AFP/Karachi

Thousands marched yesterday in several Pakistani cities against the publication of offensive cartoons by French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, two days after similar protests were held across southern Asia.
The largest rally was held yesterday in the financial centre of Karachi by Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), Pakistan’s main Islamic party, and according to police estimates it was attended by some 25,000 people.
Protesters shouted slogans including “death to France”, “death to the blasphemers” and “(We are) ready to sacrifice life for Prophet Muhammad”, as anger remains potent over the magazine’s repeated depiction of the prophet.
Karachi has seen the biggest rallies in nationwide demonstrations against the magazine, whose Paris offices were attacked on January 7 by Islamist gunmen, killing 12 people.
Speaking at the protest, JI chief Siraj-ul-Haq demanded Pakistan call a meeting of the Organization of the Islamic Conference and urged the UN “to curb the menace of blasphemy” through changes to international law.
“In Paris hundreds of thousands of people came onto the streets to support Satan’s agents and in response to that hundreds and thousands of people have come out here on the streets for love of the prophet,” Haq said.
Another sizeable demonstration was held yesterday by Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the charitable arm of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group which India accuses of the 2008 attacks on its financial capital Mumbai that claimed 166 lives.
Police estimated that at least 12,000 people attended the JuD rally against Charlie Hebdo in Karachi.
JuD chief Hafiz Mohamed Saeed, who is considered an abettor of Al Qaeda by the UN, asked protesters not only to boycott French products but to refuse to buy all European imports in protest against the magazine.
JI also held an anti-Charlie Hebdo rally in front of the provincial legislature in the eastern city of Lahore - capital of Pakistan’s politically influential and most populous province, Punjab - attended by some 5,000.
A few hundred also turned out for a street protest in the southwestern city of Quetta.
Under Pakistan’s strict blasphemy laws, insulting the Prophet can carry the death penalty, and the country’s prime minister and parliament have strongly condemned the publication of the cartoons.



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