A Somali man charged with trying to kill a Dane who caricatured the Prophet Mohammed pleaded not guilty to attempted murder on the first day of his trial Wednesday, insisting he had only aimed to scare the cartoonist.
“I was irritated and frustrated by his comments. I wanted to frighten him but not to kill him,” Mohamed Geele, 29, told a packed court in the central Danish town of Aarhus, speaking calmly in Danish.
The Somali is accused of breaking into 75-year-old Kurt Westergaard’s home on January 1 last year wielding an axe and trying to kill him.
He could face life in prison if found guilty on all counts: attempted terrorism, attempted murder, attacking a police officer and illegal arms possession.
Geele, who Danish intelligence police say is linked to the Somali Islamist movement Al-Shebab, insisted he had “bought the axe to help a friend cut down a tree.”
“But I brought it with me to Aarhus because I was very angry with (Westergaard) and wanted to break down his door to talk with him,” acknowledged the defendant, who appeared calm and collected before the court, wearing a black sweater, jeans and glasses.
Geele, who had an obvious limp from injuries he sustained during his arrest, stressed that he was “a Muslim who follows the precepts of Islam and who prays and goes to the mosque.”
He said that he had wanted the cartoonist to stop “dirtying” the prophet and Muslims like himself.
On the night of January 1, 2010, the Somali “broke down the front door with an axe and destroyed the television set and computer in the living room, screaming in Danish that he was going to kill me because I had offended the Muslim prophet,” Westergaard told AFP on the eve of the trial.
The cartoonist, who was alone at home at the time with the five-year-old daughter of a friend, rushed into a bathroom that had been fortified and transformed into a panic room and called police.
Geele testified Wednesday that “in the beginning I did not want to enter because I heard the voice of a young girl and I didn’t want to traumatise her. I have (four) children myself. But then I decided to do it to scare the cartoonist, so he wouldn’t insult the prophet again.”
When police arrived, Geele came out wielding his axe and a knife. He was shot twice and placed under arrest.
Prosecutor Kristen Dyrman on Wednesday played recordings of Westergaard’s two frightened calls to police that night for the nine jury members.
“He is breaking down the door! It’s very violent. You must come immediately,” the cartoonist screamed, insisting: “You must come now or I won’t survive. He is going to kill me!”
Before Geele took a train and taxi from his home in Copenhagen to Westergaard’s house in Viby, near Aarhus, he had “shaved his entire body and his clothes smelled strongly of perfume,” the prosecutor said, hinting that the man had performed a “ritual” often carried out by those who want to die as martyrs.
Geele rejected that hypothesis, insisting that if “I put on perfume and shave parts of my body, it is for hygenic reasons in line with Islam.”
As for the theory he wanted to “die as a martyr” by allowing himself to be shot dead by police, “it makes no sense. You do not become a martyr like that in Islam,” he said.
Dyrman also said police had found a computer at the Red Cross centre where Geele worked that he had used to conduct research on axes and to locate Westergaard’s home.
The cartoonist has faced numerous death threats since the publication of his drawing of the Prophet Mohammed wearing a turban shaped like a bomb with a lit fuse.
It appeared in the Jyllands-Posten daily on September 30, 2005 along with 11 other cartoons of the Muslim prophet, and sparked angry and even deadly protests across the Islamic world in early 2006.
Westergaard, who is scheduled to testify Thursday, told AFP Tuesday he thought his attacker would receive “a heavy prison sentence.”
“I do not want to excuse his actions, but I would really like to understand how he got to that point. Maybe he was manipulated,” he said.
Geele’s trial is set to last for nine days and the verdict is expected around the first week of February.