more »Family members describe Sayed Parwez Kaambakhsh as a frightened young man, sitting in a cramped Afghan prison cell alongside 30 hard-core criminals, hoping an apology will save him from execution for blasphemy.
But to the outside world, the 23-year-old student and journalist has become a cause: a symbol of Afghanistan's clashing constitutional commitments to freedom of expression yet also to Islamic law that allows apostasy to be punished by death. His sentence, imposed after a closed-door trial during which he was not permitted a lawyer or a hearing, has become a rallying cry for foreign critics who want Afghanistan to hew to international norms on human rights.The question now is whether international protests will save Kaambakhsh from a firing squad, or instead stiffen the spines of religious conservatives who fear that Afghanistan's morals are being diluted by imported Western values. ...
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Monday, February 18
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 18 Feb 2008 07:35 PM EST
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 18 Feb 2008 07:04 PM EST
Here's the Wikipedia Depictions of Muhammad page. Here's the discussion page.
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 18 Feb 2008 06:19 PM EST
I wonder if anyone has tried to take down The Smoking Gun? More from the Guardian's Charles Arthur, including this:
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Wikipedia, the free online encyclopaedia, is refusing to remove medieval artistic depictions of the Prophet Muhammad, despite being flooded with complaints from Muslims demanding the images be deleted.