Anonymous
Post 01/26/2015 15:17     Subject: Protests against the new Charlie Hebdo issue cover are starting-how long until rioting?

So in other words, no riots? I thought we were promised riots.
Anonymous
Post 01/26/2015 11:48     Subject: Protests against the new Charlie Hebdo issue cover are starting-how long until rioting?

Tens of thousands of Muslims took to the streets in Pakistan in anger at the Prophet Mohammed cartoons published by French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

The largest rally was held in Karachi, where 25,000 people shouted slogans including 'death to France', 'death to the blasphemers' and '(We are) ready to sacrifice life for Prophet Mohammed'.

Anger remains potent over the repeated depiction of the Muslim prophet in the satirical magazine, whose Paris offices were attacked on January 7 by Islamist gunmen, killing 12 people.

Charlie Hebdo this month published a 'survivors' issue with an image of the Prophet Mohammed weeping on the cover, triggering a wave of angry condemnation and protest in Muslim-majority countries across the world.

Speaking at the Karachi protest, the chief of Jamaat-e-Islami, Pakistan's main Islamic Party, demanded Pakistan call a meeting of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, a group of Muslim countries. He urged the United Nations 'to curb the menace of blasphemy' through changes to international law.

'In Paris hundreds of thousands of people came onto the streets to support Satan's agents and in response to that hundreds and thousands of people have come out here on the streets for love of the prophet,' Siraj-ul-Haq said.

Another sizeable demonstration was held Sunday by Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), the charitable arm of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group which India accuses of the 2008 attacks on Mumbai that claimed 166 lives.

Police estimated that at least 12,000 people attended the JuD rally against Charlie Hebdo in Karachi.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2925796/Thousands-march-cities-Parkistan-protest-against-Charlie-Hebdo-publishing-cartoons-Prophet-Mohammed.html

I particularly like the sign that says "stop terrorism against Islam", as if cartoons equate to terrorism.