French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo is under fire for an offensive cartoon featuring The Queen and the Duchess of Sussex. The cartoon has been called racist by many in France, the UK and the US.
It likens Queen Elizabeth as Officer Derek Chauvin with her knee on the Duchess of Sussex’s neck. The Duchess is compared to George Floyd, who was killed by Minneapolis Officer Derek Chauvin last year when he knelt on his neck during an arrest. Floyd yelled, “I can’t breathe,” but the officer did not take his knee off Floyd’s neck for nine minutes.
The French cartoon says: “Why Meghan left Buckingham,” and has the Duchess saying: “Because I couldn’t breathe anymore.”
Chauvin was charged with Floyd’s murder and his trial began in Minnesota on Monday.
On Twitter, the chief executive of the race equality thinktank, the Runnymede Trust, Halima Begum, slammed the cartoon’s publication: The Queen as George Floyd’s murderer crushing Meghan’s neck? Meghan saying she’s unable to breathe? This doesn’t push boundaries, make anyone laugh or challenge racism. It demeans the issues and causes offence, across the board.”
The publishing of the cartoon comes after the Duchess of Sussex revealed the racist experiences she had since marrying Prince Harry during an interview with Oprah last Sunday. During that interview, she said that a member of the Royal Family was concerned with how dark her and Harry’s son, Archie’s skin would…