Close Charlie Hebdo!
Posted: Wed Jan 22, 2025 5:49 am
"The Gay Lobby at the Conclave. "Well, is it starting to smoke?" This refers to a joke popular in 2013 about the "gay lobby" using friction during the conclave to create fire and white smoke that would come out of the chimney of the Vatican Palace, announcing the election of the Pope.
In 2011, after the victory of an Islamist party in the Tunisian elections, taiyuan mobile phone numbers database the newspaper published an issue in which the editor-in-chief was named as the Prophet Muhammad, and on the cover it was written: "A hundred lashes for anyone who does not die laughing." After this, the editorial office was set on fire, and the newspaper's website was hacked.
A week later, the editorial board released an issue with a Muslim hugging a newspaper employee on the cover, under the slogan “Love is stronger than hate.”
The latest drawing by cartoonist Stéphane Charbonnier in Charlie Hebdo: "Haven't there been any terrorist attacks in France for a long time? Wait! There's still time until the end of January."
This cartoon of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was posted on Charlie Hebdo's Twitter account hours before the attack on the office.
Front pages of newspapers on January 8
The day after the Charlie Hebda attack, all the world's major newspapers dedicated their front pages to the memory of the murdered journalists. Here are some of them.
The Independent (UK)
De Tijd (Belgium) "Charlie is me"
Cartoons in support of Charlie Hebdo
AmericanThe website BuzzFeed collected the drawings, which cartoonists from all over the world made in support of Charlie Hebdo and in memory of the journalists who died.
In 2011, after the victory of an Islamist party in the Tunisian elections, taiyuan mobile phone numbers database the newspaper published an issue in which the editor-in-chief was named as the Prophet Muhammad, and on the cover it was written: "A hundred lashes for anyone who does not die laughing." After this, the editorial office was set on fire, and the newspaper's website was hacked.
A week later, the editorial board released an issue with a Muslim hugging a newspaper employee on the cover, under the slogan “Love is stronger than hate.”
The latest drawing by cartoonist Stéphane Charbonnier in Charlie Hebdo: "Haven't there been any terrorist attacks in France for a long time? Wait! There's still time until the end of January."
This cartoon of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was posted on Charlie Hebdo's Twitter account hours before the attack on the office.
Front pages of newspapers on January 8
The day after the Charlie Hebda attack, all the world's major newspapers dedicated their front pages to the memory of the murdered journalists. Here are some of them.
The Independent (UK)
De Tijd (Belgium) "Charlie is me"
Cartoons in support of Charlie Hebdo
AmericanThe website BuzzFeed collected the drawings, which cartoonists from all over the world made in support of Charlie Hebdo and in memory of the journalists who died.