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Charlie Hebdo: Iran condemns "provocation" against Muslims

2020-09-04T09:03:23.881Z


Ridiculing or insulting Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, is punishable by death in Iran.The Islamic Republic of Iran has condemned the republication of the cartoons of Muhammad by the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo , denouncing " a provocation and an insult " against Muslims around the world. " The offensive act of the French publication (...) is a provocation ", indicates a statement from the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, published on the night of Thursday to Friday


The Islamic Republic of Iran has condemned the republication of the cartoons of Muhammad by the French satirical newspaper

Charlie Hebdo

, denouncing "

a provocation and an insult

" against Muslims around the world.

"

The offensive act of the French publication (...) is a provocation

", indicates a statement from the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, published on the night of Thursday to Friday.

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Iran also sees it as "

an insult to Islamic values ​​and to the faith of more than a billion Muslims in the world,

" the statement said.

Ridiculing or insulting Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, is punishable by death in Iran.

The trial of the jihadist attacks against Charlie Hebdo, police officers and a Jewish convenience store in January 2015, opened Wednesday in Paris.

The attacks killed 17 people in three days.

To mark the opening of this trial, Charlie Hebdo brought back the cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, who had made the satirical weekly a target of the jihadists.

Iran condemned the attack

Iran had condemned in January 2015 the attack against

Charlie Hebdo

, judging however that these drawings were an "

insult

" against Muslims and had denounced an "

abuse

" of freedom of expression.

"

Any insult or lack of respect towards the holy prophet of Islam (...) and the other divine prophets [the sacred figures of Judaism and Christianity recognized as prophets by Islam, Editor's note] are absolutely unacceptable

", adds the press release.

The ministry also called for using freedom of expression “

constructively for the peaceful coexistence of humanity

” and “

for better understanding between religions

”.

Iran appears in 173rd place (out of 180 countries) in the latest edition of the world press freedom ranking established by the NGO Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2020-09-04

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