A Paris court on Thursday sentenced a Pakistani man to 30 years in jail for attempting to murder two people outside the former offices of Charlie Hebdo in 2020 with a meat cleaver.

When he carried out the attack, 29-year-old Zaheer Mahmood wrongly believed the satirical newspaper was still based in the building, which was targeted a decade ago for publishing blasphemous caricatures of Islam.

In fact, Charlie Hebdo had moved in the wake of the storming of its offices by two Al-Qaeda-linked masked gunmen, who killed 12 people including eight of the paper’s editorial staff.

The killings in January 2015 shocked France and triggered a fierce debate about freedom of expression and religion, fuelling an outpouring of sympathy in France expressed in a wave of “Je Suis Charlie” ( “I Am Charlie “) solidarity.

Originally from rural Pakistan, Mahmood arrived in France illegally in the summer of 2019.

The court had earlier heard how Mahmood was influenced by radical Pakistani preacher Khadim Hussain Rizvi, who had called for the beheading of blasphemers.

Mahmood was convicted of attempted murder and terrorist conspiracy and he will be banned from France when his sentence is served.

The 2015 bloodshed, which included a separate but linked hostage-taking that claimed another four lives at a supermarket in eastern Paris, marked the start of a dark period for France.

In the years that followed extremists inspired by Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group repeatedly mounted attacks, setting the country on edge and inflaming religious tensions.

republished anti-Islam cartoons on September 2, 2020.

Later that month, urged by the extremist preacher to seek revenge for the blasphemous caricatures, Mahmood arrived in front of Charlie Hebdo’s former address.

Armed with a butcher’s cleaver, he gravely wounded two employees of the Premieres Lignes news agency.

Throughout the trial, his defence argued that his actions were the result of a profound disconnect he felt from France, given his upbringing in the fervently Muslim Pakistan countryside.

“In his head, he had never left Pakistan,” Mahmood’s defence lawyer Alberic de Gayardon said on Wednesday, conceding that “each of his blows aimed to kill”.

“He does not speak French, he lives with Pakistanis, he works for Pakistanis,” Gayardon added.

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