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‘Je suis Charlie’: Victims of Paris magazine attack mourned across Europe

Thousands of people across Europe joined France in mourning the victims

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Tens of thousands of people joined rallies in Paris and other French cities Wednesday to pay tribute to the victims of an attack by gunmen at the satirical weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo.

In Paris, crowds of people swarmed into the Place de la Republique, which lies barely a half a mile from the scene of the killings that have stunned France.

At least 20,000 people also gathered in the French cities of Lyon and Toulouse, police said, after the heavily armed attackers killed12 people.

Demonstrators wore black stickers reading "Je suis Charlie" (I am Charlie), a slogan aimed at showing solidarity with the victims of the deadliest such attack in France in decades.

Others waved banners with slogans such as "Press freedom has no price" and "Charb mort libre" (Charb died free), a reference to the newspaper's slain editor-in-chief Stephane Charbonnier.

Charbonnier was one of four cartoonists killed in the attack that also left 11 people injured.

"It's terrible that these people were murdered. In future, no one will be able to speak his mind. We have to demonstrate in our thousands," said Beatrice Cano, a protester in her fifties, who was carrying the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo.

Other cities around the world were also planning rallies to pay tribute to the dead.

Agence France-Presse

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