Alongside the struggle between the perpetrators of the attack and the police, a young Muslim helped save lives in a supermarket attacked by another subject.
It only took one minute and 49 seconds for the bursts of gunfire to end the lives of around ten people inside the premises of the French weekly. Charlie Hebdo .
This morning of January 7, 2015, in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, two jihadists equipped with Kalashnikov rifles and other weapons went to number 6 rue Nicolas-Appert .
They were brothers and Their names were Saïd and Chérif Kouachi 35 and 32 years old respectively.
Both They were dressed all in black and wore balaclavas. which covered their faces.
Arriving at the address they had indicated as the headquarters of Charlie Hebdo, They realized they were wrong: the weekly had changed a year ago .
However, The new location was nearby: it was number 10 on the same street. .
During this short trip, the Kouachi brothers They opened fire on two employees of the Sodexo company. One of them died Frédéric Boisseau.
When they arrived at the place they were looking for, They meet a designer named Corinne Rey (“Coco”) and do not hesitate to take her hostage. .
After all, Their goal was only one: to murder employees and managers in cold blood. of the weekly.
The criminals They forced “Coco” to give them the door code . Aware of what was going to happen, She tried to deceive them, but in vain: the Kouachi were able to enter on the second floor of the building.
With their assault rifles in hand, They searched for the media director, Stéphane Charbonnier (“Charb”) and shot him dead .
Second act, They pulled the trigger on the people they had in their sights .
There were more than 50 shots fired which happened in this short time of one minute and 49 seconds.

After starting the massacre, They left the building and fled in the Citroën C3 II which they had parked in the street. Nicolas-Appert.
During his escape, They encountered agents police with whom they exchanged fire .
In the midst of this violent scenario, At one point, they stopped on a street guarded by agent Ahmed Merabet. .
They came down and They pointed their bullets at him. He is also dead .
Then they got back in the car and They continued to flee until they collided with another vehicle. near Place Colonel Fabien.
That led them to steal one, a Renault Clio, and continue at full speed with his escape plan.
SO, They managed to leave the City of Lights nicknamed through the Porte de Pantin.
In total, the Kouachi brothers They murdered 12 people on January 7 .
France was in mourning and the news of the terrorist attack at Charlie Hebdo headquarters made international media headlines .
Following this tragic event, Authorities dispatched more than 80,000 security forces to find them according to data retrieved by Infobae .
Two days after, On January 9, they found them in the town of Dammartin-en-Goele located about fifty kilometers from Paris.
To avoid – or delay – its capture, The Kouachi took the workers of a company hostage Signage.
When they left the building to confront police as they fired their assault rifles, They were killed by the agents .

The victims of the attack and the controversies against Charlie Hebdo
In addition to murdering Boisseau, Charbonnier and Mérabet, they killed nine people. in the premises of the French weekly.
To the policeman and escort of “Charb”, Frank Brinsolaro ; to artists and collaborators George Wolinski (“Wolinski”), Jean Cabut (“Cabu”), Bernard Verlhac (“Tignous”), Philippe Honoré (“Honored”); to the economist and writer Bernard Maris (“Uncle Bernard”); to the psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who wrote chronicles Elsa Cayat ; to the corrector Mustapha Ourad ; and the journalist Michel Renaud who was there because “Cabú” had invited him.
Also, Other cartoonists, journalists and managers present were injured. like Philippe Lancon, Fabrice Nicolino, Simón Fieschi and the artist Laurent Sourisseau (“Riss”)
Afterwards, the latter published a book entitled One minute and forty-nine seconds in which he returns to the attack which ended in the death of his friends and this was marked in the history of France.
The other people present at the scene were able to escape unharmed. Among them, “Coco”, the designer that the Kouachis took hostage to enter the building.
After the attacks, the journalist present that day, Sigolène Vinson, declared that one of the attackers had told her before murdering her colleagues: “We don’t kill women, but we must convert to Islam and wear the veil.” .
Likewise, we learned that During the attack, they shouted: “Allah is greatest.” .
Throughout its turbulent history, Charlie Hebdo has been characterized as a magazine with controversial texts and drawings, which uses black humor to make irreverent and ironic references to the spheres of power. and public figures.
This also includes graphic depictions of religious leaders such as Muhammad among other things of different beliefs.

This character leads some people and communities to express their opposition to your publications.
For example, regarding his burlesque drawings of Mohammed, In 2006, they were prosecuted by French Islamic authorities for “public insults against a group of people on the basis of their religion”, but they were acquitted. on the basis of freedom of expression.
Later, In November 2011, its headquarters was attacked with Molotov cocktails. .
As an answer, A week later, they published a cover depicting a kiss between a Muslim and a cartoonist. .
“Love is stronger than hate” read on the cover.
Four days after the attack which resulted in 12 victims, nearly two million people, including local and international leaders, participated in a march for national unity .
The phrase “ I am Charlie ” (“My name is Charlie”) was shouted around the world in support of free speech. .

A parallel attack and the young Muslim who saved lives in a supermarket
On January 8, 2015, One day after the attack on Charlie Hebdo headquarters, a 23-year-old man named Amedy Coulibaly murdered a police officer. and seriously injured a civilian.
This individual, Like Chérif Kouachi, he had been a disciple of the Algerian terrorist Djamel Beghal. who was subsequently expelled in 2015.
The brothers were identified by authorities as “active jihadists,” while Coulibaly added more and more crimes. to your story.
One day later, On the 9th of the same month, Coulibaly robbed a Jewish supermarket called Hyper Cacher, located at Porte de Vincennes. east of Paris.

He murdered four Jews who were there with a rifle and took the rest of the people present hostage. .
During these tense moments where fear and uncertainty predominated, A 24-year-old undocumented Muslim immigrant who works there, Lassana Bathily, managed to escort a group of six customers – including a baby – to a cold room. .
Despite the threat Coulibaly posed, he took them to this place, He turned off the refrigerator and asked them to stay there until it was safe. to go out.
Then he came back and He suggested they escape in a forklift, but no one accepted. .
Faced with refusal, He decides to leave the scene alone to offer his help to the police. . However, At first, officers thought he was an accomplice. by Coulibaly.
“My life was almost more in danger outside than inside. If I hadn’t obeyed the police, they could have killed me “, he recalled in statements saved by The country .
He spent an hour and a half handcuffed in a van during his interrogation, until colleagues assured him that he was indeed an employee. .
With your trust, He gave them the information they needed to help them eliminate the attacker without endangering those inside. .
The operation was successful and they were able to kill Coulibaly without there being any other victims. .
Bathily’s heroism in the midst of such a complex situation earned him congratulations from the French president at the time, Françoise Hollande, who facilitated his citizenship .
For his part, he expressed: “We are brothers. It’s not about Jews, Christians or Muslims. “We are all in this together and we need to help each other move forward.” .
Time later, published an autobiographical book entitled I am not a hero (in Spanish, I am not a hero ) .

Source: Latercera

I’m Rose Brown , a journalist and writer with over 10 years of experience in the news industry. I specialize in covering tennis-related news for Athletistic, a leading sports media website. My writing is highly regarded for its quick turnaround and accuracy, as well as my ability to tell compelling stories about the sport.