This is the first interview with Emmanuel Macron since the outbreak of calls for boycott and anti-French demonstrations in certain Muslim countries.

In a long interview broadcast Saturday, October 31 by the Al-Jazeera channel, Emmanuel Macron said he understood that Muslims could be "shocked" by the cartoons of Mohammed but that they did not justify the violence.

"I understand that we can be shocked by cartoons, but I will never accept that we can justify violence. Our freedoms, our rights, I consider that it is our vocation to protect them", declares the head of the State in an excerpt from this interview broadcast by the television channel which broadcasts in several languages, including Arabic and English, and has a large audience in the countries of the Middle East and the Maghreb.

This is the first interview given by the president since the start of protests in some Muslim countries linked to his statements defending the right to cartoon in the name of freedom of expression, after the beheading two weeks ago of the teacher Samuel Paty who had shown his class these drawings.

Will for appeasement

This interview was for the Head of State an opportunity to "explain his vision in a peaceful manner", indicates his entourage, but also to demonstrate that "his words on the fight against separatism are distorted and those on caricatures often caricatured ". 

It is a question of "countering the untruths, rather than letting them prosper and re-explaining the foundations of the French republican model", specifies this source.

In the interview, Emmanuel Macron underlines in particular, according to Al-Jazeera, that the cartoons were not published by the government, but by free and independent newspapers.

Call for caution

On October 22, during the national tribute to Samuel Paty, Emmanuel Macron declared: "We will defend freedom (...) and we will promote secularism, we will not renounce caricatures, drawings, even if others are retreating ".

This commitment sparked a flood of criticism in many Muslim-majority countries, where calls to boycott French products and to demonstrate have been launched.

On Friday, tens of thousands of people demonstrated again in Bangladesh, Pakistan and, to a lesser extent, the Middle East, Maghreb and Mali.

Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian called on French nationals living abroad to be cautious, saying the threat to French interests was "everywhere".

With AFP

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