Close X
Thursday, September 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Montrealers frustrated with lack of Charlie Hebdo copies

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2015 10:55 AM

    MONTREAL — About 100 people who lined up outside a Montreal store on Friday morning hoping to pick up a copy of Charlie Hebdo were left disappointed when fewer than expected were delivered.

    A downtown outlet of the Maison de la Presse Internationale was expected to receive 40 copies of the French satirical magazine but an employee initially said only five arrived.

    Sorey Chum told The Canadian Press the copies were to be kept for ''his bosses.''

    A few hours later, Chum said the store had found another 20 copies of the issue, which is the first one produced since a pair of Islamic extremists opened fire at the magazine's Paris offices, killing 12 people.

    Some of the people in the Montreal lineup were upset at the scarcity of the newspaper.

    "They were expecting 40 copies and they only got five — just the regular weekly delivery,'' a frustrated Nicole Desormeaux said before news of the extra 20 copies surfaced.

    "I don't know what to say...I'm going home. I've been here since seven o'clock this morning and it's now 10:30.

    ''It cost me $10 for parking. I was 32 among the first 40 people and then they told us they received only five copies...I'm very, very disappointed.''

    Desormeaux said she really wanted a copy because ''it's a page of history.''

    The magazine's Canadian distributor said there wouldn't be anywhere near enough to meet demand across the country.

    LMPI said 1,500 copies would be available in 135 Canadian stores.

    While the vast majority of the copies were to be carried by Quebec retailers, the magazine was also to be available at a handful of stores in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

    Some stores said their limited number of copies were already spoken for by people who reserved them ahead of time.

    In Toronto, the manager of a Gateway newsstand said all the copies he expected to receive were already presold. But Nirmaljit Singh Chadha found out at the last minute he wouldn't get as many as promised, meaning he would have to give some customers refunds.

    "Demand is like crazy — crazy,'' he said. ''Our phone is non-stop all week, people want more than one copy. We're getting calls from all over Canada…we're getting calls from the U.S.A. We got a call from Paris, that they can't find a copy there.

    "It's a collector's item. I'm sure people don't know what they're buying or why they're buying until they read it."

    Charlie Hebdo also made the issue available through its iPhone and Android apps. It is on sale for $3.49 through the Apple App Store and $4.24 through Google Play.

    The cover shows a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad weeping and holding a sign reading "I Am Charlie" with the words "All Is Forgiven" above him.

    Customers lined up again in Paris on Thursday to try to get copies. Even though it had a special increased print run of five million copies, it sold out before dawn for a second straight day.

    Some Muslims, who believe their faith forbids depictions of Muhammad, reacted with dismay or anger at the new cover. In Pakistan, lawmakers marched outside parliament on Thursday to protest the publication.

    A leader of Yemen's al-Qaida branch officially claimed responsibility for the attacks at Charlie Hebdo, saying in a video the slayings were in "vengeance for the prophet." But U.S. and French intelligence officials lean toward an assessment that the Paris terror attacks were inspired by al-Qaida but not directly supervised by the group.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. NDP Leader Aims To Form Relationships As 'Warriors' Deal With Liberals

    B.C. NDP Leader Aims To Form Relationships As 'Warriors' Deal With Liberals
    VICTORIA — Advice from former New Democrat premier Mike Harcourt includes allowing the warriors to battle the government, the leader of British Columbia's opposition party says.

    B.C. NDP Leader Aims To Form Relationships As 'Warriors' Deal With Liberals

    No winner for Friday night's $ 11 million Lotto Max jackpot

    No winner for Friday night's $ 11 million Lotto Max jackpot
    That means the grand prize for next Friday's Lotto Max will be approximately $16 million.

    No winner for Friday night's $ 11 million Lotto Max jackpot

    Toronto Newspaper Says It Will Defy Ad Ban In New Prostitution Bill

    Toronto Newspaper Says It Will Defy Ad Ban In New Prostitution Bill
    OTTAWA — A ban on advertising sexual services takes effect Saturday as part of the federal government's new prostitution laws — but at least one of Canada's leading independent newspapers says it plans to defy it.

    Toronto Newspaper Says It Will Defy Ad Ban In New Prostitution Bill

    Ceremonies Underway To Mark 25th Anniversary Of Montreal Massacre

    Ceremonies Underway To Mark 25th Anniversary Of Montreal Massacre
    Ceremonies are underway today to mark the 25th anniversary of the Montreal Massacre where 14 women were shot to death at the Ecole Polytechnique.

    Ceremonies Underway To Mark 25th Anniversary Of Montreal Massacre

    More Than 60 Organizations And Agencies Call For Repeal Of New Prostitution Law

    More Than 60 Organizations And Agencies Call For Repeal Of New Prostitution Law
    TORONTO — More than 60 organizations and agencies from across the country are calling for the non-enforcement and repeal of new prostitution laws that came into force on Saturday.

    More Than 60 Organizations And Agencies Call For Repeal Of New Prostitution Law

    Poultry Cull Begins In B.C., 80,000 Birds To Be Euthanized Because Of Avian Flu

    Poultry Cull Begins In B.C., 80,000 Birds To Be Euthanized Because Of Avian Flu
    VANCOUVER — The destruction of as many as 80,000 birds at four poultry farms in British Columbia's Fraser Valley has begun in the effort to stem the spread of avian flu.

    Poultry Cull Begins In B.C., 80,000 Birds To Be Euthanized Because Of Avian Flu