Special edition
Ten years ago to the day, at the end of the morning of January 7, 2015 in Paris, two terrorists claiming to be from al-Qaeda in Yemen, wishing to avenge the Prophet Muhammad, entered the premises of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo. On site, 12 people were killed with weapons of war, 8 members of the editorial staff, and a police officer. It’s the start of a week of horror in France with two other attacks, in Montrouge, the next day, a police officer is killed, and the day after, again in Paris, against the hyper Kosher, 4 dead . The “Je suis Charlie” banner will be the rallying sign of a society wishing to come together and defend freedom of expression and press cartoons which are one of its vectors. How is freedom of expression and press cartoons doing in 2025? This is the subject of our special edition.
1 minute
Almost everyone was Charlie in 2015. What about today? And what about those who were too young to understand ten years ago? How is freedom of expression and press cartoons doing in 2025?
Special edition with our correspondents and reports and debates
“Can we talk about everything and how? »: debate with Jean-Loup Adénor, deputy editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo and Martin Lom, journalist and president of the Génération Charlie association.
“Press cartoons, more than ever in danger”: discussion with Kak, cartoonist at Opinion and president of Cartooning for Peace, and Khalid Gueddar, cartoonist for the Moroccan site The360.