By IINA,
Riyadh : European Union has no plan to propose or enact any new law to put an end to cartoons or documentaries considered blasphemous by one billion Muslims across the world, said European Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner. “We will certainly not propose a law, because we have a lot of laws on the issue,” she told a press conference at the end of a two-day visit to Saudi Arabia here yesterday. Ferrero-Waldner said freedom of expression and freedom of press were two basic human rights in the 27-member EU.
In EU countries every individual has the right of expression, but at the same time every other citizen, who is not in agreement with what has been expressed, can rebut by expressing his/her opinion, she said. However, respecting freedom of expression did not mean that one should involve in things insensitive to others, Ferrero-Waldner said. “I think you can say things with sensitivity and then there should not be any problem between two communities,” she said, referring to the release of the film Fitna by Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders and printing of blasphemous Prophet’s cartoons by Danish and other newspapers in EU countries. However, she clarified the Dutch government’s position and what it thought about that “stupid film.” The Dutch government said the film was an individual’s opinion and did not represent the government or its people, she said.