One of the founding members of Charlie Hebdo has accused its slain editor Stéphane Charbonnier or Charb for “dragging the team” to their deaths by releasing increasingly provocative cartoons.
Co-founder Henri Roussel, 80, wrote to the slain editor, saying: “I really hold it against you.”
The comment comes as five million copies of the “survivors’ edition” went on sale, reports UK-based the Telegraph.
Roussel wrote an article in left-leaning magazine Nouvel Obs under the pen name Delfeil de Ton.
He wrote: “I know it’s not done”, but proceeds to criticise the former “boss” of the magazine.
He also called Charb a stubborn “block head.”
“What made him feel the need to drag the team into overdoing it,” he said, referring to Charb’s decision to post a Mohammed character on the magazine’s front page in 2011. Soon afterwards, the magazine’s offices were burned down by unknown arsonists.
Delfeil adds: “He shouldn’t have done it, but Charb did it again a year later, in September 2012.”
The accusation sparked a furious reaction from Richard Malka, Charlie Hebdo’s lawyer for the past 22 years, who sent an angry message to Mathieu Pigasse, one of the owners of Nouvel Obs and Le Monde.
“Charb has not yet even been buried and Obs finds nothing better to do that to publish a polemical and venomous piece on him.
“The other day, the editor of Nouvel Obs, Matthieu Croissandeau, couldn’t shed enough tears to say he would continue the fight. I didn’t know he meant it this way. I refuse to allow myself to be invaded by bad thoughts, but my disappointment is immense.”
Nouvel Obs’ Editor Matthieu Croissandeau said: "We received this text and after a debate I decided to publish it in an edition on freedom of expression, it would have seemed to me worrisome to have censored his voice, even if it is discordant. Particularly as this is the voice of one of the pioneers of the gang."
This is not the first time Delfeil has accused Charb’s predecessor of turning Charlie into a Zionist and Islamophobic organ.
Previously, Charlie's one of the former editors Philippe Val had fired one of its historic figures, Maurice Sine, for publishing a cartoon on the marriage of Nicolas Sarkozy’s son, Jean, to a Jewish retailing heiress, which he considered anti-Semitic.


