Eight journalists, two police officers, a maintenance worker and a visitor were killed at the Charlie Hebdo offices. A look at some of the victims:
Stephane Charbonnier (above)
47, known professionally as Charb, was chief editor of Charlie Hebdo, as well as one of its top cartoonists and a stout defender of its provocative approach. He was in charge when the paper's offices were destroyed by a firebomb in 2011 after it had proposed inviting the Prophet Muhammad to be a guest editor. Charbonnier defiantly held up a copy of the paper as he stood amid debris. He suggested the attackers "are themselves unbelievers ... idiots who betray their own religion". In 2012, the paper again provoked controversy by publishing crude caricatures of Muhammad. Charbonnier, who by that time was under police protection, defended the cartoons. "I don't blame Muslims for not laughing at our drawings," he said. "I live under French law. I don't live under Koranic law." He told Le Monde he was unafraid. "I don't have kids, no wife, no car, no credit. Maybe it's a little pompous to say, but I'd rather die standing than live on my knees."
Photo / AP
"Bernard Maris was a man of heart, of culture and of great tolerance," the bank's president, Christian Noyer said. "We will miss him very much."
Jean Cabut, 76, widely known as Cabu, established himself as one of France's best-known cartoonists over a career that spanned 60 years.
Photo / AP
He served in the French military during the Algerian war for independence in the late 1950s, and later drew cartoons for several publications. One of Cabut's recurring characters was the Grande Duduche, a skinny, blond schoolboy bearing some resemblance to Cabut himself. Cabut's son, Mano Solo, a prominent singer and composer, died in 2010 at age 46.
Georges Wolinski
Photo / AP
80, was another of Charlie Hebdo's veteran cartoonists. His works had appeared in Hara-Kiri, Paris Match and numerous other publications. He was born in Tunisia and moved to France as a schoolboy. By age 26, he was working for Hara-Kiri. He was awarded the Legion of Honour, France's highest decoration, in 2005.
Bernard Verlhac
57, who drew under the name Tignous, was born in Paris in 1957 and published his first works in 1980. He was a member of a group of artists called Cartoonists for Peace and also belonged to the Press Judiciare, an association of French journalists covering the courts. He sent his last drawing - a self-portrait wishing Happy New Year - to the association the night before his death. It was posted on the group's website yesterday.
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