News

The cover comes out Jan. 14 and will feature the Prophet Muhammad holding a sign reading “Je Suis Charlie,” the saying that has captured the world since the murders.
Hamas said the Charlie Hebdo cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad on the satirical magazine’s latest cover was part of a plot by the “Zionist lobby.” ...
Charlie Hebdo Returns With The Prophet Muhammad On Its Cover. Charlie Hebdo makes a courageous statement in the wake of the terrorist attacks that killed 12 members of its staff.
Charlie Hebdo put out all 3 million print copies of its latest edition in multiple languages–or more than 50 times its typical circulation–in reaction to the terrorist attack that shook the ...
o; Muslims across the world - from Turkey to the Philippines, have staged angry protests over the decision of French satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo to depict the Prophet Mohammed on its latest ...
Condemnation of the new edition of Charlie Hebdo was swift and often fierce Wednesday (Jan. 14) in many majority-Muslim nations after the cover featured a drawing of the Prophet Muhammad with a ...
The French cartoonist who drew the Charlie Hebdo cover featuring Islam's Prophet Muhammad after the deadly attack on the magazine in January by Islamist militants says he will no longer draw the ...
Rénald Luzier describes the emotional experience of drawing the first cover of Charlie Hebdo since the satirical newspaper's offices were attacked by terrorists. By Catherine Thompson January 13 ...
Following Wednesday’s terrorist attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which claimed the lives of 12 people, several news organizations have chosen not to republish the embattled ...
A special edition of Charlie Hebdo ahead of the 10th anniversary of the attack on its offices displayed at a kiosk in Paris on January 6. The cover of the magazine's special edition features a ...
Commentary and archival information about Charlie Hebdo from The New York Times. ... Samuel Paty, who had displayed caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad as an illustration of free speech.
"He no longer interests me," Luz said in an interview. Militants attacked the magazine Jan. 7, killing editorial staff and others, in apparent retaliation for its depiction of their prophet.