French Magazine Firebombed Over Muhammad Cartoons Goes For Round Two

LE MONDE, i-TELE (France), RTL (Luxembourg)

Worldcrunch

PARIS - Riot police have been sent to guard the offices of controversial French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, in preparation of their publication of cartoons mocking Islam's Prophet Muhammad Wednesday.

The French weekly yesterday announced it would publish satirical cartoons of the prophet in this week's edition. The cartoon portrays the prophet in a wheelchair pushed by a caricature of a Jewish man. The publication is a response to the continuing violence in the Muslim world over the film the Innocence of Muslims, and a move to promote the freedom of the press.

Charlie Hebdo last year similarly ran an issue that was "guest-edited" by the Prophet Muhammad, dubbed Sharia Hebdo. The publication provoked a scandal in France and the magazine's offices in Paris were subsequently firebombed.

French officials have announced they will close embassies and French schools in 20 countries around the world, fearing the publication will inflame tensions.

French politicians have appealed to the magazine to change direction. Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who is currently in Cairo, has condemned the magazine's publication in a time of such hostility, reports i-Télé. However, Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault has affirmed that freedom of speech is a fundamental principle.

The magazine's editor, who goes by the name Charb, spoke to European-wide radio RTL: "If we start to ask questions now about whether or not we have the right to draw Muhammad, if it's dangerous or not, the next questions is going to be: 'Can we show images of Muslims in the paper?' Then the question after that will be: 'Can we show images of people in the paper?' etc. And then at the end, we won't be representing anything and this form of extremism that is happening around the world will have won."

This week, American weekly news magazine Newsweek also provoked derision over its insensitive coverage of the continuing violence and its sensationalist headline "Muslim Rage," reports Le Monde.

The magazine asked readers to give their opinions, however the move backfired with netizens rather using the hashtag "#MuslimRage" to poke fun. 



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