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12 Jan, 2015 10:08

German Muslims unite in commemoration of Charlie Hebdo massacre

German Muslims unite in commemoration of Charlie Hebdo massacre

A union of Turkish imams has announced that it will organize demonstrations in front of various media organizations across Germany in solidarity with France after the deadly attack at Charlie Hebdo's office in Paris.

READ MORE: Turkey expects same reaction to Islamophobia as to Charlie Hebdo attacks

The Turkish-Islamic Union for Religious Affairs (DİTİB), alongside other immigrant organizations in Germany recently announced that on January 16 it will hold solidarity protests outside publishing houses and TV studios after Friday prayers, with precise times and locations to be announced later this week.

“We condemn the act in the strongest possible terms, but at the same time urge people not to be intimidated or become divided,” the organization said in a statement.

Several 100 people in front of French Embassy in Berlin/Germany, demonstrating solidarity with #CharlieHebdopic.twitter.com/OMH99N406J

— Sven Röbel (@sven_roebel) January 7, 2015

“We will always support freedom of expression in the press. Everyone should be free to express their views and publish them, without fearing for their lives.”

READ MORE: March for Unity: Over 40 world leaders, 'up to 3mn' rally in Paris against extremism

“The protection of human lives is a fundamental law of Islam,” DİTİB added.

Last Wednesday, the office of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo was attacked. Twelve people were killed, including Editor-in-Chief Stephane Charbonnier and two policemen, and 20 were wounded in the shooting.

READ MORE: Hostage drama northeast of Paris as police reportedly corner shooting suspects

DİTİB went on to say: “Despite the sorrow, grief and rage over this attack, let us take pains to ensure that people of every religion, be it Islam, Christianity, Judaism or any other belief, are not stigmatized after such kinds of beastly terror attacks.”

URGENT: Arson at German paper that reprinted #CharlieHebdo cartoons http://t.co/W9XOe8zbhgpic.twitter.com/3TKIbliLVh

— RT UK (@RTUKnews) January 11, 2015

On Sunday, a German newspaper the Hamburger Morgenpost announced it had suffered an arson attack overnight. Unidentified perpetrators hurled incendiary devices into the building, where the tabloid newspaper that reprinted Charlie Hebdo cartoons is located. Nobody was hurt in the incident.

Charlie Hebdo magazine became a target for attacks after it published a series of controversial Prophet Muhammad cartoons in 2006.

The DİTİB, one of the largest Islamic organizations in Germany, is a federation of 896 Turkish-Islamic mosque associations in the country. It falls within the jurisdiction of Turkey’s Directorate General for Religious Affairs.

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