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I quit, says Charlie Hebdo cartoonist – it is torture without the others

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    "Each issue is torture because the others are gone," Luz said Alexander Klein
  • 2 of 2
    Luz, 43, escaped the massacre because he was late for Charlie's editorial meeting Ian Langsdon

Charlie Hebdo, the French satirical weekly whose staff were gunned down by Islamists, faces an uncertain future after its top cartoonist announced his departure today as its editor tried to defuse a revolt over control of its new wealth.

Renald Luzier, known as Luz, said that he was unable to handle the distress that followed the January 7 attack in which the two Kouachi brothers killed 12 people at the weekly’s offices, including Charb, its editor, and three other famous caricaturists.

“Each issue is torture because the others are gone. Spending sleepless nights summoning the dead, wondering what Charb, Cabu,

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