TOPSHOT - (From L) Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo (L), Anti-terrorism state prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard, Mayor of the 11th arrondissement of Paris Francois Vauglin, French Prime Minister Jean Castex, Paris police prefect Didier Lallement and French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin arrive in the vicinity of where several people were injured near the former offices of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo following an attack by a man wielding a knife in Paris on September 25, 2020. - A man armed with a knife seriously wounded two people on September 25, 2020, in a suspected terror attack outside the former offices of French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris, three weeks into the trial of men accused of being accomplices in the 2015 massacre of the newspaper's staff. Charlie Hebdo had angered many Muslims around the world by publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, and in a defiant gesture ahead of the trial this month, it reprinted the caricatures on its front cover. (Photo by GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP)