While many in France support Charlie Hebdo’s decision to put a new cartoon of Mohammad on its cover, others fear it will just provoke more tension.<br /><br /> And for religious reasons, some French Muslims strongly object.<br /><br /> “It is a country of freedom of expression. So let me express myself,” said one woman in Paris.<br /><br /> “I am against what Charlie has said because it is a strong attack on our prophet, who is sacred. They can attack my father, my mother or my children but not our prophet. It is not good.”<br /><br /> But on the outskirts of the French capital, another woman saw things differently.<br /><br /> “I believe we all have the right to humour and caricatures.I don’t see why we should prevent ourselves from laughing”. <br /><br /> In Iran where newspapers printed their own satirical cartoons aimed at ISIL fundamentalists, authorities condemned the Charlie Hebdo front page for offending Muslim sensibilities.<br /><br /> Many in the Middle East are angry – not least in the Gaza Strip where the French publication was slammed as d