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Charlie Hebdo shootings

Charlie Hebdo shooting
Part of the January 2015 Île-de-France attacks
Charlie-Hebdo-2015-11.JPG
Police officers, emergency vehicles, and journalists at the scene two hours after the shooting
Location 10 Rue Nicolas-Appert, 11th arrondissement of Paris, France
Coordinates 48°51′33″N 2°22′13″E / 48.85925°N 2.37025°E / 48.85925; 2.37025Coordinates: 48°51′33″N 2°22′13″E / 48.85925°N 2.37025°E / 48.85925; 2.37025
Date 7 January 2015
11:30 CET (UTC+01:00)
Target Charlie Hebdo employees
Attack type
Mass shooting
Weapons
Deaths 12
Non-fatal injuries
11
Perpetrators Chérif and Saïd Kouachi
Motive Islamic extremism
Chérif and Saïd Kouachi
 
Chérif Kouachi.jpg Saïd Kouachi.jpg
Chérif Kouachi (left) and Saïd Kouachi
Born Chérif: (1982-11-29)29 November 1982
Saïd: (1980-09-07)7 September 1980
10th Ardt, Paris, France
Died (2015-01-09)9 January 2015 (aged 32 and 34)
Dammartin-en-Goële, France
Cause of death Gunshot wounds
Nationality French
Killings
Date 7–9 January 2015
Location(s) Charlie Hebdo offices
Target(s) Charlie Hebdo staff
Killed 12
Injured 11
Weapons

On 7 January 2015 at about 11:30 local time, two brothers, Saïd and Chérif Kouachi, forced their way into the offices of the French satirical weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris. Armed with rifles and other weapons, they killed 12 people and injured 11 others. The gunmen identified themselves as belonging to the Islamist terrorist group Al-Qaeda's branch in Yemen, which took responsibility for the attack. Several related attacks followed in the Île-de-France region, on 7-8 January 2015. On 9 January 2015 was the Hypercacher Kosher Supermarket siege, where a terrorist murdered four Jewish hostages and held fifteen other hostages.

France raised its Vigipirate terror alert and deployed soldiers in Île-de-France and Picardy. A major manhunt led to the discovery of the suspects, who exchanged fire with police. The brothers took hostages at a signage company in Dammartin-en-Goële on 9 January and were shot dead when they emerged from the building firing.

On 11 January, about two million people, including more than 40 world leaders, met in Paris for a rally of national unity, and 3.7 million people joined demonstrations across France. The phrase Je suis Charlie became a common slogan of support at the rallies and in social media. The staff of Charlie Hebdo continued with the publication, and the following issue print ran 7.95 million copies in six languages, compared to its typical print run of 60,000 in only French.

Charlie Hebdo ([ʃaʁli ɛbdo]; French for Charlie Weekly) is a French satirical weekly newspaper that features cartoons, reports, polemics, and jokes. The publication is irreverent and stridently non-conformist in tone, is strongly secularist, antireligious, and left-wing, publishing articles that mock Catholicism, Judaism, Islam, and various other groups as local and world news unfolds. The magazine was published from 1969 to 1981, and has been again from 1992 on.


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