Fitna Online
Thursday, March 27th, 2008I disagree with quite a lot Wilders has to say, but he’s been in the news so often, I might as well show you what all the ruckus is about:
[Quote:]
Government sources in The Hague have yet to respond. The first to address the assembled press was Mr Wilders himself, who said the film was not intended as a “provocation”, but as a “final warning” and an invitation to Muslims to join the debate about Islam. Fitna, he said, “depicted the hard realities” of modern life and “now we have to draw the political conclusions”.
Speaking on prime time news, Islam expert Maurits Berger agreed that the film should not be seen as a provocation. “It presents a succession of images which we have all seen in recent years.” The anticipated widespread demonstrations in the Muslim world, Mr Berger said, “would be an exaggerated response”.
Muslim organisations in the Netherlands were quoted as expressing relief: “The film is not as shocking as expected” and “represented a caricature of Islam”. National alert levels, which recently went up, have not been raised any further.
[Quote:]
Geert Wilders, Dutch politician and leader of the Party for Freedom (PVV), has called his just-released Fitna a ‘respectable film’. He admitted that Muslims may not be happy with it, but emphasised that he had always stuck to the facts. He said he believes that the film is also ‘one thousand kilometres within the framework of the law’.
While noting that he hoped that Fitna’s release would cause no disturbances, Mr Wilders stressed that the maker of the film could not be held responsible for any riots or boycotts that might result, and that it was not meant to provoke disruption. Rather, he said, the images in Fitna were intended to make clear the dangers contained in the Qur’an and Islam.
He also said that he hoped it would lead to discussions of the disadvantages of the faith, both in the Netherlands and abroad, and explicitly invited Muslims to engage in such discussions.





