reThe trial of the terrorists’ accomplices in the attack on Charlie Hebdo was under way when 90 major media outlets published a manifesto for freedom of expression. No newspaper illustrated the appeal with one of the Muhammad cartoons that the satirical magazine reprinted at the start of the trial. Again there were death threats, an employee had to leave her apartment in ten minutes; he has been under police protection since 2015. A knife attack in front of the old editorial building resulted in two seriously injured people. History teacher Samuel Paty, who was beheaded on Friday, had also shown the cartoons to students two weeks earlier in a lesson on freedom of the press and freedom of expression.
The newspapers reacted to the negotiations in the courts with their manifesto for press freedom. “Charlie Hebdo” attorney Richard Malka spoke of the “judgment of a defeat” and accused the newspapers of discouragement. Witnesses and survivors stressed in the courtroom how much the situation had worsened since the attack. Fear triumphs: there are, Malka said with resignation, there are no books, there are no exhibitions, there are no films or plays that critically address Islam.
“Charlie Hebdo” settled with politicians and intellectuals as intellectual accomplices of the terrorists. For fear of fomenting “Islamophobia”, they belittle the totalitarian threat. Nor is the media’s call to defend press freedom formulated as a courageous declaration of war. Avoid terms like “Islamism” and radical Islam. There is talk of fanatics, but without ideological classification.