By Paul Richter, Tribune Washington Bureau –
UNITED NATIONS — The annual U.N. General Assembly meeting, which is intended to celebrate the world’s common values, this year is exposing instead the gulf between Western and Islamic perspectives on freedom of expression, posing an unexpected challenge for President Barack Obama when he speaks here Tuesday.
Prompted by the anti-Muslim video produced in California that has stirred deadly riots around the world, delegations from major Muslim nations have arrived at the U.N. prepared to demand international curbs on speech or media that they believe defame their religion or the Prophet Muhammad.
Western leaders say they won’t give ground on free speech, but the clash is souring the mood at a gathering that diplomats had hoped would yield new collaboration on Syria, the dispute over Iran’s nuclear development and the challenges newly elected governments face a year after the “Arab Spring” toppled authoritarian rulers in the Middle East and North Africa.
The demand for limits on anti-Islamic expression is coming from leading Islamic groups such as the Organization for Islamic Cooperation, and leaders as diverse as Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan, Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Erdogan, who Obama views as a key ally, has declared that all 57 Islamic nations “should speak forcefully with one voice,” and has called for “international legal regulations against attacks on what people deem sacred.”
These leaders consider anti-Islamic material a kind of “hate speech” that should be banned around the world. They are expected to demand those regulations when debate begins Tuesday in the General Assembly.
“This has exposed a huge fault line in political philosophies,” said Stewart Patrick, of the nonpartisan Council on Foreign Relations. “It may be irreconcilable.”
The dispute puts Obama in a difficult position in the closing weeks of the presidential race. While the president will stand firmly for First Amendment values, he needs to be careful in condemning the anti-Muslim video not to sound an apologetic note that would draw political fire from his adversaries.
The White House was hoping Obama could use his U.N. address to show how his administration’s support for democratic movements in the Arab Spring, and greater engagement with the Muslim world overall, have improved America’s international standing after a decade of war in Muslim nations.
Instead he faces a jarring reminder of the anti-American riots in some 20 nations, and the storming of the U.S. Consulate in eastern Libya that killed U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans on Sept. 11. The White House last week described the heavily armed assault in Benghazi as a terrorist attack.
The controversy is expected to breathe new life into efforts by the Organization for Islamic Cooperation, which pushed unsuccessfully for a dozen years for the U.N. Human Rights Council to pass a resolution making anti-blasphemy laws a matter of global human rights.
A battle at the U.N. for such a standard, even if it doesn’t pass, is a setback for U.S. policy on several levels.
Experts say it helps legitimize efforts in parts of the Islamic world to enforce tough anti-blasphemy laws that may be used to target moderate politicians and permit harsh treatment of minority groups and religions. It also could make it harder for missionaries seeking converts, and Western nongovernmental groups pushing for democratic governance.
The demand for limits on supposed hate speech reflects, in part, new political realities since the “Arab Spring.”
In countries like Egypt and Tunisia, previously outlawed Islamist parties are competing openly for votes and power. Their leaders are seeking to outflank more moderate political rivals, who feel increasing pressure to back down on free speech amid the broader public outrage.
Morsi, the Egyptian president, was slow to respond when protests broke out over the anti-Islamic video. The Muslim Brotherhood, now a dominant force in Egyptian politics, wants to maintain its legitimacy on the streets, and it took two days after crowds stormed the U.S. Embassy for the new Egyptian leader to publicly condemn the attack.
Rachid Ghannouchi, leader of the moderate Islamist Ennahda party in Tunisia, is widely respected in the West, for example. But he has joined the calls for international criminalization of anti-Muslim speech, and his party has introduced a draft law in Tunisia’s legislature that would make such behavior illegal.
On the far end of the spectrum, Hassan Nasrallah, head of the militant Shiite militia Hezbollah in Lebanon, has also called for international rules to ban insults against Islam, as well as insults against Christianity and Judaism. His comments are viewed as a sign of the popular appeal of the issue since Nasrallah rarely concerns himself with international diplomacy.
Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, told reporters in New York on Monday that Israel is only a short-lived presence among the ancient civilizations of the Middle East and would eventually be “eliminated.”
Meanwhile, the situation in civil war-ravaged Syria “is extremely bad, and getting worse,” Lakhdar Brahimi, special envoy for the United Nations and the Arab League, told reporters in New York. The violence there “is a threat to the region and a threat to peace and security in the world.”
10 thoughts on “Muslim nations seek curbs on anti-Islam speech”
It is very important for all of us to understand that Muslim-ism/Islam is a form of government.
Arab law comes from their Koran. This is why they are referred to as the Arab Nations.
Arab/Muslim/Islam all follow the same doctrine. It is confusing to the American people when terrorists are referred to as “Radical Islamist”. All Arab/Muslim/Islamist use the Koran as we do our Constitution. How does one separate one Muslim from another. Jihad is clearly a part of their laws. It is written in the Koran along with many other radical rules to deal with anyone that don’t adhere to Koran law. This includes freedom of speech.
The Koran calls for any Muslim to be put do death for allowing or taking part in any discussion of any other religion or belief system.
A Muslim is a Muslim. This is why we always see such large numbers of Muslims that take to the streets to protest Americans. This is why Muslims don’t fight against another Muslim that is doing the Jihad thing. If the people in these Arab/Muslim countries were civilized and not so brainwashed by their Koran they would be the first to put a stop against all these terrorist attacks.
I maintain that the Mosques that are used as places of worship built in America are isolated Muslim Nations right here in America, with their own set of laws. It is Sharia Law that the Muslims govern themselves with. While they appear to follow American rule of law it is only because their laws within the Koran are more repressive and therefore go unnoticed.
It can best defined as a cult.
We all best be prepared. An Arab war is coming and I fear all too soon.
We need to get out of the U.N. The only time these clowns do anything with it is when they want something. All it does is cost us money and New York in particular. Who the hell do these clowns think they are telling us what to do with our constitution. They all want to come over here and then they want to turn it into a cesspool just like where they came from. Keep religion out of our politics.
I don’t agree. There is an old saying that I think is very applicable here.
“Keep your friends close, but keep your enemies closer.”
Mr. Iamadinnerjacket gives a wonderful speech about limiting expression when it comes to his religion.
Obviously, he has no concept about freedom, and it’s far reaching powers given to all people in our country.
The citizens of this country don’t wish to emulate a stifled and autocratic form of life. Just as in the Soviet block years ago, where if you felt a certain way, it had to be whispered to someone who you really can trust for fear of being turned in.
The only person in Iran who has real freedom is Mr. Iamadinnerjacket, the rest must knuckle under the yoke of oppression.
And so many wonder why we consider Mr. Jefferson a visionary. It is because he knew what would happen if people were not allowed to practice their beliefs as they choose, with out threat of coercion from the government.
I would rather go to war than submit to that kind of regulation of our free society. By a foreigner no less.
We are going to war with the Muslim world, very soon!
Muslums come to our country because of our freedoms which includes freedom of speech but if e say something bad about them they want to kill us.
Thanks to the Muslim Brotherhood it looks like the Arab Spring has made it to an Arab Winter, skipping over Summer and Fall.
Who knew another “cold war” would come out of the desert?
Just what the world needed.
Time to get out of the UN. What a joke.
No kidding. I wish they would move it to some Muslim country.
Well, Gee whiz. What makes them so special. I didn’t even read the article. They certainly don’t respect any other religion. I hope no one caves in to these terrorists.