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London: Hundreds of people queued up for hours across Britain to get their hands on the survivors' edition of the French satirical magazine 'Charlie Hebdo' as it hit the stands in the country on Friday.
More than 2,000 copies are believed to have been made available in the UK, a sizable increase from the 30 or so copies usually sold each week.
Demand has been high for the issue in the wake of the deadly attack on the magazine's office in Paris on January 7 that killed 12 people.
Five million copies of the magazine -- which usually has a print run of around 60,000 -- were published in a special edition commemorating the Paris massacre.
Newsagents in the London area of South Kensington, home to a sizable French community, faced the most extensive queues and sold out soon after the shops opened.
Interest in the magazine had prompted more than 50 British Muslim leaders to appeal for calm from Muslims in response to the front-cover cartoon earlier this week.
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