Mumbai/New Delhi:
Posters of France President Emmanuel Macron – whose defence of cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed and comments describing Islam as “a religion in crisis” have angered several Muslim-majority nations – were spotted pasted on the surface of a road in Mumbai’s Muhammad Ali Road area on Thursday.
Videos of cars and two wheelers driving over the posters and people walking over them have been widely shared online. Other videos shared show irate members of the Muslim community taking out marches to protest against Mr Macron’s comments – with placards that read “Our Prophet Muhammad, Our Honour” – and one man hitting a poster of the French President with slippers.
The posters have triggered a political row in Maharashtra, with the BJP hitting out at the Shiv Sena for “supporting Islam terrorists” and demanding action against those who pasted the posters.
“When France speaks out against Islamic terror then here (in Maharashtra) the government stands behind people supporting fanatic Islam terrorists?” BJP leader Kirit Somaiya told news agency ANI.
Although the posters in Mumbai were swiftly removed by the police, who have deployed additional security at these points. No case, however, has been registered.
Similar protests were registered over the past two days in Madhya Pradesh’s Bhopal, in which a Congress MLA also participated, at the Aligarh Muslim University in Uttar Pradesh and in Punjab’s Ludhiana. The protests in India have also trended online with the hashtag #BoycottFrenchProducts.
These come a day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed solidarity with the victims of the knife attack at a church in the French city of Nice.
PM Modi said: “I strongly condemn the recent terrorist attacks in France, including today’s heinous attack in Nice inside a church” and “India stands with France in the fight against terrorism”.
I strongly condemn the recent terrorist attacks in France, including today’s heinous attack in Nice inside a church. Our deepest and heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims and the people of France. India stands with France in the fight against terrorism.
— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) October 29, 2020
The knife-wielding attacker shouted “Allahu Akbar” and beheaded a woman and killed two other people, according to news agency Reuters. Nice’s mayor, Christian Estrosi, described the attack as terrorism. Mr Macron, on visiting the scene, said: “Very clearly France is under attack”.
Protests against Mr Macron erupted first after he refused to criticise satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo for re-publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad – cartoons originally published in 2015 that led to a terror attack on the magazine’s offices – citing “freedom of expression”.
The French President also described Islam as a “religion in crisis” and, following the public beheading of a Paris teacher – who had shown students in his class the cartoons – said he (the teacher) had been “killed because Islamists want our future“.
Mr Macron has since become the subject of personal attacks, including those by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He was also targeted by Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, who accused his French counterpart of “attacking Islam”.
On Wednesday India strongly condemned the personal attacks against Mr Macron, calling it “a violation of the most basic standards of international discourse”. In a strongly-worded statement the Foreign Ministry also condemned the brutal terrorist attack that killed the teacher.
Caricatures of Mohammed are forbidden by Islam and such actions are regarded as blasphemy – an explosive issue in ultra-conservative Muslim-majority nations where anyone deemed to have committed such acts can face the death penalty.
With input from ANI, PTI, Reuters