Macron: France fights extremism, but respects Islam
France was the scene of a number of terrorist attacks in the past weeks after cartoons mocking Prophet Muhammad resurfaced in the European state.
Exacerbating the
attacks was the political exploitation of the cartoons, amid growing hate
speech against France and French citizens and calls for boycotting French
goods.
This forced French
President Emmanuel Macron to clarify his point of his in this regard and
address the Islamic world.
Bloody escalation
Events started
taking a violent turn in France after an extremist stabbed two French citizens
on September 25, near the headquarters of the French magazine Charlie Hebdo
which republished the offending cartoons.
The attack coincided
with the trial by a French court of people involved in a 2015 attack on the
magazine, against the background of the cartoons' publication.
Things became even
worse when a history teacher showed his pupils the same cartoons during a class
on free speech.
A Chechen extremist
used the event in slaughtering the teacher on October 16, an event that was
condemned everywhere in the world, including in predominantly Islamic states.
President Macron
defended the freedom to draw cartoons during a mourning ceremony of the
teacher. However, this was interpreted as a challenge against Muslims and an
offence against their prophet.
Turkey used the
ensuing anger in inciting Muslims against France, while Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan made his most cherished sketch, namely this of a world leader
defending the Islamic religion.
This evolved into a
boycott campaign against French goods. Some people even called for substituting
French goods with Turkish ones with the aim of putting pressure on Macron.
Macron at the center
Macron gave an
interview to the Qatari news channel al-Jazeera, in which he said that his
remarks were purposely misinterpreted to serve the interests of some rival
states.
France, he said, has
no problem with religions. The French president added that Muslims practice their
faith in full freedom in France.
My basic massage is
one of peaceful coexistence among all humans, regardless of which religion they
follow, Macron said.



