DIRECT. Charlie Hebdo: The commemoration ceremonies for the January 2015 attacks ended in front of the Hypercacher

DIRECT. Charlie Hebdo: The commemoration ceremonies for the January 2015 attacks ended in front of the Hypercacher
DIRECT. Charlie Hebdo: The commemoration ceremonies for the January 2015 attacks ended in front of the Hypercacher

The French President, Emmanuel Macron, and the Mayor of , Anne Hidalgo, will pay tribute, this Tuesday, January 7, to the victims of the Islamist-inspired attacks on Charlie Hebdo and Hypercacher, which had pushed into crisis. horror ten years ago.

On the morning of January 7, 2015, Chérif and Saïd Kouachi burst into the offices of Charlie Hebdo, killing 12 people in cold blood, including eight members of the editorial staff, then a police officer, Ahmed Merabet, during their escape.

The two brothers, who had pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, intended to “avenge the Prophet”, whose satirical newspaper had published caricatures in 2006 which had been deemed offensive in the Arab-Muslim world. Five designers – Cabu, Charb, Honoré, Tignous and Wolinski – are among the victims.

Chérif and Saïd Kouachi were shot dead two days later by the police while they had taken refuge in a printing works in Dammartin-en-Goële (Seine-et-).

The same day, four Jewish customers of a hypercasher store located at Porte de , in the east of the capital, were murdered by Amedy Coulibaly, a jihadist claiming to be from the Islamic State (IS) organization who had already killed a municipal police officer the day before in (Hauts-de-Seine), south of Paris.

These attacks, the starting point of a wave of jihadist-inspired attacks which bloodied France for several years, inspired the slogan “Je suis Charlie” and sparked a gigantic mobilization in favor of freedom of expression on 11 January 2015 in the streets of Paris, where dozens of heads of state and government paraded.

“In the world when France is affected, it is freedom, human rights which are attacked while unfortunately, terrorism has spread everywhere,” said former President François Hollande during a interview with Reuters. “It is towards France that we turn because it is France, this strong idea of ​​freedom which prevails over all other considerations.”

Freedom of expression

Ten years after the events, and a painful trial of the assassins’ accomplices which did not provide all the answers hoped for, Charlie Hebdo “is still there”, proclaims its editorial director, Riss, in an anniversary issue entitled “Incredible! “, with on the front page, a hilarious reader sitting on a Kalashnikov, the weapon of the Kouachi brothers.

“Satire has a virtue that has helped us get through these tragic years: optimism,” Riss writes in his editorial. “If we want to laugh, it’s because we want to live. Laughter, irony, caricature are manifestations of optimism. Whatever happens, dramatic or happy, the The urge to laugh will never go away.”

For François Hollande, freedom of expression remains a precious asset to be preserved in the age of social networks.

“It is threatened, sometimes hampered by a form of fear that has taken hold. Should we publish drawings, project certain images, make reports when we know that they can hurt personalities or communities? There is this form of self-censorship that has taken hold,” he notes.

In his eyes, the “libertarian conception” notably advocated by billionaire Elon Musk, owner of the social network

“Freedom of expression – and this was the case with the Charlie Hebdo caricatures – can be mocked, denounced, but it is never a call to hatred, discrimination or the questioning of the faithful or of practitioners of a religion, while absolute freedom allows you to say everything about everything without limits”, judges the former president who has become a deputy again.

1:10 p.m.

The procession gathers in front of the Hyper Kosher

This is the last stage of the commemorations. After paying tribute to the victims of the attack on Charlie Hebdo and to police officer Ahmed Merabet, participants in the commemorations arrived in front of the Hyper Cacher, east of Paris. On January 9, 2015, four people were killed there by Amedy Coulibaly.

12h30.

Second commemoration ceremony begins

Participants in the commemorations of the 10th anniversary of the January 2015 attack arrived on Boulevard Richard Lenoir, a few hundred meters from the former Charlie Hebdo premises. There too, they laid wreaths of flowers in front of the plaque commemorating the assassination.

11h55.

The tribute ceremony has begun

In a collected silence, the names of the eleven victims of the attack of January 7, 2015 were listed. That of the journalists from Charlie Hebdo, that of the maintenance worker killed in the hall, that of the police officer shot dead by the terrorists while leaving the premises. In reverse protocol order, wreaths were laid.

This first commemoration ceremony ends with the Marseillaise. The head of state must now go to Boulevard Richard Lenoir, a few meters away, in memory of police lieutenant Ahmed Merabet, killed by the Kouachi brothers. pic.twitter.com/Fgw1y0mQw0

— franceinfo (@franceinfo) https://twitter.com/franceinfo/status/1876584591890284548?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

There follows the bell ringing for the dead and a minute of silence observed in great contemplation, broken by the Marseillaise.

10h17.

Macron wants the Terrorism Memorial project to be maintained, threatened with abandonment

Emmanuel Macron made known his desire to maintain the Terrorism Museum-Memorial project near Paris “as he announced it” in 2018, and which had been threatened with abandonment by the government of Michel Barnier, a- we learned on Tuesday from a source close to the matter.

The President of the Republic assured us last evening of his commitment to continuing the MMT project in . It is good news for all victims of terrorism on this memorial day to see the word of the State respected.

— Henry Rousso (@Henry_Rousso) https://twitter.com/Henry_Rousso/status/1876532924578996367?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

On the eve of the tenth anniversary of the jihadist attack against Charlie Hebdo, the head of state saw on Monday the president and the director of the mission to foreshadow this memorial, Henry Rousso and Elisabeth Pelsez, “and told them that “he wanted the project to be maintained as he had announced it,” this source told AFP, confirming information from franceinfo.

09h13.

“One could almost think that it did not happen. Freedom has not been undermined,” reassures Yannick Haenel, columnist at Charlie Hebdo.

ud83dudde3ufe0f “You might almost think that it didn’t happen. Freedom wasn’t taken into account.”

ud83dudd34 Yannick Haenel, columnist @Charlie_Hebdo_looks back on his experience within the newspaper and believes that joining him “was the right thing to do.”#Les4V pic.twitter.com/UW9l2HKYbp

— Telematin (@telematin) https://twitter.com/telematin/status/1876529834970554879?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

09h08.

A former Raid negotiator looks back on his discussions with Amedy Coulibaly, the Hyper Cacher terrorist

ud83dudde3ufe0f “A situation like that is the realm of paradoxes. You have an ultra offensive individual and then he is a calm individual.”

ud83dudd34 Frédérick Martin, former RAID negotiator, reveals his exchanges with Amedy Coulibaly during the Hyper Cacher attack. #Telematin pic.twitter.com/JIEU6PZeYg

— Telematin (@telematin) https://twitter.com/telematin/status/1876538823116464242?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

09h02.

On this “anniversary” of the tenth anniversary of the Charlie Hebdo attack, the Prefect of Police, Laurent Nunez, recalls that “there is a permanent threat which is very high”

08h56.

“The intelligence services had not seen it”

ud83dudd34 Charlie Hebdo attack u27a1ufe0f “Finding the Kouachi brothers, whose surveillance had been stopped a few months before, at this stage, and on an attack like that, the intelligence services had not seen it”, said François Molins. pic.twitter.com/qkxhesxx0Y

— franceinfo (@franceinfo) https://twitter.com/franceinfo/status/1876536981292777574?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

08:53.

“I had never seen a crime scene like that. It’s something extremely violent,” confides François Molins, former public prosecutor.

ud83dudd34 Charlie Hebdo attack u27a1ufe0f “I had never seen a crime scene like that. It’s something extremely violent,” says François Molins. pic.twitter.com/iqsLdfn6zA

— franceinfo (@franceinfo) https://twitter.com/franceinfo/status/1876535766785937876?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

08h45.

“I think that the Charlie spirit is still there and that it is shared by an immense majority of French people,” underlines Manuel Valls, then Prime Minister during the attacks.

08h27.

“We are still here, 10 years after years,” confides the editor-in-chief of the Charlie Hebdo newspaper

With our colleagues at RMC, Gérard Biard, editor-in-chief of the satirical newspaper, discusses the terrible attack which affected the editorial staff of Charlie Hebdo. He confides: “This symbolic date is complicated every year. This year, it’s even more so, there is the symbol of the date.”

He adds: “We are still here, 10 years later. The two terrorists who came out of the premises shouting ‘we killed Charlie Hebdo’, we made them lie. Charlie Hebdo is still there. We exercise our freedoms.”

08h23.

“Freedom of expression is a fundamental right”, assures National Secretary of the PCF

“Tomorrow evening, at the PCF headquarters, we will present the drawings which came from the competition which was launched by Charlie Hebdo, “laughter of god”, and which were produced by cartoonists from all over the world. They made caricatures of one or more religions,” he explains.

08h11.

How has French opinion evolved regarding freedom of expression in satire and press cartoons?

According to an Ifop survey published by the newspaper Charlie Hebdo, for 76% of French people, freedom of expression is a fundamental right. In addition, 62% of French people consider that it is possible to criticize a religious belief, symbol or dogma in an outrageous manner.

However, according to this survey, a third of young people under 35 think that we cannot say and caricature everything we want under the guise of freedom of expression, compared to 21% of 35-64 year olds. .

08h09.

The Minister of the Interior “favorable” to a terrorism memorial

-

-

PREV AMD floods us with Ryzen AI and unveils the processors of the next portable consoles
NEXT Last minute: the message from Dani Olmo – FC Barcelona