[Reader-list] manufacturing flags for burning

TaraPrakash taraprakash at gmail.com
Wed May 26 20:03:47 IST 2010


A lot of people in US are mad at face book about their privacy policy. Wish 
they had some flags to burn to. More demands for flags, even for burning, is 
good for business, probably they will employ some more people.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Yousuf" <ysaeed7 at yahoo.com>
To: "sarai list" <reader-list at sarai.net>
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2010 7:46 AM
Subject: [Reader-list] manufacturing flags for burning


> Facebook fuels American flag business in Pak
> AFP, May 26, 2010, 12.23pm IST
>
> KARACHI: In Pakistan a row about Facebook, censorship and religious 
> sacrilege means booming demand for replica American and Israeli flags to 
> go up in flames at protest rallies.
>
> That means one thing for 31-year-old Mamoon ur Rasheed – business – and he 
> is working long into the night to churn out the paraphernalia beloved of 
> Islamic activists taking to the streets.
>
> "I have nothing to do with any political party, but it is really enjoyable 
> when you see your work on TV screens," a laughing Rasheed said.
>
> "I'm busy every day making banners and placards for different religious 
> and political parties, but work gets a boost – especially when 
> international controversy concerning Muslims breaks out," he said.
>
> When a Facebook user decided to organise an "Everyone Draw Mohammed Day" 
> competition to promote "freedom of expression", it sparked a major 
> backlash among Islamic activists in the South Asian country of 170 
> million.
>
> Islam strictly prohibits the depiction of any prophet as blasphemous and 
> the row sparked comparison with protests across the Muslim world over the 
> publication of satirical cartoons of Mohammed in European newspapers in 
> 2006.
>
> Several thousand Pakistanis have taken to the streets at the behest of 
> right-wing religious groups, who turn to Rasheed when they need flags to 
> burn and banners to write.
>
> "Generally, we receive orders for banners for a couple of demonstrations a 
> day, but due to the blasphemous drawings issue, the number of orders for 
> flags and banners has increased by 10 to 12 per day," said Rasheed.
>
> "Flags are made for burning. They symbolise what our clients want to 
> express and we are paid for it, so I'm happy to see our work go up in 
> flames."
>
> Rasheed owns a workshop where he employs four craftsmen to paint flags and 
> write calligraphy, and a small printing press.
>
> "We have received continuous orders for American and Israeli flags. 
> Normally we paint them but when demand surges into the hundreds we print 
> these flags to get them to our clients in time," he said.
>
> In the wake of the Prophet Mohammed controversy, Pakistan blocked hundreds 
> of web pages to limit access to "blasphemous" material, banning access to 
> US-based Facebook and YouTube – the two most popular websites in the 
> country.
>
> A court in the eastern city of Lahore ordered the block on Facebook until 
> at least May 31, when it is scheduled to hear a petition from Islamic 
> lawyers.
>
> Although none of the protests has mobilised the masses, sporadic 
> demonstrators have continued to vent anger in Karachi and other cities.
>
> Rasheed runs his business on times of stress. Different periods mean 
> demand for the flags of India – Pakistan's deepest rival with whom the 
> country has fought three wars – Norway and Sweden, and former colonial 
> ruler Britain.
>
> Four years ago, widespread protests broke out in the conservative Muslim 
> nation over satirical cartoons of Mohammed that were published by a Danish 
> newspaper and then reprinted in other European countries.
>
> Then in 2008, thousands of Pakistani Islamists rallied against an 
> anti-Koran film made by a far-right Dutch lawmaker. Another focal point 
> for anger has been Swedish artist Lars Vilks, who etched a blasphemous 
> caricature.
>
> Whenever elections approach or protests start, wholesalers stock huge 
> quantities of cheap cloth and reap handsome rewards.
>
> "We are getting bigger orders from scores of painters and printers 
> nowadays," cloth merchant Mohammad Siddique said.
>
> "Pakistan is the country of protests and for this Karachi is undoubtedly 
> its capital and our business gets a boost in such circumstances," Siddique 
> said.
>
> Waqar Ahmed, owner of a printing press in Karachi's southern neighbourhood 
> Pakistan Chowk, says orders are flooding in for posters, pamphlets and 
> placards, temporarily overtaking his main business in books and wedding 
> cards.
>
> "I get orders for pamphlets and posters in the event of controversies or 
> elections," Waqar says. May 15, when Palestinians marked Naqba day – the 
> so-called catastrophe of Israel's creation in 1948 – is another landmark.
>
> "I got some orders to print flags of Israel and United States – 100 a 
> piece – during Naqba rallies. We have also sold some American and Swedish 
> flags during the protests against Facebook," Ahmed said.
>
>
>
>
>
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