The latest roundup of the major news stories from Australia and around the world.
1. Charlie Hebdo magazine
The cartoonist and editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo have appeared before the world’s press speaking of their decision to feature the prophet Mohammed on the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo – which will be released today.
The cover depicts the prophet Mohammed holding a sign which reads ‘Je suis Charlie’. He is crying a single tear and above him are the words ‘Tout est pardonné (All is forgiven)’.
You can see the cover here.
In an emotional press conference a weeping cartoonist Renald ‘Luz’ Luzier said the image represented “just a little guy who’s crying.”
Shaking and fidgeting he said, “The only idea left was to draw Mohammed, I am Charlie. Then I looked at him, he was crying. Then above, I wrote: “All is forgiven”, and then cried. We had the front page, we had finally found this bloody front page. This was our front page.
This was not the front page the world wanted us to draw, it was our front page.
This is not the front page that the terrorists want us to draw, as there are no terrorists in it, just a man who cries: it’s Mohammed. I am sorry that we drew him again, but the Mohammed we drew is a Mohammed who is crying above all.”
Luz, as he is known escaped the massacre because he had overslept by half an hour. He said, “We are cartoonists and we like drawing little characters, just as we were as children.
The terrorists, they were kids, they drew just like we did, just like all children do.
Top Comments
3 stories I am a bit unclear of, the football star father- is he the father of the bully or the victim?
What "gender reporting" are they speaking of, perhaps this is something of common knowledge? Do they mean employment type reporting, and if so exactly what type of reporting is it that relates to gender.
Lastly the measles guy, how did they know he had measles? Did someone see a spotty guy and just assume he had measles?
Perhaps I am obtuse for asking these questions.
He's the father of the bully, so probably a big boy compared to other kids his age and has probably being pulling the "my father is ......." for ages.
He would have gone to his doctor, been diagnosed with measles and the public health unit at Metro South (as mentioned by name in the story) would have together with him, traced his movements when he was contagious and made public the announcement for when he went to a busy, public place. That's how public health works. People don't just ring up a news outlet saying "I saw someone spotty at Bunnings, he must've had measles" and have it get widely reported.
The gender reporting is something that business must complete and send to the government each year, and details how many females are employed, average female salary, females in management, parental leave policies etc. It used to be quite a simple process but last year it became much more cumbersome and time consuming to complete.
I disagree with those at the Lindt cafe receiving bravery awards unless they specifically did sonething brave, for a start we don't actually know the full story of what happened, I have seen a number of conflicting reports about Tori for instance, and some of the hostages haven't had yheir stories mentioned at all.
Of course they all went through something awful, but I think we make a mockery of bravery awards if we hand these out to everyone who has had a traumatic experience.