In Belgium, Prime Minister Charles Michel spoke of "shock, dismay and terror" after the attacks against Charlie Hebdo. One major Belgian daily, Le Soir, published two pages of the weekly drawings. "No way here to agree or disagree with the content of the French satirical magazine - as a reminder, we had not published at the time the Danish cartoons. It is not about content but to defend a principle, being a link in the chain that proclaims: not even death, life resumes as before, "the Soir.be.
The Belgian newspaper has also tweeted a line drawing by Flemish separatist Bart de Wever representing a caricature of himself under Adolph Hitler traits.
In Italy, the press had made her one of Charlie Hebdo, after the attacks against the drafting of the magazine. The Italian daily Corriere della Sera had the headline: '' Attacks against freedom. All ''. La Repubblica: "Here, this is not satire is at stake but freedom." La Stampa described the weekly "symbol of French journalism."
Charlie Hebdo was published today in Italy with 'Il Fatto Quotidiano' 'that will make a donation to the families of journalists killed. 260,000 copies of the magazine were distributed in Italy. There was also out of stock in the kiosks. 200,000 additional copies will be distributed on Thursday.
The publication of the special edition of "Charlie Hebdo" with Muhammad in tears received the support of most of the country's Spanish-speaking world. The mainstream media of Spain welcomed the fight for freedom of expression means to them the satirical magazine. Like El Pais, who wrote an editorial titled "With Charlie Hebdo". In Ecuador, cartoonists have used this struggle to criticize the censorship of the press by the government of Rafael Correa.
In Iran, the spokesman of the Foreign Ministry, Marzieh Afkham, condemned the new cartoon on the front page of Charlie Hebdo. She said that it was an act of provocation against the Muslim world. "The West is abusing freedom of expression and this must stop," she added.
In Turkey, the Cumhuriyet newspaper distributed a four-page insert in Turkish taking most of the new issue of Charlie Hebdo. The distribution trucks were stopped and searched by the police who then allowed the sale of this edition. "We feel very close to Charlie Hebdo, as we have also lost a journalist because of the terror in the past," writes Cumhuriyet.
In the UK, the first page of Charlie Hebdo was described in most major UK newspapers. However, only The Independent and The Guardian published an entirely of the satirical weekly. The Guardian added this warning to his readers: "This article contains the image of a magazine that could be deemed offensive"
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