A simple online flash videogame backed by the right wing Austrian Freedom Party (FPO), launched in advance of regional elections to be held on September 26, depicts the province of Styria as overrun with mosques and tasks players with stopping further
ones from being built.
A Reuters story claims that the Bye Bye Mosque game has already drawn over 60,000 visitors.
Iin addition to criticisms from the local Islamic community, Social Democrats and the Green Party. A local Islamic
leader named Anas Schakfeh called the game tasteless and incomprehensible, adding, This is religious hatred and xenophobia beyond comparison.
As the game ends, a message reads, Styria is full of minarets and mosques. So vote for
Dr. Gerhard Kurzmann (pictured) and the Freedom Party on September 26 so that this doesn't happen.
A right-wing Austrian politician has been cleared of incitement after he created a simple anti-mosque flash game as part of an election campaign.
Freedom Party deputy Gerhard Kurzmann used the game in his failed bid to become governor of the
south-eastern province of Styria last year.
Players of Moschee Ba Ba (Bye-bye, Mosque) had to shoot at Muslims and mosques as they emerged from a rural scene.
The game sparked inevitable criticism from other parties and religious
groups. Judicial authorities forced the Freedom Party to take down the game and Kurzmann was later charged with inciting religious hatred and defaming a religion.
But on Friday a court in Graz cleared Kurzmann. It did not reach the threshold of
incitement and I would also say this was not the intention, Judge Christoph Lichtenberg said, in remarks carried by the national APA news agency.