Charlie Hebdo News
French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo has stirred controversy with its latest cartoons
The January issue of Charlie Hebdo features the winners of a recent cartoon contest
The whole country is shocked after the massacre in Udaipur. In such a situation, India can learn a lot from France if it wants. Like India, France is also a democratic and secular country. Similar to Udaipur's incident, a teacher named Samuel Paty was murdered in France in 2020 in the name of insulting Prophet Mohammad Sahib.
French magazine Charlie Hebdo sparked controversy
It compared Meghan Markle's story to death of George Floyd
Markle recently accused the royal family of racism
A teacher in Moleenbeek was suspended for showing a class a naked cartoon of Prophet Mohammed.
The children, some younger than 10, were outraged and complained to their parents.
The teacher was suspended for showing obscene photos to pre-teens.
Pakistan remains silent against China but spewing venom against France. Watch the report here.
Saudi Arabian ‘revolution’ against bigotry. Watch special report.
"Our people should have no doubt that all necessary legal and diplomatic steps will be taken against the caricature in question," Turkey`s Communications Directorate said.
"Our battle against these rude, ill-intentioned and insulting steps will continue until the end with reason but determination," it said in a statement.
A French city defied Islamist terrorism by projecting huge images of Charlie Hebdo caricatures on a local government building. Daily News and Analysis (DNA) hosted by Zee News Editor-in-Chief Sudhir Chaudhary, brings to you analysis of the top news of the day. In this segment of DNA, we tell you about France's move against terrorism.
Teacher's beheading in France has stunned the world, after which Charlie Hebdo cartoons displayed in 2 French cities as a mark of protest against fundamentalists.
The motive for the attack is unclear, and it is not clear whether it is linked to Charlie Hebdo, which moved its activities out of the area after Islamic extremists attacked its editorial offices in 2015, killing 12 people.
To mark the start of the trial, Charlie Hebdo republished the cartoons which, when first published, turned it into a target of searing anger and a global symbol of free speech
"It`s to show that we are still standing, still alive, still doing Charlie," said Antonio Fischetti. Anticipating strong sales, the magazine said it printed 200,000 copies of last week`s issue
While before it struggled to stay afloat with weekly sales of 30,000, the first edition after the attacks sold 8 million copies. Weekly sales have now settled back to around 55,000, the magazine said
Five years after Islamist terrorists stormed its offices in Paris and slaughtered 12 people and injured at least 11. The French magazine Charlie Hebdo on September 1 republished the controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet, which had provoked that attack.
Fourteen suspected accomplices to the French Islamist militants behind the attacks on the Charlie Hebdo magazine and a Jewish supermarket will go on trial.
Seventeen people were killed during three days of bloodshed that marked the beginning of a wave of Islamist violence that was to leave scores more dead.
Despite criticism from rights groups that the law reduces judicial oversight over the actions of the police, the lower house of parliament is set to vote on a first draft of the law on Tuesday.
Two slaughterhouses of political heavyweights BSP leader Yakub Qureshi and former Meerut MP and ex-BSP leader Shahid Akhlaq were sealed in Meerut.
Last month a plot to blow up a car packed with explosives near Notre Dame cathedral was foiled.
An Italian town hit by a deadly earthquake is pursuing legal action against the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo for defamation over a series of cartoons about the tragedy.
The hashtag #CharlieHebdo was soon trending on Twitter, with many expressing disgust at the cartoon for ridiculing the victims of the quake, which killed nearly 300 people.
A Bulgarian court ordered today that the brother-in-law of one of the men who attacked French magazine Charlie Hebdo be extradited to France after he was caught allegedly trying to join Islamic State fighters in Syria.
French lawmakers approved a six-month rollover of emergency rule on Wednesday in the wake of last week`s truck attack on the city of Nice, the third deadly assault in 18 months for which the Islamic State militant group has claimed responsibility.
Loading...