New Charlie Hebdo cartoon depicts Aylan Kurdi as sex offender in Germany
The drawing was issued after German authorities said that nearly all the suspects in a rash of New Year’s Eve violence against women in Cologne were “of foreign origin”. Police said late Sunday that more than a week on from New Year’s Eve, some 516 complaints had been lodged, including 40 per cent that were related to sexual assault. Witnesses described terrifying scenes of hundreds of women running a gauntlet of groping hands, lewd insults and robberies in the mob violence.
German probe blames migrants for New Year's Eve violence
The newspaper, known for its controversial drawings, caused furore when the image drawn by Laurent Sourisseau, also known as "Riss," a longtime contributor to the newspaper and its current publishing director, suggested that if Kurdi had survived his journey to Europe, he would have become a “groper in Germany”.
Sourisseau was present when extremists attacked the publication's offices in January last year. That attack left 12 people dead; Sourisseau was shot in the shoulder.
#AylanKurdi: The three-year-old who broke the world's heart
This is not the first time the newspaper has mocked the death of the Syrian toddler. While the world mourned his death, Charlie Hebdo featured two drawings of young Kurdi who was found lifeless on a Turkish beach after a migrant boat capsized while trying to reach the Greek island of Kos.
Charlie Hebdo mocks death of Syrian child Aylan Kurdi
Many took to Twitter to convey their outrage at the cartoon.
However, a few spoke out in defence of Charlei Hebdo: