<p>A cartoonist who designed the front page of the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, said he will no longer draw the Prophet Mohammad, media reported on Thursday.<br /><br />The magazine's office in Paris was attacked on January 7. The two Islamaist attackers -- Cherif and Said Kouachi -- killed at least 12 people including its chief editor.<br /><br />Renald Luzier has told French magazine 'Inrocks' that drawing Mohammad "no longer interests me".<br />Within days of the attack, the satirical magazine's surviving staff produced a defiant edition with the headline "All is forgiven" above Luz's cartoon showing the Prophet weeping, while holding a sign saying "I am Charlie".<br /><br />"I've got tired of drawing Mohammad, just like I got tired of drawing Sarkozy. I'm not going to spend my life drawing them," Luz said.</p>.<p>Luz is about to release a book of cartoons entitled "Catharsis", which he says in his interview, was his way of expressing himself after the murder of his colleagues.<br /><br />Following the January attack, the magazine's normal print run of 60,000 eventually climbed to eight million.<br /><br />A new format of the magazine is set to release in September.<br /><br /></p>
<p>A cartoonist who designed the front page of the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, said he will no longer draw the Prophet Mohammad, media reported on Thursday.<br /><br />The magazine's office in Paris was attacked on January 7. The two Islamaist attackers -- Cherif and Said Kouachi -- killed at least 12 people including its chief editor.<br /><br />Renald Luzier has told French magazine 'Inrocks' that drawing Mohammad "no longer interests me".<br />Within days of the attack, the satirical magazine's surviving staff produced a defiant edition with the headline "All is forgiven" above Luz's cartoon showing the Prophet weeping, while holding a sign saying "I am Charlie".<br /><br />"I've got tired of drawing Mohammad, just like I got tired of drawing Sarkozy. I'm not going to spend my life drawing them," Luz said.</p>.<p>Luz is about to release a book of cartoons entitled "Catharsis", which he says in his interview, was his way of expressing himself after the murder of his colleagues.<br /><br />Following the January attack, the magazine's normal print run of 60,000 eventually climbed to eight million.<br /><br />A new format of the magazine is set to release in September.<br /><br /></p>