Advertisement
Advertisement
Charlie Hebdo attack
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
File photo from January 2015 shows people marching in Brussels in tribute to the 17 victims of the three-day killing spree in Paris, France that started with the massacre of Charlie Hebdo and ended with the assault against the Hyper Cacher market. Photo: AFP

Charlie Hebdo marks year since attack with provocative cover

French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo will mark a year since the jihadist attack on its offices with a cover featuring a bloodied, gun-toting, bearded God figure, under the headline: “One year on: The assassin still at large”.

One million copies of the special edition will go on sale in France Wednesday, on the eve of the first anniversary of the killing of 12 people at the magazine’s Paris offices by brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi.

Eight Charlie Hebdo staff were among the victims of the January 7, 2015 assault which brought millions of people onto France’s streets in protest and transformed a fading publication into a global symbol of freedom of expression.

A total of 17 people were killed in three days of attacks that also targeted a Jewish supermarket and police, marking the start of a string of jihadist strikes in France that culminated in November’s massacre in Paris.

READ MORE: Charlie Hebdo to Islamic State: ‘They have weapons. Screw them, we have champagne!’

Charlie Hebdo’s offices had been firebombed in 2011 and other magazines in Europe which published Mohammed cartoons had also been threatened, but the brazen attack in Paris shocked the world.

Le Monde described the attack, which was claimed by Al-Qaeda’s branch in the Arabian Peninsula as revenge for Charlie’s cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, as “France’s 9/11”.

Within hours of the shootings, #JeSuisCharlie went viral, rallying millions behind the plight of a publication that had nearly shut down a month earlier because of a lack of readers.
A dog with a helmet reading

As police scoured the capital for the killers, Amedy Coulibaly, a radicalised Frenchman claiming to be working with the Kouachis, killed a policewoman.

The next day, he took shoppers hostage at a Jewish supermarket, killing four people before police stormed the building and shot him dead.

The Kouachi brothers were killed in a simultaneous shootout with police, north of Paris.

READ MORE: Documentary about the Charlie Hebdo massacre wants us to refocus on the principles at stake

On Sunday, January 11, in a grieving Paris, President Francois Hollande led an anti-terror march that drew dozens of world leaders, from German Chancellor Angela Merkel to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

French President Francois Hollande(right) welcomed German Chancellor Angela Merkel (left) at the Elysee Palace before the rally “Marche Republicaine” in Paris on January 11, 2015. Photo: AFP

A further four million people rallied across France in a display of unity not seen since the liberation from Nazi tyranny in 1944.

But behind the apparently unified facade, a difficult debate unfolded over freedom of speech.

Many Muslims soon made it clear that while they condemned the violence, they were offended by what they saw as Charlie’s racist portrayal of their faith and its followers.

In Charlie’s defence, its supporters said the magazine was part of a time-honoured French satirical tradition in which no-one -- from popes and business tycoons to celebrities and sports stars -- is spared barbs.

When Charlie Hebdo defiantly re-appeared on newsstands a week after the attack with a front cover featuring the Prophet Mohammed with a tear in his eye under the headline “All is forgiven”, 7.5 million copies were sold, but angry protests were held across the Muslim world from Chechnya to Chad.

The first issue of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo to be published since a jihadist attack decimated its editorial staff last week was sold out within minutes at kiosks across France. Photo: AFP

French society meanwhile was left to ask how the killers, brought up and educated in France, became so radicalised. Prime Minister Manuel Valls spoke of a “social and ethnic apartheid” in which the children of immigrants from the poorest parts of French cities had lost out.

A series of other assaults followed.

In August, a bloodbath on a high-speed train was narrowly averted when passengers led by holidaying US soldiers overpowered a heavily-armed gunman.
Then, on Friday, November 13, nine men -- most of whom had fought alongside Islamic State (IS) extremists in Syria -- unleashed explosives near the Stade de France stadium and opened fire on people enjoying a night out at bars and restaurants in Paris, and at the Bataclan concert hall that lies just a short walk from where the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists were killed.

In all, 130 people lost their lives and 350 were wounded.

The Eiffel Tower lit up with the colours of the French flag in tribute to the victims of the November 13 Paris terror attacks. Photo: AFP

This time, the positive energy that seemed to flow from the terrible events of January seemed largely absent.

Fear and anger gripped the country, helping the far-right National Front to pick up an unprecedented 28 percent of the vote in regional elections in December.

Hollande, donning the cloak of war leader, increased air strikes on IS in Syria and Iraq as he promised to crush the group.

But he also seemed to strike a chord with many as he warned again and again of the perils of intolerance and sectarianism.

“We will not give in either to fear or to hate,” Hollande vowed. “To all of you, I solemnly promise that France will do everything to destroy the army of fanatics that committed these crimes.”

Post