Seattle cartoonist in hiding over threat - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 05:23 AM | Calgary | -12.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Seattle cartoonist in hiding over threat

Molly Norris, former cartoonist for Seattle Weekly, has gone into hiding on the advice from the FBI after receiving death threats from an Islamic extremist.

Molly Norris, former cartoonist for Seattle Weekly, has gone into hiding on the advice of the FBI after receiving death threats from an Islamic extremist.

The Washington paper says Norris is in the witness protection program without government funding after being put on Anwar al-Awlakis execution list in July.

The Yemeni-American cleric in Yemen called for Norriss execution in English-language al-Qaeda magazine, Inspire, calling her a "prime target of assassination."

Al-Awlakihas been linked to a Times Square bombing attempt, the Fort Hood massacre and a plot to kill two U.S. soldiers.

"The gifted artist is alive and well, thankfully," Seattle Weekly editor-in-chief MarkFefer wrote Wednesday.

"But on the insistence of top security specialists at the FBI, she is, as they put it, going ghost: moving, changing her name and essentially wiping away her identity."

In April, Norris published a drawing deeming May 20, 2010, "Everybody Draw Muhammad Day,"including drawings of the Islamic prophet as everyday objects. Some Muslims deem illustrations of Muhammad blasphemous.

Thedrawing, which Seattle TV station KIRO 7says was a response to Comedy Central banning of South Parks illustration of Muhammad in a bear suit, inspired a Facebook group of the same name.

This group resulted in many protests and a banning of the social media site in Pakistan.

After the cartoon went viral, Norris went on her website, claiming the drawing and suggested day were not meant to be a criticism of Islam, but a platform for expressing cartoonists right to freedom of expression.

"I apologize to people of Muslim faith and ask that this 'day' be called off," she said on the site, which has also disappeared.