Atheism in France
Gerard Biard, Editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo: Fake News Has a Bright Future Ahead
It has been six years since the Islamist attack on the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo. Twelve people lost their lives and millions mourned. "Je suis Charlie" became an expression of solidarity, and Charlie Hebdo a symbol of freedom of speech and press freedom. How did the events of January 2015 change Charlie Hebdo?
Turkish-origin defendants among 14 sentenced in Charlie Hebdo trial
The attack at Charlie Hebdo’s Paris office was the first in a series of attacks over three days in January 2015
Ambassador Ramis, about cartoon in 'Charlie Hebdo': Magazine does not embody French public opinion
The satirical magazine 'Charlie Hebdo' "does not embody in any way the sentiment of the French public opinion", the freedom of speech and freedom of the press being fundamental principles of the French Republic, French Ambassador in Bucharest Michele Ramis told AGERPRES.
New Death Threats Towards French Satirical Weekly Magazine Charlie Hebdo
The French satirical weekly magazine "Charlie Hebdo," against which a terrorist attack was made in January 2015, announced that they had filed a complaint about death threats in social networks after publishing a cartoon of a Swiss Islamist accused of rape, reports mediapool.
Cartoonists take issue with censorship
The Greek cartoonists' union said Thursday that the decision not to include 12 out of 28 Greek sketches in a European Parliament exhibition to mark its 60th anniversary on the grounds they were Nazi-friendly or an infringement of EU values, has raised serious questions.
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