"The interior ministry, using its powers under the state of emergency and in order to maintain public order, announces that it is outlawing any form of demonstration anywhere in Tunisian territory on Friday," a ministry statement said on Thursday.
"The ministry notes that it has received information suggesting the protests would be exploited for the purpose of committing acts of violence and causing unrest," it added.
Calls for Friday protests were circulating on social networks following the publication by French weekly Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday of cartoons featuring obscene images of the founder of Islam.
The interior ministry called on "all Tunisians and civil society to demonstrate understanding" and "urge (people) not to follow the call" to protest.
The French embassy has announced it will close on Friday and said all French schools in Tunisia would remain shut from Wednesday until Monday morning, as a precautionary measure.
Tunisia's ruling Islamist party responded to the printing of the controversial images by saying Muslims had "the right to protest" against them, as long as they do so peacefully.
"Ennahda backs the right of Muslims to protest and calls on the use of peaceful and civilised means," said Ennahda, which heads Tunisia's governing coalition, while also branding the cartoons "a new attack against the Prophet."
Publication of the cartoons comes against a background of violent protests across the Muslim world, which first erupted early last week over an anti-Islam film made in California and posted on the Internet.
Four people were killed and dozens wounded on Friday during a demonstration by hardline Salafists outside the US embassy in Tunis, with protesters hurling petrol bombs and storming the mission, while police fired live rounds and tear gas.
The security forces have been sharply criticised for their handling of last week's deadly unrest, which saw police overwhelmed by protesters for long periods, despite ample warning and attempts to boost security around the US mission.
Interior Minister Ali Larayedh has recognised that the security forces "stumbled," but insisted they had averted a "catastrophe" and has rejected numerous calls for his resignation over the issue.
In recent weeks, Tunisia has seen a spate of disturbances by Islamist hardliners of the Salafist movement that have escalated in the face of the US-produced movie "Innocence of Muslims."
Tunisia's Islamist-led government is regularly accused by the opposition and NGOs of not doing enough to rein in the extremists.
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John Stuart Mill proved long ago that the benefit of freedom of speech is that it assures the continuing growth and relevance of our most cherished institutions: “The peculiar evil of silencing the expression of an opinion is that it is robbing the human race; posterity as well as the existing generation; those who dissent from the opinion, still more than those who hold it. If the opinion is right, they are deprived of the opportunity of exchanging error for truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a benefit, the clearer perception and livelier impression of truth, produced by its collision with error.”