To commemorate the 10th anniversary of the deadly terror attack on its offices, French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo has reprinted its controversial Muhammad ...
Zaheer Mahmood, from Pakistan, seriously injured two people outside magazine's former offices after republication of Muhammad ...
French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo unveiled a special edition ... cartoonist drawing a bearded figure who looks like Mohammed. Another cartoon appears to show the leaders of the three ...
Critics say the weekly publication sometimes crosses the line into Islamophobia, pointing to some of the Prophet Mohammed ... in 2015, Charlie Hebdo published a front-page cartoon of a bearded ...
A Paris court found Pakistani national Zaheer Mahmood guilty of attempted murder and terrorism in an Islamist-motivated ...
The perpetrator of the attack, Zaheer Mahmood, 29, hadn't realized that the satirical weekly magazine had moved offices and ...
The debate on art and freedom overlooks the ways in which Charlie Hebdo perpetuated racist stereotypes against Muslims, who are vulnerable in French society.
A Paris court on Thursday sentenced a Pakistani man to 30 years in jail for attempting to murder two people outside the former offices of Charlie Hebdo in 2020 with a meat cleaver.
Zaheer Mahmoud attacked two people near the former offices 'Charlie Hebdo' in 2020. He said he had been looking to avenge the ...
In September 2020, ahead of the trial for the 2015 massacre, Charlie Hebdo republished its controversial Mohammed cartoons, prompting a surge of protests in Pakistan, where blasphemy can carry the ...
A French court on Thursday sentenced a Pakistani man to 30 years in prison for his attempt to stage an attack on the offices ...
Zaheer Mahmood, 29, from Pakistan, attacked and badly wounded two employees of the Premieres Lignes news agency, days after Charlie Hebdo had republished cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.