(Israelnationalnews.com) A new Danish film portraying the Arab Muslim genocide against Black Africans in Darfur is being compared by the Sudanese government to the anti-Islamist film Fitna and to cartoons of Muhammad published in a Danish newspaper in 2005. The publication of those cartoons of the founder of Islam led to worldwide rioting and ongoing violence, including an attempt this week to kill one of the cartoonists.
A spokesman for Sudan's foreign ministry called the movie, Hævnen ("The Revenge"; also titled Civilization in English) by Susanne Bier, "racist". The film "should be seen as a new extension of the notorious Fitna movie and the cartoons which insult the prophet Muhammad," according to Sudanese officials.
Fitna, a 15-minute film produced by Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders, attempts to show the Islamic sources for, and promoters of, jihadist ideology in Europe. The film, released in 2008, led to Wilders being threatened with death and banned from Britain.
An earlier short film, Submission by Theo van Gogh, focused on the suppression of women under Islamic rule. After the film was broadcast in Holland in 2004, van Gogh was shot to death and mutilated by a Muslim assassin, Mohammed Bouyeri.
Bier's Hævnen is currently being filmed in Kenya and Denmark. It follows the life story of Darfur refugees from Sudan to a town in Denmark. The Danish Fyens Stiftstidende newspaper, which reported on the controversy, said that Hævnen is due to be released in August 2010.
Sudan claims the film will portray "nonexistent conditions", yet at the same time it will "prolong the war in Darfur." According to a Sudanese official, the Danish filmmakers paid refugees in Kenya to falsely portray victims of genocide in Sudan.
Attempt to Axe 'Muhammad Cartoonist' to Death
A man affiliated with Shabab Al-Mujahideen, the Somali branch of Al-Qaeda, attempted to murder Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard in his home on Saturday, January 2. Westergaard was one of the cartoonists whose work sparked mass rioting among Muslims worldwide in 2005. The attacker, who broke into the cartoonist's house bearing a knife and a hatchet, was shot and arrested by police.
Reacting to the reports, a Shabab spokesman praised the attack on the "devil who abused our prophet Mohammad." The group called "upon all Muslims around world to target people like [Westergaard]."
The Somali immigrant who tried to murder Westergaard, Muhideen Jelle, was previously involved in raising funds in Sweden for jihadist causes.
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