Six teens found guilty in connection to Islamist beheading of French teacher
A high school history teacher was beheaded by an Islamic refugee in a Paris suburb on Oct. 16, 2020. Six teenagers who had a hand in Samuel Paty's savage execution were convicted Friday by a French court.
Among the convicts was a Muslim student who spread lies about the nature of the teacher's Oct. 6 lesson on freedom of expression as well as other teens who helped set up the bloody ambush. Adults suspected of complicity in the terrorist murder, including the Moroccan father of the untruthful teen, are set for trial in 2024.
Although some justice has ostensibly been meted out, it appears to be of little consolation to a country struggling with radicalism and the apparent fallout of multiculturalism.
The Islamist murder plot
Paty, 47, was a teacher at Collège Bois-d'Aulne, in a suburb northwest of Paris. On Oct. 6, 2020, he showed Charlie Hebdo caricatures of Mohamed to his class during a lesson on freedom of expression, posing the question, "To be or not to be Charlie?"
The lesson was timely since Charlie Hebdo, a satirical magazine, had been targeted by Islamic terrorists multiple times in recent memory, including the previous month when two employees were stabbed outside its headquarters. In 2015, two Islamic terrorists gunned down 12 people at the magazine's headquarters. In 2011, the magazine's office was firebombed.
One of Paty's students, a then-13-year-old Muslim girl, was suspended that month for skipping school. Rather than own up to her truancy, the Guardian reported that the teen told her father, Brahim Chnina, that she had been ousted for confronting Paty over the freedom of expression class.
According to the yarn she spun, Paty dismissed Muslim students from the class so that he could show non-Muslims "a photograph of the Prophet naked." She further claimed the upon confronting Paty, the teacher had her suspended.
Chnina, an Islamist preacher who migrated from the 99% Sunni Muslim nation of Morocco, subsequently took to social media to condemn Paty and demand that he be fired.
Abdullakh Anzorov, an 18-year-old Islamist migrant from Chechnya, picked up on the enraged father's cues and began plotting the murder. Prosecutors indicated that Anzorov traveled 50 miles from Normandy to Conflans-Sainte-Honorine to assassinate Paty, reported the BBC.
Five other teens, between the ages of 13 and 15 at the time, then helped Anzorov identify and ambush Paty. The terrorist paid them roughly $327 for their services.
With the help of the teens, Anzorov tracked down Paty as he walked home from work and used a cleaver to hack off his head. Witnesses reportedly heard the attacker shout, "Allahu Akbar," during the commission of the assassination.
Police responded to the scene and successfully gunned down the terrorist, but not before he could boast of the slaying on Twitter.
BBC indicated 15 people were taken into custody following the murder, including Anzorov's parents, brother, and grandfather. Additionally, various Muslim organizations that allegedly trafficked in outrage over the false claims concerning Pety's lesson were scrutinized. The Collective Against Islamophobia in France was, for instance, deemed an "enemy of the state" by the country's interior minister.
First set of convictions
The teenage girl who spread the initial lie about Paty was revealed in court not to have been in class during the lesson. She was found guilty Friday of making false accusation charges and slanderous comments, reported the Guardian.
For her hand in Paty's demise, the untruthful teen was given an 18-month suspended prison sentence.
The five teens who helped Anzorov with his murder plot were found guilty criminal conspiracy with intent to cause violence. Four of the facilitators were given suspended sentences. The fifth was sentenced to six months in prison but may ultimately serve time on the outside under electronic surveillance.
Virginie Le Roy, a lawyer representing the victim's family, told the French press, "The role of the minors was fundamental in the sequence of events that led to his assassination."
Eight adults will be tried next year for their alleged hand in the assassination.
In addition to Chnina and members of the terrorist's family, Anzorov's friends, identified as Azim E. and Naim B., will be tried for alleged "complicity in a terrorist murder," according to France 24. The duo are said to have helped the killer pick out and buy the murder weapon.
Growing concern
The convictions are unlikely to ease tensions in France, where the struggle with what the New York Times characterized in 2021 as a failure of integration appears to have come to a head.
Recently, Muslim students at a school west of Paris raged over their art teacher's exhibition of a Renaissance painting portraying a Greek mythology story and featuring scantily clad women, reported the Daily Mail. Facing threats from Islamists, various teachers went on strike.
This summer, the country faced race riots over the police-involved shooting of an Algerian teen that were almost as destructive to the European nation as the 2020 BLM riots were to the United States.
Last month, a gang of youths who made clear they were out to "stab white people" did just that at a French village's annual winter ball, butchering a 16-year-old boy. The attacks prompted major protests critical of the nation's immigration policy.
The French regime has in recent days unsuccessfully attempted to pass legislation that would clamp down on illegal immigration, toughen French language requirements, speed up the deportation process, and make it more challenging for foreign nationals to obtain residency papers, reported the New York Times.
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FACT CHECK: Did A Satirical Magazine Run A Cover With Ukrainians Vandalizing A World Cup Poster With Nazi Symbols?
The cover is digitally fabricated
FACT CHECK: Does This Photo Show A French Anti-Vaccine Passport Demonstration?
The photo actually shows a crowd assembling to show solidarity after terrorist attacks in Paris in 2015
French magazine Charlie Hebdo sparks fury for cartoon of Queen kneeling on Meghan Markle’s neck: 'It's terrorism!'
The French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo sparked online outrage after its latest cover evoked memories of the death of George Floyd. The controversial cover depicted a cartoon caricature of Queen Elizabeth II pressing her knee into the neck of Meghan Markle, which was labeled as "hate speech," and lambasted as being "offensive" and "racist."
The front page of the provocative newspaper parodies the death of George Floyd, where former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was caught kneeling on Floyd's neck for nearly nine minutes. The Charlie Hebdo cover satirizes the death of Floyd with a visual comparison to the split of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex with the royal family.
The headline on the cartoon reads: "Why Meghan left Buckingham Palace." There is a dialogue bubble from Meghan, saying, "Because I couldn't breathe anymore," a reference to the May 25 video of Floyd, where he is heard saying, "I can't breathe" over 20 times.
French magazine Charlie Hebdo mocks George Floyd's murder and Meghan's racism concerns. The cover reads: 'Why Megha… https://t.co/ruc3u2xhhD— Nadine White (@Nadine White)1615630046.0
The controversial illustration was relentlessly chastised online by furious commenters, who racked up thousands of likes and retweets for their outrage.
One Twitter user declared, "Charlie Hebdo is a racist rag and has been for a very long time. Saying it does not mean condoning the 2015 attacks or being against free speech. It simply means being against racism. Ignoring it is being complicit and plays right in the hands of all those who seek to divide us."
NBA basketball player Enes Kanter castigated the paper, "Shame on @Charlie_Hebdo_ for promoting Racism, Xenophobia, Islamophobia and Sexism. They make millions while making light of oppression and injustice all for a punchline. This is disgusting. Racism is NOT free speech. ITS HATE SPEECH AND TERRORISM!"
One tweet read, "Charlie Hebdo is a disgusting newspaper that promotes Racism, Xenophobia, Islamophobia and sexism. For years it has made fun of many serious social issues that exists in the world, whilst making millions of dollars. We need to call them out for this Bulls***."
Another commenter ranted, "Creating a culture of hate is terrorism. STOP NORMALIZING RACISM AS FREE SPEECH! Racism is NOT free speech. ITS HATE SPEECH AND TERRORISM! It's only white people I see defending racism under free speech and blatantly racist publications like Charlie Hebdo."
Another said the cartoon was "absolutely disgusting."
One person said, "I feel sick" after seeing the Charlie Hebdo cover.
Some people were so enraged by the cartoon that they referred to and attempted to justify the 2015 massacre that happened at the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris that killed 17 and injured 11 others. Radical Islamic terrorists slaughtered the employees of the newspaper because of a satirical image of the Prophet Mohammed.
Murdering dozens of journalists is fine if they make fun of George Floyd, say leftists. https://t.co/ExwL3PXSPi— Ian Miles Cheong (@Ian Miles Cheong)1615667581.0
There were a few commenters who defended Charlie Hebdo's cover as free speech.
One commenter said, "I remember when people were defending Charlie Hebdo after people their were murdered for free speech."
"Charlie Hebdo has more than earned the right to say what it likes in the way it likes, and through the blood of their staff remains the rights of ourselves to freely criticize them in turn. But not to shut them down or shut them up. If you don't like it, don't RT it," one person wrote on Twitter.
Another Twitter user said, "BREAKING: Charlie Hebdo, a magazine famous for offensive cartoon covers, does an offensive cartoon cover."
France's fight for sovereignty against terrorism
Macron is fighting to save the integrity of the French state against an extremist worldview totalitarian in its ends and homicidal in its means.
Twitter removes tweet saying Muslims have a 'right ... to kill millions of French people' — but apparently will not suspend account
Twitter on Thursday removed a tweet posted by the former prime minister of Malaysia that said Muslims have "a right to be angry and kill millions of French people," but did not suspend the author's account. The tweet was sent hours after an attacker yelling "Allahu Akbar" brutally beheaded one person and killed two others in Nice, France.
The deleted tweet was part of a longer thread from former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, who said that while he personally does not approve of the murder, Muslims have a "right to be angry" with Western civilization and French President Emmanuel Macron over the display of cartoons depicting the prophet Mohammad.
The Muslim world is outraged at the French government for refusing to take action against French citizens for public displays of the prophet Mohammad, who founded of Islam. Images depicting Mohammad are considered blasphemous in the Islamic religion. French citizens have begun depicting Mohammad in images as a show of support for free expression after a French school teacher was beheaded by a Chehchen refugee on Oct. 16 in retribution for showing his students a Mohammad cartoon.
The former prime minister criticized Macron for refusing to stop the French people from freely expressing themselves.
"Macron is not showing that he is civilised [sic]. He is very primitive in blaming the religion of Islam and Muslims for the killing of the insulting school teacher. It is not in keeping with the teachings of Islam," Mohamad tweeted. "But irrespective of the religion professed, angry people kill. The French in the course of their history has killed millions of people. Many were Muslims."
Then he argued in a tweet hidden by Twitter that Muslims have a right to kill "millions of French people for the massacres of the past."
Image source: Twitter/chedetofficial screenshot
According to Twitter's policy documents, tweets that the company determines violate Twitter Rules are required to be removed before the violator can tweet again.
"In the interim period between when Twitter takes enforcement action and the person removes the Tweet, we hide that Tweet from public view and will replace the original content with a notice stating that the Tweet is no longer available because it violated our Rules," Twitter's policy states.
Mohamad has not tweeted from his account since his thread was finished five hours ago. It is unclear if he has not tweeted because Twitter has prevented him from doing so.
Twitter did not immediately respond to The Blaze's request for comment.
Earlier, Twitter locked the account of U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Mark Morgan for violating Twitter rules on "hateful conduct" with a tweet that celebrated the success of the Trump administration's new wall on the U.S. southern border.
The Federalist obtained screenshots of Morgan's offending tweet, which said, ".@CBP & @USACEHQ continue to build new wall every day. Every mile helps us stop gang members, murderers, sexual predators, and drugs from entering our country."
"It's a fact, walls work," Morgan said.
For this tweet, Twitter locked Morgan's account and sent him an email that said, "You may not promote violence against, threaten, or harass other people on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, religious affiliation, age, disability, or serious disease."
It appears that under Twitter's rules, a post justifying the killing of millions is morally equivalent to one promoting law enforcement and border security.
City in France projects drawings of Prophet Muhammad onto buildings after beheading of school teacher
Charlie Hebdo's controversial depictions of the Prophet Muhammad were projected onto the walls of regional hotels in Toulouse and Montpellier, France.
Suspect in Paris stabbing said he wanted to attack Charlie Hebdo: Report
The man who apparently attacked two people with a meat cleaver in Paris on Friday told investigators that he wanted to target the weekly satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, according to a report.
French police launch terror investigation after knife attack near Charlie Hebdo's former office
Police are investigating a knife attack that took place near the former Paris offices of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, the site of a 2015 radical Islamist terror attack, CNN reported Friday.
The stabbing occurred Friday morning and has left two individuals seriously injured, police said. The victims are said to be employees of the French documentary production company Premières Lignes. They are in serious condition but are expected to survive.
The attack comes as a long-awaited trial unfolds of 14 people accused of assisting the two gunmen, brothers Saïd and Chérif Kouachi, in their attack on Charlie Hebdo's offices nearly five years ago.
Shortly after the attack, an unidentified suspect was arrested near Place de la Bastille, and as of Friday afternoon, two suspects were being held by police.
"The main perpetrator has been arrested and is currently in police custody, the second individual was placed in custody for his relations with the main perpetrator," Jean-François Ricard, France's anti-terror prosecutor, said.
A terror investigation has been launched
French prosecutors have reportedly opened a terrorism investigation due to the attack's proximity to the 2015 terror attack, which took the lives of 12 people and injured 11 others, and its timing in relation to the current trial.
Ricard added that the two victims were on a cigarette break when they were attacked.
According to CNN, Premières Lignes' founder, Paul Moreira, told BFM TV that it "all happened very quickly" and that "a few blows were given to the two people in front of the office" by an attacker wielding some "sort of cleaver."
The company's director, Luc Hermann, criticized what he described as a "total absence of protection of this building since the attacks on Charlie Hebdo."
"We're journalists. Our job is to inform, not to get attacked like this morning," he added.
Following the incident, Charlie Hebdo tweeted out "support and solidarity" to its "neighbors and colleagues at [Premières Ligne] and to those affected by this heinous attack."
Earlier this week, the magazine's head of human resources, Marika Bret, was forced to flee her home forever as a result of "precise and detailed" death threats.
As the trial loomed, the magazine decided to republish the Mohammed cartoons that sparked the original attack.
"Since the start of the trial and with the republication of the cartoons, we have received all kinds of horrors, including threats from al-Qaeda and calls to finish the work of the [gunmen from the 2015 attack]," Bret told Le Point magazine.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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