Al Qaeda Offers Bounty to Kill Swedish Artist
Al Qaeda in Iraq is now getting into the act over the Swedish roundabout dogs of blasphemy, offering $100,000 to any Muslim who kills artist Lars Vilks—with a $50,000 bonus if Vilks is “slaughtered like a lamb.”
And killing the editor of the newspaper that printed Vilks’ sketches is worth another 50 grand.
CAIRO, Egypt - The leader of al-Qaida in Iraq offered money for the murder of a Swedish cartoonist and his editor who recently produced images deemed insulting to Islam, according to a statement carried by Islamist Web sites Saturday.
In a half hour audio file entitled “They plotted yet God too was plotting,” Abu Omar al-Baghdadi also named the other insurgent groups in Iraq that al-Qaida was fighting and promised new attacks, particularly against the minority Yazidi sect.“We are calling for the assassination of cartoonist Lars Vilks who dared insult our Prophet, peace be upon him, and we announce a reward during this generous month of Ramadan of $100,000 for the one who kills this criminal,” the transcript on the Web site said.
The al-Qaida leader upped the reward for Vilks’ death to $150,000 if he was “slaughtered like a lamb” and offered $50,000 for the killing of the editor of Nerikes Allehanda, the Swedish paper that printed Vilks’ cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad with a dog’s body on Aug. 19. …
Al-Baghdadi added in his message that if the “crusader state of Sweden” didn’t apologize, his organization would also attack major companies.
“We know how to force you to retreat and apologize and if you don’t, wait for us to strike the economy of your giant companies including Ericsson, Scania, Volvo, Ikea, and Electrolux,” he said.
Vilks, who is a typical anti-everything leftist, has received a wakeup call from the RoP.
Vilks said from Sweden he believed the matter of his cartoons had been blown out of proportion.
“We have a real problem here,” Vilks told The Associated Press by telephone. “We can only hope that Muslims in Europe and in the Western world choose to distance themselves from this and support the idea of freedom of expression.”
Advice to Vilks: don’t hold your breath.