Chechnya holds huge rally over Charlie Hebdo cartoons

People attend a rally to protest against satirical cartoons of prophet Mohammad, near the Heart of Chechnya mosque in Grozny, Chechnya January 19, 2015.

People attend a rally to protest against satirical cartoons of prophet Mohammad, near the Heart of Chechnya mosque in Grozny, Chechnya January 19, 2015.


Tens of thousands of people rallied Monday at a state-sponsored protest in Russia’s Muslim North Caucasus region of Chechnya against the publication of Prophet Mohammed cartoons in the wake of Islamist attacks in France.

“This is a protest against those who support the publication of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed,” the region’s strongman leader Ramzan Kadyrov told the rally in the capital Grozny.

“This is a protest against those who insult the Muslim religion.”

Demonstrators chanted “Allahu Akbar” (God is Greatest) and released balloons into the sky at the highly-choreographed event, as speakers harangued Western governments for allowing publications to print caricatures of the prophet.

Kadyrov — a loyalist of President Vladimir Putin — on Sunday said that he expected hundreds of thousands of people to attend the meeting and live footage on Russian state television showed demonstrators filling Grozny’s main square.

The protest was the latest to take place in the Muslim world over the latest publication of a Prophet Mohammed cartoon by the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo.

The magazine ran the cartoon a week after an attack on its offices by two Islamists, the first of a spate of attacks that eventually left 17 people dead in and around Paris in three days.

The Paris attacks shocked the country and sparked an outpouring of international support, with many newspapers and magazines around the world reprinting Charlie Hebdo cartoons.

Many Muslims see any depiction of Islam’s prophet as offensive and the publications have sparked sometimes violent rallies in countries from Pakistan to Niger.

Russia’s media watchdog on Friday warned publications that printing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed was against the country’s law and ethical norms.

Media and communications ombudsman Roskomnadzor said that publishing the caricatures could be qualified as “inciting ethnic and religious hatred” and punished under anti-extremism laws.

Although Russia’s leadership extended its condolences to France, and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov participated in a unity march staged in Paris following the attacks, pro-Kremlin commentators and Muslims accused the cartoonists of provoking the attack.

Around 15,000 people rallied Saturday against the drawings in Chechnya’s neighboring region of Ingushetia.


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