Under the garb of freedom of speech, Charlie Hebdo made two drawings of young Kurdi who was found dead recently on a Turkish beach and became a symbol of the refugee crisis.
Read: No more Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) comics, says Charlie Hebdo editor
The front page of the latest edition of the magazine featured the toddler lying face down on the beach and while the strapline read "Welcome to migrants", the main text read "So close to his goal". The magazine further made an illustration of a McDonalds billboard in the background stating "Two menus of children for the price of one."
Read: The attack on Charlie Hebdo
Meanwhile, the second cartoon entitled "The proof that Europe is Christian," portrayed Kurdi drowning in the water a man on the side, supposedly Jesus standing on the water and saying "Christians walk on waters, Muslim kids sink."
Many took to the social networking site to criticise Charlie Hebdo
https://twitter.com/jjsteeves/status/643376420832591872
https://twitter.com/Triska/status/643364431225753605
Charlie Hebdo mocks death of Syrian child #HumanityWashedAshore
— ISMAIL HUSSAYN 🦅 (@IsmailHussayn) September 14, 2015
Unbelievable & Disgraceful. pic.twitter.com/PAMB8YfxoP
@MWNEnglish is the most useless "media" in the world. Another personal opinion masked as journalism #CharlieHebdo http://t.co/93TUXhOSnI
— Amal Guerdali (@amalguerdali) September 14, 2015
They are as much of awful caricature as those Charlie Hebdo cartoons and show nothing other than aggression, machismo, violence
— Sunny Singh (@ProfSunnySingh) September 14, 2015
Charlie Hebdo managed to mock Aylan Kurdi, the boy who drowned, in the name of satire.
— . (@fatah_pak) September 14, 2015
They stand for freedom of speech or from humanity?
This article originally appeared on Morocco World News
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