Wednesday 14 January 2015

Charlie Hebdo attack: Rush to buy new "survivors' issue"


A note that reads: "No more Charlie Hebdo" is posted after all copies of the satirical newspaper were sold out at a newsstand in Paris, 14 January 2015  
All copies of the magazine were sold out by Wednesday morning at this Paris newsstand
 
Long queues have formed at newsstands in France for the latest edition of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. 

Five million copies are being printed - a week after Islamist gunmen murdered 12 people at its offices and five others in subsequent attacks in Paris.
The cover shows a cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammad weeping while holding a sign saying "I am Charlie" - the message of support for the magazine.
Al-Qaeda in Yemen claimed the attack in a video purportedly from the group.
It is believed earlier cartoons of the Prophet prompted the attack on the magazine.
In a separate attack in Paris two days later, four Jewish men died after an Islamist gunmen took hostages at a kosher shop in the French capital. A police woman was shot dead in a third shooting believed to have been carried out by the same attacker.
 
Jean Paul Bierlein reads the new Charlie Hebdo outside a newsstand in Nice, southeastern France, 14 January 2015 Some kiosks said they had received dozens of reservation requests
 
A man waves a flag reading 'Je suis Charlie' during a unity rally in Paris. Photo: 11 January 2015  
On Sunday, about 1.5 million people rallied in Paris in a show of solidarity with the victims
 
Three million copies of the latest edition of Charlie Hebdo were originally printed for distribution. 

Copies in France quickly sold out on Wednesday morning. Editors then decided to increase the print run to five million. Normally, only 60,000 are printed each week.
Demand for what is being called the "survivors' issue" of the magazine is high, in part because the proceeds will go to the victims' families, correspondents say.
Kiosk owners told French media they had received large numbers of reservation requests, while at one shop in Paris all copies were reportedly sold out within five minutes.

New threats
 
Charlie Hebdo's decision to publish another cartoon of the Prophet has already generated threats from militant Islamist websites and criticism from the Islamic world, the BBC's Chris Morris in Paris reports.
The self-styled Islamic State (IS) militant group said on its radio station that the publication of the cartoon was "an extremely stupid act",
Meanwhile, a new video said to be from al-Qaeda in Yemen (Aqap) was aired on Wednesday saying the group was behind last week's attack on the magazine.
Supermarket gunman Amedy Coulibaly had pledged allegiance to IS in a video message, while the Charlie Hebdo attackers, Said and Cherif Kopuachi, had said they were acting on behalf of Aqap.
Coulibaly had also said they had co-ordinated the attacks, but experts say it is highly unlikely IS and Aqap, rivals in the Middle East, would plan an attack together.

Hugh Schofield in Paris on the new edition:

There's the full-page cartoon of a weeping Muhammad on the front cover, but inside there are no more caricatures of the Prophet.
There are plenty - in the paper's characteristic scurrilous vein - of Muslim extremists. In one cartoon, two terrorists are seen ascending to heaven and asking: "Where are the 70 virgins?" In the background, the murdered staff at Charlie Hebdo are enjoying an orgy.
An editorial thanks the millions of people who have declared themselves as Charlie in the past few days - but it says it wants no more of the past insinuations that by provoking Muslims, it has somehow brought trouble on itself.

The issue will be available in six languages - including English, Arabic and Turkish - some in print and some online.

Editor-in-chief Gerard Biard told reporters: "We are happy to have done it and happy to have been able to do it, to have achieved it. It was tough. The front page... was complicated to put together, because it had to express something new, it had to say something relating to the event that we had to deal with."

A French policeman and soldiers on patrol in Roubaix, northern France. Photo: 13 January 2015 Security has been increased dramatically across France after the attacks

Outside France, the Washington Post, Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine, Corriere della Sera in Italy and the UK's Guardian are among publications to show the cartoon.
Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet has published a section of the magazine, including a small image of the cover in one of its columns. It had originally planned to publish the full edition, but scaled down its plans due to security concerns.
Very few outlets in the Middle East and North Africa have shown the image.
Comedian arrested Referring to last week's shocking events, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said his country was at war with extremism and terrorism - but not with Muslims.
He was speaking on Tuesday after funeral ceremonies were held for seven of the victims in France and Israel.
France has deployed 10,000 troops at various sites across the country - including synagogues, mosques and airports - in response to the attacks.
Meanwhile, controversial French comedian Dieudonne M'bala M'bala was arrested on Wednesday for "defending terrorism".
Police opened an investigation into the comic on Monday, after he wrote on a Facebook post "I feel like Charlie Coulibaly" - merging Charlie Hebdo with the name of supermarket gunman Amedy Coulibaly.
Suspect on the run The three days of violence in Paris began after brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi attacked the magazine's office. They shouted "We have avenged the Prophet Muhammad" after the shootings.

The brothers were later killed by French security services after a stand-off in a town north of Paris.
Separately, Coulibaly - whom investigators have linked to the brothers - killed the four men at the kosher supermarket on Friday, apparently before police stormed the building. Coulibaly is also believed to have shot dead the policewoman the day before.
His partner Hayat Boumeddiene is now thought to be in Syria. She has been identified as a suspect by French police, although she left France before the attacks.


BBC

No comments:

Post a Comment