Eid marked amid Koran burning outrage

10 September 2010 | 08:51:25 PM | Source: AFP

muslim_holdingup_koran_100910_B_getty_477061222

A Palestinian Muslim holds up a copy of the Koran while attending a mass prayer event on the Eid holiday, which marks the end of Ramadan (Getty Images)

Thousands of rock-pelting Afghans assaulted a NATO military outpost on Friday as fury built across the Muslim world against a US pastor's threats to immolate the Koran on the anniversary of 9/11.

  
In a turbulent start to the festival of Eid al-Fitr, when Muslims worldwide mark the end of the Ramadan fasting month, leaders of countries including Afghanistan and Indonesia issued dire warnings against the provocative act.
  
Radical Florida evangelist Terry Jones issued a heavily conditioned offer to call off his event, which he had planned for Saturday's ninth anniversary of the September 11 attacks in protest at the "evil of Islam".
  
"We have heard that in the US, a pastor has decided to insult Korans. Now although we have heard that they are not doing this, we tell them they should not even think of it," Afghan President Hamid Karzai said.
  
"By burning the Koran they cannot harm it. The Koran is in the hearts and minds of one and a half billion people. (But) insulting the Koran is an insult to nations," Karzai said in an Eid message.
  
The commander of US-led forces in Afghanistan, General David Petraeus, the UN mission in Afghanistan and leading aid organisations have all said the burning will endanger the lives of Afghans and foreigners if it goes ahead.
  
Thousands of protestors threw rocks at a small NATO-run base in the remote town of Fayzabad, capital of Badakhshan province in northeast Afghanistan, after traditional prayers for Eid, police said.
  
"They numbered in their thousands, it is a big crowd," provincial deputy police chief Sayed Hassan Jafary told AFP.
  
"People almost from all city mosques gathered," he said, adding that the crowd chanted "death to America" and threw rocks at the German-run military base in the city.
  
The crowd demanded authorities give them an American flag "so they can burn it and end the demonstrations", Jafary said. "But we don't have an American flag."
  
In neighouring Pakistan, hundreds of protesters rallied in the central city of Multan to torch US flags.
  
"We have heard that they have postponed the plans to burn the Holy Koran, but it is not enough. We will continue to raise our voice so that it never happens again," cleric Mufti Hidayatullah Pasroori said in an address to the protestors.
  
Jones said on Thursday he was putting his event on hold and would cancel it if a planned Islamic cultural centre near Ground Zero in New York is relocated.
  
The imam leading the New York project has denied any quid-pro-quo deal with Jones to move the planned centre, prompting the Florida pastor to threaten afresh to go ahead with the burning.
  
There have also been several protests by Islamists in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority country, which has suffered years of extremist violence.
  
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono lashed out anew against Jones and his tiny evangelical denomination, located in Gainesville, Florida, a day after calling on US President Barack Obama to intervene.
  
"This threatens peace and international security. This is something that endangers harmony among religious people," Yudhoyono said in a nationally televised address marking the end of Ramadan.
  
"I'm of course aware of the reported cancellation of the deplorable act by Terry Jones. However, none of us can be complacent until such a despicable idea is totally extinguished," he said.
  
The governments of Pakistan and India, which after Indonesia have the world's biggest Muslim populations, have added their voices to a chorus of global outrage against Jones.
  
Najib Razak, prime minister of Muslim-majority Malaysia, warned Friday the fraught relationship between the Muslim and non-Muslim worlds would enter "a very dangerous chapter" if the burning went ahead.
  
"I hope the pastor will have a change of heart because by that single act of abhorrence... it will ignite the feelings of Muslims throughout the world, the consequences of which I fear would be very, very costly," he told reporters.
 

Your Comments

14 Sep 2010 17:17 AEST

ali

From: adelaide SA

solution

Its so unfair that minorities in all the countries are targeted and insulted. Will all the weapon manufacturers in the world be de-commissioned, i can only see that as a solution to ending all conflicts; no weapons to fight with.

Agree (0 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
 

12 Sep 2010 15:54 AEST

Fred

From: Sydney

the religion of peace reacts with violence?

It seems strange to me that this "religion of peace" reacts with extreme violence whenever some imagine "slur" is enacted. Doesn't anyone see the conundrum here? Wouldn't it be interesting if Christians and those of other religions reacted vehemently when their brothers in Muslim countries were attacked? The world would be a basket-case. Or more of a basket-case that it already is,

Agree (2 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
 

11 Sep 2010 9:02 AEST

sniffer dog

From: Melbourne

small ideas from a big land

What do you expect from arrogant STUPID redneck America...the source of most of the world's problems today. How this clueless small time pastor of a small clueless congregation of 50 can get away with this is beyond reason. He should be jailed for stirring up such a dangerous commotion. Oh that;s right I forgot...America, home of the free and land of the bravre. BS! I say.

Agree (3 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
 

11 Sep 2010 7:17 AEST

travis

From: tasmania

Welcome to the 21st century! - this is as good as it gets.

Just ignore the pastor! Stop reporting this story! Dont give him the attention. Your dividing people. By these muslims becoming violent at this act, which is being done by someone who is obviously an extremist in his own right. They should look at/inside themselves for letting him upset them - they have automaticaly lowered themselves to less than the pastors level by attacking a NATO base. TBH if religion does this to people, you can pile ALL religious literature onto the fire, as far as i care

Agree (1 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
 

10 Sep 2010 23:12 AEST

Yousif

From: Sydney

Shame you call yourself a man of God!!

Shame on you calling yourself a man of God. You suggested the lowest of low act I ever heard in the name of 2977 innocent American lives when at the same time more than ONE MILLION Iraqi civillians have died as a result of the illegal US led war & not a single Iraqi suggested something as wrong, stupid, evil, immoral, inhumae, uncivilised, pethetic & mercyless as you have Jones. Lets just pray you don't become the reason behind some more tragic innocent life loss.

Agree (0 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
 

10 Sep 2010 23:07 AEST

Ronald Martens

From: Perth Morley

Ronald

How many times in the past have we seen these people burning an American flag or any flag for that matter as a symbol of contempt. And what do the people from around the world do? Nothing just look at these people and think what is their problem? Same thing with burning a book so what. Didn't China burn many books? Get over it they are the ones instilling hatred around the world . And I think people are starting to get sick of them. They live in the 1,400s time to catch up.

Agree (0 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
 

Join the Discussion

E.g. Suburb / City
You have characters remaining.
Validation (
) :
This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.

All submitted comments become the property of SBS. They are moderated, so we reserve the right to edit comments and remove HTML tags. Not all submitted comments will be published. Publication does not mean we endorse the opinions expressed. Please read our terms and conditions for more information.