Charlie Hebdo shakes with cover drowning neonazi's

Charlie Hebdo shakes with cover drowning neonazi's

World August 31, 2017 15:03

- The fact that the French satirical weekly magazine Charlie Hebdo is not afraid to hurt is well known. But the cartoon on their most recent front page fires on social media in many people in the wrong throat. In it, the drowning death of some Texans seems to be celebrated and Hurricane Harvey's victims are put down as neonazi's.

The cartoon shows how some people drown while they seem to be a Hitler greeting. In the water float big red nazi flags. This would be a reference to the people in Texas who were drowned by hurricane Harvey.

'God exists!', Writes the magazine on the cover. 'He drowned all neo-Nazis in Texas!'

On social media it raises criticism.

'False,' responds the one. 'This is why I do not read that magazine anymore. Waning is one thing. But these are dangerous delusions, 'responds another.

It's not the first time Charlie Hebdo gets the criticism that they go too far with their cartoons. In 2011, many Muslims were angry with a drawing of the Prophet Muhammad, which Islam can not depict.

Even after the attack on the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo did not reduce the tone against Muslims. A second sign of the Prophet then produced angry reactions again.

The editors again spoke in 2016 with a provocative cartoon about the drowned Syrian boy Aylan. Two gripping graves were seen running men behind women. The text reads: 'And what would Aylan have become later? Billenknijper in Germany ', referring to assaults of women in that country.

The cartoon shows how some people drown while they seem to be a Hitler greeting. In the water float big red nazi flags. This would be a reference to the people in Texas who were drowned by hurricane Harvey.

'God exists!', Writes the magazine on the cover. 'He drowned all neo-Nazis in Texas!'

On social media it raises criticism.

'False,' responds the one. 'This is why I do not read that magazine anymore. Waning is one thing. But these are dangerous delusions, 'responds another.

It's not the first time Charlie Hebdo gets the criticism that they go too far with their cartoons. In 2011, many Muslims were angry with a drawing of the Prophet Muhammad, which Islam can not depict.

Even after the attack on the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo did not reduce the tone against Muslims. A second sign of the Prophet then produced angry reactions again.

The editors again spoke in 2016 with a provocative cartoon about the drowned Syrian boy Aylan. Two gripping graves were seen running men behind women. The text reads: 'And what would Aylan have become later? Billenknijper in Germany ', referring to assaults of women in that country.

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