Following "precise and detailed threats" received on September 14 by the security officers who have been protecting her for almost 5 years, Charlie Hebdo's HRD, Marika Bret, was forced to leave her home.

The director of human resources at Charlie Hebdo was exfiltrated from her home because of threats deemed serious, in the midst of the trial of the January 2015 attacks, she explained Monday in an interview with the weekly Le Point.

Following "precise and detailed threats" received on September 14 by the security officers who have been protecting her for almost 5 years, Charlie Hebdo's HRD, Marika Bret, was forced to leave her home.

"Many politicians have, out of patronage or fear, forgot fundamental concepts such as citizenship"

"I had ten minutes to do my business and leave my home. Ten minutes to give up part of her existence, it's a bit short, and it's very violent. I won't be coming home", a- she confided to Point.

An exfiltration which "reflects the unprecedented level of tension with which we are confronted", she notes, underlining "a level of hallucinatory hatred around Charlie Hebdo".

"Since the start of the trial and with the republication of the cartoons, we have received all kinds of horrors, including threats from Al-Qaeda and calls to finish the work of the Kouachi brothers," testifies Ms. Bret.

The jihadist organization Al-Qaeda threatened to attack again Charlie Hebdo, which republished cartoons of the prophet of Islam Muhammad on the occasion of the trial, claiming that the deadly January 2015 raid on the newspaper "n ' was not a one-time incident ".

Charlie Hebdo's HRD also accuses the leader of La France insoumise Jean-Luc Mélenchon of fueling "a climate of hatred".

"But Jean-Luc Mélenchon is not the only one. Many politicians have, through patronage or fear, forgotten fundamental concepts such as citizenship," she believes.

"We are not addressing potential voters based on their skin color or their religion, it is the very negation of what politics should be."