Chanting “I am not Charlie, I am Mohammed”, hundreds of protesters in Algeria joined a wave of demos across the Muslim world against Charlie Hebdo’s cartoons.<br /><br /> Protests turned violent after Friday prayers. <br /><br /> In Niger’s second largest city of Zinder four died and 45 were wounded in clashes with police. The French cultural centre was set alight and churches were attacked.<br /><br /> The first edition of the French satirical weekly since a deadly attack on their offices featured a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed, which many saw as a new provocation.<br /><br /> Turkish President Erdogan said that publishing the cartoons had nothing to do with freedom of expression but with “terrorising the freedom of others”.<br /><br /> At the Fatih mosque in Istanbul, protesters also prayed for the memory of the Kouachi brothers, the two suspects who died in a shootout with police following the Paris attacks.<br /><br /> “We’re here to protest against the insult to our Prophet (Muhammad) and to hold funeral prayers for our two brothers (re
