PARIS -- France stepped up security at
some of its embassies on Wednesday after a satirical Parisian weekly
published crude caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed. The prime minister
said he would block a demonstration by people angry over a movie
insulting to Islam as the country plunged into a fierce debate about
free speech.
The government defended the right of magazine Charlie Hebdo to publish the cartoons, which played off of the U.S.-produced film The Innocence of Muslims,
and riot police took up positions outside the offices of the magazine,
which was firebombed last year after it released an edition that mocked
radical Islam.
The amateurish movie, which
portrays the prophet as a fraud, a womanizer and a child molester, has
set off violence in seven countries that has killed at least 28 people,
including the U.S. ambassador to Libya.
The
French Foreign Ministry issued a travel warning Wednesday urging French
people in the Muslim world to exercise "the greatest vigilance,"
avoiding all public gatherings and "sensitive buildings" such as those
representing the West or religious sites.
Government authorities and Muslim leaders urged calm in France, which has western Europe's largest Muslim population.
"This
is a disgraceful and hateful, useless and stupid provocation," Dalil
Boubakeur, rector of the Grand Paris Mosque, told The Associated Press.
"We are not like animals of Pavlov to react at each insult."
CFCM,
an umbrella group for French Muslims, issued a statement French Muslims
to "not cede to provocation and ... express their indignation in peace
via legal means."
Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said organizers of a demonstration planned for Saturday against Innocence of Muslims won't receive police authorization.
"There's no reason for us to let a conflict that doesn't concern France come into our country," Ayrault told French radio RTL.
Paris
prosecutors have opened an investigation into an unauthorized protest
last Saturday around the U.S. Embassy that drew about 150 people and led
to scores of arrests.
The tensions surrounding the film are provoking debate in France about the limits of free speech.
The small-circulation weekly Charlie Hebdo
often draws attention for ridiculing sensitivity around the Prophet
Mohammed, and an investigation into the firebombing of its offices last
year is still open. The magazine's website was down Wednesday for
reasons that were unclear.
One of the
cartoonists, who goes by the name of Tignous, defended the drawings in
an interview Wednesday with the AP at the weekly's offices, on the
northeast edge of Paris amid a cluster of housing projects.
"It's just a drawing," he said. "It's not a provocation."
The
prime minister said freedom of expression is guaranteed in France, but
cautioned that it "should be exercised with responsibility and respect."
Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius defended freedom of expression, but warned that Charlie Hebdo could be throwing "oil on the fire" and said it's up to courts to decide whether the magazine went too far.
"Freedom
of expression can be limited by court decisions. If there is a case of
overstepping, it's up to individuals or groups to bring it to the
courts, which will say whether the law ... was respected," he said after
a Cabinet meeting.
Abdallah Zekri, President
of the Paris-Based Anti-Islamophobia Observatory, said his group is
considering filing a lawsuit but no decision has been made. "People want
to create trouble in France," he told AP. "Charlie Hebdo wants to make money on the backs of Muslims."
Fabius said that because of the Charlie Hebdo
caricatures, embassy security was being stepped up in some countries,
and that he had "sent instructions to all countries where this could
pose problems."
On the streets of Paris, public reaction was mixed.
"I'm
not shocked at all. If this shocks people, well too bad for them," said
Sylvain Marseguerra, a 21-year-old student at the Sorbonne. "We are
free to say what we want. We are a country in which freedom prevails and
... if this doesn't enchant some people, well too bad for them."
Khairreddene
Chabbara disagreed. "We are for freedom of expression, but when it
comes to religion it shouldn't hurt the feelings of believers."
Charlie Hebdo
has courted potentially dangerous controversy in the past. Last
November the magazine's front-page, was subtitled "Sharia Hebdo," a
reference to Islamic law, and showed caricatures of radical Muslims. The
newspaper's offices were destroyed in a firebomb attack just hours
before the edition hit newsstands.
In 2006, Charlie Hebdo
printed reprints of caricatures carried by a Danish newspaper in 2005
that stoked anger across the Islamic world. Many European papers
reprinted the drawings in the name of media freedom.
Charlie Hebdo
has also faced legal challenges. The weekly was acquitted in 2008 by a
Paris appeals court of "publicly abusing a group of people because of
their religion" following a complaint by Muslim associations.
The
debate about the limits of free expression spread to neighboring
Germany, where Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Wednesday, "I
call on all those, especially those who rightly invoke the right of
freedom of speech, to also act responsibly. The one who now puts more
oil on the fire on purpose, with obvious effect, is not the greatest
thinker."
Speaking in Berlin, he said the
German Embassy in Sudan, which was attacked last week, remains closed
and security at the country's embassies in other countries has been
beefed up.
Associated Press