Iran has summoned French charge d’affaires to voice opposition with anti-Islam comments made by President Macron in support of the sacrilege of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) by satirical magazine.
Iran summons French charge d’affaires over Macron’s anti-Islamic remarks raging world Muslims
27 Oct 2020 - 18:14
Iran has summoned French charge d’affaires to voice opposition with anti-Islam comments made by President Macron in support of the sacrilege of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) by satirical magazine.
In the absence of the French ambassador to Tehran, Florent Aydalot was summoned on Monday to Iran’s Foreign Ministry, where he met with the department’s deputy director-general for European Affairs.
During the session, the Iranian official denounced the French officials’ “unacceptable measures,” which have hurt the feelings of millions of Muslims in Europe and the entire world, saying, “Any insult and disrespect to Islam’s Prophet (PBUH) and pure Islamic values by any person —regardless of their position — are strongly condemned and rejected.”
Earlier this month, French history teacher Samuel Paty provoked outrage by showing to his students the blasphemous cartoons of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), published by the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo.
He was murdered outside his school in a Paris suburb on October 16 by an 18-year-old assailant, identified as Chechen Abdullakh Anzorov, who was shot dead by police soon after the killing.
French President Emmanuel Macron characterized the incident as an “Islamist terrorist attack.”
The remarks have triggered anti-France sentiment in the Muslim world, prompting calls for the boycott of French goods and an official apology.
Story Code: 480083