The Borneo Post

Student charged in mosque attack

Canadian political science student known to have nationalis­t sympathies faces 11 counts of charges

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QUEBEC CITY: A Canadian political science student known to have nationalis­t sympathies was charged Monday with six counts of murder over a shooting spree at a Quebec mosque – one of the worst attacks ever to target Muslims in a western country.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned as a ‘terrorist attack’ Sunday night’s assault on the Islamic Cultural Centre in a busy district of Quebec City, which sent terrified worshipper­s fleeing barefoot in the snow.

Eight people were also wounded in the crossfire, and five of them remained in critical condition in hospital Monday.

Alexandre Bissonnett­e, who made a brief court appearance after surrenderi­ng to authoritie­s, was charged with six counts of premeditat­ed murder and five of attempted murder, police said.

More indictment­s are expected later, police added.

“There are search warrants underway,” a spokeswoma­n for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told a press conference.

“We hope to obtain the evidence to reach the point where we will be able to lay terrorism and national security charges,” she said.

So far, authoritie­s have shed no light on what may have prompted the attack.

Local media said Bissonnett­e is a Quebec nationalis­t and antifemini­st who recently ‘ liked’ US President Donald Trump’s page on Facebook.

He also has reportedly expressed support for French farright politician Marine Le Pen.

Both police and witnesses had initially described two masked men opening fire inside the mosque, where worshipper­s were gathered for evening prayer.

But authoritie­s said Monday that a second person detained had only been questioned as a witness.

Explaining how one suspect was eventually let go, the RCMP said: “This morning and last evening we had reason to believe that two individual­s should be arrested, that two people had participat­ed.”

After investigat­ing, they said: “we reached the conclusion that we should focus on one single suspect. And there was no reason to believe that the other individual had participat­ed.”

Some 50 people were in the mosque at the time of the attack.

The dead are all dual Canadian nationals: one Moroccan, two Algerians, one Tunisian and two Guineans.

Quebec has traditiona­lly attracted Muslim immigrants from North Africa.

Bissonnett­e, who is a student at Laval University, surrendere­d 20 kilometres outside the city after calling an emergency services hotline an hour after the attack to reveal his location.

“It is a domestic investigat­ion at this time,” Royal Canadian Mounted Police Inspector Martin Plante said.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said the nation’s security threat level remained at medium – requiring security forces to be on guard but having no specific informatio­n about an imminent threat.

It was raised to this level in October 2014 after a lone gunman attacked parliament.

Police are continuing to collect evidence in a bid to “identify exactly who is involved and what was their motivation,” Goodale said. Authoritie­s, he added, don’t have “sufficient, hard facts yet to be able to draw conclusion­s.”

The Quebec mosque had already been the target of hate: a pig’s head was left on the doorstep last June during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Other mosques in Canada have been targeted with anti-Muslim graffiti in recent months.

Police stationed near the mosque told AFP that they had feared this type of attack “because it’s happening all over the world.”

The shooting came as Canada vowed to open its arms to Muslim refugees after Trump’s controvers­ial immigratio­n ban prompted travel chaos and outrage around the world.

“Last night’s horrible crime against the Muslim community was an act of terror committed against Canada and against all Canadians,” Trudeau said.

To the one million Canadians who profess the Muslim faith, he said “36 million hearts are breaking with yours,” alluding to the country’s total population.

“Canadians will not be intimidate­d,” Trudeau added. “We will not meet violence with more violence. We will meet fear and hatred with love and compassion.”

Trump telephoned Trudeau to offer his condolence­s following the attack, which was condemned around the world including by leading Sunni Muslim body Al-Azhar, as well as Egypt and Jordan.

Mohamed Ali Saidane, who lost a relative in the shooting, joined elected officials at city hall to denounce escalating hate. “The Arab- Muslim community has become the victim of populist politics,” he said.

People fleeing the mosque – here custom requires worshipper­s to remove their shoes during prayer – did not have time to collect their winter boots.

“They arrived in a panic,” said Louis- Gabriel Cloutier, the manager of a cafe across the street who saw them fleeing the rampage. Some took refuge at the cafe. “I never thought that such a thing could happen,” said a man who frequents another of the city’s 10 mosques. He had ventured to the scene because “I know people who were inside.”

Hamid Nadji learned of the shooting from a friend and rushed to the mosque area.

“For us Muslims, Quebec and Canada had been a safe zone,” he said. — AFP

We reached the conclusion that we should focus on one single suspect. And there was no reason to believe that the other individual had participat­ed. Spokeswoma­n for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police

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 ?? Reuters photo ?? A woman places a candle at a memorial site near a sign saying ‘no violence’ and ‘terrorism has no religion or identity’ following a vigil held in honour of the victims of a shooting in a Quebec mosque. —
Reuters photo A woman places a candle at a memorial site near a sign saying ‘no violence’ and ‘terrorism has no religion or identity’ following a vigil held in honour of the victims of a shooting in a Quebec mosque. —
 ?? Reuters photo ?? Alexandre Bissonnett­e as seen in a Facebook posting. —
Reuters photo Alexandre Bissonnett­e as seen in a Facebook posting. —

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