Mardom-e Emrooz (Today's People) had come under criticism
after running the image of the U.S. actor at last week's Golden
Globes ceremony displaying his support for victims of a deadly
attack two weeks ago on the Charlie Hebdo weekly in Paris.
A conservative press watchdog revoked Mardom-e Emrooz's permit
only three weeks after it started publishing with a pledge to
support President Hassan Rouhani in his political and social
liberalization program, the official IRNA news agency said,
citing board member Allaeddin Zohurian.
Like many other Hollywood celebrities, Clooney commands wide
popularity among Iranian youths, although they only get to watch
his movies on pirated videos. Almost all Hollywood productions
are banned in the Islamic republic as "culturally decadent".
Twelve people were killed in the Jan. 7 shooting at the Charlie
Hebdo office, carried out in retaliation for caricatures of the
Prophet Mohammad.
Thousands of Islamist hardliners gathered outside the French
embassy on Monday to denounce a new drawing of the Prophet
published last Wednesday in the first issue of Charlie Hebdo
after the shooting.
The cartoon has sparked violent clashes in other Muslim
countries.
(Corrects typo in Golden Globes in second paragraph)
(Reporting by Mehrdad Balali; Editing by Tom Heneghan and Kevin
Liffey)
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