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After being the victims to a slaughter in its own newsroom in January, Charlie Hebdo went from a publication that was little-known outside of France to an international symbol of free expression.

Now, in the wake of last week's massacre in Paris, the once-obscure satirical newspaper has a message that will be heard around the world: "They got the weapons -- Screw them, we got the Champagne!"

That's the caption on the cover of Charlie Hebdo's latest issue, which is due out on Wednesday. The cover features a cartoon of a man drinking champagne, which is coming out of holes on his body that were created by the shootings.

The January shooting was in retaliation for the newspaper's caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed, a serious affront to some Muslims. That attack left 12 people dead, including Charlie Hebdo's top editor and several of the publication's cartoonists.

A little more than a week after the shooting, Charlie Hebdo put out another issue that featured a cartoon depiction of Mohammed on the cover. Millions of copies of the issue were printed, a dramatic increase from the newspaper's typical print run.

The issue sold out quickly in Paris and elsewhere in Europe. Americans were also eager to obtain a copy, though the issue was initially hard to come by in the United States.

It was a sign of the publication's newfound prominence. Vanity Fair reported in July that Charlie Hebdo had raked in millions of dollars in donations and sales following the attack.

The latest issue will likely be the newspapers’ most anticipated since the one it published after the attack in January. It includes an editorial from Charlie Hebdo's editor, Riss, who invoked Winston Churchill's famed "blood, toil, tears and sweat" quote.

"Without realizing it, Parisians of 2015 have kind of become Londoners from 1940, determined to never give up, neither to fear nor resignation, no matter what hits them in the face," he wrote.

Riss also called for a debate on Islam, which he said "has become a battlefield where the radicals want to destroy the non-believers and submit by force the moderates."

"Avoiding the trap of division doesn't mean giving up the right to criticize religion on the grounds that its practice is sometimes irritating," he wrote. "Among all of the fundamental freedoms that make up our lives, it's also this freedom that the killers wanted to eliminate Friday night."

 

 

 

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When ISIS terrorists want to keep secrets, they are turning to an app called Telegram. It's "the new hot thing among jihadists," said Laith Alkhouri, director of Research at Flashpoint Global Partners.

The Berlin-based startup boasts two layers of encryption and claims to be "faster and more secure" than its competitor WhatsApp, which is owned by Facebook. Users can securely message friends and send pictures and files. They can also create group chats with up to 200 members or opt for "special secret chats" where messages, photos, and videos will self-destruct.

ISIS is also using Telegram to broadcast big messages on the app's "channels," which are devoted to a variety of topics. It was on the official ISIS channel that the group said the Paris attacks would be the "first of the storm." ISIS also used Telegram to claim responsibility for downing a Russian airplane on October 31.

"A lot of people are now seeing Telegram advertised on ISIS supporter Twitter accounts," said Alkhouri. He said the official ISIS channel distributes between 10 and 20 ISIS statements and videos a day.

Some terror groups are using Telegram to fundraise. On certain jihadi-related channels, users are asked to donate and pick where their money would go. For example, users can pick out the type of weapons their money would be spent on. "You can choose whether to donate your money to an AK-47," Alkhouri said.

Because Telegram isn't yet widely known, there's less scrutiny. It launched in 2013 by brothers Nikolai and Pavel Durov, who has been dubbed "the Mark Zuckerberg of Russia."

Pavel Durov created the popular Russian social network Vkontakte, and fled Russia after refusing to hand over user data to the government, according to reporting by the New York Times. On Telegram's FAQ page, it says profits will never be a goal for the company. The company says it has "quite enough money for the time being."

Telegram is a reaction to what the makers of the app believe are shortcomings of other mainstream networks. "Big Internet companies like Facebook or Google have effectively hijacked the privacy discourse in the recent years," the site says.

A number of startups have popped up looking to make secure, encrypted communication mainstream -- a reaction to the revelations in the Edward Snowden leaks about the NSA's oversight of private communications. But now there's a debate: How much oversight should the government have? And how much privacy can be expected while still ensuring security?

While ISIS members often meet and relay their messages on social networks like Twitter, they often then "go dark," using apps with encryption.

"Encryption is one of many ways that an adversary, whether that's a criminal, a terrorist, a rogue nation, one of the many ways that they might use to hide their activities," former NSA Deputy Director Chris Inglis, said. Describing these kinds of Apps as an obstacle for the NSA.

 

 

 

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Two Air France flights bound for Paris from the United States were diverted for several hours on Tuesday following anonymous bomb threats, and more than 700 passengers and crew were safely taken off the planes, officials said.

Flight 65, an Airbus A-380 that departed from Los Angeles, landed safely in Salt Lake City, where passengers and crew were escorted into the terminal, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration said. The Salt Lake Tribune, citing an airport official, said it was carrying 497 passengers and crew.

The FBI said in a statement that no evidence was found aboard the plane "which would lend credibility to the threats" against the flight. The airport said operations were not affected, and local Utah media including broadcaster KSL reported that passengers had been cleared to reboard and resume their journey.

Keith Rosso, a passenger who tweeted a photo shortly after takeoff from Los Angeles, said he was "thankful to everyone who has been working to keep everyone calm and make sure air travel is safe. Hope to be taking off again shortly."

A separate Boeing 777 that left Dulles International Airport outside Washington, D.C., Flight 55, was diverted to Halifax International Airport in Nova Scotia, which said 262 passengers and crew members had safely disembarked.

In a brief statement, Air France said both flights had been the "subjects of anonymous threats received after their respective take-offs."

"As a precautionary measure and to conduct all necessary security checks, Air France, applying the safety regulations in force, decided to request the landings of both aircraft," the airline said in its statement.

It said authorities inspected the aircraft, passengers and luggage, adding: “An investigation will be led by the authorities to identify the source of the telephone call.”

Security officials have been on high alert since Islamic State militants claimed responsibility for attacks last week in Paris that killed 129 people. Russia has said the group was also responsible for the downing on Oct. 31 of a plane returning to St. Petersburg from the Sharm al-Sheikh resort in Egypt, killing all 224 on board.

The incidents did not appear to be causing flight delays or cancellations elsewhere.

According to data on flight tracking website flightradar24.com, flights operated by both Air France and other airlines appear to be taking off and landing normally at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris.

In another story, gunfire and explosions shook the Paris suburb of St Denis early on Wednesday as French police surrounded a building where a Belgian Islamist militant suspected of masterminding last week's attacks in the French capital was believed to be holed up.

Two assailants were killed, including a woman who detonated a suicide bomb, a source close to the case said, adding that the police operation was continuing to flush out two other suspects.

The target of the raid, which filled the streets of St Denis with heavily armed police and soldiers, was Islamic State militant Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who was initially thought to have orchestrated the Paris attacks from Syria, police and justice sources said.

A judicial source said police had originally been hunting other suspects in St Denis, but now believed he was one of those barricaded in the building.

Shooting began at about 4.30 a.m. (10.30 p.m. ET) and police Special Forces of the RAID unit were still involved in exchanges of fire three hours later, witnesses said.

"The operation is still under way. It's not over," local Member of Parliament Mathieu Hanotin said on France Inter radio. "Everyone must stay indoors. There are still gunmen holed up in the apartment."

Three police officers and a passerby were injured in the assault. A police source said three suspects had been arrested so far with security forces still trying to "neutralize" two more at the scene close to the Stade de France stadium which was one of the targets of last Friday's attacks.

The coordinated series of bombings and shootings killed 129 people, the worst atrocity in France since World War Two. Investigators soon linked the attacks to a militant cell in Belgium which was in contact with Islamic State in Syria.

The third event occurred lately when a soccer game between Germany and Netherlands which German Chancellor Angel Merkel was due to attend in Hanover was called off two hours before its scheduled start on Tuesday over fears of a planned bombing.

The match was due to have been held four days after the deadly attacks in Paris on Friday, when suicide bombers targeted the soccer stadium where Germany were playing France.

"We had received specific indications that an attack with explosives was planned," Hanover Police President Volker Kluwe told NDR state broadcaster. "We took them seriously and that is why we took the measures."

"We do not know if these people, who had planned something for the stadium, had planned something else so we try to have a presence throughout the city," he said

Police vans with loudspeakers ordered fans to leave the Hanover stadium and heavily armed officers positioned themselves outside the arena.

 

  

 

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