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Delayed reaction How did a series of not particularly well-drawn or funny cartoons, published on 30 September in a Danish newspaper, produce such anger in Europe and the Middle East four months later?
"Smile, anger, laughter, fear are few things that you can represent in your cartoon. If you get the expression right, the rest of the drawing can be done easily," he said.
- Anger at France - On October 16, French school teacher Samuel Paty is beheaded by a Chechen extremist in a Paris suburb after showing his pupils some of the Muhammad cartoons during a lesson on ...
The outrage is close-minded; it's an automatic response, and [the cartoon] says as much about the people who use those words as it does about those who summon the cry against it." That said, Tucker ...
But Muslim anger escalated after numerous European newspapers republished the cartoons last week, threatening to make the issue a milestone in modern Muslim-Christian relations.
Newspapers across the globe respond to the "survivor's edition" of French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo - which features a cartoon of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad - with a mixture of anger ...
The cartoon ignited a spirited debate in cyberspace on Sunday with people slamming Zapiro. Classical Bharatha Naytam dancer Verushka Pather said: “This is very disappointing.
In 2005, Danish cartoons of the Prophet sparked a wave of protests across the Muslim world in which at least 50 died. France is already on alert for attacks by al Qaeda on French interests in West ...
Newspapers across the globe respond to the "survivor's edition" of French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo - which features a cartoon of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad - with a mixture of anger ...
Acclaimed cartoonist Jonathan Shapiro (Zapiro) is refusing to bow to pressure from South African Hindu organisations to apologise over a cartoon. File photo: Chris Collingridge Published Oct 28, 2013 ...