Mosque Attack That Killed 6 is Terrorism-Says Canada PM
QUEBEC
CITY (AP) — Six people were killed and eight were injured in a shooting
at a Quebec City mosque during evening prayers. Authorities reported
two arrests in what Canada's prime minister called an act of terrorism.
Quebec
provincial police spokeswoman Christine Coulombe said early Monday that
some of the wounded were gravely injured. She said the dead were
approximately 35 to 70 years of age. Thirty-nine people were unharmed.
More than 50 were at the mosque at the time of the attack.
One
suspect was arrested at the scene and another nearby in d'Orleans,
Quebec. Police don't believe there are other suspects. They did not
release names of the two.
"The
Muslim community was the target of this murderous attack," Quebec
Premier Philippe Couillard said at an early morning press conference
Monday.
Couillard
said there will be solidarity rallies across Quebec on Monday and says
the province's people will all be together to express horror.
Quebec City Mayor Regis Labeaume appeared visibly shaken.
"No
person should have to pay with their life, for their race, their color,
their sexual orientation or their religious beliefs," Labeaume said.
Quebec
City Islamic Cultural Centre President Mohamed Yangui said the shooting
in the provincial capital happened in the men's section of the mosque.
He said he wasn't at the center when the attack occurred, but he got
some details from people on the scene. "We are sad for the families," he
said.
Ali
Hamadi said he left the mosque a few minutes before the shooting. He
said his friend and co-worker Abdelkrim Hassen, who worked in IT for the
government, was killed. He said Hassen has three daughters and a wife.
He got the neighbor to bring the wife to the hospital so she could hear
the news.
She asked, "was he badly hurt?" Hamadi said he had to tell her that Hassen was dead.
Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau and Couillard both characterized the attack as a
terrorist act, which came amid heightened tensions worldwide over U.S.
President Donald Trump's travel ban on certain Muslim countries.
"We
condemn this terrorist attack on Muslims in a center of worship and
refuge," Trudeau said in a statement. "It is heart-wrenching to see such
senseless violence. Diversity is our strength, and religious tolerance
is a value that we, as Canadians, hold dear.
"Muslim-Canadians
are an important part of our national fabric, and these senseless acts
have no place in our communities, cities and country," he said.
"Canadian law enforcement agencies will protect the rights of all
Canadians, and will make every effort to apprehend the perpetrators of
this act and all acts of intolerance."
Quebec City police spokesman Constable Pierre Poirier said the mosque had been evacuated and the situation was under control.
Trudeau
had earlier reacted to Trump's visa ban for people from some
Muslim-majority countries by tweeting Saturday: "To those fleeing
persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of
your faith. Diversity is our strength #WelcomeToCanada."
Trudeau
also posted a picture of himself greeting a Syrian child at Toronto's
airport in late 2015. Trudeau oversaw the arrival of more than 39,000
Syrian refugees soon after he was elected.
The
mayor of Gatineau, Quebec, near Canada's capital of Ottawa, said there
would be an increased police presence at mosques around his city
following the attack.
The New York Police Department said it was also stepping up patrols at mosques and other houses of worship.
"NYPD
is providing additional protection for mosques in the city. All New
Yorkers should be vigilant. If you see something, say something," New
York City Mayor Bill Blasio said on Twitter.
"Our
prayers tonight are with the people of Quebec City as they deal with a
terrible attack on a mosque. We must stand together," Blasio said in
another tweet.
Canada's
public safety minister, Ralph Goodale, said on Twitter Sunday that he
was deeply saddened by the loss of life. His office said no motive had
been confirmed.
In
the summer of 2016 a pig's head was left on the doorstep of the Quebec
Islamic Cultural Centre. The incident occurred in the middle of Ramadan,
when Muslims fast from dawn to sunset. Practicing Muslims do not eat
pork.
Francois
Deschamps, an organizer of a refugee-support group in Quebec City, said
the motive for Sunday's attack is unknown, but right-wing groups are
very organized in Quebec City, distribute fliers at the university and
plaster stickers around town.
Deschamps
said he has received death threats after starting a refugee support
group on Facebook and people have posted his address online.
"I'm not very surprised about the event," Deschamps said.
Canada
is generally very welcoming toward immigrants and all religions, but
it's less so in the French-speaking province of Quebec which has had a
long-simmering debate about race and religious accommodation. A few
years ago Quebecers debated a "charter of values" under the previous
separatist government, which called for a ban of ostentatious religious
symbols such as the hijab in public institutions.
Associated Press writer Sean Farrell in Montreal contributed to this report. Gillies reported from Toronto.
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