Eleven staff members have called for all employees to become equal shareholders in the magazine, setting them up for a battle with the current management.
Charlie Hebdo is currently 40 per cent owned by the parents of Charb, the former director of the magazine who was killed in the January 7 attacks, 40 per cent by cartoonist Riss, who is recovering in hospital from shoulder wounds and 20 per cent by joint manager Eric Portheault.
The group includes Patrick Pelloux, a Charlie Hebdo columnist who provided one of the most powerful images from a Paris march against terrorism four days after the attacks when he fell sobbing into the arms of President Francois Hollande.
Until the attacks, Charlie Hebdo was teetering on the verge of bankruptcy and was selling only around 30,000 copies a week.
But a "survivors' issue" published a week after the attacks flew off the shelves and ended up selling seven million copies.
The attack was the first wave in a series of killings to rock the French capital. Amedy Coulibaly shot dead a policewoman the day after and then killed four Jews in a kosher supermarket.
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