National Post (National Edition)

‘MAKE NO MISTAKE: THIS WAS TERROR’

‘BLOOD ON THE PRAYER RUGS’

- GRAEME HAMILTON

QUEBEC CITY • The men, women and children gathered Sunday at the Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec were mostly seated after completing their evening prayers. But some continued praying, standing with their backs to the door, facing toward Mecca.

According to a passerby who spoke to Radio-Canada, the peaceful scene was shattered by a cry of “F--- you” as a man brandishin­g an assault rifle burst through the unlocked mosque doors.

“I saw a man go in, open the mosque door, then I heard ‘tock-tock-tock-tock-tock.’ Five gunshots,” the witness, whose identity was not disclosed, said. He fled for cover, but inside the worshipper­s were trapped.

“Those sitting down who had finished praying were not hit much, but those who were still standing and praying, they received all the bullets,” said Boufeldja Benabdalla­h, co-founder of the cultural centre in the suburb of Sainte-Foy, who spoke to a survivor. “They were shot in the back.”

In a message posted to its Facebook page, the centre, also known as the Grande Mosquée de Québec, described the horror that unfolded inside.

“A scene of unspeakabl­e brutality took place in front of several dozen Quebec citizens, including children,” it said. “Gunshots, deaths, loading of ammunition, the cries of the injured. Blood on the prayer rugs. Practicall­y a scene of war, here in our home of Quebec City, our city known for its peacefulne­ss. Children witnessed this vile cruelty.”

Calls to 911 began coming in at around 7:55 p.m. Salah Benrqiq, a co-founder of the centre, said it was around that time he got a panicked call from a friend who had been inside.

“He called me to say, “There’s a massacre at the Grande Mosquée de Québec. You have to warn the people at the other mosques to evacuate the buildings.’ “

Just a couple of hours earlier, Ezzedine Soufiane had been behind the counter of his halal butcher shop and grocery store a few blocks away from the mosque when Nacer Bouimadagh­ene, a fellow immigrant from Morocco, stopped in to make a purchase. Bouimadagh­ene said that after closing shop, Soufiane, 57, would stop by the mosque for prayers before heading home for the night.

But on Sunday, he never made it home. Two friends of Soufiane, local imam Karim Elabed and Ali Ouldache, told The Canadian Press they’d been told that Soufiane died after trying to stop the gunman.

“He wanted to stop the shooter,” Ouldache, a Quebec City personal trainer, said. “I had a friend in the mosque and he told me he jumped at the shooter and the shooter didn’t hesitate to shoot at his head.”

On Monday afternoon, the Épicerie Assalam was locked up, and bouquets of flowers lay on the doorstep. Bouimadagh­ene and his wife, Khadija El Assad, fought back tears as they remembered Soufiane, the man who had helped them feel at home when they moved to Quebec City to be near their son.

“It is hard to find words to express our sadness. He was someone known by everyone and loved by everyone. He was one of a kind. And now he is gone,” Bouimadagh­ene said. “He was someone who helped. He was someone who was very wise.”

Danielle Thivierge, a regular customer, stopped by to say hello to Soufiane Monday and was shaken to learn the butcher with the best calf liver in town was among the six victims of the mosque attack. She recalled the time she forgot her wallet and Soufiane insisted she take her groceries and pay later. “He said, ‘Madame, nobody leaves the store without their food.’ ”

The man who allegedly stormed the mosque, 27-yearold Alexandre Bissonnett­e, appeared in court late Monday on six charges of first-degree murder and five charges of attempted murder.

An anthropolo­gy student at Université Laval, Bissonnett­e had allegedly succeeded in fleeing the scene Sunday night, making it as far as the bridge to Île d’Orléans, just east of Quebec City. Police said they got a call from a man who identified himself as the suspect in the shootings, and Bissonnett­e was arrested there without a struggle at around 9 p.m.

A second man seen fleeing the mosque was arrested and interrogat­ed but turned out to have been a mosque-goer who was trying to aid an injured friend. Police believe Bissonnett­e acted alone.

Police have not speculated on the motives, but Premier Philippe Couillard said there is no doubt that the gunman singled out Muslims.

 ?? ALICE CHICHE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Top to bottom: Mourners light candles at a vigil in Moncton, N.B., on Monday; Mohamed Labidi, vice-president of the targeted Islamic centre, is comforted by mayor Régis Labeaume at a press conference; Police stand guard on the roof of the Centre...
ALICE CHICHE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Top to bottom: Mourners light candles at a vigil in Moncton, N.B., on Monday; Mohamed Labidi, vice-president of the targeted Islamic centre, is comforted by mayor Régis Labeaume at a press conference; Police stand guard on the roof of the Centre...
 ?? DARREN CALABRESE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
DARREN CALABRESE / THE CANADIAN PRESS
 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT / THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
JACQUES BOISSINOT / THE CANADIAN PRESS
 ??  ?? Suspect Alexandre Bissonnett­e
Suspect Alexandre Bissonnett­e

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