Toronto Star

Mosque hero’s daughter asks his killer, ‘why?’

Quebec City mosque head Boufeldja Benabdalla­h said the community is healing. Tearful 14-year-old takes stand during the sentencing hearing for gunman in Quebec shooting

- STEPHANIE MARIN

QUEBEC— The 14-year-old daughter of the man considered a hero after he died trying to stop the Quebec City mosque shooter gave moving testimony Thursday about how much she misses her father.

Between tears, the teenager spoke on behalf of herself and her family and about how Azzedine Soufiane’s death has left a giant void in their lives.

“I miss my father terribly,” said the girl, whose name is under a publicatio­n ban.

The girl’s mother and many others in the courtroom cried throughout her testimony, which was part of the sentencing arguments hearing for Alexandre Bissonnett­e, who pleaded guilty to murdering Soufiane and five other Muslim worshipper­s on Jan. 29, 2017.

Witnesses to the mosque shooting said Soufiane charged the gunman, trying to disarm him and save others, only to be shot dead on the carpet.

The girl said in the days following the shooting she was living in a fog, telling herself her father was still alive.

“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 François 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 set 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 wellthough­t-out gesture,” he said.

He said the community was recovering but painful memories remain.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada