Güncelleme Tarihi:
One thousand prints of the cartoon, featuring the prophet wearing a turban with a lit fuse stuck in it, are up for sale for 250 dollars (188 euros) on the group’s website.
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Each print is numbered and signed by the cartoonist Kurt Westergaard.Â
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"Now you can own an exclusive print of the most famous picture of our time," the newspaper said on its website.
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Westergaard, 73, is one of 12 cartoonists whose drawings of the Muslim prophet were first published in Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in September 2005, sparking controversy among Muslims worldwide.
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He has since been the subject of threats, forcing him to live in hiding.
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Two Tunisians were arrested in
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"The image won Kurt Westergaard international fame, but it has also forced him to live under constant police protection," the Free Press Society said on its website.
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"Despite threats and concrete murder plots planned by Islamists, he has nonetheless never expressed any regret and never apologized for being a free artist."
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The Free Press Society, founded in 2004, started selling the prints about a week ago to raise money for its cause, its president Lars Hedegaard said.
So far, about 100 to 200 have been sold.
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The organization, whose 600 members include journalists, schoolteachers and consultants among others, has been accused by some of being anti-Islam.
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"We distinguish between Muslims -- many of whom are moderate -- and Islam. Unfortunately there is no major tendency within Islam that can be called moderate," he told AFP.
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"Our organization is not based on any political view. But the biggest threat to free speech comes from Islam," he said.
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The 12 cartoons were considered offensive by many Muslims and their publication sparked violent protests worldwide in January and February 2006.
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Demonstrators burned Danish flags in protests that culminated in February 2006 with the torching of Danish diplomatic offices in
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Last week