Sunday, September 06, 2020

"THE FREEDOM TO BELIEVE INCLUDES THE FREEDOM TO NOT BELIEVE": Macron Condemns 'Islamic Separatism,' Defends Right to Commit Blasphemy

 


PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron criticized Friday what he called “Islamic separatism” in his country and those who seek French citizenship without accepting France’s “right to commit blasphemy.” 
Macron defended satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which published caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that helped inspire two French-born Islamic extremists to mount a deadly January 2015 attack on the paper's newsroom. 
The weekly republished the images this week as the trial began of 14 people over the attacks on Charlie Hebdo and on a kosher supermarket. 
Speaking at a ceremony Friday celebrating France’s democratic history and naturalizing new citizens, the French president said, 
“You don’t choose one part of France. You choose France....The Republic will never allow any separatist adventure.” Freedom in France, Macron said, includes “the freedom to believe or not to believe. But this is inseparable from the freedom of expression up to the right to blasphemy.”

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