Stone-throwing demonstrators set fire to two churches in Niger’s capital Niamey yesterday, in the latest protest in France’s former African colonies at French newspaper Charlie Hebdo’s cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

Security forces stand at the main entrance to the headquarters of the French embassy during a demonstration against satirical French weekly Charlie Hebdo, which featured a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed as the cover of its first edition after the Paris attacks in Sana’a , Yemen, yesterday. Photo: Mohamed al-Sayaghi/ReutersSecurity forces stand at the main entrance to the headquarters of the French embassy during a demonstration against satirical French weekly Charlie Hebdo, which featured a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed as the cover of its first edition after the Paris attacks in Sana’a , Yemen, yesterday. Photo: Mohamed al-Sayaghi/Reuters

A day after five people were killed in Niger in protests over the cartoons, protesters in Niamey attacked a police station and burned at least two police cars near the main mosque after authorities banned a meeting called by local Muslim leaders. Police responded with teargas.

“They offended our Prophet Mohammed. That’s what we didn’t like,” said Amadou Abdoul Ouahab, who took part in the demonstration. “This is the reason why we have asked Muslims to come, so that we can explain this to them, but the State refused.”

Demonstrations were also reported in regional towns, including Maradi, 600 km east of Niamey, where two churches were burned. Another church and a residence of the Foreign Minister were burned in the eastern town of Goure.

Four Muslim preachers who had convened the meeting in Niamey were arrested, police sources said. Protesters burned the French flag and set up roadblocks on streets in the town centre but no casualties were reported yesterday.

They offended our Prophet Mohammed

The French embassy in Niamey warned its citizens not to go out on the streets.

The death toll from Friday’s clashes in Niger’s second largest city of Zinder, rose to five after emergency services discovered a burned body inside a Catholic Church.

On Friday, churches were burned, Christian homes looted and the French cultural centre attacked during the violence in Zinder, residents said.

A police officer and three civilians had already been confirmed killed in the demonstrations against the Charlie Hebdo cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, police sources said.

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