Burned in hours … France’s fire overtakes Google Arabia (video)



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A huge fire yesterday in the port of Le Havre in northern France topped the Arabic search list on Google, coinciding with an expanded electronic campaign against France and the demand to boycott its products, after insulting the prophet of Islam, Muhammad.

The angry activists also shared the news of the fire on social media platforms, as well as video clips, all of which were attached to Bossoum condemning France, after its president, Emmanuel Macron, insisted on publishing cartoons offensive to Islam, such as (#France) Y (#except God’s messenger) Y (Boycott of French products) Y (Macron offends the Prophet), More hashtag (#fire_France).

On Saturday, police and local media said a large fire broke out in an abandoned building in the northern French port city of Le Havre, sending thick clouds of black smoke into the air.

In a statement on Twitter, police said houses had been evacuated in the Le Havre port district. And the Civil Defense published video clips of the scene of the fire.

Radio Tendance Ouest reported on its Twitter account that the fire had started in an old Lipton warehouse.

And local news sites showed smoke rising into the sky from the warehouse, miles away.

Activists on social media also shared images confirming plumes of condensed smoke rising over the building.

Le Havre is located at the mouth of the Seine and is one of the largest port cities in France.

Macron had expressed his insistence on publishing cartoons insulting Islam, “in support of secular values,” as he himself put it. And he stressed in a televised speech that his country would not abandon the satirical cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.

This came in an interview about 47-year-old French teacher Samuel Patty, who was assassinated on October 16 after posting insulting images of the Prophet Muhammad about some of his students at a school northwest of the capital Paris.

The French president said: “We will continue, teacher, we will defend the freedom that you teach, and we will carry high the flag of secularism,” according to Agence France-Presse.

France is recently witnessing a controversy over the statements of a large part of the politicians, directed against Islam and Muslims, after the incident of the murder of a teacher and his beheading.

In recent days, pressure and raids have increased, targeting Islamic civil society organizations in France, due to the incident.

The French magazine “Charlie Hebdo” had published 12 insulting cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, in 2006, which unleashed a wave of anger throughout the Islamic world, which are the same cartoons that Patti presented to her students before her death.



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