Thousands in Muslim-majority countries protest blasphemous sketches

 

Thousands in Muslim-majority countries protest blasphemous sketches

Countless protesters at Pakistan pumped in the streets to join anti-France protests on Friday, whilst the French president is determined never to"stop animations" depicting Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) has been agitating the Muslim universe.


Crowds headed by Islamic functions chanted anti-France slogans, increased banner ads and obstructed big roads en route into  Sufi shrine. A large number of individuals stomped on French flags and yelled to its boycott of products.

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More gatherings were expected after on Friday at Pakistan, for example, Islamabad, wherever authorities had been out in effect to stop potential demonstrations beyond the French Embassy. The air was stressed as authorities placed sending containers to obstruct those roadways.


Additional protests are anticipated from the other side of the area, for example in Lebanon as well as the Gaza Strip.


Back in Afghanistan, members of the Hezb-i- Islami place the French flag on fire. Its leader, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, cautioned Macron that should he still does not "restrain, the circumstance will let us enter a third world war and Europe is going to be responsible for it.


The protests appear amid soaring tensions among France and also Muslim-majority states, that rallied earlier this month when a young gentleman beheaded a French school teacher who had blasphemous sketches of Prophet (PBUH).


The pictures, supplied from the publication Charlie Hebdo to symbolise the start of this trial to its mortal 2015 assault, also have awakened the ire of all Muslims around the whole world.


A succession of strikes that French governments have imputed to Muslim extremism ensued. On Thursday, a knife-wielding Tunisian male transporting out a duplicate of this Holy Quran murdered about three people in a church from the southern metropolis of pleasant.


During the last week, both protests and phone calls for boycott French goods have now propagated fast from Bangladesh into Pakistan into Kuwait.


Social networking marketing was fraught with anti-France Hash-tags. Muslim leaders,'' Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan particularly,  loudly criticised France for what they see as the government’s provocative and anti-Muslim stance.

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