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Turkish Police Arrest 5 Protesting Reprinting of Charlie Hebdo Cartoons

© AFP 2023 / BULENT KILICTurkish Muslims chant slogans in front of Istanbul courthouse during a protest against the publication by Turkish daily newspaper Cumhuriyet of a a four page pull-out containing cartoons and articles translated into Turkish from the historic Charlie Hebdo issue, on January 15, 2015, in Istanbul
Turkish Muslims chant slogans in front of Istanbul courthouse during a protest against the publication by Turkish daily newspaper Cumhuriyet of a a four page pull-out containing cartoons and articles translated into Turkish from the historic Charlie Hebdo issue, on January 15, 2015, in Istanbul - Sputnik International
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Turkish police arrested five of those protesting against the republication of Charlie Hebdo cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad by the national Cumhuriyet magazine, Anadolu news agency reported Thursday.

People wait to buy the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo newspaper at a newsstand in Rennes, western France, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015 - Sputnik International
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MOSCOW, January 15 (Sputnik) The protesters, who gathered in front of the publication's office in Istanbul, were yelling slogans criticizing the edition. Five people holding banners and burning copies of Cumhuriyet were arrested. Similar protest actions took place in several other Turkish cities including Ankara, the country's capital, according to Anadolu.

On Wednesday, the Turkish daily Cumhuriyet reprinted several cartoons, depicting the Prophet Muhammad, from Charlie Hebdo "with the aim of criticizing the attack on a media corporation and showing solidarity." Three more Turkish satirical magazines, Leman, Uykusuz and Penguen, also republished the cartoons as a "tribute to fallen colleagues in France," the news agency reported.

Jean Paul Bierlein reads the new Charlie Hebdo outside a newsstand in Nice, southeastern France, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015. - Sputnik International
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On January 7, the Paris office of Charlie Hebdo was attacked by terrorists who killed 12 people, 10 of whom were editorial staff. The magazine, notorious for publishing caricatures of prominent political and religious figures, among them the Prophet Muhammad, had previously received threats from Islamic fundamentalists.

The killings caused an international outcry, with more than three million people participating in a unity marches held in cities across France on Sunday. Media reports indicate that the latest issue's print run reached five million copies after the magazine sold out mid-morning on Wednesday, in comparison to its usual circulation of 60,000.

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