A conservative Jewish newspaper edited a picture of world leaders rallying in anti-extremism solidarity in Paris last week, manipulating female politicians, including one of the most powerful people on the planet, Angela Merkel, out of the picture.

The German Chancellor, along with the Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo, the EU's high representative for foreign affairs Federica Mogherini and Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt all vanished from the already famous photograph in the Israeli Haredi "HaMevaser" (The Announcer) paper.

READ MORE: March for Unity: Over 40 world leaders, 'up to 3mn' rally in Paris against extremism

Images of women are usually completely absent from the conservative publication, which refers to protecting female modesty as the reason for its men-only visual world.

"Finde die Frau" fordert #Yedioth weil ultraorthod.Zeitung "HaMevaser" Frauen wie BK #Merkel auf Fotos entfernt hat pic.twitter.com/tqXpjP0DWx — Torsten Teichmann (@TeichmannARD) January 13, 2015

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First spotted by a religion reporter on the Hebrew-language Walla! website, the manipulation sparked condemnation in international media.

READ MORE: 'Terrorism has no religion': Muslims in France and abroad pay tribute to Charlie Hebdo victims (PHOTOS)

Israel's oldest daily newspaper, Haaretz, called the incident "infuriating and shocking." It "deserves to be called out – like denying the fact that in the wider world, beyond the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, women do stand on the world stage and shape events," the paper wrote in a blog.

Israeli paper HaMevaser's weekly "spot the Merkel" competition widely misunderstood by Twitter as censorship pic.twitter.com/iyfsJo5RiY — Rupert Myers (@RupertMyers) January 13, 2015

Following an attack on the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine in Paris, in which 12 people were killed by terrorists, more people fell victims to extremists in the French capital. During the manhunt for the attackers, there were casualties in a new siege at a Paris kosher store. After going into the shop, a man armed with automatic rifles shot four people and took 16 others hostage.

READ MORE: 4 hostages, 3 gunmen killed as Charlie Hebdo hunt ends in France

The women in power, marching hand in hand with other world leaders in unity and support for the victims of Paris attacks, were not just blurred. The photograph was more extensively re-edited, with images of participants moved around with women replaced by men.

I marched in one row with world leaders in order to unite against terrorism. Any terrorism must be fought to the end pic.twitter.com/X5oFg5r3cB — בנימין נתניהו (@netanyahu) January 11, 2015

The rally of the politicians in Paris has already caused controversial reaction. While Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has been criticized for cropping the shot of the march not to include Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, US President Barack Obama has been criticized for not attending at all.

READ MORE: Obama takes heat for not attending 'anti-terror' Paris rally

If they can edit Merkel out of the Paris Photo-Op, why can't they edit Pres. Obama into it? — Fresh Brew (@TheFreshBrew) January 12, 2015

Reacting to the edited image of the rally in the Israeli paper, some jokingly commented Obama should have requested to be photoshopped into the picture to take Merkel's place. Others left the German chancellor and other female leaders in their places, but edited out all the men instead.

Pictures from the historic march in Paris on January 11 became widely altered on social media. Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy made his way to the front row of the rally; his moves were spotted by internet users and he was ridiculed for being desperate for the spotlight. Dozens of photoshopped images emerged under the hashtag #JeSuisNico, which immediately began trending on Twitter.