To check Oneindia News on your Mobile
go to:   http://m.oneindia.in/news/
  •  

Iran paper again publishes offensive article

Tehran, Mar 8: The conservative Siyasat-e Rouz newspaper, banned last month for printing an article seen as offensive to Iran's Sunni Muslim minority, republished after it said a legal case was dropped.

The watchdog Press Supervisory Board suspended the daily after it published an article on February 1 that the editor said unintentionally offended Sunnis due to a typographical error.

Iran is overwhelmingly Shi'ite Muslim and is governed under a complex system of Islamic government in which top Shi'ite clerics exert a controlling influence.

Most of Iran's Sunni minority also belong to ethnic minorities, so Tehran is wary of any move that could cause religious or ethnic tension. A state-run newspaper was shut for five months last year for a cartoon deemed insulting to Iran's ethnic Azeris.

''After studying charges, the public prosecutor confirmed that no charges against Siyasat-e Rouz were proven and since no one has complained about the case there is no reason for the closure of the paper,'' the daily said on its front page yesterday.

In a February 1 article, Siyassat-e Rouz appeared to criticise Islam's second caliph, Omar, revered by Sunnis. But on February 3 the paper issued a correction saying there had been a typographical error, indicating another figure was the target.

The newspaper's editor also apologised for any offence.

Sunni lawmakers issued a statement saying the paper should not be banned because it swiftly explained the mistake. Sunnis make up about nine per cent of Iran's 70 million people.

Iranian officials have stepped up criticism of the United States for what they say is Washington's attempt to create divisions between Shi'ites and Sunnis inside Iran and the Islamic world.

Reuters

Surgery in the sun lures patients to Thailand

BANGKOK, Mar 8 (Reuters) When June Flowers woke up in her small Ohio town one winter's morning, unable to move because of back pain, she never dreamt she would fly to the other side of the world to undergo surgery that she couldn't afford at home. One of 40 million Americans with no health insurance, the part-time cashier who had never been outside the United States became a ''medical tourist'' to a hospital with a strange-sounding name in the Thai capital,.....

Hidden bombs stalk Vietnamese as states seek treaty

DONG HA, Vietnam, Mar 8 (Reuters) In the same week that dozens of countries declared plans to ban cluster munitions, a boy was killed by the explosion of a steel ball he picked up and threw while tending livestock. The boy was not in one of the present-day war zones of Iraq, Afghanistan or Lebanon, but in Vietnam, where the battlefields were silenced more than 30 years ago. The American and Vietnamese armies left behind cluster bombs like the one that.....

Risk-taking kiwis protest looming "party pill" ban

WELLINGTON, Mar 8 (Reuters) Skiing down active volcanoes is perfectly alright, so is bungy-jumping off canyons and ''zorbing'' down mountains in massive inflatable plastic balls. But should risk-taking New Zealanders be allowed to pop the legal stimulants they call ''party pills''? Frenzy, Torque and D-lite may not be New Zealand's best-known inventions, but kiwi fans fighting a proposed government ban argue their legal highs are safer than many of the small country's dangerous pastimes. ''There have been 26 million party pills.....
User Comments
[ Post Comments ]
Be the first to comment on this article.
Oneindia  Oneindia Login