Charlie Hebdo to be honored in New York under increased security

An empty Charlie Hebdo shelf seen in a magazine store in Montreal, January 16, 2015. With limited issues of the magazine sent to Canada most stores sold reserved copies prior to their delivery. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

By Ellen Wulfhorst NEW YORK (Reuters) - The French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, targeted in a deadly attack earlier this year by Islamist gunmen, will be honored on Tuesday at a New York gala under heavy security, organizers said. The award from the PEN American Center comes two days after two gunmen opened fire at a Texas exhibit of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad, depictions that Muslims consider offensive. Drawings of the founder of Islam were also at the heart of the January attack on Charlie Hebdo's Paris offices that killed 12 people. Al Qaeda's branch in Yemen claimed responsibility, saying the weekly had insulted the Prophet with its cartoons. PEN's decision to give the Freedom of Expression Courage Award to Charlie Hebdo prompted six prominent writers to withdraw from the event and more than 100 others to write a letter of protest, said PEN, an organization advocating on behalf of writers persecuted because of their work. One novelist who withdrew, Rachel Kushner, said she was not comfortable with Charlie Hebdo's "cultural intolerance," PEN said. Authors Peter Carey, Michael Ondaatje, Francine Prose, Teju Cole and Taiye Selasi also withdrew, PEN said. The Paris attack has raised questions about religious tolerance and censorship in France, which has 5 million Muslims. Police and federal agents planned security for months ahead of the Texas event on Sunday, and the two gunmen were killed after opening fire in a parking lot outside the exhibit. PEN organizers said security would be "increased" at Tuesday's event. Uniformed officers, police counterterrorism units and police dogs were visible near the entrance of the American Museum of Natural History, where the event was being held. A spokeswoman for the New York Police Department said there had been no immediate threats. A lone protester held a sign saying "Je ne suis pas Charlie," or "I am not Charlie," and said she thought it was insulting to caricature the Prophet like Charlie Hebdo did. "It is the role of the satirists in any free society to challenge the powerful and the sacred, pushing boundaries in ways that make expression freer and more robust for us all," said PEN Executive Director Suzanne Nossel. "Charlie Hebdo deserves to be recognized for its dauntlessness in the face of one of the most noxious assaults on expression in recent memory." (Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by Scott Malone, Lisa Lambert and Eric Beech)