Emails reportedly leaked from Middle Eastern broadcaster Al Jazeera reveal how staff are split over its coverage Charlie Hebdo attack. Emails reportedly linked by Al Jazeera staff show conflicting viewpointsSome brand satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo as 'racist' and 'extremist'Others defend right to publish cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad By Stephanie Linning for MailOnline Published: 20:05 GMT, 10 January 2015 | Updated: 21:09 GMT, 10 January 2015 A series of emails leaked by journalists at Al Jazeera English reveal a divide among staff regarding the news organisation's coverage of the Charlie Hebdo massacre.
In the exchange, some staff members brand the satirical magazine as 'racist' and 'extremist,' over the publication of controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad. While others defended Charlie Hebdo's decision, saying that it needed to be done to ensure that the 'violent' do not have control over 'liberal civilization'. Scroll down for video 'Alienating': One of the emails urged staff to discuss the potentially divisive 'Je suis Charlie' slogan. The email sparked a heated debate among its recipients.
Anonymous 'declare war on jihadists' after Charlie Hebdo massacre. The hacking group have condemned the Paris massacre which killed 12Anonymous has now released a video 'declaring war' against terroristsPledged to close jihadi social network accounts to avenge those murdered.
Hayat Boumeddiene has reportedly fled to Syria. The wife of terrorist Amedi Coulibaly took a flight from Madrid to Instanbul yesterday accompanied by a man whose brother was known to French intelligence services. Hayat Boumeddiene, 26, is the 'wife' of Amedy Coulibaly, who killed a policewoman and four hostages in a kosher bakery She reportedly took a flight from Madrid to Istanbul yesterday Coulibaly was killed as commandos stormed the kosher bakeryHundreds of phone calls were made between Boumeddiene and the wife of one of the Charlie Hebdo killers last yearPolice are interrogating wives of Said and Cherif Kouachi in a bid to track down Boumeddiene Kouachi brothers were killed as they tried to fight their way out of a print works 25 miles from Paris By Fidelma Cook and Peter Allen In France and Jenny Stanton For Mailonline.
Armed and dangerous: the hunt for Hayat Boumeddiene - Telegraph. Analysis of their phone records showed the two women had spoken more than 500 times in 2014, highlighting how well the two sets of attackers knew each other.
Francois Molins, the Paris prosecutor, said the phone records proved “constant and sustained” contact between the two. New photos show Boumeddiene wearing a skimpy bikini while cuddling her husband on a sunny beach. Yet in other images she is shown clutching a crossbow, and aiming the weapon at the camera. Boumeddiene was born on June 26, 1988, into a large family of seven in Villiers-sur-Marne.
After the death of her mother in 1994, her father a delivery driver called Mohamed, struggled to raise his children. She met Coulibaly while working as a cashier, and waited four years for him to come out of prison following his conviction for armed robbery. Charlie Hebdo terror mentor's wife on benefits in Leicester. After the two men were released from prison they remained close, and were photographed by French surveillance officers playing football in April 2010 in Cantal, southern France, with two other convicted terrorists.
It emerged on Friday that Amedy Coulbaly and his girlfriend Hayat Boumeddiene, suspected of murdering a policewoman and holding hostages in a Jewish grocery store, were also mentored by Beghal. According to Le Monde, the pair visited the militant in 2010 in Cantal, southern France, where he was under house arrest. Paris gunmen linked to Abu Hamza, ISIS commander and Al-Qaeda leader in Yemen. Two of the terrorists who brought carnage to Paris were mentored by Djamel Beghal, a key al Qaeda leader, in prisonBeghal recruited terrorists at a Finsbury Park mosque and was linked to hook-handed hate preacher Abu Hamza and Abu WQatadaCharlie Hebdo killer Cherif Kaouchi and Ahmedi Coulibaly, who was shot dead after taking hostages in Paris kosher deli on Friday, both tried to free a known terroristKey member of the Buttes Chaumont gang now top level ISIS commander Cherif Kaouchi also went to the Yemen as late as 2011 to meet top Al Qaeda cleric By Flora Drury For Mailonline Published: 19:05 GMT, 9 January 2015 | Updated: 19:59 GMT, 9 January 2015 The Charlie Hebdo killers and the fanatic who died in a gun fight in a Paris kosher grocery store are all part of the same terror gang which flourished in the heart of Paris and whose tentacles spread to hate preachers Abu Hamza, Abu Qatada, and top leaders of Al Qaeda in Yemen and ISIS.
Charlie Hebdo assassins shot dead then Paris hostage taker as commandos kill all three terrorists. Brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi were killed as they tried to fight their way out of a print works 25 miles from ParisFellow jihadi Amedy Coulibay also killed after taking hostages at a Jewish grocery shop in east of cityHis girlfriend Hayat Boumeddiene, described as armed and dangerous, is still on the runFour hostages died at grocery shop while Michel Catalano, who was held by Kouachi brothers escaped unharmed All three dead terrorists were born in France but linked to same terror cell By Peter Allen and Simon Tomlinson and Martin Robinson and Claire Duffin and Hannah Roberts and Emine Sinmaz In Longpont For Mailonline and David Williams for the Daily Mail Published: 08:02 GMT, 9 January 2015 | Updated: 20:16 GMT, 9 January 2015 Three Islamic jihadists were dead tonight after special forces brought an end to more than two days of slaughter which have left at least 17 dead and spread terror across France.
Said, 34, and Cherif, 32, were both killed. Scroll down for videos. Cartoonists show solidarity after Paris Charlie Hebdo attack, in pictures - Telegraph. Charlie Hebdo attack: Suspects' profiles. 9 January 2015Last updated at 14:25 ET Police in France have brought to an end two hostage stand-offs, killing three attackers.
Charlie Hebdo attack: Victim obituaries. 8 January 2015Last updated at 13:23 ET <div class="warning"><img class="holding" src=" alt="People gather at New York's Union Square in reaction to the attack on French newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris, 7 Januray 2015" /><p><strong>Please turn on JavaScript.
</strong> Media requires JavaScript to play. </p></div> As the manhunt for the attackers continues, here's a tribute to those killed - in 60 seconds. Charlie Hebdo attack: What we know so far. 9 January 2015Last updated at 11:54 ET Two brothers suspected of shooting 12 people in an attack on Paris-based French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo were killed on Friday as elite police stormed the building they were holed up in.
A hostage was freed unhurt after the mission in Dammartin-en-Goele, 5km (22 miles) north-east of the capital. Police simultaneously stormed a kosher supermarket in Paris where another gunman was also holding a number of hostages. He was also killed. Continue reading the main story In the attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices on Wednesday, two masked men, armed with assault rifles, forced their way into the magazine offices, shooting dead the editor Stephane Charbonnier, his police guard and nine other members of staff.
Gun attack on French magazine Charlie Hebdo kills 11. 7 January 2015Last updated at 06:39 ET Police and rescue services near the office of Charlie Hebdo Gunmen have attacked the Paris office of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, killing 11 people and injuring 10, French officials say. Witnesses spoke of sustained gunfire at the office as the attackers opened fire with assault rifles. The satirical weekly has courted controversy in the past with its take on news and current affairs. Its latest tweet was a cartoon of the Islamic State militant group leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. Charlie Hebdo and its place in French journalism. 8 January 2015Last updated at 11:36 ET A special edition of Charlie Hebdo on sale on 2 January 2013 The French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo has been attacked by gunmen, who have killed 12 people at its Paris offices.
It is the worst attack on a magazine which has been hit by violence before. In 2006 many Muslims were angered by Charlie Hebdo's reprinting of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. They had originally appeared in a Danish daily, Jyllands-Posten. The magazine's offices were fire-bombed in November 2011 when it published a cartoon of Muhammad under the title "Charia Hebdo". One of the latest tweets on Charlie Hebdo's feed was a cartoon of the Islamic State militant group leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
The editor, Stephane Charbonnier, had been under police protection, having received death threats. Historical satire France is on high alert after the deadly attack on Charlie Hebdo Nowadays there are new dragons to slay: politicians, the police, bankers and religion. Charlie Hebdo: Recalling a day at the magazine.