Artwork Charlie Hebdo about the crash angered Russians

Rusija, Francuska, Charlie Hebdo, Karikature

French newspaper published two cartoons after a Russian plane crashed in the Sinai, killing 224 people.

Russian Kremlin denounced the new caricature of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo on the demolition of their aircraft in Egypt.

On Sunday, one of Russia's largest social network said that the cartoons were a topic that is most discussed over the weekend.

"Moronic cynicism and mockery of the victims of a great tragedy," wrote Anna Isayeva on Twitter.

French newspaper published two cartoons after a Russian plane crashed in the Sinai on October 31. In the accident that killed 224 people.

On a caricature shows the skull of passengers entitled "Risk of Russian low-cost flights".

Fighter with a beard

On the other caricatures to see how the plane fall on your head fighter with a beard, and below it says "the Russian air forces have stepped up their attacks."

On Friday, a spokesman for Russia's Kremlin Dmitry Peskov said that the caricatures of pure blasphemy and that has nothing to do with democracy and freedom of expression.

Several Russian politicians reacted strongly to these caricatures.

A spokeswoman for the Russian Foreign Ministry Maria Zakharova is on Facebook wrote: "Is anyone else, Charlie?", Referring to the phrase Je Suis Charlie used in support of the French newspaper that killed 11 people in an attack on their editorial office in Paris.

The leader of Chechnya Ramzan Kadyrov said that two caricatures of Russian aircraft are not proper to man.

Gerard Biard, chief editor of Charlie Hebdo, the French media said that the charges are absurd on their behalf.

Flights Russian airline Kogalimavija, on a flight from Sharm el-Sheikh to St. Petersburg, crashed 23 minutes after take-off, close to a hundred kilometers of Arish in northern Sinai.

Most of the passengers were Russian tourists.