Meanwhile, a second Kenyan newspaper has published the satirical magazine`s cover with an article which said it embodied press freedom.
In Senegal, the government banned the French magazine`s distribution.
Many Senegalese are Muslims who are likely to welcome the ban, correspondents say.
`Muslim sensibilities`
The country has close links with France, the former colonial power and French newspapers are widely available.
The magazine is being distributed worldwide, with a cartoon which shows the Prophet weeping while holding a sign saying "I am Charlie", and below the headline "All is forgiven".
Twelve of its staff were killed last week by militant Islamist gunmen who said they were avenging a 2005 depiction of Prophet Muhammad
"It is forbidden to distribute and disseminate, by any means, today`s editions of the French magazine Charlie Hebdo and the French newspaper Liberation throughout the national territory," the Senegalese news agency APS reported, citing a statement from the interior ministry.
Liberation also published the cartoon.
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