The president of a London university atheist society has resigned over a row about an image of the Prophet Muhammad.
The society at University College London (UCL) published an
image on its Facebook page showing "Jesus and Mo" having a drink at a
bar.
A student Muslim group mounted a petition asking for its removal and the UCL Union also said it should go.
The atheist group has closed a counter-petition defending its "freedom of expression" but has not removed it.
UCL's Atheist, Secularist and Humanist society, said its
president, Robbie Yellon, was stepping down to be replaced by former
vice president Michael Thor.
"Robbie stepped aside because he signed up as president to organize events and run a student society," said Michael Paynter,
secretary for the National Federation of Atheist, Humanist and Secular
Student Societies.
"He did not appreciate the stress he would be under when
dealing with a controversy like this, so he wanted to make way for
someone else."
'No need'
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association is continuing with its protest against the image, saying it has wider implications.
Adam Walker, the association's national spokesperson, said
the two student groups had worked well together in the past and said the offense was unnecessary.
"The principle
is more important than who is being attacked - this time it is Muslims
and Christians but in the future it could be atheists themselves.
"There is no need to print these things other than to cause offense and history has told us that these things cause offense."
He added: "I wouldn't say we're specifically pursuing UCL atheist society, it's more about the broader principle."
The image that started the controversy was taken from an online satirical comic called Jesus and Mo.
The twice-weekly comic strip, running since 2005, depicts
Jesus and what creators say is a "body double" of the Prophet Muhammad
talking to a barmaid.
The row has prompted debate on the internet with prominent academic and author Richard Dawkins backing the atheist society.
UCL Union (UCLU) said in a statement: "The atheist society
has agreed they will take more consideration when drawing up publicity
for future events.
"The society was asked to remove the image because UCLU aims
to foster good relations between different groups of students and create
a safe environment where all students can benefit from societies
regardless of their religious or other beliefs."
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