Indian police arrest editor over Charlie Hebdo reprint

Kashmiri Muslims demonstrating against French magazine Charlie Hebdo during a protest in Srinagar, India on Jan, 23, 2015. Police have arrested and bailed the editor of an Urdu-language newspaper in Mumbai for reprinting a cartoon of the Prophet
Kashmiri Muslims demonstrating against French magazine Charlie Hebdo during a protest in Srinagar, India on Jan, 23, 2015. Police have arrested and bailed the editor of an Urdu-language newspaper in Mumbai for reprinting a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed from the satirical French magazine, police said on Thursday, Jan 29. -- PHOTO: AFP

MUMBAI (AFP) - Police have arrested and bailed the editor of an Urdu-language newspaper in Mumbai for reprinting a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed from satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo, police said Thursday.

Shirin Dalvi, editor of the Mumbai edition of the daily Avadhnama newspaper, was arrested by police in the town of Mumbra in Thane district, close to the financial capital.

The editor was arrested under section 295A of the Indian Penal Code, which bans malicious and deliberate acts intended to outrage religious feelings.

"She was arrested by us, produced in the court and granted bail. We are investigating the matter," S.M. Mundhe, senior police inspector in Mumbra, told AFP.

The Indian Express said several readers approached police in Mumbai and Thane after Urdu paper Avadhnama reprinted the Charlie Hebdo cover image, which was published after gunmen stormed the magazine's offices in Paris on January 7 and killed 12 people.

That cover issue showed the Prophet Mohammed with a tear in his eye holding a "Je suis Charlie" sign - the slogan taken up by supporters of the magazine after the shootings - under the headline "All is forgiven".

Mr Mundhe did not confirm details of the Charlie Hebdo cover in question and AFP was unable to reach staff who could comment at Avadhnama, which has several editions across India.

Last week, tens of thousands across Muslim-majority Indian Kashmir, Afghanistan and Pakistan took to the streets to protest against Charlie Hebdo's cartoon portrayal of the Prophet Mohammed.

Images of the prophet are considered blasphemous by many Muslims and the magazine's publishing of the cartoon has trigged protests in Muslim countries around the world.

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