France calls on Arab countries to stop boycott of French products

On Sunday France urged Arab countries to stop calls for boycotts of French products, while President Emmanuel Macron vowed the country would never give in to radical Islamists.

The French foreign affairs ministry said in a statement released on Sunday that in recent days there had been calls to boycott French products, notably food products, in several Middle Eastern countries as well as calls for demonstrations against France over the publication of satirical cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.

"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 said.

On Sunday, Macron said in a tweet: "We will not give in, ever" to Islamic radicals. "We do not accept hate speech and defend reasonable debate," the French leader added.

Boycotts already underway

Calls to boycott French goods are already growing in the Arab world and beyond, after President Emmanuel Macron criticised Islamists and vowed not to "give up cartoons" depicting the Prophet Muhammad.

 

Macron's initial comments, on Wednesday, came in response to the beheading of teacher Samuel Paty outside his school in a suburb outside Paris earlier this month, after he had shown cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad during a class he was leading on free speech.

Muslims see any depiction of the Prophet as blasphemous.

Kuwait's non-governmental Union of Consumer Co-operative Societies have already pulled several French products in boycott. Several co-ops visited by journalists on Sunday had cleared the shelves of items such as hair and beauty products made by French companies.

"All French products have been removed from all Consumer Cooperative Societies," admitted union head Fahd Al-Kishti, adding that the move was in response to "repeated insults" against the Prophet and had been taken independently of Kuwait's government.

Boycott calls on social media

The co-ops, some the size of hypermarkets, carry government-subsidised staples for Kuwaitis and account for a big part of retail in the country, as well as organising some educational courses and recreational activities.

In Saudi Arabia, the Arab world's largest economy, a hashtag calling for the boycott of French supermarket retailer Carrefour was the second most trending on Sunday.

Similar boycott calls have also been issued by groups in Jordan and Qatar.

The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation on Friday decried the brutal murder that has shaken France, but also criticised the "justification for blasphemy-based harassment of any religion in the name of freedom of expression".    (FRANCE24/AFP/Reuters)