Multiple
people reported killed and injured by gunmen at Quebec City mosque
By Derek
Hawkins and Alan Freeman
Multiple
people were killed and others injured Sunday after gunmen opened fire on
worshipers at a Quebec City mosque as evening prayers were ending in what
Quebec’s premier described as an act of terrorism.
The mosque’s
president told Reuters that five people were killed. Police said via Twitter
that there were “deaths and injuries” but did not specify a number. A police
spokesperson said that two suspects had been arrested.
“The situation
is under control, the premises are secure and the occupants were evacuated,”
police said in a tweet. “The investigation is ongoing.”
Witnesses said
that two gunmen, some reports said three, opened fired at the Quebec Islamic
Cultural Center. Local media reported that between 60 and 100 people were
inside.
“Why is this
happening here? This is barbaric,” the mosque’s president, Mohamed Yangui, told
Reuters.
Speaking on
RDI, Quebec City police spokesman Etienne Doyon said that the shootings took
place as prayers were ending Sunday evening.
Witnesses
reported that at least two hooded shooters entered the mosque and opened fire
on congregants who had remained there after the end of prayers. Other said the
shooters were wearing ski masks.
Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau called the attack “cowardly” and said Canadians grieved
for the victims.
Quebec Premier
Philippe Couillard condemned the attacks in a tweet and called for solidarity
with Muslims in Quebec. “Quebec categorically rejects this barbaric violence,”
he said. Later he Tweeted that it was an act of terrorism.
The Quebec
Islamic Cultural Center is located near Laval University, which has a large
community of international students, many from French-speaking Africa and the
Maghreb.
The mosque,
one of several in the area, was the target of a hate crime last June when a
pig’s head was left at the front door with the message “Bonne appétit,” as The
Washington Post reported at the time. The consumption of pork is banned by
Islam. Concerned about that kind of incident, the mosque installed several
closed-circuit cameras around the building.
The shooting
is a particular shock for Quebec City, a quiet white-collar city with a low
crime rate. In 2015, the city reported two murders. The metropolitan area has
800,000 people.
According to
La Presse, the province’s leading newspaper, police were also treating the
attack as a terrorist incident and had activated a joint task force involving
municipal police, Quebec’s provincial police and the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police.
An ambulance
is parked at the scene of a fatal shooting at the Quebec Islamic Cultural
Centre in Quebec City, Canada. REUTERS/Mathieu Belanger
Samer Majzoub,
the president of the Canadian Muslim Forum, a Muslim advocacy group in Quebec,
said he knows people who attend the Quebec City mosque, but that he and other
area Muslim leaders were still trying frantically to find out who had been
shot.
“People that
we know, we are not sure if they’re alive right now. They’re saying about five
confirmed, a dozen injured. And the police are cordoning all the area,” he told
The Post. “It is shocking. It never came to our mind that we’d have a terrorist
act as such, especially in Canada.”
Majzoub said
Canada has seen increasing anti-Muslim hostility over the past year, but still
nowhere near the level witnessed in the United States and Europe. But he said
the area where the mosque has appeared to be particularly prone to anti-Muslim
sentiments. “This masjid has witnessed a lot of issues before — threats and
vandalism, and some Islamophobic graffiti,” he said, using the Arabic word for
mosque. “It’s not the first time.”
Majzoub said
the mosque has a small congregation of about a hundred people and attracts a
lot of students because it’s near a university. He said many of its attendees
are of North African descent.
“We never
thought it could happen,” he said. “It was a slaughter.”
This is a
breaking story and will be updated.
Abigail
Hauslohner contributed to this report. Alan Freeman reported from Ottawa.
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