Controversial cartoons of the Prophet on the walls of buildings in France in protest of murder of teacher

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Controversial cartoons on the walls of buildings in France

Paris: Demonstrations have been taking place in France since the beheading of a teacher for showing a cartoon of Prophet Muhammad in a class in France. People have been angry since the case. According to reports, controversial cartoons of the Prophet, made by Charlie Hebdo, are being shown on projectors on the walls of several buildings in the French cities of Montpellier and Toulouse to protest the incident.

In fact, during a lecture in France on October 16, Samuel Patty, a 47-year-old teacher, showed a cartoon of Mohammed Sahib to the students in the class, after which a man of Chechen origin killed Patty by cutting his throat.

Controversial cartoons on the walls of buildings in France

The announcement to publish the photos was made on Twitter on Wednesday by Carol Delga, president of the Occitanne region of France. He wrote, “Teacher Samuel Patty will be shown to pay tribute.”

Government and police in action
Earlier, French President Emanuel Macron on Tuesday blamed a domestic Islamist organization “directly” for the beheading of a teacher. Macron had said the organization would be dissolved on Wednesday and the mosque condemning the teacher would also be closed.

Large number of police deployed at various places in the city
After meeting with regional officials working to deal with radical Islamists, Macron said other organizations and individuals were also under surveillance and would be shut down or controlled. Meanwhile, police are continuously conducting raids all over the country. A large number of suspects have also been detained. Large numbers of police have been deployed at various places in the city to deal with any incident.

It is a battle for security, culture, and education
According to a report, French government spokesman Gabriel Atal said that after the teacher’s assassination, an Islamic group named after Palestinian leader Sheikh Yassin has been banned. The banned group is named after Sheikh Yassin, a Palestinian Muslim leader and co-founder of the Hamas movement. Hamas, a terrorist organization active in Palestine, has denied any ties to the French group. Gabriel said it is a battle over security, culture, and education.

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