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Mahathir Mohamad
Former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad says he is ‘disgusted with attempts to misrepresent and take out of context’ his comments that provoked outrage after the Nice attack. Photograph: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters
Former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad says he is ‘disgusted with attempts to misrepresent and take out of context’ his comments that provoked outrage after the Nice attack. Photograph: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters

Mahathir Mohamad says his remarks after French attack were taken out of context

This article is more than 3 years old

Two-time Malaysian PM criticises Twitter and Facebook for removing his posts after the attack on Nice church

The former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has stood by his widely condemned comments on attacks by Muslim extremists in France, saying they were taken out of context. He also criticised Twitter and Facebook for removing his posts.

Mahathir, 95, sparked widespread anger when he wrote on his blog on Thursday that “Muslims have a right to be angry and kill millions of French people for the massacres of the past”.

Twitter removed a tweet from Mahathir containing the remark, which it said glorified violence, and France’s digital minister demanded the company also ban Mahathir from its platform.

“I am indeed disgusted with attempts to misrepresent and take out of context what I wrote on my blog,” Mahathir said in a statement on Friday.

He said critics failed to read his posting in full, especially the next sentence, which read: “But by and large Muslims have not applied the ‘eye for an eye’ law. Muslims don’t. The French shouldn’t. Instead the French should teach their people to respect other people’s feelings.”

He said Twitter and Facebook removed the posting despite his explanation, and criticised the move as hypocritical.

“On the one hand, they defended those who chose to display offending caricatures of Prophet Muhammad ... and expect all Muslims to swallow it in the name of freedom of speech and expression,” he said.

“On the other, they deleted deliberately that Muslims had never sought revenge for the injustice against them in the past,” thereby stirring French hatred for Muslims, he added. On Twitter, however, that sentence was not deleted. A Mahathir staff member said the entire posting was removed by Facebook.

Facebook Malaysia said in an email that it removed Mahathir’s post for violating its policies. “We do not allow hate speech on Facebook and strongly condemn any support for violence, death or physical harm,” it said.

The comments by Mahathir, a two-time prime minister, were in response to calls by Muslim nations to boycott French products after the French president, Emmanuel Macron, described Islam as a religion “in crisis” and vowed to crack down on radicalism following the murder of a French teacher who showed his class a cartoon depicting Prophet Muhammad.

His remarks also came as a Tunisian man killed three people at a church in Nice, France. Mahathir wrote about cultural clashes between the western and Islamic world, and condemned the French president, Emmanuel Macron, for linking Thursday’s attack in Nice to Islam.

The US ambassador to Malaysia, Kamala Shirin Lakhdir, said she “strongly disagreed” with Mahathir’s statement. “Freedom of expression is a right, calling for violence is not,” she said in a brief statement on Friday.

The Australian high commissioner in Malaysia, Andrew Goledzinowski, wrote that even though Mahathir was not advocating actual violence, “in the current climate, words can have consequences”.

Mahathir’s second stint as prime minister lasted from 2018 until he quit in February 2020.

He has been viewed as an advocate of moderate Islamic views and a spokesman for the interests of developing countries. At the same time, he pointedly criticised Western society and nations and their relationships to the Muslim world, while he was denounced in Israel and elsewhere for making anti-Semitic remarks.

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