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HUNDREDS of British Muslims prayed before protesting against Emmanuel Macron outside the French embassy in London today.

The group took their noon prayers outside the building this afternoon after Macron defended cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed being published.

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Hundreds of British Muslims prayed outside the French embassy in London
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Hundreds of British Muslims prayed outside the French embassy in LondonCredit: Alamy Live News
The group then carried out a peaceful protests over Emmanuel Macron's comments
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The group then carried out a peaceful protests over Emmanuel Macron's commentsCredit: PA:Press Association

The protesters held banners saying "don't divide humanity" and "insult is not freedom of speech".

The French President's defence of the controversial cartoons created by Charlie Hebdo have sparked worldwide protests.

The caricatures are considered blasphemous by Muslims, with many now boycotting French products.

Thousands in Tunisia, Pakistan, Israel, Palestine, Russia have taken to the streets to burn pictures of Macron, with demonstrations also held in Bangladesh, India and Iran.

The row flared after a French teacher who showed pupils cartoons of the Prophet published in the satirical magazine was beheaded in France earlier this month.

Samuel Paty, 47, was killed by 18-year-old Abdullah Anzorov on October 17 after using the drawing to teach his students about free speech.

The image he showed pupils was the one published by Charlie Hebdo which sparked an attack on the magazine's offices that killed 12 in 2015.

The French government saw the knife attack as an attack on freedom of speech.

It also follows two suspected terror attacks in France on Thursday which left three people dead - including a woman beheaded in a church by a knifeman shouting "Allahu Akbar".

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Two separate knifemen are understood to have launched attacks in Nice and Avignon just hours apart.

France has raised its alert status to the highest possible level of "terror attack emergency".

Macron announced up to 7,000 soldiers will be deployed to the streets across France in the wake of the violence to protect landmarks, schools and places of worship.

He denounced the Nice bloodbath as an "Islamic terror attack" and defiantly said France will not "give up on our values".

Furthering anger, Charlie Hebdo published a cartoon on its cover showing Turkish leader Tayyip Erdogan sitting in a white T-shirt and underpants, holding a canned drink and lifting the skirt of a woman wearing an Islamic hijab to reveal her naked bottom.

Thousands of demonstrators have denounced France in protests in several Muslim countries amid the row over Macron's defence of the right to publish the Charlie Hebdo cartoons.

Dozens of Iranians gathered in protest in front of the French embassy in Tehran, state media reported.

Some held up placards with red crosses plastered on images of French goods.

In Dhaka, hundreds of Bangladeshi Muslims took to the streets of the capital for another day, chanting slogans such as "Boycott French products" and burning effigies of Macron, who they described as an enemy of Islam.

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In the Somali capital Mogadishu, protesters shouted: "France down, it insulted our Prophet."

Turkish officials said Ankara would take legal and diplomatic steps in response to the caricature, calling it a "disgusting effort" to "spread its cultural racism and hatred".

Demonstrators burn pictures of Macron during protests in Pakistan
Demonstrators burn pictures of Macron during protests in Pakistan
Police in Nice after a multiple terror attacks in France
Police in Nice after a multiple terror attacks in France
Emmanuel Macron visits the site of the attack in Nice
Emmanuel Macron visits the site of the attack in Nice
Protesters took to the streets in Tunisia over the defence of the cartoons
Protesters took to the streets in Tunisia over the defence of the cartoons
Protesters outside the French embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel 
Protesters outside the French embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel