Boycotts of French goods launched in Kuwait, Qatar over prophet cartoons

Supermarkets in Kuwait, Qatar and elsewhere in the Muslim world are pulling French products off their shelves to protest recent comments made by French President Emmanuel Macron over controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.

Kuwait’s nongovernmental Union of Consumer Co-operative Societies has reportedly yanked a number of items made in France. Reuters visited several co-ops Sunday and found the shelves cleared of French beauty and hair products as well as other French goods.

Union head Fahd Al-Kishti told the news agency the move was “taken independently of the Kuwait government” and was prompted by “repeated insults” to the Prophet Muhammad.

Earlier this month, an 18-year-old Chechen refugee beheaded a schoolteacher near Paris who had shown his classroom the cartoons of the prophet during a lesson on freedom of expression. Muslims consider depictions of the founder of Islam to be blasphemous.

The debate over freedom of expression in France was kindled last month after satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo republished the same cartoons of the prophet that triggered a deadly terrorist attack on its offices in 2015.

Speaking at a memorial service for the teacher, Macron said last week that Samuel Paty was killed “because Islamists want our future.”

“We will not disavow the cartoons, the drawings, even if others recoil,” Macron said, highlighting the country’s long tradition of secularism.

The French leader’s comments sparked calls for boycotts in Muslim-majority countries.

“I am calling to all my citizens from here to never help French brands or buy them,” Turkish President Recept Tayyip Erdogan said during a speech on Monday. “European leaders must say ‘stop’ to Macron and his campaign of hatred.”

Last week, Erdogan suggested his French counterpart needed mental health treatment. The “unacceptable” comments prompted France to recall its Turkish ambassador.

The six-member Gulf Cooperation Council called Macron’s comments “irresponsible,” and a spokesperson for Jordan’s foreign minister said they risked fueling further extremism.

On Friday, Qatar’s Al Meera supermarket chain announced that it would begin removing French products from stores, and Qatar University announced it would postpone its French cultural week.

In a statement on Sunday, the French Foreign Ministry called on world leaders to distance themselves from the boycotts and instead do their part to promote French businesses.

“These calls for boycott are baseless and should stop immediately, as well as all attacks against our country, which are being pushed by a radical minority,” the statement read.

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