'Muslims have a right to kill the French': Ex-Malaysian PM on recent controversy
Muslims 'have the right to kill millions of French people', Malaysia's former PM says after church terror attack in Nice - as Scott Morrison slams 'abhorrent' comments
- Malaysia's ex-PM Mahathir Mohamad launched an extraordinary outburst after the attack in Nice
- The 95-year-old politician said in a now-removed tweet Muslims have a right 'to kill millions of French people'
- He said freedom of speech does not include 'insulting other people' amid row over cartoons of the Prophet
THE DAILY MAIL
UPDATED: 00:28 GMT, 30 October 2020
Malaysia's former prime minister said that Muslims have the right 'to kill millions of French people', shortly after a knife-wielding Islamist killed three people in a deadly terror attack in Nice. 'The French in the course of their history [have] killed millions of people. Many were Muslims,' he said in a tweet which has since been removed for violating the website's rules.
Mahathir, who has drawn controversy for comments about Jews and LGBT people in the past, went on: 'Muslims have a right to be angry and to kill millions of French people for the massacres of the past.'
The Malaysian politician said that 'by and large', Muslims have not applied the principle of 'eye for an eye': 'Muslims don't. The French shouldn't.
Instead the French should teach their people to respect other people's feelings'.
Mahathir, who served as Malaysian premier twice for a total of 24 years, said that French President Emmanuel Macron was 'very primitive' and 'not showing that he is civilised'.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison slammed Mahathir's remarks, calling them 'absurd and abhorrent' as ge paid tribute to the victims of the terror attack in southern France.
'The only thing that should be said today is to completely condemn those attacks. The only response is to be utterly, utterly devastated,' Mr Morrison told 2GB radio on Friday morning.
France's digital minister demanded that Twitter also ban Mahathir from its platform, with Cedric O saying he told the managing director of the social media giant in France that his account 'must be immediately suspended.'
The former Prime Minister made no direct reference to the attack in a church in Nice, but his comments come amid fury across the Islamic world at President Emmanuel Macron for defending caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed, and on the day that Sunni Muslims mark the Prophet's birthday.
It came during a day of terror for France, in which:
- Vincent Loques, 45, a sacristan of the Notre Dame basilica in the city of Nice, was killed as he prepared for the first Mass of the day after 21-year-old Tunisian migrant Brahim Aoussaoui attacked the church;
- Aoussaoui attacked worshippers in the heart of the Mediterranean resort city with a foot-long blade, slitting the throat of an elderly woman in an apparent beheading attempt;
- A mother in her forties also succumbed to her injuries after seeking refuge in a nearby bar';
- A knifeman shouting 'Allahu Akbar' was shot dead by police in the city of Avignon;
- A security guard at the French consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, was stabbed and wounded;
- A man armed with a knife was arrested in Sartrouville near a church after vowing 'to do as in Nice';
- An Afghan man was arrested in Lyon trying to board a train while armed with a long knife
Malaysia's former PM Mahathir Mohamad, pictured in Kuala Lumpur earlier this month, said that Muslims 'have the right to be angry and to kill millions of French people'
Removed: Twitter took down Mahathir's most provocative post about 'killing millions of French people'
Three people have died - two of whom were beheaded - after a knifeman attacked the Notre Dame basilica in Nice at 9am on Friday, before he was shot and arrested by police
Emmanuel Macron takes part in a video conference on Covid-19 with members of the European Council at the Elysee Palace
Brahim Aoussaoui (left), a 21-year-old Tunisian who arrived in Europe on a migrant boat just last month, attacked worshippers with a 12-inch blade in the Notre Dame basilica in Nice, slitting the throat of an elderly woman near the church's holy water in a beheading attempt. He hacked sacristan Vincent Loques (right), a 54-year-old father-of-two, to death
Scott Morrison said: 'This was the most callous and cowardly and vicious act of barbarism by a terrorist, and should be condemned in the strongest possible way'
Malaysia's ex-PM said: 'The French should teach their people to respect other people's feelings.
'Since you have blamed all Muslims and the Muslims' religion for what was done by one angry person, the Muslims have a right to punish the French.
'The boycott cannot compensate the wrongs committed by the French all these years.'
It also comes two weeks after a schoolteacher, Samuel Paty, was beheaded in Paris for showing cartoons of the Prophet to his class in a lesson on free speech.
The Islamist terrorist who shouted 'Allahu Akbar' as he beheaded a woman and killed two others in an attack on a Catholic church in France yesterday has been pictured.
Brahim Aoussaoui, a 21-year-old Tunisian who arrived in Europe on a migrant boat just last month, attacked worshippers with a 12-inch blade in the Notre Dame basilica in Nice, slitting the throat of an elderly woman near the church's holy water in a beheading attempt.
Emmanuel Macron arrives at the scene of the attack, where he spoke with paramedics and police officers
Police swarmed the area around 9am, running into the church before the attacker was shot and arrested. Mayor Christian Estrosi said the attacker kept shouting Allahu Akbar even after being medicated
The first attack took place at 9am in Nice, before the second attack in Avignon two hours later. Separately, a guard at the French consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, was stabbed
The assailant was shot 14 times by armed police as he screamed 'God is greatest' in Arabic during the attack and 'while under medication' as he was taken to hospital, Nice's Mayor Christian Estrosi said.
Aoussaoui arrived in Nice at around 6.30am via the railway station, where he quickly changed his clothes, Jean-Francois Ricard told journalists yesterday. CCTV then showed him arriving in the church at 8.30am and staying there for nearly half an hour.
The assailant, born in Tunisia in 1999, entered Europe via the Italian island of Lampedusa on September 20 and arrived in Paris on October 9. The travel information came from a document on Aoussaoui from the Italian Red Cross, the state prosecutor said.
Investigators found two unused knives, a Koran and two mobile phones, in addition to a bag with some personal effects. He was unknown to French security services, Mr Ricard told a press conference.
A picture showing Aoussaoui bleeding on the floor and being treated by paramedics after he was shot by armed police outside the basilica was tweeted by the head of the respected SITE organisation.
However, it later transpired the man was part of the far-Right, anti-Islam Identarian Movement, and had made a Nazi Salute. French media initially reported the man shouted 'Allahu Akbar', which turned out to be wrong.
Mr Macron travelled to Nice following the attack and gave a speech shortly after 3pm, as church bells sounded across France to honour the dead. The President said it was 'clear that France that is under attack... because of our values of freedom and our desire not to give in to terror'.
'I say it with lots of clarity again today: we will not give any ground,' he added.
The beheading of teacher Mr Paty prompted President Macron to promise a crackdown on Islamic extremism.
Mr Macron and others have also launched a full-throated defence of freedom of expression and the right to mock religion, in a move which has inflamed tensions in several Muslim countries.
The latest in a long line of violent attacks in France was 'already being celebrated massively across jihadi communities' by late Thursday, according to the SITE Intelligence monitoring group.
Mahathir Mohamad, who lost power in February this year, said freedom of expression does not include 'insulting other people' as fury over satirical cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed sweeps the Islamic world
Police block a cordon near the Notre-Dame de l'Assomption Basilica in Nice after a knifeman killed three people at the church
A person who was wounded during the attack on a basilica in Nice is wheeled into the back of an ambulance
Special forces stand guard near the scene of a reported knife attack at Notre Dame church in Nice
A security officer secures the area after a reported knife attack at Notre Dame church in Nice
Forensic officers wait outside the basilica after two people were killed inside during a terror attack in Nice
Police officers stand guard near Notre Dame church in Nice, southern France, after a terror attack
Katz said that jihadists were celebrating the attackers 'freedom of action' after three violent episodes in the space of a few hours. 'These new attacks comes amid a massive and enduring wave of jihadi media condemning France and its cartoonists,' she said.
A report by SITE said that jihadists were 'overjoyed' by the news from Nice, Avignon and Saudi Arabia.
Extremists linked to both ISIS and al-Qaeda have seized on the beheading of Samuel Paty earlier this month to incite more attacks against France.
Katz said that the 'prospect of co-ordination' between the various attackers seemed 'increasingly plausible', although not confirmed.
The two recent attacks are the latest in a long line of terror attacks in France in recent years, including the Charlie Hebdo massacre in 2015.
French politicians lined up to demand tougher action against Islamist terrorism after the triple murder.
French politicians were taking part in a coronavirus lockdown debate when the news reached them - and held a minute of silence in the chamber (pictured)
Nice's mayor Christian Estrosi said that 'enough is enough... it's time now for France to exonerate itself from the laws of peace in order to definitively wipe out Islamo-fascism from our country'.
One of Mr Macron's party colleagues called for 'total mobilisation' against extremism in what another called a 'war that the Islamists are waging on our nation'.
Mr Macron's prime minister Jean Castex said France's alert level had been raised to its highest 'attack emergency' setting after the violence.
Within hours of the Nice attack, a gunman had been shot dead by police in Paris while a knifeman was arrested for attacking a guard at a French consulate in Saudi Arabia.
Speaking in parliament, where he had earlier been talking about France's new lockdown, Mr Castex said the Nice attack was 'as cowardly as it is barbaric'.
Tunisians take part in a protest against the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in France
Indian Muslims burn posters of Emmanuel Macron during protest against his defence of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
Muslims demonstrators burn posters of Emmanel Macron during a protest in Quetta, Pakistan, on Thursday