syedali73
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It maybe because of the following:As far as freedom of speech is concerned Iranian are well within their rights to draw Holacaust cartoons.
But here is thing Prophet cartoons were drawn by liberal atheists of a French satirical weekly, who are equal opportunity critics.. they make fun of Muslims as well as Jews and Christians.
How does making fun of jews classify as a response to French Charlie hebdo, couldn't they whip up anything against the french?
Avigdor Lieberman urges supporters to distribute copies of Charlie Hebdo
Move by Israeli foreign minister comes after Muslim complaints over book store's planned sale of French satrical magazine featuring caricature of Prophet Mohammed.
By Robert Tait, Jerusalem
6:37PM GMT 25 Jan 2015
Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's combative foreign minister, has urged supporters to distribute copies of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo depicting the Prophet Mohammed after a leading book store cancelled a planned gala sale following complaints by Muslims.
Mr Lieberman, leader of the Yisrael Beiteinu party, called for the move on "free speech" grounds after Steimatsky, Israel's largest book chain, called off the event at its flagship Ramat Gan shop, near Tel Aviv, after Muslim leaders of Israel's Arab community pleaded with Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, to intervene.
The store imported 700 copies of the first edition of Charlie Hebdo produced following the murder of 12 people by French jihadists at the magazine's Paris offices on January 7.
The in-store event originally planned for Monday was replaced by sales on the internet after Masoud Ganaim, an Israeli-Arab MP and a member of Israel's Islamic Movement, wrote to Mr Netanyahu, warning that a high-profle public sale would be a "serious, dangerous, and stupid step" of which "no-one can predict the consequences".
"I hereby appeal to your sense of honor; please personally intervene to prevent Steimatzky from distribution of the magazine and the damaging images of the Prophet Mohammed, lest the Israeli government and Steimatzky be responsible for every consequence," Mr Ganaim wrote.
The Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, consisting of Israeli-Arab parliamentarians and council leaders, also condemned the planned sale as a "provocation".
The edition's front cover features a cartoon depicting the Prophet Mohammed saying "Je suis Charlie" under the headline "all is forgiven".
After Steimatsky shelved the event, Mr Lieberman - who has previously questioned the loyalty of Israel's Arab citizens - accused it of "surrendering to terrorism" and called on his party's supporters to buy thousands of copies of the magazine and distribute them around Israel for free.
"You cannot turn the state of Israel into the Islamic State," he said. "We won't allow radical Islam to terrorize us and turn the State of Israel into a state that submits to threats and hurts freedom of speech. Steimatzky's behaviour is unreasonable and inappropriate. It's surrendering to terrorism."
Steimatsky denied it was bowing to pressure but said in a statement that it was responding to requests from customers that it sell the magazine "in a more convenient place " while also suggesting that it had concerns for its staff's safety.
It added: "We have employees from all sectors and we need to take them into consideration. This isn't surrender to pressure, but rather consumers who want fair access to the issue and employees who are bothered by it."
Avigdor Lieberman urges supporters to distribute copies of Charlie Hebdo - Telegraph