‘Je suis Muslim’: Hundreds rally in Australia over portrayal of Islam, Prophet (PBUH)

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Hundreds of Muslims rallied in Sydney yesterday night to protest against negative media coverage of Islam and French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo’s depictions of Prophet Mohamed (PBUH).

Police said 14 people were told to move on from the rally for breaching the peace. But no one was charged and the event was calm with a huge group of demonstrators praying on the street.

Some of the 800-strong demonstrators in the Lakemba suburb – which has a large population of Lebanese Australians – held up placards with the slogan “Je suis Muslim” (French for “I am Muslim”).

Other protesters held up signs saying ‘insult to one prophet is an insult to all prophets’ and ‘mercy to mankind’.

The slogan was a response to the latest front cover of Charlie Hebdo that depicts a tearful Prophet Mohamed (PBUH) holding a sign saying “Je suis Charlie,” a sentiment expressed around the world in commemoration of 12 people who were shot dead by masked gunmen at the magazine’s offices.

Similar demonstrations have been taking place around the world with one in the Philippines that drew around 1,500 Muslims who burned a mock-up of a Charlie Hebdo cover featuring Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to protest against “Zionist double standards” of the magazine.

The latest edition is the first since the attack on January 7 – in which the perpetrators claimed they were avenging Prophet Mohamed (PBUH) – which was followed by deaths of another five people including four hostages at HyperCacher kosher supermarket in Paris by another gunman in an incident believed to be linked.

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