Outrage has spread from Meghan Markle and Queen’s Charlie Hebdo cartoons



The cover image came just days after cartoon Meghan and her husband Harry made several allegations against the royal family in an interview with Oprah Winfrey – in which the couple’s baby Archie’s skin tone was discussed as a possible issue.

The couple did not disclose who made the remarks, but said it was not Queen Elizabeth II or her husband Philip, Duke Ed of Edinburgh. In the interview, Meghan also described having regular suicidal thoughts and a short time as a working prince during her pregnancy, and the couple said Meghan and Archie were offered inadequate security and safety at the palace.

The cartoon was released on Saturday.

The title of the cartoon, released on Saturday, is “Why Meghan Quit is Busingham,” Meghan said: “Because I can’t breathe anymore!”

Meghan's interview began the race count in the UK media.  Will anything change?

Race Equality Think Tank’s RunnyMade Trust CEO Halima Begum said the cartoon was “wrong at every level.”

“Is the Queen as George Floyd’s killer strangling Meghan’s throat? Meghan says she’s unable to breathe? Doesn’t push these boundaries, make anyone laugh or challenge racism. It causes these issues and crimes on board.” Twitter.
Meghan and Harry’s interviews sparked widespread discussions about racism in both the royal family and the country’s media.
“We are not a very racist family,” Prince William told reporters this week, denying the royal family was racist.

In a statement on behalf of the Queen, Buckingham Palace said on Tuesday that allegations of racism made by Sussex were relevant and were “taken very seriously.”

Representatives from Buckingham Palace and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex declined to comment on the Charlie Hebdo cartoon.

The Paris-based weekly publication, founded in 1970, is famous for its provocative cartoons and gifts of politicians, public figures and religious symbols.

In 2015, the brothers broke into the newsroom of Said and Sheriff Kuachi magazine and shot dead staff members, while 12 people were killed and 11 wounded after the magazine published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

The attack on the magazine was part of a series of deadly attacks that killed 17 people in the French capital in three days in January 2015.

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