No more Muhammad comics, says Charlie Hebdo editor Sourisseau
"Charlie Hebdo" editorial manager Laurent Sourisseau has told "Stern" magazine he will no more draw depiction of the Muslim prophet Muhammad. Souriseau's announcement comes six months after a dangerous assault on the magazine's workplaces.
Frankreich Charlie Hebdo Ausgabe C'est Reparti!
Amid a meeting with the Hamburg-based news magazine "Stern," editorial manager of the French week after week "Charlie Hebdo" said he would no more draw funnies of the Muslim prophet Muhammad.
"We have attracted Muhammad to shield the rule that one can draw whatever they need. It is a touch interesting however: we are relied upon to practice a flexibility of expression that nobody sets out to," Sourisseau told "Stern."
The editorial manager said that the magazine had done what it set out to do.
"We've done our employment. We have protected the privilege to exaggeration," Sourisseau said.
"Regardless we accept that we have the privilege to condemn all religions," the supervisor said, including that he would not like to accept that the magazine "was controlled by Islam."
Charlie Hebdo Laurent Sourisseau
Sourisseau survived however his officer was broken in the assault
"The oversights you could reprimand Islam for can be found in different religions," Sourisseau noted.
Sourisseau, who possesses 40 percent of the organization's shares, survived the savage terrorist assault on the workplaces of "Charlie Hebdo" on January 7 by playing dead.
He related the unfortunate occasion to "Stern," expressing that "when it was over, there was no solid. No protests. No whimpering. That is the point at which I comprehended that most were dead." The casualties incorporated the magazine's late editorial manager Stephane Charbonnier, nicknamed "Charb."
The dangerous battle drove by the aggressor Kouachi siblings in January left 16 dead after they attacked the workplaces of "Charlie Hebdo" and took prisoners at a genuine grocery store on the edges of Paris.
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