Reactions to Muhammad cartoons: Abu Ramadan keeps running



[ad_1]

Libyan Abu Ramadan is no longer allowed to preach at the Ar’Rahman mosque in Biel, but is now venting his hatred on Facebook.

Former welfare recipient and Imam Abu Ramadan at a 5-star hotel in Saudi Arabia.

Former welfare recipient and Imam Abu Ramadan at a 5-star hotel in Saudi Arabia.

Photo: Facebook

Anger for French President Emmanuel Macron is great on social media. Muslims around the world are protesting the reactions of the French authorities to recent Islamist terrorist attacks. Angry Muslims focus not on the victims of the attacks, but on the cartoons of the Prophet published by the satirical magazine “Charlie Hebdo” and the recent French crackdown on Islamist organizations and mosques.

Perhaps the best known are the comments made by former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. He said that Muslims have a right to be angry and that millions of French
kill because Macron had linked the attack in Nice on Thursday to Islam.
In the attack on a church, an illegally admitted Tunisian murdered three people, slitting two women. Since then, Twitter has removed the former prime minister’s remarks. But social media cannot keep up with the avalanche of hate speech, many of them in Arabic.

To read this article in its entirety, you need a subscription.

[ad_2]