Paris Attacks: Charlie Hebdo Responds To Massacre That Killed 129

Charlie Hebdo's First Cover Since The Paris Attacks Really Sticks One To ISIS
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French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo has responded to the Paris terror attacks in typically controversial style.

The magazine’s core of staff were murdered in January when a gunman stormed its offices, igniting three days of bloodshed around Paris that left 17 victims dead.

In the aftermath of the attacks in the French capital last week, Charlie Hebdo's front page features a cartoon of a man riddled with bullet holes, swigging from a bottle, with the caption: “They have the weapons. Fuck them, we have the champagne!”

Islamic State (IS, also known as ISIS and ISIL) has claimed responsibility for the atrocities which saw 129 people killed in a wave of attacks across the city on Friday night.

For many, this spree of six attacks by three apparently coordinated teams felt different, more visceral, than the Charlie Hebdo massacres in January.

Paris Attacks
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A medic tends to a man after an attack near the Boulevard des Filles-du-Calvaire Nov. 13, 2015, in Paris, France. (credit:Thierry Chesnot via Getty Images)
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A woman is being evacuated from the Bataclan theater after a shooting in Paris, Friday Nov. 13, 2015. French President Francois Hollande declared a state of emergency and announced that he was closing the country's borders. (credit:Thibault Camus/AP)
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French Red Cross rescue workers evacuate an injured person near the Bataclan concert hall in central Paris. (credit:DOMINIQUE FAGET via Getty Images)
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Medics move a wounded man near the Boulevard des Filles-du-Calvaire. (credit:Thierry Chesnot via Getty Images)
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Police officers and rescue workers gather around a victim outside a Paris restaurant. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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A Victim of a shooting attack is treated on the pavement outside La Belle Equipe restaurant. (credit:Anne Sophie Chaisemartin/AP)
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Spectators wait on the pitch of the Stade de France stadium after explosions were heard.
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Football fans leave the Stade de France stadium. (credit:FRANCK FIFE via Getty Images)
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Football fans talk to a policeman securing an area outside the Stade de France stadium. (credit:FRANCK FIFE via Getty Images)
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Police and rescuers are seen outside a cafe-brasserie in Paris' 10th arrondissement. (credit:KENZO TRIBOUILLARD via Getty Images)
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A rescue worker walks past a victim in the 10th district.
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Police officers secure a street outside the Stade de France stadium after the international friendly soccer France against Germany, Friday, Nov. 13, 2015 in Saint Denis, outside Paris. Two police officials say that at least 26 people have been killed in shootings and explosions around Paris, in the deadliest violence in France in decades. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)
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President Barack Obama speaks to the press after the Paris attacks. (credit:JIM WATSON via Getty Images)
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Spectators flee the stadium after explosions were heard. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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French President Francois Hollande, left, and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier arrive to watch the international friendly soccer match France against Germany at the Stade de France stadium. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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An injured man is evacuated on a stretcher near the Bataclan concert hall. (credit:DOMINIQUE FAGET via Getty Images)
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A man is being evacuated from the Bataclan theater after a shooting in Paris, Friday Nov. 13, 2015. French President Francois Hollande declared a state of emergency and announced that he was closing the country's borders. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)
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People are evacuated by bus, near the Bataclan concert hall in central Paris, on November 14, 2015. More than 100 people were killed in a mass hostage-taking at a Paris concert hall on November 13 and many more were feared dead in a series of bombings and shootings, as France declared a national state of emergency. (credit:FRANCOIS GUILLOT via Getty Images)
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Spectators embrace each other as they stand on the playing field of the Stade de France stadium at the end of a friendly soccer match between France and Germany in Saint Denis, outside Paris, Friday, Nov. 13, 2015. Hundreds made their way to the pitch after explosions were heard nearby. Multiple fatal attacks throughout the city have prompted President Francois Hollande to announce he was closing the country's borders and declaring a state of emergency. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)
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Investigating police officers are pictured outside the Stade de France stadium after an international friendly soccer match France against Germany, in Saint Denis, outside Paris, Friday Nov. 13, 2015. During the first half of France's soccer match against Germany on Friday, two explosions went off nearby. French President Francois Hollande declared a state of emergency and announced that he was closing the country's borders. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)
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French officials and medics work near Le Petit Cambodge restaurant in the 11th district after a drive-by shooting killing 11 people, November 14, 2015, Paris, France. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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Police forces and forensic experts gather near the Bataclan concert hall in central Paris, on November 14, 2015. (credit:MARTIN BUREAU via Getty Images)
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French officials and medics work near Le Petit Cambodge restaurant in the 11th district after a drive-by shooting killing 11 people, November 14, 2015, Paris, France. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Not just because the death toll was so much higher, but because these killings were viciously indiscriminate, turning life and death into a lottery, with victims simply in the wrong place at the wrong time, gunned down and blown up seemingly at random as they unwound from the week on a Friday night - sipping beers on pavements, sitting in cafes and watching American rock band Eagles of Death Metal perform.

Three suicide bombers also detonated their explosive vests outside the national Stade de France stadium, where France's soccer team was playing an exhibition match against Germany.

By shooting journalists who ran cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, the Charlie Hebdo gunmen targeted France's mind, assaulting values of free expression that the French cherish. Friday's suicide attackers - a new strain of terrorist for France - landed more of a blow to the heart by massacring people who were simply out having fun.

After the January massacre the slogan Je Suis Charlie was adopted by supporters of freedom of speech and freedom of the press and trended worldwide in a gesture of support for the magazine.

The weekly publication has a history of drawing outrage across the Muslim world with crude cartoons of Islam’s holiest figure, resulting in the firebombing of its offices in 2011.

A year later, the magazine published more Muhammad drawings amid an uproar over an anti-Muslim film. The cartoons depicted Muhammad naked and in demeaning or pornographic poses. As outrage grew, the French government defended free speech even as it rebuked Charlie Hebdo for fanning tensions.

Victims of the Paris attacks named
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Lamia Mondeguer
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Marie Mosser
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Manu Perez
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Matthieu Giroud
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Thomas Duperron
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Christophe Lelluche
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Claire Camax
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Elsa Delplace
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Romain Didier
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Romain Dunay
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Anne Guyomard
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Fanny Minot
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Pierro Innocenti
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Quentin Mourier
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Précilia Correia
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Germain Ferey
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Nicolas Classeau
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Maxime Bouffard
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Kheireddine Sahbi
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Elif Dogan
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Milko Jozic
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Marie Lausch
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Aurélie de Peretti
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Halima Saadi and Houda Saadi
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Quentin Boulenger
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Mathieu Hoche
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Juan Alberto González Garrido
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Luis Felipe Zschoche Valle
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Elodie Breuil
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François-Xavier Prévost
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Lola Salines
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Thomas Ayad
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Nick Alexander
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Valentin Ribet
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Guillaume Decherf
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Nohemi Gonzalez
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Cedric Mauduit
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Asta Diakite
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Fabrice Dubois
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Valeria Solesin
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Djamila Houd
Caroline Prenat(42 of108)
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Eric Thome(43 of108)
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Marie Lausch and Mathias Dymarski, both from Metz(44 of108)
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Précilia Correia(45 of108)
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Mohamed Amine Benmbarek(46 of108)
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Maud Serrault
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Ludovic Boumbas
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Halima Saadi
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Houda Saadi
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Stephane Albertini
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Armelle Pumir Anticevic
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Anne-Laure Arruebo
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Thomas Ayad
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Chole Boissinot
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Quentin Boulenger
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Ciprian Calciu
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Baptiste Chevreau
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Véronique Geoffroy de Bourgies
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Nicolas Degenhardt
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Alban Denuit
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Vincent Detoc
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Manuel Dias
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Gregory Fosse
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Cedric Gomet
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Christophe Foultier
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Julien Galisson
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Suzon Garrigues
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Mayeul Gaubert
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Olivier Hauducoeur
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Frederic Henninot
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Pierre-Antoine Henry
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Raphael Hilz
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Natalie Jardin
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Hyacinthe Koma
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Gilles Leclerc
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Guillaume Le Dramp
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Marion and sister Anna Pétard-Lieffrig
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Isabelle Merlin
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Cecile Misse
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Helene Muyal-Leiris
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Franck Pitiot
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Bertrand Navarret
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Christopher Neuet-Shalter
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David Perchirin
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Michelli Gil Jaimez
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Richard Rammant
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Estelle Rouat
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Patricia San Martin Nunez
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Sven Silva
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Jean-Jacques Kircheim
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Fabian Stech
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Ariane Theiller
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Olivier Vernadal
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Luis Felipe Zschoche Valle
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Marion Jouanneau
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Lola Ouzounian
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Emmanuel Bonnet,
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Yannick Minvielle
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Thierry Hardouin