Muslim backlash against Macron gathers pace after police raids
The backlash against Emmanuel Macron following his
insistence that publication of caricatures of the prophet Muhammad is
fundamental to freedom of speech has spread, with angry international protests,
cyber-attacks against French websites and warnings that the president’s response
is “unwise”.
Muslims in France – and elsewhere – are also furious
at what they claim is a heavy-handed government clampdown on their communities
in the wake of the killing 11 days ago of the high school teacher Samuel Paty.
The French interior minister, , who has overseen
raids on Islamic organisations and individuals in the last week, and even
criticised supermarkets over their separate halal and kosher sections, defended
the police actions, insisting France was seeking to stamp out extremism.
“We are
seeking to fight an ideology, not a religion. I think the great majority of
French Muslims are well aware they are the first affected by the ideological
drift of radical Islam,” Darmanin told Libération.
In the latest fallout from Macron’s declaration that
France would not “renounce the caricatures”, Iran summoned a French diplomat to
inform them Paris’s response to the killing was “unwise”.
A report on state TV claimed an official from the
Iranian foreign ministry in Tehran had accused France of fostering hatred
against Islam under the guise of freedom of expression.
A powerful association of clerics in the Iranian
city of Qom also urged the country’s government to condemn Macron’s remarks and
called on Islamic nations to impose political and economic sanctions on France.
One hardline Iranian newspaper depicted the French president as the devil,
portraying him as Satan in a cartoon on its front page.
In Saudi Arabia, the country’s state run press
agency quoted an anonymous foreign ministry official saying the kingdom
“rejects any attempt to link Islam and terrorism, and denounces the offensive
cartoons of the prophet”.
In Bangladesh, an estimated 40,000 people took part
in an anti-France rally in the capital, Dhaka, burning an effigy of Macron and
calling for a boycott of French products. The rally was organised by Islami
Andolan Bangladesh (IAB), one of the country’s largest Islamist parties. There
were also calls for the Bangladeshi government to order the French ambassador
back to Paris and threats to tear down the French embassy building.
In France, Macron’s centrist government is facing
criticism over its response to Paty’s killing by Abdoullakh Anzorov, 18, a
Chechen national living in France since the age of six, after the teacher
showed one of his high school classes a series of caricatures, including one of
the prophet Muhammad, during a lesson on free speech.
After his death, French police raided dozens of
suspected Islamist groups and individuals accused of extremism. Darmanin said
the raids, authorised by a judge, were aimed at “sending a message” and told
Libération the searches had uncovered “weapons and videos of decapitations”.
Darmanin has also announced his intention to
dissolve high-profile Muslim organisations, including the Collective for the
Fight Against Islamophobia in France (CCIF) and BarakaCity, a humanitarian
organisation that has carried out projects in Togo, south-east Asia and
Pakistan.
Darmanin said the CCIF was implicated in the murder
of Paty as a video posted on Facebook implicated it in what he described as a
“fatwa” against the history teacher.
“It is an Islamist outfit that does not condemn the
attacks … that has invited radical islamists. It is an agency against the
republic. It considers there is a state Islamophobia all the while being
subsidised (financially) by the French state. And I think it’s time we stopped
being naive with these outfits on our territory,” he told Libération.
The minister also defended his criticism of
supermarkets that operated special sections for halal or kosher food, saying it
led to “communitarianism” and “separation” and declared that the “harassment” of
radical Islamism was a “national priority”.
In the wake of Paty’s killing, police sources told
French media the authorities were ready to deport 213 foreign nationals on a
government watchlist as holding alleged extreme religious beliefs.
There have been calls from several Islamic countries
to boycott French goods and protests across the Islamic world, including in
Kuwait, Qatar, Iraq, Turkey, the UAE and Gaza.
On Tuesday, Le Figaro reported Islamic hackers had
taken over a number of French websites, leaving the message: “Those who
mistreat the messenger of Allah must be punished.” Certain groups have called
for an “apocalypse” to be brought down on the French web and appealed for other
hackers to target French websites. Similar attacks, described by French
officials as a “cyberjihad”, happened after the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attack, in
which 12 people were killed by Islamist terrorists.
The Muslim advocacy group Cage, a London-based NGO,
called on the French government to “end its campaign of hostility towards those
carrying out their duties lawfully”.
“The interior minister made the shocking public
admission that dozens of individuals not linked to any criminal investigation
were raided in order to simply send a message to Muslims in France. This
extraordinary claim highlights that the police and other arms of government
have been politicised to intimidate otherwise innocent Muslim citizens,” it
wrote in an open letter.



