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Facebook Censors 'Everybody Draw Mohammad Day' Page, Pakistan Lifts Ban

Everybody Draw Mohammad

BABAR DOGAR   05/31/10 12:07 PM ET  AP

LAHORE, Pakistan — Pakistan lifted a ban on Facebook on Monday after officials from the social networking site apologized for a page deemed offensive to Muslims and removed its contents, a top information technology official said.

The move came almost two weeks after Pakistan imposed the ban amid anger over a page that encouraged users to post images of Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Many Muslims regard depictions of the prophet, even favorable ones, as blasphemous.

"In response to our protest, Facebook has tendered their apology and informed us that all the sacrilegious material has been removed from the URL," said Najibullah Malik, secretary of Pakistan's information technology ministry, referring to the technical term for a Web page.

Facebook assured the Pakistani government that "nothing of this sort will happen in the future," Malik said.

Officials from the website could not immediately be reached for comment. They said earlier the contents of the "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day!" page did not violate Facebook's terms.

The page encouraged users to post images of the prophet to protest threats made by a radical Muslim group against the creators of the American TV series "South Park" for depicting Muhammad in a bear suit during an episode earlier this year.

Pakistan blocked Facebook on May 19 following a ruling by one of the country's highest courts. The Lahore High Court reversed its ruling Monday because of Facebook's response, paving the way for the government to restore access, Malik said.

The government will continue to block some Web pages that contain "sacrilegious material," but Malik declined to specify which ones.

The Facebook controversy sparked a handful of protests across Pakistan, many by student members of radical Islamic groups. Some of the protesters carried signs advocating holy war against the website for allowing the page.

Bangladesh also decided to block Facebook on Sunday but said it would restore access to the site if the offensive material was removed.

It is not the first time that images of the prophet have sparked anger. Pakistan and other Muslim countries saw large and sometimes violent protests in 2006 when a Danish newspaper published cartoons of Muhammad, and again in 2008 when they were reprinted. Later the same year, a suspected al-Qaida suicide bomber attacked the Danish Embassy in Islamabad, killing six people.

Anger over the Facebook controversy also prompted the Pakistani government to block access to YouTube briefly, saying there was growing sacrilegious content on the video sharing website. The government restored access to YouTube last week but said it would continue to block videos offensive to Muslims that are posted on the site.

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LAHORE, Pakistan — Pakistan lifted a ban on Facebook on Monday after officials from the social networking site apologized for a page deemed offensive to Muslims and removed its contents, a top i...
LAHORE, Pakistan — Pakistan lifted a ban on Facebook on Monday after officials from the social networking site apologized for a page deemed offensive to Muslims and removed its contents, a top i...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dunkleberger Karl
Historian,Humanitarian,Hedonist.
02:41 PM on 07/28/2010
If I was apple, I would show a dell computer with an immage of mohammad apon it in a news paper, will a mullah in the back ground screaming, Your computer is defiled, destroy it, smash it smash it now!, And later run an ad, "Apple, Halalah!"
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Guy Incognito
Canadian. Sorry.
05:02 PM on 06/02/2010
Hmmm...Cassius Clay has been conspicuously absent in all this...

http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/m/muhammad_ali.html

Truly, there's a prophet.
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12:46 AM on 06/02/2010
flossophy: hugo chavez is not a dictator. He is democratically elected leader, just like Evo Morales.This is a fact, not up for debate. You're just brainwashed.

I have no shame because I read.
06:43 PM on 06/01/2010
This isn't an issue of US government censorship so the 1st amendment doesn't apply..
*However* If Americans don't respect the spirit behind the 1st amendment anymore then US companies won't.. and eventually the government will realize it can get away with eroding freedom of speech or religion (ie, the freedom to *not* be a muslim, since muslims can simply not go to such pages, not watch South Park, etc). If Pakistani's can rally and protest for censorship, why won't Americans? Rally for Freedom of Speech and Religion June 24th for Show Mohammed day. Here is a facebook page viewable even if you aren't on facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Show-Mohammed-Day/121228857900451
or a copy of it on http://showmohammed.com
07:26 PM on 06/01/2010
FYI, there are no photo's allowed on that page. I will setup photo sharing elsewhere later, with a warning to those who do not wish to see Mohammed not to go there. This is in no way anti-muslim.. it is anti-censorship no matter who calls for it. We should have the freedom to *not* be muslims and *not* be restricted to seeing only things those of other religions might object to.

ps, sorry for the repeat post below (if they let me), I just realized I should have let the first be published to my friend's walls and it doesn't seem to give an option to do it now.
04:26 AM on 06/28/2010
Everything you say is true... (apart from the anti-censorship thing- IMHO)
Reminds me when the US was outraged that dead soldiers, coffins, etc. were being openly shown on Al-Jazeera at the beginning of the war and how everyone called for "respect" and such. AlJazeera claimed freedom of press and speech- but that was an ulterior reason to show the carnage.

Freedom of speech becomes offensive/hate/damaging speech without responsibility: that doesn't mean everyone should be as PC as a hippie- but its when you know your targeting and being offensive to whole nations and populations.

Just because a few Jihad-calling, flag-burning, Gandalf-bearded, lunatics have hijacked the religion (bad pun?) doesn't mean you have to blanket 23% of the worlds population and offend them as much as possible.

Theo van Gogh's "Submission" (although horrible...) is a good example in openly questioning misogyny and a culture of violence against women because of Koranic interpretations. The questions raised in the film deserve to be asked: is it divine will to assault or kill women? Is there holiness in holding women at substandard levels, denying them the right to free will and independent thought? And ultimately, how can such a mindframe exist in the 21st century?

The Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons were crass and insulting- and not even satire.
07:31 PM on 06/01/2010
This isn't an issue of US government censorship so the 1st amendment doesn't apply..
*However* If Americans don't respect the spirit behind the 1st amendment anymore then US companies won't.. and eventually the government will realize it can get away with eroding freedom of speech or religion (ie, the freedom to *not* be a muslim, since muslims can simply not go to such pages, not watch South Park, etc). If Pakistani's can rally and protest for censorship, why won't Americans for free speech? *please* spread the word.

Rally for Freedom of Speech and Religion June 24th for Show Mohammed day. Here is a facebook page viewable even if you aren't on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Show-Mohammed-Day/121228857900451 or a copy of it on http://showmohammed.com (note, more support for rallies coming, ie links get to get protest signs, handouts, etc). Note this is pro-freedom of speech&religion, not anti-muslim. Its anti-censorship by anyone regardless of faith or lack of one.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Json
Cynical dreamer, sarcastic idealist...
03:12 PM on 06/01/2010
Pathetic cowardice. It wasn't "draw an offensive picture of mohammed" day. Just draw a picture. Give the incredibly hateful and offensive pages that they let flourish, this cave-in is just a huge blinking sign that reads "Threats of Violence Work!"
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JoeMentia
They hate us for our Free Dumb!
09:05 AM on 06/01/2010
Funny how Facebook will pull down a page that asks people to draw pictures, but as far as I know, the page asking people to pray for Obama's death is still up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrkr
08:05 AM on 06/01/2010
bye bye FB, you spineless wretches.
08:03 AM on 06/01/2010
the page is a great idea
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin1961
07:44 AM on 06/01/2010
I guess the dollar is just a little too important to risk offending anyone.
06:47 AM on 06/01/2010
Doesn't anyone ever check anything out for themselves anymore? The page is there - came back up Saturday morning
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JoeMentia
They hate us for our Free Dumb!
09:03 AM on 06/01/2010
That one is there. But there was the original page, that had about 110,000 fans before it was deleted. I believe that is the one that they were talking about censoring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theresa N
06:42 AM on 06/01/2010
Shouldn't the war be one of freedom of speech over that of oppression? What are we fighting for if we will allow religious zealots from a feudalistic theocracy dictate what pictures we draw and look at? This is much more indicative of how things are going than is the war in Afghanistan and Iraq.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daniel Contreras
04:57 AM on 06/01/2010
I dont agree with facebook removing the page, however, i dont support intentionally being rude to anyone. Supporting this anti muslim page says more about you than it does about muslims. Get a life.
06:49 AM on 06/01/2010
I support it. It says about me that we stand with the people targeted for drawing Mo and say to the islamic crazies "you can't kill us all". Thanks, have a life :)
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thewirah
Freedom is a dish best served cold
07:28 AM on 06/01/2010
This is fighting ignorance with ignorance. If you had any muslim friends, you wouldn't tell them that you have to do something offensive to them in order to punish some extremists that they have nothing to do with. How childish is that? Should muslims react back by drawing Jesus in some hillarious situations? Way to go.
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05:28 PM on 06/03/2010
oh boy the racists and bigots are getting excited. the level of ignorance here is mind boggling.

In the words of chris rock," when I hear people attacking muslims, and immigrants, I keep my ear open, because blacks and jews are next."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidgoldmandg
04:07 AM on 06/01/2010
I am a blasphemer as I'm not Muslim.

My religion is freedom and my value is human rights and care.

Why is Buttface Book oppressing me just because I don't threaten to kill anyone?
07:55 AM on 06/01/2010
EXACTLY they say Islam is the fastest rising religion in the world, they are wrong.

ATHEISM IS, and it's time they start respecting OUR most cherished beliefs of freedom and progress.

If atheists all boycotted facebook they'd lose a hell of a lot more business than if the Muslims did (but atheists won't because most of us are tech-savvy enough to realize how important social networking is to the future of communication).
03:57 AM on 06/01/2010
I deleted my Facebook account today. Their privacy policy coupled with this decision made it easy to say goodbye. I do recommend that you give people fair warning before you remove your account because everything will disappear right away even though they don't permanently delete the account for two weeks.

Ultimately Facebook has the right to run their business as they see fit. And we as consumers have the right not to use their service. It's clear they won't miss the tiny bit of ad revenue my page views bring them. But as more people grow tired of their practices, it will eventually make a dent.
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03:54 AM on 06/01/2010
I don't think Facebook should have removed the offensive material. However, I still feel that the people who participated in this "Draw Muhammad Day" were either anti-Muslim bigots or fools who think this is the proper way to defend free speech. It is especially cruel to offend Muslims in this way when war is being waged in Muslim countries for corporate profits.
06:50 AM on 06/01/2010
It is the proper way - it dilutes the strength of their threats against those that draw Mo.
08:02 AM on 06/01/2010
that's because you're suffering from the strange leftist obsession to side with anyone who looks ethnic and claims they're being discriminated against, no matter what the circumstances.

Muslims (and you're kidding yourself if you think it's just a small pocket of "extremists") are physically hurting people who criticize their religion. This is western society's way of confronting these kinds of issues. It's our way of saying, "in the west people will criticize you, and they have every right too. You may criticize them back but you may not physically hurt them".
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thewirah
Freedom is a dish best served cold
09:41 AM on 06/01/2010
Talking about physically hurting people, I am no aware of any muslim country who keeps 1 % of its adult population behind bars. They will be much happier and civilized once they have been americanized and start putting more people in jails. What's with this right wing obsession of always knowing what's best for others?