Tag: Islam

  • Suspects In Charlie Hebdo Massacre Named By French Police

    Suspects In Charlie Hebdo Massacre Named By French Police

    French police have named two brothers as suspects in the attack on the Paris offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, as a manhunt continues.

    They issued photos of Cherif and Said Kouachi, said to be “armed and dangerous”, and arrest warrants. A third suspect has surrendered.

    France is holding a day of mourning for the 12 people killed in the attack.

    A minute’s silence will be observed at midday across the country and the bells of Notre Dame in the capital will toll.

    Security forces carried out a major search operation in the eastern city of Reims overnight but no arrests were made. Police cordoned off a block of flats and forensic teams could be seen inside.

    The country has been placed on the highest terror alert and extra troops have been deployed to guard media offices, places of worship, transport and other sensitive areas.

    Vigils have been held in Paris and in cities across the world in tribute to those killed in Wednesday’s attack. Many carried placards reading “Je suis Charlie” (I am Charlie) in solidarity with the victims.

    Eight journalists – including the magazine’s editor – died along with two policemen, a maintenance worker and a visitor when masked men armed with assault rifles stormed the Charlie Hebdo offices.

    The magazine has angered some Muslims in the past by printing cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. The offices were firebombed in 2011.

    The gunmen were heard shouting “we have avenged the Prophet Muhammad” and “God is Great” in Arabic (“Allahu Akbar”).

    French media, citing police documents, initially named a third suspect as Hamyd Mourad, 18, who later handed himself in to police. Paris prosecutor’s spokeswoman Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre said he had surrendered after hearing his name on the news in connection with the attack.

    Officials then issued photographs of the Kouachi brothers and said arrest warrants had been issued for them.

    Cherif Kouachi was sentenced in 2008 to three years in prison for belonging to a Paris-based group sending jihadist fighters to Iraq.

    France ‘targeted’

    President Francois Hollande said the country’s tradition of free speech had been attacked and called on all French people to stand together.

    In a sombre televised address late on Wednesday he said: “Today the French Republic as a whole was the target.”

    Thursday’s national day of mourning is only the fifth held in France in the past 50 years.

    The attack took place as the magazine was holding its weekly editorial meeting. In addition to the dead, 11 people were wounded, some seriously.

     

    Source: www.bbc.com

  • Charlie Hebdo Has Long Been Targeted By Hardliners For Their Continued Flippant Depiction Of Islam

    Charlie Hebdo Has Long Been Targeted By Hardliners For Their Continued Flippant Depiction Of Islam

    PARIS: The massacre Wednesday (Jan 7) at French weekly Charlie Hebdo took place after years of confrontation between the satirical publication and Islamists infuriated by what they see as its attacks on their religion.

    Its offices were fire-bombed in November 2011 when it published caricatures of the Muslim prophet Mohammed but there were no casualties in that attack.

    Its latest issue’s front page highlighted yet another polemic about Islam, with a focus on controversial French author Michel Houellebecq and his latest book, “Soumission” (“Submission”), which imagines a France in 2022 under Muslim rule.

    The weekly publication, which seeks to provoke, amuse and inform mostly through irreverent cartoons, was under police protection when Wednesday’s assault happened because of the constant threat it was working under. Two policemen were among those killed.

    The weekly started in 1970, taking inspiration for its name from the American comic book character Charlie Brown and with the aim of mocking celebrities, political leaders and religions. It never changed course, even as the threats piled up.

    In 2006, Charlie Hebdo became a major target for Islamists when it reprinted 12 cartoons of Mohammed published by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in a statement for freedom of expression. The cartoons, including one which showed a bomb in place of a turban, prompted violent protests in Muslim countries.

    “There have been constant threats since the Mohammed caricatures were published,” Richard Malka, Charlie Hebdo’s lawyer, told RTL radio after the deadly attack. “We’ve lived under the threats for eight years. There was protection. But there is nothing that could be done against savages who come with Kalashnikovs.”

    Malka, clearly shaken, said it was “madness” to be targeted with violence “simply for making cartoons”. “The newspaper only defended freedom of expression, freedom quite simply… and today journalists, cartoonists – simple cartoonists – paid a heavy price for that.”

    THREATS, HACKS

    In 2008, France’s courts acquitted Charlie Hebdo of a charge of “insulting Muslims” with the Mohammed cartoons, saying the images were “clearly” aimed at extremist Islamists and not the entire Muslim community.

    The 2011 cartoon – for which Charlie Hebdo changed its masthead to “Sharia Hebdo” – depicted Mohammed laughing. The day that edition came out, the paper’s offices were set alight by what the government claimed were “fundamentalist Muslims”.

    The 47-year-old editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo, Stephane “Charb” Charbonnier, also one of its cartoonists, was among those killed. He had been assigned police bodyguards for the past three years. The newspaper lost three other cartoonists in the attack.

    The newspaper’s website was also hacked several times. In 2011, its home screen was replaced with a photo of Mecca with the message “No God but Allah”. In 2012, more caricatures printed by Charlie Hebdo sparked fierce criticism in many Muslim countries, forcing the French government to react. Charlie Hebdo sells 30,000 copies in an average week, and recently appealed for donations to stay afloat.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Attack On Satirical Magazine Charlie Hebdo Leaves 12 Dead

    Attack On Satirical Magazine Charlie Hebdo Leaves 12 Dead

    PARIS: Heavily-armed men shouting “Allahu Akbar” stormed the Paris headquarters of a satirical weekly on Wednesday (Jan 7), killing 12 people in cold blood in the worst attack in France in decades.

    The assault on Charlie Hebdo headquarters in a quiet Paris neighbourhood sparked a massive manhunt as the gunmen managed to escape, executing a wounded police officer as they fled. The men remained on the run in the early evening, with few clues on their whereabouts and parts of the French capital in lockdown.

    French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said security forces were hunting for three gunmen after the noon-time attack on the weekly. French police said they have identified three suspects who were allegedly behind the attack.

    Two of the suspects are believed to be brothers – Said Kouachi and Cherif Kouachi – both in their thirties. The third suspect is named as Hamyd Mourad, who is 18 years old. Reports said the trio are linked to a Yemeni terrorist network.

    Victims included four prominent cartoonists, including the chief editor, who had been holding a morning meeting when the assailants armed with Kalashnikovs burst in and opened fire, officials said.

    President Francois Hollande immediately rushed to the scene of what he called “an act of exceptional barbarism” and “undoubtedly a terrorist attack.”

    Amateur video shot after the bloodbath showed two men masked and dressed head-to-toe in black military style running toward a wounded policeman as he lay on the pavement. The attacker says “you wanted to kill me?” before shooting the officer in the head execution style. The gunmen then climb into their getaway vehicle and drive off.

    Large numbers of police and ambulances rushed to the scene, where shocked residents spilled into the streets. Reporters saw bullet-riddled windows and people being carried out on stretchers. Two police were confirmed among the dead and four people were critically injured.

    The attack took place at a time of heightened fears in France and other European capitals over fallout from the wars in Iraq and Syria, where hundreds of European citizens have gone to fight alongside the radical Islamic State group. In a sign of such tensions, a media group’s office in Madrid was evacuated later in the day after a suspicious package was sent there.

    THESE GUYS WERE SERIOUS

    One man, who witnessed the attack, described a scene like “in a movie.” “I saw them leaving and shooting. They were wearing masks. These guys were serious,” said the man who declined to give his name. “At first I thought it was special forces chasing drug traffickers or something.”

    An employee at a nearby daycare centre said he was walking with children when panic erupted. “People leaned out of the window and yelled at me to get off the pavement,” he said. “We got out of there very fast,” said Jean-Paul Chevalier, 56. “People were  panicking. I heard shooting.”

    Hollande called for “national unity”, adding that “several terrorist attacks had been foiled in recent weeks”. US President Barack Obama condemned the attack, while British Prime Minister David Cameron called it “sickening.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the attack was “despicable” and Russian President Vladimir Putin as well as the Arab League condemned the violence.

    Wednesday’s shooting was the worst attack in France in at least four decades. It revived fears of a return to the dark days of the 1980s and 1990s when France was hit by a wave of extremist violence.

     

    In 1995, a bomb in a commuter train blamed on Algerian extremists exploded at the Saint Michel metro station in Paris, killing eight and wounding 119. Al-Qaeda inspired gunman Mohamed Merah killed seven people in and around the southern city of Toulouse in 2012. His victims included three French soldiers and four Jews – three children and a rabbi.

    DEATH THREATS

    The satirical newspaper attack on Wednesday gained notoriety in February 2006 when it reprinted cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that had originally appeared in Danish daily Jyllands-Posten, causing fury across the Muslim world. Its offices were fire-bombed in November 2011 when it published a cartoon of Mohammed under the title “Sharia Hebdo”.

    Despite being taken to court under anti-racism laws, the weekly continued to publish controversial cartoons of the Muslim prophet. In September 2012, Charlie Hebdo published cartoons of a naked Mohammed as violent protests were taking place in several countries over a low-budget film, titled “Innocence of Muslims”, which was made in the United States and insulted the prophet.

    Wednesday’s attack began with the gunmen first going to the wrong address at 6 rue Nicolas Appert, where the paper’s archives are located. After realising their mistake they moved a few doors down to the weekly’s headquarters.

    Editor-in-chief Stephane Charbonnier, known as Charb and who had lived under police protection after receiving death threats, was among the victims. Others included Jean Cabut, known across France as Cabu; Georges Wolinski; and Bernard Verlhac, better known as Tignous.

    The publication’s website went down after the attack before coming back on line with the single image of the words “I am Charlie” which has been trending worldwide on social media. Thousands of people gathered on the large Republique square in Paris holding up banners of the phrase.

    The attack took place on the day the latest edition of Charlie Hebdo was published, featuring controversial author French Michel Houellebecq, whose latest book “Soumission”, or “Submission,” imagines a France in the near future that is ruled by an Islamic government.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com and www.bbc.com

  • Singapore Firm Launches “HalalTrip” App To Share Halal Culinary Discoveries From Around The World

    Singapore Firm Launches “HalalTrip” App To Share Halal Culinary Discoveries From Around The World

    A Singapore-based company on Wednesday launched a mobile application that enables Muslim foodies and travellers to share halal restaurant discoveries around the world.

    The free “HalalTrip” app, available for Apple iOS and Android devices, enables users to take and upload photos of halal dishes, write comments and share them through social media.

    Clicking on a photo gives details about the dish as well as the location of the restaurant. The app, which has English and Arabic interfaces, also uses a traveller’s location to display photos of halal dishes served in nearby restaurants.

    The term halal is used for food, products and services that comply with Islamic requirements.

    “Halal food is one of the biggest drivers of tourism for the Muslim market,” said Fazal Bahardeen, chief executive of HalalTrip, part of a Muslim-oriented business group called CrescentRating.

    “When travelling, one of the main concerns of Muslims is halal food. What we did is to bring in a social media element into discovering halal food and making it more fun and more intuitive,” he told AFP.

    Fazal predicted the Muslim travel market would be worth $192 billion a year globally by 2020, up from $140 billion in 2013.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Anti-Foreigner And Anti-Islam Sentiments Dividing Germany

    Anti-Foreigner And Anti-Islam Sentiments Dividing Germany

    DRESDEN (Germany) — The fear of foreigners, especially Muslims, threatening or drowning out national and regional identities forged over centuries seems to have a growing pull in Europe, where populists and nationalists scored record gains in elections in May for the European Parliament and where recent protests against immigrants flared up in Germany and Sweden.

    The simmering resentment and suspicion have driven debates across Europe about tighter controls on immigration. Worries about immigration have helped buoy right-wing parties in Britain, Denmark, France and Hungary. German officials recorded more than 70 attacks on mosques from 2012 to 2014, including a case of arson, and the police in Britain have recorded an increase in hate crimes against Muslims.

    Protesters marched in several German cities on Monday against higher levels of immigration and what they see as the growing influence of Islam, in defiance of an appeal from Chancellor Angela Merkel to spurn rallies she views as racist.

    The German rallies, organised by a new grassroots movement known as PEGIDA, or Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West, have become an almost weekly event in the east German city of Dresden in recent months. About 18,000 people, the biggest number so far, turned out in Dresden on Monday, but similar rallies in Berlin and the western city of Cologne were heavily outnumbered by counter-protesters who accuse PEGIDA of fanning racism and intolerance.

    In her New Year address last week, Ms Merkel urged Germans to shun the anti-Muslim protesters, saying their hearts were full of hatred. “We need to … say that right-wing extremism, hostility towards foreigners and anti-Semitism should not be allowed any place in our society,” she said on Monday in the eastern town of Neustrelitz.

    Ms Merkel was joined in her sentiment yesterday when top-selling German tabloid Bild and 50 prominent Germans called for an end to what they see as rising xenophobia. Bild published a “No to PEGIDA” appeal yesterday, covering the front page and a double page spread on pages 2 and 3 with quotes from the 50 politicians and celebrities.

    “(They) are saying ‘no’ to xenophobia and ‘yes’ to diversity and tolerance,” Bild deputy editor Bela Anda wrote in a commentary. “We should not hand over our streets to hollow rallying cries.”

    Elsewhere, hundreds of Swedes gathered last Friday outside the royal palace in Stockholm and in other cities to show solidarity with the Muslim population a day after an unknown assailant threw a bottle filled with flammable liquid at a mosque in the northern city of Uppsala and sprayed racist slogans on the building. The firebomb caused no injuries and did not damage the building.

    But as each day brings more reports of immigrants who have boarded ships and sneaked across European borders, the famous tolerance of the Swedes is being tested as never before.

    Despite a lacklustre economy, Sweden was third behind only Germany and France in the number of people registering for asylum in 2012, said the Migration Policy Institute in Washington. Relative to its population, Sweden received the second-highest share of asylum applications in the European Union after Malta, the institute said.

    Even so, there are few places where the turn against immigrants is more surprising than Sweden, where a solid core of citizens still supports the 65-year-old open-door policy towards immigrants facing hardship that has long earned international respect for the country.

    The Syrian conflict has boosted the number of asylum seekers. Of 81,000 people seeking asylum in Sweden in 2014, roughly half were from Syria, the Swedish Migration Board said.

    Opposition to the rising numbers is growing. The far-right, anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats had their best showing ever, nearly 13 per cent of votes, in elections in September.

    Mr Omar Mustafa, president of the Islamic Association of Sweden, which represents about 40 communities across the country, said the recent fires at mosques were the culmination of a year of rising anti-Islamic attacks, from women having their hijabs, or head coverings, pulled off in the streets to the vandalism of 14 mosques, as well as racist or anti-Muslim vitriol spread through social media.

    “It is a scary development in Swedish society,” Mr Mustafa said in a telephone interview. “It is a big movement that is moving from the Internet to the real world.”

    Germany, too, has some of the world’s most liberal asylum rules, partly due to its Nazi past. The number of asylum seekers arriving in Germany, many from the Middle East, jumped to around 200,000 last year, four times as many as in 2012. In Cologne, home to a large Muslim population, there were 10 times as many counter-demonstrators as PEGIDA protesters. In similarly multi-ethnic Berlin, about 5,000 counter-demonstrators swamped around 400 anti-Muslim protesters, local police said.

    “Germany is a country where refugees are welcome and the silent majority must not remain silent but rather go out onto the streets and show itself,” Justice Minister Heiko Maas said at the Berlin counter-demonstration.

    Cologne Cathedral, one of Germany’s most famous landmarks, switched its lights off to protest against the anti-Muslim rallies. Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate turned off its floodlights in a similar gesture of solidarity.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com