04 January 2010

No sense of humor, these al-Qaeda guys


The Wall Street Journal quotes an AP article about an attempted murder in Denmark:
A Somali man was charged with two counts of attempted murder on Saturday for an attack on a Danish artist whose 2005 cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad ignited riots and outrage in Muslim countries, authorities said. The 28-year-old Somali man, with ties to al-Qaeda, broke into Kurt Westergaard's home in Aarhus, Denmark, on Friday night, armed with an ax and a knife, said Jakob Scharf, head of Denmark's PET intelligence agency.
The 74-year-old artist, who has been targeted with several death threats since depicting the Prophet Muhammad with a bomb-shaped turban, pressed an alarm and fled with his five-year-old granddaughter to a specially-made safe room. Officers arrived two minutes later and tried to arrest the assailant, but then shot him in the hand and knee when he threatened them with the ax, said Preben Nielsen of the Aarhus police.
The man was charged at a court hearing Saturday in Aarhus, Denmark's second largest city. He was wheeled into the courtroom on a stretcher from the hospital where he was being treated for his wounds, and was accompanied by a lawyer, authorities said.
Chief Superintendent Ole Madsen in Aarhus said the Somali man was charged with two counts of attempted murder: one on Westergaard and one on a police officer. "He will be in custody for four weeks, and in isolation for two," Mr. Madsen said.
The suspect's name was not released in line with Danish privacy rules. Mr. Nielsen said the man's wounds were serious but not life-threatening. Mr. Westergaard was "quite shocked" by the attack but was not injured, Nielsen said.
The Danish cartoonist remains a potential target for extremists nearly five years after he drew a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad, along with eleven others that were printed in the Jyllands-Posten newspaper.
The drawings triggered riots and protests in the Muslim world, and Danish and other Western embassies in several Muslim countries were torched a few months later in 2006 by angry protesters who felt the cartoons had profoundly insulted Islam. Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the prophet, even favorable, for fear it could lead to idolatry.
The Danish security service said a 28-year-old man armed with a knife and axe broke into the home of Kurt WesterGaard, a Danish artist whose 2005 cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad ignited riots. The Somali man had won an asylum case and received a residency permit to stay in Denmark, Mr. Scharf said, declaring the Friday attack to be "terror related." "The arrested man has, according to PET's information, close relations to the Somali terrorist group al-Shabab and al-Qaeda leaders in eastern Africa," he said. "The attack again confirms the terror threat that is directed at Denmark and against the cartoonist Kurt Westergaard in particular."
Mr. Scharf said the man is suspected of having been involved in terror-related activities in East Africa and had been under PET's surveillance, but not in connection with Mr. Westergaard.
Mr. Westergaard could not be reached for comment. However, he told his employer, the Jyllands-Posten newspaper, that the assailant shouted "Revenge!" and "Blood!" as he tried to enter the bathroom where Mr. Westergaard and the child had sought shelter.
"My grandchild did fine," Mr. Westergaard said, according to the newspaper's web edition. "It was scary. It was close. Really close. But we did it."
Mr. Westergaard has received previous death threats and was the subject of an alleged assassination plot. In October, terror charges were brought against two Chicago men who planned to kill Mr. Westergaard and newspaper's former cultural editor. In 2008, Danish police arrested two Tunisian men suspected of plotting to kill Mr. Westergaard. Neither suspect was prosecuted. One was deported and the other was released Monday after an immigration board rejected PET's efforts to expel him from Denmark.
Throughout the crisis, then-Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen distanced himself from the cartoons but resisted calls to apologize for them, citing freedom of speech and saying his government could not be held responsible for the actions of Denmark's press.
An umbrella organization for moderate Muslims in Denmark condemned the Friday attack. "The Danish Muslim Union strongly distances itself from the attack and any kind of extremism that leads to such acts," the group said in a statement.

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