Sir Osama

Here's a good example of the silliness of religious rhetoric these days. A farewell knighthood for Salman Rushdie, as Blair is walking out the door, triggers this response from an extremist in Pakistan:

A hardline Pakistani parliamentarian and head of a religious political party Wednesday demanded title 'sir' for Osama bin Laden, the leader of the Al Qaeda terrorist network, in retaliation to Britain knighting author Salman Rushdie.

'Muslims should confer the 'sir' title and all other awards on bin Laden and Mullah Omar in reply to Britain's shameful decision to knight Rushdie,' Sami ul Haq, leader of the pro-Taliban Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, said in a statement, referring also to the leader of the Taliban.

Such a move would not only go against the political grain of Britain, who joined in the international effort to drive the Taliban from power and Al Qaeda from their Afghan safe haven in 2001, but it would also break knighthood rules, under which foreigners may not be addressed as sir.

Rushdie, 60, was given the recognition at birthday honours for Britain's Queen Elizabeth II Saturday, about two decades after his book 'The Satanic Verses' sparked protests in Muslim countries, including Pakistan, in 1989.

The novel also became the subject in the same year of a fatwa, a religious edict, by late Iranian spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomenei, who demanded Rushdie's death.

'Europe and Western nations are intentionally pushing Muslims towards extremism by awarding a nefarious person,' Haq said.

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Posted by B Feiler at 7:37 AM  

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