TV21 News and Entertainment Blog from Hyderabad Deccan ,Services ,Legal Advice
Monday, January 30, 2017
Québec mosque shooting: six dead as........
Québec mosque shooting: six dead as Trudeau decries 'terrorist attack'
Two arrests made after fatal shooting on Sunday night condemned as senseless violence by Canadian PM
Six people have been killed and eight injured at a mosque in Québec
City in a shooting denounced as a “terrorist attack” by Canada’s prime
minister. Witnesses said three people carried out the attack at the Québec City
Islamic cultural center during evening prayers on Sunday. Police
received the first calls just before 8pm (1am GMT). Two arrests have been made, a police spokesman said. Local newspaper Le Soleil
said police accepted a third suspect could still be on the run, though
spokeswoman Chistine Coulombe later said: “Nothing right now makes us
believe that there would be other suspects related to this event.” One of the suspects was carrying an AK-47 assault rifle and one was aged 27, Le Soleil reported. The Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, spoke of his anger after hearing the news, “We condemn this terrorist attack on Muslims in a centre of worship and refuge,” he said. “While authorities are still investigating and details continue to be
confirmed, 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.”
Police said the victims were aged between 35 and 70. At the time of the attack, more than 50 people were thought to be in
the two-storey building, also called the Grande Mosquée de Québec, which
is equipped with several CCTV cameras. The mosque’s president, Mohamed Yangui – who was not inside the
mosque when the shooting occurred – said he got frantic calls from
people at evening prayers. He said the injured were taken to different
hospitals across Québec City. “Why is this happening here? This is
barbaric,” he said. The city’s police said the site had been secured and all occupants
evacuated. A large security cordon was set up around the site. Witnesses
reported seeing heavily armed police entering the mosque after the
shooting. The premier of Québec, Philippe Couillard, called the killings a
“terrorist act” and said the government stood in solidarity with the
city’s Muslim population. He tweeted:
“#Québec rejects categorically this barbaric violence. All our
solidarity to the families of the victims, the injured and their
families.” Solidarity rallies will be held across Québec on Monday, Couillard said.
Looking shaken at an early morning press conference, the city’s
mayor, Régis Labeaume, said Québec was in mourning. “I want to express
my revolt to this villainous crime,” he added.
Canada’s publics safety minister, Ralph Goodale, said he was “deeply saddened” by the deaths. Local politician Manon Massé said: “We know little at the moment, but
one or two people have assumed the right to kill our fellow Muslim
Québec citizens. When intolerance goes from debate to murder, solidarity
is essential.” The French president, François Hollande, condemned “in the strongest
possible terms” what he called an “odious attack”. “It’s the spirit of
peace and openness of the people of Quebec that the terrorists wanted to hit,” he said. The mosque has been targeted before. In June, a pig’s head was left
there during the holy month of Ramadan. Weeks later, an Islamophobic
letter was distributed in the vicinity. Yangui told the Edmonton Journal
the mosque had not received any threats recently. “We have a very good
relationship with the neighbours, with the community,” he said. “There’s
mutual respect – and now today we have this dramatic event.”
No comments:
Post a Comment