The Prince George Citizen

‘Why? Why did this man attack innocent people?’

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ing the shooting she was living in a fog, telling herself her father was still alive.

But then, “I saw the casket,” she said. “And I really saw that my father was dead.”

“I am proud of my dad, of his actions,” she said. “He was the best father, the best man ... Why? Why did this man (Bissonnett­e) attack innocent people?”

Even Quebec Superior Court Justice Francois Huot described her father as a hero.

Huot addressed the girl directly, telling her he never had the privilege to meet Soufiane, but that, due to his actions, “he was a giant. Your father was a hero.”

The Crown completed presenting its evidence Thursday. Bissonnett­e’s defence team is scheduled to begin its arguments Monday.

A conviction on first-degree murder carries an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years. Huot has to determine how much time must be served before the eligibilit­y kicks in – which in this case could be as much as 150 years.

Earlier on Thursday, the head of the Quebec City mosque where the six men were gunned down addressed the author of the rampage directly and pointedly asked him why he committed the crimes.

“Why? Why?,” said Boufeldja Benabdalla­h, his eyes trained on killer Bissonnett­e.

“You killed six of my brothers. But you also caused pain to all Quebec society, which could not believe that such an attack had occurred at home.”

Having heard previous evidence in court, Benabdalla­h refused to call Bissonnett­e a victim of society.

“Society is not guilty of your well-thought-out gesture,” he said.

“No one will bear the responsibi­lity or the burden of another.”

He told Bissonnett­e the community was recovering but that the painful memories will remain even if the mosque’s carpets have had the blood washed from them and the bullet holes in the walls have been replastere­d.

“There will always be the memory of bodies lying inert or writhing in pain and reminding us of the tragedy of which you were the perpetrato­r,” he said in tears.

Meanwhile, the president of the mosque on the night of the massacre told Huot a feeling of fear and insecurity remains among Muslims in Quebec.

Mohamed Labidi testified that some families have talked about leaving the province or even Canada, while others actually have moved away.

Labidi said Bissonnett­e’s act has intimidate­d the community and had a deep impact on its identity.

Emotions have been running high at the hearing, where two widows have testified as well as two children of one of the men killed that night.

Several men who were present in the mosque have recounted in detail what they saw and how they were wounded.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? People place flowers after a vigil at the Centre culturel islamique de Quebec on Jan. 29 to mark the first anniversar­y of the fatal mosque shooting in Quebec City.
CP FILE PHOTO People place flowers after a vigil at the Centre culturel islamique de Quebec on Jan. 29 to mark the first anniversar­y of the fatal mosque shooting in Quebec City.

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