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Finally, US pastor says he won't burn holy Quran
PTI
Last Updated IST
Pastor Terry Jones of the Dove World Outreach Center speaks to the media, Thursday, Sept. 9,2010 telling them that he is not going to burn the Quran on Saturday but there has been some problem with information about the moving of the Mosque in New York and he is going to wait to get further information before making any other decisions now. AP
Pastor Terry Jones of the Dove World Outreach Center speaks to the media, Thursday, Sept. 9,2010 telling them that he is not going to burn the Quran on Saturday but there has been some problem with information about the moving of the Mosque in New York and he is going to wait to get further information before making any other decisions now. AP

Pastor Terry Jones made the announcement that he has decided not to burn Quran during a television programme today, hours after he said he was "rethinking" his earlier plans to call off the proposed act.

"Right now we have plans not to do it (burning of the Quran)," Pastor Jones of Florida, told ABC's "Good Morning America.""We believe that the imam will keep his word. We believe that proposal is still good," he said, referring to a "deal" he has clinched with a Florida imam.

He said the deal was cancelling the burning of Quran in exchange for abandoning plans to put an Islamic community center two blocks from the site of the 9/11 attacks.

However, Imam Muhammad Musri, president of the Islamic Society of Central Florida, said the "deal" exists only in Jones' mind.But, Jones insisted: "He (the imam) gave us the proposal that they would move the mosque from the Ground Zero location."
"The Muslims do not want us to burn the Koran. Americans do not want the mosque near the Ground Zero place. And we made the proposal on the radio, which he heard, that if they were willing to move the mosque from the Ground Zero location, we would be willing to cancel our event. He came back to me with that proposal," he said.

The imam said he does not have any control over the mosque in New York.
He said Jones had "stretched and exaggerated my statements."

"I told him, I'm willing to make contact, as an imam, to the imam in New York ... and ask on his behalf to schedule a meeting. And I told him, I will invite you with me."
The imam said he beileved that "it is the right thing" to move the proposed New York Islamic center from its present location.

The pastor's threat to burn copies of the holy Quran had stirred outrage in Islamic world, with Kings and Presidents of Muslim nations joining hands to condemn his plans and asking US President Barack Obama to intervene to stop it.
Obama, on his part, said, the pastor's move could lead to "recruitment bonanza for al-Qaeda."

In his Eid greetings, Obama said this year's Eid is also an occasion to reflect on the importance of religious tolerance and to recognise the positive role that religious communities of all faiths, including Muslims, have played in American life.
Non-Muslim nations have also condemned the pastor's plans.

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(Published 10 September 2010, 09:34 IST)