What's new

On this day, 7th January 2015 : 2 gunmen commit mass murder at the offices of Charlie Hebdo [Paris]

MenInG

PakPassion Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Runs
217,977
CNN)Here is some background information about the January 2015 terror attacks in Paris. From January 7 to January 9, a total of 17 people were killed in attacks on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, a kosher grocery store, and the Paris suburb of Montrouge. Three suspects in the attacks were killed by police in separate standoffs.

Facts:

The Charlie Hebdo magazine began publishing in 1970 with the goal of satirizing religion, politics, and other topics. Most employees came from the publication Hara-Kiri, which was banned after it mocked the death of former President Charles de Gaulle.

The Charlie in the title references Charlie Brown from the Peanuts cartoon. Hebdo is short for hebdomadaire, meaning weekly, in French.

The magazine ceased publication in the 1980s due to lack of funds. It resumed publishing in 1992.
In 2006, Charlie Hebdo reprinted controversial cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that originally appeared in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. French President Jacques Chirac criticized the decision and called it "overt provocation."

In 2011, the magazine's offices were destroyed by a gasoline bomb after it published a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed.

Profiles of the seventeen victims.

The Suspects:

Cherif Kouachi:
-- Born in France, of Algerian descent.
-- During his standoff with police, Cherif Kouachi told CNN affiliate BFMTV that he'd trained in Yemen with al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
- He also told BFMTV that during that time he met with Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born Muslim who was the face of AQAP until he was killed in 2011 in a US drone strike.

Said Kouachi:

-- Born in France, of Algerian descent.
-- Starting in 2009, Kouachi traveled to Yemen frequently, spending months at a time there.
-- US officials said that in 2011 Kouachi received weapons training and worked with AQAP.
Amedy Coulibaly:
-- Born in France, of Senegalese descent.
-- Arrested in 2010 for attempting to free an Algerian serving time for a 1995 subway bombing and spent some time in prison. Cherif Kouachi was under investigation for the same plot, but there was not enough evidence to indict him.
- Before he was killed by police, Amedy Coulibaly purportedly told CNN affiliate BFMTV by phone that he belonged to ISIS.

Hayat Boumeddiene:
-- Born in France, of Algerian descent.
-- Girlfriend of Amedy Coulibaly.
-- Initially it was believed she took part in the shooting of a police woman in Montrouge and the subsequent kosher grocery store attack.
-- However, a Turkish Prime Ministry source has told CNN that Boumeddiene entered Turkey on January 2, arriving at the Istanbul airport on a flight from Madrid with a man. She had a return ticket to Madrid for January 9, but she failed to take her return flight from Istanbul that day.
-- Also, a French source close to the nation's security services said it's believed that Boumeddiene is no longer in France and she is thought to have left for Turkey, "of course to reach Syria."
-- Paris prosecutor Francois Molins has indicated Boumedienne and Cherif Kouachi's wife also were well acquainted, saying they exchanged 500 phone calls in 2014.

Timeline of the attacks:

January 7, 2015 -
-- At approximately 11:30 a.m., gunmen force their way into the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris. The attackers allegedly say they are avenging the Prophet Mohammed and shout "Allahu akbar," which translates to "God is great," according to Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins.
-- Twelve people are killed: Eight employees, a guest at the magazine, a maintenance worker and a police officer are killed.
-- After fleeing the building, the gunmen encounter another police officer on the street and shoot him at point-blank range.
-- Later in the day, the phrase "Je Suis Charlie" ("I am Charlie"), begins trending on social media. Thousands of Parisians take to the streets to hold a vigil for the victims.
-- Hamyd Mourad, 18, turns himself into police after he is identified as the third suspect in the attacks. Police later clear Mourad of involvement, after numerous witnesses verify that he was at school during the time of the attacks.

January 8, 2015 -
-- Police name the prime suspects, brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi. Police search for them in an area northeast of Paris, near Villers-Cotterêts.
-- One killed: A gunman dressed similarly to those in the Charlie Hebdo attack, all in black and wearing a bulletproof vest, shoots and kills a female police officer in the Paris suburb of Montrouge.
-- The Kouachi brothers steal food and gas from a gas station near Villers-Cotterets, according to a gas station attendant.
-- A US law enforcement official tells CNN both Kouachi brothers were in a US database of known or suspected international terrorists known as TIDE and also were on the no-fly list and had been for years.
-- In the evening, the Eiffel Tower briefly goes dark in remembrance of the victims.

January 9, 2015 -
-- Four people are killed: In the morning, police and French special forces troops surround a building in Dammartin-en-Goele, northeast of Paris, where the Kouachi brothers are hiding inside with one hostage.
-- In the afternoon, a gunman enters a kosher grocery store in the Paris suburb of Porte de Vincennes, taking people hostage. The gunman is identified as Amedy Coulibaly. Police also link him to the attack in Montrouge. Also identified is his suspected accomplice, Hayat Boumeddiene. Officials say Coulibaly killed four hostages in the grocery store.
-- At approximately 5 p.m., police launch an assault on the building in Dammartin-en-Goele, where the Kouachi brothers are hiding. The brothers are killed.
-- Shortly afterward, police launch an operation against Amedy Coulibaly at the kosher grocery store. Four hostages are killed, and fifteen are rescued. Coulibaly is also killed.

January 11, 2015 -
-- Across France, approximately 3.7 million people march in anti-terrorism rallies. In Paris, 40 world leaders, including French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and British Prime Minister David Cameron march with a crowd of 1.5 million people. US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry are noticeably absent.

January 13, 2015 -
-- Funeral services are held in Israel for the four hostages killed in the kosher market. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends.
-- French President Francois Hollande awards The Order of Légion d'Honneur, France's highest honor, posthumously to the three slain police officers in the attacks, during a memorial ceremony at the Prefecture de Police in Paris.
-- Bulgaria arrests Frenchman Fritz-Joly Joachin on a European arrest warrant, citing alleged ties to terrorists and a possible connection to the Kouachi brothers.

January 14, 2015 -
-- Charlie Hebdo releases a new edition of its magazine, featuring a cartoon of the Muslim prophet Mohammed on the cover, holding a sign that says "Je suis Charlie."
-- AQAP claims responsibility for the operation carried out on Charlie Hebdo.
-- French security services identify a fourth man suspected of involvement in the Paris attacks, according to the French newspaper, Le Parisien. The newspaper says the man may have been an accomplice of Amedy Coulibaly, driving him to the kosher supermarket.

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/01/21/europe/2015-paris-terror-attacks-fast-facts/index.html
 
How much did this attack play a role in the change of attitudes towards Muslims in France?
 
Yeah that shows how strong your faith is - by killing comedians and satirists who mock your holy figures.

These terrorists never think through the logic of their actions unless its to do with barbarism and murder.
 
Yeah that shows how strong your faith is - by killing comedians and satirists who mock your holy figures.

These terrorists never think through the logic of their actions unless its to do with barbarism and murder.


You’re going on like people from the media are not routinely silence, killed or kidnapped in countries all around the world for dissent of the government

Fair enough Charlie was in his own country and like you said murdered by cowards who won’t let anyone else have an opinion but this goes on everywhere

The likes of Assange, David kelly, manning , Irving , Ahed tamimi etc etc
 
You’re going on like people from the media are not routinely silence, killed or kidnapped in countries all around the world for dissent of the government

Fair enough Charlie was in his own country and like you said murdered by cowards who won’t let anyone else have an opinion but this goes on everywhere

The likes of Assange, David kelly, manning , Irving , Ahed tamimi etc etc

The religious text is, we should be openly denouncing the organization as enemies for doing that. A non-Muslim is not expected to follow or believe in our matters, but respect is an uncompromising matter. They knew this would happen. They still published such content, hence the retaliation.

Although the killers are expected to be pumped up be religious militants backed by CIA sort of evil entities as it was the job of Islamic govt to engage for such punishment instead of private people but no country did that.

Anyway, its a sensitive matter. Lesser I speak, the better it will be. I really pray that people don't make fun of religions or don't get killed because of them.
 
The religious text is, we should be openly denouncing the organization as enemies for doing that. A non-Muslim is not expected to follow or believe in our matters, but respect is an uncompromising matter. They knew this would happen. They still published such content, hence the retaliation.

Although the killers are expected to be pumped up be religious militants backed by CIA sort of evil entities as it was the job of Islamic govt to engage for such punishment instead of private people but no country did that.

Anyway, its a sensitive matter. Lesser I speak, the better it will be. I really pray that people don't make fun of religions or don't get killed because of them.


There’s defintely a hardcore brand of Islam which certain authotarian non Muslims like
The likes of Napoleon,Hitler etc

This type of Islam is putiranical, remorseless and khrawiji

It was pursued amongst the Sufi Chechnya’s
And then the Sufi taliban
And the wahabis with their takfeeri ideologue

It has taken root as Hamas took over their main rivals the PLO and in turn managed to completely quell the Palestinian resistance
In Kashmir as Indian used the Ikhwan to kill all competition
And ISIS, a modern ruthless criminal organisation with little though or comment on classic Islamic history or text


The vision to turn the East into a liberal democratic society has given the likes of ISIS free reign to cause destruction and instability
 
I read that Charlie Hebdo are struggling badly currently, with a slump in sales and the annual €1.5 million security bill. Hopefully the anniversary reminders around the world will help them in their noble cause.
 
There’s defintely a hardcore brand of Islam which certain authotarian non Muslims like
The likes of Napoleon,Hitler etc

This type of Islam is putiranical, remorseless and khrawiji

It was pursued amongst the Sufi Chechnya’s
And then the Sufi taliban
And the wahabis with their takfeeri ideologue

It has taken root as Hamas took over their main rivals the PLO and in turn managed to completely quell the Palestinian resistance
In Kashmir as Indian used the Ikhwan to kill all competition
And ISIS, a modern ruthless criminal organisation with little though or comment on classic Islamic history or text


The vision to turn the East into a liberal democratic society has given the likes of ISIS free reign to cause destruction and instability


ISIS doesn't even tolerate non-Muslims in their lands. I am only asking to respect our holy figure.
 
2015 Charlie Hebdo attack trial suspended as suspect catches Covid-19

The main suspect in the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attack in France has tested positive for Covid-19 and his trial has been suspended, lawyers say.

Ali Reza Polat is accused of helping the militant Islamist attackers who killed 12 people at the satirical magazine four years ago.

The presiding judge says 10 accused accomplices must be tested for the virus before the trial can resume.

The suspension is likely to delay the trial's conclusion later this month.

Ali Reza Polat, 35, was sick and seen by a doctor, prompting the judge to suspend court for several days.

Judge Regis de Jorna said 10 other suspects must be tested, and "the resumption of the trial will depend on the results of these tests and the development of the health of the people concerned".

The defence lawyers were due to give their final submissions in the coming days, and verdicts were expected in two weeks' time.

Fourteen people in total are on trial over the attack on the magazine, as well as related attacks on a police woman and Jewish supermarket that left 17 people dead in total over three days. Three of the 14 are being tried in absentia.

The three gunmen in the two attacks were shot dead by police.

Ali Reza Polat is seen as the main link between the attacks and is believed to have had a key role in obtaining the weapons used. He subsequently attempted to flee to Dubai, Lebanon and Syria but without success.

The trial had already been delayed four months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

France returned to strict lockdown on Friday after a sharp rise in coronavirus cases in recent days.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-54768212
 
This open-and-shut trial has been on for 5 years?

France haven't taken pages from our book of justice by any chance have they?
 
Back
Top