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Je suis Charlie

PressForNirvana

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Conspiracy theories all over the place in wake of Charlie Hebdo attacks in France

From colour of mirrors to mislaid identity card, rumours over Charlie Hebdo attacks abound


PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 20 January, 2015, 1:01am
UPDATED : Tuesday, 20 January, 2015, 1:01am

Agence France-Presse in Paris

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The colour of car's mirrors is conspiracy fodder.Photo: SCMP Pictures

Could the January 7 Charlie Hebdo attack have been a secret service operation or perhaps an anti-Muslim plot? The wildest conspiracy theories found their way onto the internet within hours of the Paris bloodbath.

Just as it did in the wake of the September 11 attacks in the United States, the rumour machine moved into top gear from the very moment the first reports about the shootings emerged.

Among the most frequently mentioned is the apparent change in colour of the rearview mirrors of a car used by the Kouachi brothers - white on an image taken near the Charlie Hebdo office where they killed 12 people and black in a later image of the abandoned vehicle.

Experts put the change down to the fact that the mirrors were made out of highly reflective chrome, which can change colour according to the light.

Other details providing rich material for the conspiracy theorists included the identity card mislaid by one of the Kouachi brothers and the telephone receiver not properly put back on its hook at the supermarket where gunman Amedy Coulibaly killed four people during a hostage siege two days later.

Even the route of the January 11 solidarity march through Paris has been given dubious significance in the minds of some, with claims that it mirrored the outline of Israel's borders.

Emmanuel Taieb, a professor at the Sciences-Po Lyon university in central-eastern France and a specialist in conspiracy plots, said that for many the official interpretation of events - as provided by the police, politicians and analysts - was simply too dull for them. "It is considered poor, disappointing. So it is ruled out or questioned in favour of a more appealing, worrying analysis," Taieb said.

Observers say that young people, for whom the internet is their main source of information, are particularly vulnerable to believing everything they read online. Mohamed Tria, 49, a business executive and president of La Duchere football club in a tough area of Lyon, said the mainstream interpretation of the attacks was far from the norm in some places.

"I met around 40 kids aged between 13 and 15 in my club," he said. "I was astounded by what I heard.

"They had not got their information from newspapers, but from social networks, it's the only accessible source for them, and they believe what they read there as if it is the truth," he said.

Others said adults now have far less control over what young people opt to believe.

For Guillaume Brossard, who is the co-founder of the website hoaxbuster.com a site that allows people to check the validity of information, it is as if the self-expression made possible by the internet was custom-made for rebellious teenagers.

"Adolescence is a time when one needs to assert oneself and rebel against adults, the established order, society etc... Alternative theories are therefore a wonderful area of self-expression for them," he said.

Olivier Ertzscheid, a lecturer in information science in the western city of Nantes, noted that some established media such as the daily Le Monde responded fairly quickly on social networks with their counter-arguments knocking down the various conspiracy theories.

Speed was of the essence if a balanced picture was to emerge, he said.

 

PressForNirvana

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Re: Charlie Hebdo Shootings - Censored Video


Paris attacks: Four men charged with links to terrorist attacks by Amedy Coulibaly

The four men have been charged with offences including helping to plan terror attacks and possession of weapons

Roisin O'Connor
Wednesday 21 January 2015

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Four men have been charged with links to the terrorist attacks in Paris that occurred earlier this month, the prosecutor’s office has said.

Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins said that the men were handed preliminary charges overnight of association with terrorism. The men are 22, 25, 26 and 28 years old and are suspected of providing logistical support to Amedy Coulibaly, one of the terrorists killed by police. They are being held in custody until further investigation.

Three of the four had criminal records while at least one met Coulibaly in prison, M. Molins said.

He said that authorities in France are working with other countries to search for other possible suspects, and added that investigators are trying to uncover who was responsible for the posthumous video of Coulibaly, which was edited and released days after he and the Charlie Hebdo gunmen Said and Cherif Kouachi were killed by police.

In the video, Coulibaly pledges allegiance to the Islamic State group and details how the attacks were coordinated by the three men.

Police probing the attacks on the Charlie Hebdo headquarters and a kosher grocery in eastern Paris arrested 12 people on the night of 15 January and in the early hours of the following day.

Under French law, they will be held in custody while an investigating magistrate builds a case. The other suspects have all been released.

Nine men and three women were questioned on suspicion of providing logistical support to the killers, the Interior Ministry announced at the time of the attacks.

France is currently still on the highest alert and has deployed over 120,000 police and soldiers across the country to protect vulnerable buildings such as schools and train stations.

Police said that the DNA of one of those arrested was found on a weapon used by Amedy Coulibaly: who killed a police officer in a Paris suburb on 8 January and then murdered four hostages at a kosher grocery store in the Porte de Vincennes, eastern Paris, the next day.

DNA of another man was found in the car Coulibaly drove to the grocery, Europe1 radio reported.

The three gunmen were killed in almost simultaneous assaults by the police on 9 January.

Police are still investigating the degree of coordination between the two attacks.

Additional reporting by AP


 
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