5000 x 3011 px | 42,3 x 25,5 cm | 16,7 x 10 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
2015
Lieu:
London
Informations supplémentaires:
Cover detail of 14th January 2015 No. 1178 edition of Charlie Hebdo. A cartoon of Muhammad bears a Je suis Charlie sign, French for "I am Charlie". Charlie Hebdo issue No. 1178 was published on 14 January 2015. It was the first issue after the shootings at the periodical's headquarters on 7 January 2015 that left 11 of the staff dead. The edition was put together by surviving Charlie Hebdo cartoonists, journalists, and former contributors and was prepared in a room in the offices of Libération. The print run for the issue – over seven million copies – was the highest ever for the French press. The publication sparked protests by Muslim demonstrators in Yemen, Pakistan, Mauritania, Algeria, Mali, Senegal, Niger, Chechnya, and other countries. In Niger, violent protests led to 10 deaths. On the morning of 14 January, thousands of people in France queued in line for hours, waiting for newsstands to open. Within an hour, 700, 000 copies had been sold and every newsstand in the country was sold out. More copies were delivered the next day and in total 1.9 million copies were sold in the first 48 hours. The issue run was increased again to five million on 14 January, and finally to seven million. The print run was the highest ever for the French press, the former record being 2.2 million for an issue of France-Soir on the death of Charles de Gaulle. The demand was so great that pirated copies were already being distributed on 14 January, and issues were being offered on eBay for "exorbitant" prices. The issue was translated into five languages: English, Italian, Spanish, Arabic and Turkish. There were plans for it to be sold in 25 countries and translated into 16 languages.
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