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Many mosques have been vandalized recently across Europe.
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PARIS — Vandals scrawled
swastikas and racist slogans on the walls of
two mosques in France and threw Molotov
cocktails at a mosque in central Russia on
Sunday, September 24, the day French and
Russian Muslims started celebrating Ramadan.
The mosque which was
torched, in the northwest town of Quimper,
suffered damage from the flames. Six swastikas
were painted on the outside of its walls,
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported Monday,
September 25.
In the southwestern town of
Carcassonne, the other mosque was daubed with
swastikas and slogans reading "France for
the French", "Arabs get out"
and "Death to Islam", officials
said.
No-one has claimed
responsibility for the vandalism and
investigations have been launched to find the
perpetrators.
Religious and anti-racism
groups condemned the attacks.
"This is odious
because it is stupid and nasty and because it
shows a radical ignorance of Islam,"
Dalil Boubakeur, president of the French
Council for the Muslim Faith, told AFP.
"The criminal
intention doubles up with a desire to disturb,
in a particularly vile way, the peaceful
course of ceremonies that accompany this month
of fasting and penitence," Boubakeur
said.
The Movement Against Racism
and for Friendship between People (MRAP)
expressed its solidarity with Muslims and
blamed an environment in which Islam was
increasingly being associated with terrorism.
This is "part of the
Islam equals terrorism equation," MRAP
said in a statement.
"The far right's
political maneuvering on the theme that France
is becoming Islamized contributes to an
obnoxious climate that fosters these kind of
acts," the rights group said.
The Quimper mosque had
already had been vandalized several times
since it was built in February 2003.
Five million Muslims live
in France, the largest Muslim minority in
Europe.
Moltov Attack
In central Russia,
unidentified attackers threw Molotov cocktails
at a mosque in Yaroslavl in the early hours of
Sunday, but the building did not catch fire,
the head of a local Muslim organization said.
"About half past
midnight, several young people got into the
mosque's courtyard and threw bottles filled
with inflammable substances at the windows of
a first-floor room," Kury Kalimov told
the Interfax news agency.
A religious service was
taking place at the time and there were
worshippers in the room, but the bottles hit
the window frame and fell back without
exploding, he explained.
The attackers also threw
stones, breaking a number of mosque windows as
well as the windows of cars parked in the
courtyard.
After the incident a
spokeswoman for the council of Russian muftis,
Gulnor Gazieva, said she was worried and
angry.
Speaking on Moscow's Echo
radio station, she called on the Muslim
minority "not to give in to any
provocation, to stay calm and to pass the
month of Ramadan in the goodness of
fasting."
Russia has a Muslim
population of 20 million people concentrated
in north of the Caucasus and in the central
parts of the country.