It's not uncommon to come across stories like this. On BBC 3's "Free Speech" on Wednesday the 12th of March, 2014, the question "When will it be ok for me to me muslim AND gay."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-26576673
It was pulled because the show was being recorded in a Birmingham Mosque. The Mosque didn't want to have the question discussed because it had received security threats that they feared would have put their community in danger. The BBC have had to postpone the debate till when they are not filming it inside said Mosque. It isn't that the fact that the Mosque didn't want the topic discussed, I mean, I disagree with it, but what they do in their own place of worship is up to them. The religion pushing down on LGBT people is another debate all together.
The thing that strikes me here is the fear of free speech that the people who threatened the Mosque are. They are using fear of violent retaliation to make people say and do what they want. Which is very wrong. If we have to let you get on with it, you have to let us do the same.
This isn't a new debate, especially in the Muslim world. They have countlessly threatened people when they propose showing pictures of Muhammed. Famously there was the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoon controversy. It was an educational cartoon for a publication, which was met with very violent protest all over the world, just for an artists interpretation.
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