Toronto Star

Families mourn Quebec stabbing victims

Sword-wielding attacker was targeting random strangers, police say

- HINA ALAM

Just hours after Marie-Jo Duchesne had shared laughs with her older brother, who had been out hiking on a sunny Saturday in Quebec, the heartbreak­ing call came informing her of François Duchesne’s death in Quebec City.

She received the news from a sibling.

“The police came to another one of my sisters’ houses,” she told The Canadian Press in an interview from her home in Paris. “We talked a lot and cried a lot.”

François Duchesne, 56 was one of two people killed in the Halloween night sword attack in Quebec’s capital that police said targeted random strangers.

Hairdresse­r Suzanne Clermont, 61, was the other victim. Five people were also injured, though they are all expected to survive.

Duchesne described François as a “lovely brother” who was her confidant and best friend and was always there for her when she needed him.

“We are, we were, five kids raised by a courageous mother,” she said. “We are very tight-knit despite the distance for me in Paris and for my other brother, who lives in B.C.”

She said that on Saturday, shortly before he was killed, she had a FaceTime call with her brother and her 19-year-old son who lives in the Netherland­s, where he goes to university.

“He was really close with his 10 nieces and nephews,” she added, her voice breaking with emotion. “He was smiling, he was happy, and he was the brother I love.” Now the family is in shock. Duchesne doesn’t know all the details of the attack but noted that her brother had been walking home in a city that he loved when it happened.

“I have no other words. It’s such a big loss.”

Quebec City police chief Robert Pigeon said the murder suspect had been dressed in “medieval” clothing and swung a katana-like sword at randomly chosen victims. Police raced to the scene around 10:30 Saturday night and then chased a suspect through the narrow streets of Old Quebec, arresting him shortly before 1 a.m. Sunday. Carl Girouar d has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder and five of attempted murder. The identities of the five people injured in the attack are protected by a publicatio­n ban.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Julien Fortin, middle, gives a tearful message to his mother, Suzanne Clermont, at a memorial to her Monday evening in Quebec City. Clermont, 61, was one of two killed in Saturday’s attack.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS Julien Fortin, middle, gives a tearful message to his mother, Suzanne Clermont, at a memorial to her Monday evening in Quebec City. Clermont, 61, was one of two killed in Saturday’s attack.

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