
Journalists at satirical magazine in Turkey arrested over Prophet Muhammad cartoon
The cartoon, published in the LeMan weekly magazine, depicts a Muslim and a Jewish figure – both illustrated with wings and halos – shaking hands as bombs rain down below them.
Four days after its release, the image went viral on social media, sparking outrage. Hundreds of protesters marched down Istanbul's main tourist avenue, chanting 'Allahu Akbar'. Turkish officials swiftly denounced the magazine after Istanbul's chief prosecutor announced the arrest of the magazine editors and the cartoonist on the grounds that it had published a cartoon that 'publicly insulted religious values'.
Turkey 's interior minister Ali Yerlikaya called the cartoon a provocation and said those 'who dare to do this will be held accountable before the law'. Mr Yerlikaya asserted that the cartoon did not fall under the protections of freedom of expression or speech.
According to Mr Yerlikaya, Turkish police arrested the cartoonist as well as LeMan's graphic designer. Media reports also stated that arrest warrants had been issued for LeMan's editor-in-chief and its managing editor, both of whom were named in the investigation.
Fahrettin Altun, the Turkish presidency's communications chief, condemned it as a 'vile attack on our beliefs and values'.
Meanwhile, the justice ministry announced a formal investigation under Article 216 of the Turkish Penal Code, which covers the offence of 'publicly insulting religious values'.
Yilmaz Tunc, the justice minister, said: 'No freedom grants the right to make the sacred values of a belief a subject of humour in an ugly way.'
LeMan, the weekly Turkish political satire magazine, released a statement after the backlash. 'This cartoon is not a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh). In the work, the name Mohammed is fictionalised as belonging to a Muslim person killed in Israel's bombardments. There are more than 200 million people named Mohammed in the Islamic world. The work does not refer to the Prophet Mohammed in any way,' the magazine's editor-in-chief, Tuncay Akgun, said.
'By highlighting a murdered Muslim, the aim was to highlight the righteousness of the oppressed Muslim people, with no intention whatsoever of belittling religious values. We reject the stigma imposed on us, as there is no depiction of our Prophet,' LeMan said.
'To interpret the cartoon in such a way requires extreme malice,' the magazine added, but also offered an apology to any readers who may have been offended.
Istanbul governor Davut Gul confirmed that all four individuals sought in connection with the cartoon are now in police custody. While he did not specify whether any protesters had been detained, Mr Gul noted in a statement that 'it has been determined that some individuals mingling among the protesters have engaged in provocative actions'.
He urged protestors to disperse peacefully to protect public safety and prevent further unrest. However, several groups have since called for further demonstrations against the magazine on Tuesday.
Mr Gul earlier also lashed out at 'this mentality that seeks to provoke society by attacking our sacred values'.
'We will not remain silent in the face of any vile act targeting our nation's faith,' he said.
As protests intensified, Turkey's interior ministry shared footage of the cartoonist being detained at home, barefoot and in handcuffs, with captions warning they couldn't evade justice.
Outside LeMan 's offices in central Istanbul, demonstrators kicked down doors and chanted threats, with one declaring, 'For our Prophet, we would give our lives and take lives; no one can insult our Prophet'.
On social media, the incident drew comparisons to the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris, when two gunmen stormed the offices of the French satirical magazine and killed 12 people. The attackers sought to avenge the Prophet Mohammad nearly a decade after the atheist and frequently provocative weekly published cartoons mocking the Prophet.
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The Guardian
38 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Turkish police arrest cartoonists over drawing ‘showing prophet Muhammad'
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has condemned a cartoon in a satirical magazine as a 'vile provocation' for appearing to depict the prophets Muhammad and Moses, amplifying an outcry by religious conservatives. The cartoon, published a few days after the end of a 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran, appears to show Muhammad, Islam's chief prophet, and Moses, one of Judaism's most important prophets, shaking hands in the sky while missiles fly below in a wartime scene. Four cartoonists were arrested on Monday over the illustration. It was criticised by religious conservatives and by Erdoğan's ruling party, which called it an 'Islamophobic hate crime,' even as the magazine that published it, LeMan, apologised to readers who felt offended and said the drawing had been misunderstood. 'We will not allow anyone to speak against our sacred values,' Erdoğan said in televised remarks, adding that the authorities would closely follow the legal process. 'Those who show disrespect to our prophet and other prophets will be held accountable before the law,' he said. Erdoğan and his Islamic-rooted AK Party regularly criticise what they call Islamophobic acts in broadly secular Turkey and across Europe. Devout Muslims regard depictions of the prophet Muhammad as blasphemous. In a statement on X, LeMan said: 'The work does not refer to the Prophet Muhammad in any way.' The cartoonist, Dogan Pehlevan, had sought to highlight 'the suffering of a Muslim man killed in Israeli attacks', it said, adding there had been no intent to insult Islam or its prophet. The magazine urged authorities to counter what it called a smear campaign, and to protect freedom of expression. Several civil society groups condemned the detentions of the four cartoonists as a violation of freedom of thought and expression. Turkey's freedom of expression ranking is low, due to restrictions on media and public discourse. Reporters Without Borders ranked it 158th out of 180 countries in its 2024 Press Freedom Index. More than 200 people rallied against LeMan in central Istanbul on Tuesday, despite a ban on gatherings and a heavy police presence. One protester, public servant Muhammed Emin Necipsoy, said the magazine's defence seemed insincere. 'There is a subtle emphasis there on both the prophet [Muhammad] and the prophet Moses,' he said. Turkey's interior minister, Ali Yerlikaya, shared a video on X showing police officers detaining Pehlevan, with his hands cuffed behind his back as he was dragged up a flight of stairs. He also shared videos of three other men being removed from their homes and put into vans, one of them barefoot. 'The individual who drew this vile image, D.P., has been apprehended and taken into custody. These shameless people will be held accountable before the law,' Yerlikaya wrote. The Turkish government said an inquiry had been launched under a law that criminalises incitement to hatred and enmity.


The Guardian
13 hours ago
- The Guardian
Turkish police arrest cartoonists over drawing ‘showing prophet Muhammad'
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has condemned a cartoon in a satirical magazine as a 'vile provocation' for appearing to depict the prophets Muhammad and Moses, amplifying an outcry by religious conservatives. The cartoon, published a few days after the end of a 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran, appears to show Muhammad, Islam's chief prophet, and Moses, one of Judaism's most important prophets, shaking hands in the sky while missiles fly below in a wartime scene. Four cartoonists were arrested on Monday over the illustration. It was criticised by religious conservatives and by Erdoğan's ruling party, which called it an 'Islamophobic hate crime,' even as the magazine that published it, LeMan, apologised to readers who felt offended and said the drawing had been misunderstood. 'We will not allow anyone to speak against our sacred values,' Erdoğan said in televised remarks, adding that the authorities would closely follow the legal process. 'Those who show disrespect to our prophet and other prophets will be held accountable before the law,' he said. Erdoğan and his Islamic-rooted AK Party regularly criticise what they call Islamophobic acts in broadly secular Turkey and across Europe. Devout Muslims regard depictions of the prophet Muhammad as blasphemous. In a statement on X, LeMan said: 'The work does not refer to the Prophet Muhammad in any way.' The cartoonist, Dogan Pehlevan, had sought to highlight 'the suffering of a Muslim man killed in Israeli attacks', it said, adding there had been no intent to insult Islam or its prophet. The magazine urged authorities to counter what it called a smear campaign, and to protect freedom of expression. Several civil society groups condemned the detentions of the four cartoonists as a violation of freedom of thought and expression. Turkey's freedom of expression ranking is low, due to restrictions on media and public discourse. Reporters Without Borders ranked it 158th out of 180 countries in its 2024 Press Freedom Index. More than 200 people rallied against LeMan in central Istanbul on Tuesday, despite a ban on gatherings and a heavy police presence. One protester, public servant Muhammed Emin Necipsoy, said the magazine's defence seemed insincere. 'There is a subtle emphasis there on both the prophet [Muhammad] and the prophet Moses,' he said. Turkey's interior minister, Ali Yerlikaya, shared a video on X showing police officers detaining Pehlevan, with his hands cuffed behind his back as he was dragged up a flight of stairs. He also shared videos of three other men being removed from their homes and put into vans, one of them barefoot. 'The individual who drew this vile image, D.P., has been apprehended and taken into custody. These shameless people will be held accountable before the law,' Yerlikaya wrote. The Turkish government said an inquiry had been launched under a law that criminalises incitement to hatred and enmity.


Daily Mail
14 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Islamist protesters clash with police and scream 'long live sharia, jihad... don't forget Charlie Hebdo' after Turkish magazine is accused of publishing cartoon of Prophet Mohammed
Angry protests erupted in Istanbul today following allegations a satirical magazine in Turkey had published a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed. A group of some 300 protesters issued a chilling warning as they took to the streets on Tuesday, chanting 'don't forget Charlie Hebdo'. The crowd was referring to the 2015 attack on a Paris magazine when Islamist gunmen killed 12 after it published caricatures lampooning the Prophet Mohammed. Unrest began late on Monday after the city's chief prosecutor ordered the arrest of staff at LeMan, claiming it had published a cartoon that 'insulted religious values'. An angry mob of hardline Islamist protesters clashed with police late into the night after news of the warrant emerged, an AFP correspondent said. 'Down with secularism, long live sharia (law)! Jihad, jihad, martyrdom!' they had shouted while tussling with police, who fired tear gas and rubber bullets. The weekly has categorically denied the allegation, with its editor-in-chief telling AFP that its cartoon had 'nothing to do with the Prophet Mohammed'. Illustrator Dogan Pehlevan had sought to highlight 'the suffering of a Muslim man killed in Israeli attacks', the magazine said. The cartoon, published last Thursday, shows two winged, bearded men shaking hands and introducing themselves as Mohammed and Musa (Moses). Bullets are seen falling from the sky as a city skyline burns around them. It was flanked by cartoons satirizing poverty and marginalisation in Turkey. The magazine apologised to readers who felt offended and said it had been misunderstood, adding that there was no intent to insult Islam or its prophet. Erdogan and his ruling AK Party nonetheless condemned what the party called an 'Islamophobic hate crime' as officials paraded the arrests of staff. Interpretations have varied. Opposition leader Ozgur Ozel said he was initially shocked when he first heard the allegations, but after seeing it came to a different conclusion. 'Take a proper look: I see an angel who died in a bombardment in Gaza, with a halo and wings who encounters another angel also killed by a bomb.. (but) Mohammad is a prophet, not an angel,' he said. 'I will not allow any disrespect to the Prophet Mohammed, but I won't remain silent about a social lynching based on a non-existant disrespect.' Speaking to AFP from Paris, LeMan editor-in-chief Tuncay Akgun said the image had been deliberately misinterpreted to cause provocation. 'In this work, the name of a Muslim who was killed in Israel's bombardments is fictionalised as Mohammed,' he said. 'This cartoon is not a caricature of Prophet Mohammed in any way,' he said, describing the arrest warrant as a "systematic provocation and attack" on the decades-old satirical magazine. Hundreds of people nonetheless rallied against Leman in central Istanbul on Tuesday, despite a ban on gatherings and a heavy police presence. Police shut Taksim Square and Istiklal, the city's busy shopping thoroughfare, in response. One protester in Istanbul said the defence seemed insincere. They said: 'There is a subtle emphasis there on both the Prophet (Mohammad) and the Prophet Moses.' Devout Muslims regard depictions of the Prophet Mohammad as blasphemous. A correspondent for the AFP news agency said the protesters were far less aggressive than those who rallied on Monday night, when around 400 Islamist hardliners tried to storm a bar frequented by the magazine staff. But the streets have filled with people carrying banners and shouting abuse at the magazine since authorities arrested staff and denounced what President Erdogan's ruling party called an 'Islamophobic hate crime'. 'We will not allow anyone to speak against our sacred values,' Erdogan said in televised remarks, adding that authorities would closely follow the legal process. 'Those who show disrespect to our Prophet and other prophets will be held accountable before the law,' he said. The magazine urged authorities to counter what it called a smear campaign, and to protect freedom of expression. Four Leman cartoonists were detained late on Monday over the drawing. Late on Monday, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya shared a video on X showing police officers detaining Pehlevan, the cartoonist, with his hands cuffed behind his back as he was dragged up a stairwell. He also shared videos of three other men being removed from their homes and dragged into vans, one of them barefoot. 'The individual who drew this vile image, D.P., has been apprehended and taken into custody. These shameless people will be held accountable before the law,' Yerlikaya wrote. People shout slogans during a protest against LeMan magazine outside Taksim mosque today Several civil society groups condemned the detentions as a violation of freedom of thought and expression. The government said an inquiry was launched under a penal code article that criminalises incitement to hatred and enmity. Turkey's freedom of expression ranking is low due to restrictions on media and public discourse.