The fourteen accomplices to the 2015 attacks on the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine in Paris have been found guilty.
A French court delivered the verdict, following a three-month trial. Seventeen people died after gunmen attacked the magazine's office, a Jewish supermarket and police officers on the streets of Paris.
The accomplices were found guilty on charges ranging from membership of a criminal network to complicity in the attacks.
Paris correspondent Hugh Schofield speaks to Susie Ferguson.