Charlie Hebdo cartoon of Meghan Markle and Queen furious

The cover photo came days after Meghan and her husband Harry made a series of damning accusations against the royal family in an interview with Oprah Winfrey – including the fact that the skin color of the couple’s child, Archie, was discussed as a possible issue. before he was born.

The couple did not disclose who made the remarks, but said it was not Queen Elizabeth II or her husband, Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh. In the interview, Meghan also described that she regularly had suicidal thoughts during her pregnancy and a short time as a working royal, and the couple said that the palace offered Meghan and Archie insufficient security and protection.

The cartoon was published on Saturday.

The cartoon, published on Saturday, is titled “WHY MEGHAN STOP BUCKINGHAM”, with Meghan saying, “Because I could no longer breathe!”

Meghan's interview made a settlement of race in British media.  Will anything change?

Halima Begum, CEO of the think tank of the race, Runnymede Trust, said the cartoon is wrong on every level.

“The queen as GeorgeFloyd’s killer who crushes Meghan’s neck? Meghan says she can not breathe? It does not push boundaries, makes no one laugh or challenges racism. It humiliates the issues and causes offense across the board,” she said. Twitter.
Meghan and Harry’s interview sparked wide-ranging conversations about racism in the royal family and in the country’s media.
Prince William denied this week that the royal family is racist and told a reporter: “We are very much not a racist family.”

In a statement on behalf of the Queen, Buckingham Palace said on Tuesday that the Sussex allegations about racism were being made and were “taken very seriously”.

Buckingham Palace and representatives of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex declined to comment on the Charlie Hebdo cartoon.

The weekly publication in Paris, founded in 1970, is known for its provocative cartoons and removals of politicians, public figures and religious symbols.

In 2015, brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi burst into the magazine’s newsroom and shot dead staff members, killing 12 people and wounding 11 after the magazine published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

The attack on the magazine was part of a series of deadly attacks in which 17 people were killed in January 2015 in the French capital for three days.

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