In
Berlin, the conservative daily Die Welt reprinted the turban-bomb
image on its front page and three other pictures inside.
"The
protests from Muslims would be taken more seriously if they were less
hypocritical," it wrote in an editorial.
"When
Syrian television showed drama documentaries in prime time depicting
(Jewish) rabbis as cannibals, the imams were quiet."
In
Rome, La Stampa published the cartoons Wednesday, as did Corriere
della Sera Monday.
In
the Netherlands, deputy editor Arie Elshout of Volkskrank daily
said his paper had published the pictures in November and again
Wednesday to illustrate the debate, and that there had been no negative
reaction.
In
an editorial Tuesday it branded the outcry a "sordid affair"
reflecting badly on countries which did not support Denmark.
Geert
Wilders, a lawmaker and outspoken critic of Islam, said he would post
the offending picture on his Web site as a show of support for their
authors.
Switzerland's
Blick newspaper published two of the cartoons Tuesday, while the Tribune
de Geneve said it would do so in its next edition Thursday.
Paris
daily France Soir said it had decided to reprint them "not
from an appetite for gratuitous provocation, but because they constitute
the subject of a controversy on a global scale which has done nothing to
maintain balance and mutual limits in democracy, respect of religious
beliefs and freedom of expression.”
“Now
they want an apology from a society characterized with freedom of
expression and religion at a time when they deny their peoples the right
to free speech.”
It
continued: “We will give no heed to their objections and insist on
drawing pictures of Muhammad, Jesus and Buddha, which has everything to
do with the freedom of expression we do enjoy in our society.”
Punishment
The
furor in the Arab and Muslim worlds after the apology is far from being
over with Arab interior ministers saying Denmark should punish the
newspaper.
"We
ask the Danish authorities to take the necessary measures to punish
those responsible of this harm and to take action to avoid its
repeat," the ministers said in a statement carried by Reuters.
The
statement came at the end of two-day meeting in Tunis to discuss ways of
strengthening cooperation against terrorism in the region.
Muslim
scholars and other opinion leaders in the Muslim world also asked for
the newspaper to be punished to avoid the publication of a similarly
offensive material in future.
Diplomats
said it would be a political blunder for the ministers who are at the
forefront of the fight against extremists to avoid the issue of the
Danish cartoons and appear unenthusiastic defenders of Prophet Muhammad.
Arab
commentators dismissed the argument that Danish traditions of tolerance
and respect for press freedoms barred the government from taking action
against the newspaper.
"Why
do they talk about democracy and freedom of expression just when the
issue concerns Islam? If it concerns other religions the facts will
change", said Amr Moussa, the Arab League chief, who attended the
gathering.
Malaysian
Protest
Also
an influential Malaysian Muslim organization Wednesday urged the
government to protest to Denmark over the caricatures.
The
Muslim Consumers Association of Malaysia, which claims 100,000 members,
also called on Copenhagen to apologize over the 12 cartoons.
"As
a Muslim country we do find this kind of thing is insulting our
feelings," said Noor Nirwandy Noordin, project coordinator from the
group which spearheaded a high-profile boycott of Thai goods over the
treatment of its Muslim minority.
"We
want the Malaysian government, our prime minister, to send a protest to
Denmark," he told AFP.
"Denmark
has to send through their embassy a formal apology letter to the Muslim
community in Malaysia ... it is necessary for them to apologize to every
Muslim country in the world."
An
apology will "send a message or signal to other countries to
respect other religions," added Noordin.
The
Muslim world's two main political bodies -- the Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Arab League -- said Sunday, January 29,
they were seeking a UN resolution, backed by possible sanctions, to
protect religions in response to the furor.
Danish
embassies in the Middle East have been the scenes of protests, a Danish
flag was burnt by angry Palestinian demonstrators in Gaza and Gulf
retailers pulled Danish products off their shelves.