Secretary General of the organisation Iyad Madani while speaking to reporters in Riyadh said that freedom of speech has its limits and must not offend others.
Madani added the caricatures from the “survivor issue” of the magazine have hurt the sentiments of Muslims across the world.
Following an attack on the magazine on January 12, Charlie Hebdo published a caricature of the Prophet Mohammad (pbuh) on its cover for its “survivor issue.”
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According to The Independent, the former culture minister told a Saudi newspaper, “OIC is studying Europe and French laws and other available procedures to be able to take legal action against Charlie Hebdo.”
“If French laws allow us to take legal procedures against Charlie Hebdo, OIC will not hesitate to prosecute the French magazine.”
On his personal Twitter feed, Madani added: “These cartoons have hurt the sentiments of Muslims across the world.”
إعادة نشر الصحيفة الفرنسية "تشارلي إيبدو" الصور المسيئة للرسول عليه الصلاة والسلام، حماقة وصلافة وجهل؛ ويستدعي مقاضاتها فرنسيا وأوروبيا.
— Iyad Amin Madani (@IyadMadani) January 16, 2015
“Freedom of speech must not become a hate speech and must not offend others. No sane person, irrespective of doctrine, religion or faith, accepts his beliefs being ridiculed,” he said.
The OIC has 57 member states across North Africa and the Middle East, among others, as well as permanent delegations to the United Nations and the European Union. Madani was nominated to be its secretary general by Saudi Arabia, and elected at the end of 2013.
Madani’s comments come as seething anger fuelled by the publication of blasphemous cartoons by Charlie Hebdo sweep across the Muslim world.
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In Niger, police fired tear gas on an opposition protest held in defiance of a ban declared by the government in the aftermath of anti-Charlie Hebdo protests.
Protesters against the Charlie Hebdo cartoons have set churches on fire, attacked bars and police stations and killed 10 people across the capital Niamey.
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In Gaza, vandals sprayed graffiti on the walls of the French Cultural Centre. “You will go to hell, French journalists,” read one of the slogans daubed on the walls of the cultural centre compound, which has been closed since it was damaged in a fire last October.
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While, in Karachi clashes erupted when the police stopped the protesters belonging to the student wing of politico-religious Jamaat-e-Islami from marching towards the French Consulate. Over a dozen people – including AFP photojournalist Asif Hassan and four policemen – were wounded in the scuffle that lasted for more than an hour.
While, Kenyan and South African papers apologised for running Charlie Hebdo cover.
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COMMENTS (7)
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Hypocrites.
Bad idea. The court will deny the lawsuit after which will be another round of church burnings and deaths.
Great idea! Now non-Muslims know whom to sue when they are victims of hate crimes and terrorism.
That is fine. You have the right to sue but at the same time you should have declared that no one has the right to take another's life in the name of blasphemy.
If oic would have taken solid steps earlier to stop this notorious act people wouldn't have to show their anger like this .people want to be heard they want the world to know that they hate these blasphemous caricatures they want their governments and world muslim leaders to deal with this notorious act firmly and strongly but when they see weak and lame attitude of their governments they become aggressive.
This is the way civilized people deal with provocation. Not murder people!
This is a good step and should be followed with great ardour by the muslim countries. This is a much better response than damaging the properties of the innocent.