A Russian parliamentarian has hit out at French satirical magazine
Charlie Hebdo for an "absolutely blasphemous and rude escapade" over its
treatment of the opening of an Orthodox Church centre in Paris.
The new Russian Orthodox centre includes a school, bookshop, coffee shop and conference facilities as well as a cathedral.
Charlie Hebdo – attacked by Islamist extremists in January 2015 in a
massacre that left 12 dead and 11 wounded – printed an edition yesterday
depicting the five golden domes of the cathedral as faces, accompanied
by a satirical article.
According to Tass,
Leonid Slutsky, the chairman of the State Duma international affairs
committee, told reporters: "This is yet another provocation that
strongly hurts the feelings of the believers, this time in the Orthodox
world. Any church is a holy place. Cartoons using holy images as
impermissible, outrageous and insulting for any person seeing himself or
herself as part of the Russian world."
He suggested the cartoon might have been inspired by France's strong
opposition to Russia's policy in Syria, which has seen its warplanes
repeatedly target civilian areas in Aleppo.
The cathedral was consecrated on Wednesday by the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill.
Charlie Hebdo has frequently annoyed Russia.
Kirill said after
the massacres in a broadcast sermon: "The cartoons of Prophet Mohammad
are childish caricatures compared to what this publication allows itself
in mocking the feelings of Christians.
"Today, in saying 'no' to terrorism, killings, violence, we also say
'no' to the inexplicable drive by a certain group of people to deride
religious feelings."
Earlier this year Russian lawmakers asked the Russian and European Journalists' Unions to boycott the magazine after it published a cartoon mocking the recent attacks on women by immigrants in Cologne.