An American "Hero", armed with a rocket launcher and a machine gun, parachutes into the Middle East and starts picking off Arab men and women. His mission is to wipe off the Muslim race. Once Arabs are knocked off, its the turn of Osama Bin Laden and after that the Prophet Muhammed and finally Allah.
The surging popularity of the game in UK is a source of consternation for Muslims settled there and understandably so. The game has hit a motherlode of covert Islamophobia in Britain and its affect on impressionable young minds is for anthropologists to explore.
Coming on the heals of the xenophobic Danish cartoons associating suicidal violence with the the Prophet Muhammed, who is deeply revered by Muslims the world over, this provocotive and offensive computer game adds to the rising wave of Islamophobia in Europe.
The concept of Muslim Massacre, sadly, is not a cyber fad. Over the last two decades there have been several real-life genocides of Muslim populations. In the early nineties several hundred thousand are estimated to have been killed in the US-led coalition bombing of Iraq; a few years later Serbs in Bosnia again massacred and raped several hundred thousand Muslims; in Gujrat India, a decade ago, rampaging Hindu mobs lynched over two thousand Muslims.
A couple of years ago author John Irving was arrested in Brussels and convited in a Court of Law for making anti-semetic comments. Isn't it time that something be done a la John Irving?
Who is the publisher of the game?
It is a wake up call for Muslims. If they failed to act now, the attacks of this sort would intensify as well as the concept of this game might become a reality, partially if not wholly. Mr Bush had talked of crusade and later termed it a slip of tongue but in fact it was not a slip of tongue rather a calculated thing.