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Why don’t they
honour the British historian David Irving? The
queen did not honour him because she cannot
rebel against the Jews, who are her
masters.

Pakistan
Daily Times


[Zawahiri]Al
Qaeda threatens ‘response’ to Rushdie’s knighthood

DUBAI: Al Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri said on
Tuesday the group was preparing a “precise response” to Britain’s decision to knight author
Salman Rushdie.

“I say to Queen Elizabeth and Tony
Blair
that your message has reached us and we are in the process of preparing for you a precise response,” Zawahiri said in an audio recording posted on an Internet website often used by Islamic militants.

The queen had knighted Rushdie last month in her birthday honours list, prompting condemnation from a number of Muslim countries and organisations. The author is accused by some Muslims of blaspheming
Islam in his novel “The Satanic Verses”, which triggered an international outcry when it was first published in 1988.

The Indian-born Rushdie, 59, was forced to go into hiding for a decade after erstwhile Iranian supreme leader Aytatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
issued a death sentence over the book in 1989.

Khomeini’s successor, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei,
said in January 2005 that he still believed the British novelist was an apostate whose killing would be authorised by Islam.

Following Rushdie’s knighting, Iran said the death sentence still stood. “The stance of the
Islamic Republic of Iran on this issue has not changed from what was put forward by Imam
Khomeini,” foreign ministry spokesman Muhammad
Ali Hosseini
said.

In the audio message billed “Malicious Britain and its Indian Slaves”, Zawahiri said Britain was hypocritical for giving Rushdie the knighthood under the banner of freedom of speech. He said the least Muslims could do was to boycott Britain to protest Rushdie’s knighthood.

“Why don’t they honour
the British historian David Irving? The
queen did not honour him because she cannot
rebel against the Jews, who are her masters,” he
said.

Irving had spent
13 months in jail in Austria
following a conviction there for Holocaust denial. Zawahiri also warned Britain’s new prime minister, Gordon
Brown
, to alter his state’s foreign policy.

“The policy of your predecessor Tony Blair has brought tragedy and defeat upon you not only in
Afghanistan and Iraq, but also in the centre of
London. If you did not learn the lesson, we are prepared to repeat, God willing, until you have understood,” he said.

Zawahiri also praised an attack last month on UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon in which six soldiers were killed. “This operation came as a response against the invading Crusader forces who were occupying a beloved part of the land of
Islam,” he said.

Zawahiri also urged Hamas in the Palestininan territories to wage holy war against Israel and called on Muslims in Pakistan to resist their
“corrupt” president, General Pervez
Musharraf
, by offering moral and financial support to militants in neighbouring
Afghanistan.

“An Islamic emirate in Afghanistan is the hope for real change in the region and hopefully the final blow to the Crusaders in South Asia,” he said. It was not immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the tape.

On Monday, a British court found four men guilty over a failed Islamist plot to set off bombs in
London two weeks after the 2005 bombing. At the end of June, just two days after Brown took over from
Blair, two car bombs were discovered in central
London. In Scotland a flaming Jeep Cherokee slammed into Glasgow airport’s main terminal the following day.

On Sunday, Britain’s new Security and
Counter-Terrorism Minister Sir Alan West had said that Britain was facing a 15-year battle against Islamist extremism. West told the Sunday
Telegraph
that Britain was facing its greatest threat yet.

“This is not a quick thing. I believe it will take 10 to 15 years. But I think it can be done as long as we as a nation apply ourselves to it and it’s done across the board,” he said.

His comments came as Brown called on countries to cooperate more in sharing information on potential terror suspects. agencies.

Source Information
Original Publication: 2007-07-11
Digital Archive: Focal Point Publications
Accessed: June 3, 2026