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Afghan Taliban condemn Prophet cartoons, hail Paris gunmen

Afghan Taliban said that the gunmen who killed the magazine staff on January 7 were "bringing the perpetrators of the obscene act to justice"

Mourners hold signs that translate as "I am Charlie" during a rally in support of Charlie Hebdo

PTIAFP Kabul
The Afghan Taliban today condemned the publication in France of further cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, and lauded last week's deadly Islamist attack on the Charlie Hebdo magazine office in Paris.

A English statement from the group said they "strongly condemn this repugnant and inhumane action and consider its perpetrators, those who allowed it and its supporters (to be) the enemies of humanity".

It added the gunmen who killed the magazine staff on January 7 were "bringing the perpetrators of the obscene act to justice".

French President Francois Hollande yesterday declared Charlie Hebdo was "alive and will live on" after its new edition sold out in record time, as Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the attack.
 
The Taliban, which ran a hardline Islamic government in Afghanistan from 1996-2001, said world leaders should prevent such cartoons from being released.

They said publication must be stopped to prevent "further harming world peace", adding that to do otherwise would mean "the beliefs and sacrosanctity of over a billion people is desecrated and the world is pushed further into the fire of hatred and war".

A few hundred people demonstrated last week in the central Afghan province of Uruzgan, praising the gunmen and criticising President Ashraf Ghani's condemnation of the attack in Paris.

Previous insults to Islam have sparked violents protests in the ultra-conservative Muslim country.

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First Published: Jan 15 2015 | 1:25 PM IST

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