Alexandre bissonnette: who is the man charged in canada mosque shooting?

Alexandre bissonnette: who is the man charged in canada mosque shooting?

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A 27-year-old student has been charged with six counts of murder and five counts of attempted murder in connection with Sunday's gun attack on a mosque in Quebec City. Alexandre


Bissonnette, the only suspect in the killings, made a brief appearance in court on Monday as the charges against him were read. Initial media reports claimed at least two gunmen carried out


the assault, but police later clarified that a man arrested at the scene, Mohamed Belkhadir, was a witness rather than a suspect. SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your echo chamber. Get the


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inbox. Six men aged between 35 and 65 were killed in Sunday's attack and another 18 people injured, five of them seriously. Witnesses say a man entered the mosque and opened fire with a


weapon described as similar to an AK-47. Dozens of worshippers had lingered to chat after the evening prayer service. "Provincial police are treating the attack as a terrorist


act," CBC reports. Bissonnette is reported to have called police himself shortly after the massacre to tell them his location. The political science student, studying at Quebec


City's Laval University, had no previous criminal record. A neighbour described him as "solitary", while former school friends told Radio Canada he was an introvert who


enjoyed playing chess. "An archived screenshot of his Facebook page showed he 'liked' a wide range of pages, including those of US President Donald Trump, far-right French


politician Marine Le Pen and atheist scientist Richard Dawkins," the Toronto Star reports. Francois Deschamps, who runs a Facebook group welcoming refugees to Quebec, told La Presse


that when he saw Bissonnette's photo in the news, he recognised him as an online "troll" who he claimed had targeted foreigners and feminists in posts. SIX DEAD IN CANADA


MOSQUE SHOOTING 30 January Six people were killed and several others wounded when gunmen opened fire on worshippers inside a mosque in Quebec City, Canada, during evening prayers yesterday.


Police have arrested two suspects and a security cordon remains in place around the Quebec City Islamic Cultural Centre, where at least 50 men, women and children were believed to have


gathered for evening prayers. Mohamed Yangui, the centre's president, said the shooting happened in the men's section of the mosque. A witness told CBC's French language


service Radio-Canada: "A bullet passed right over my head. There were even kids. There was even a three-year-old who was with his father." Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau


condemned what he called a "terrorist attack on Muslims in a centre of worship and refuge", while Philippe Couillard, the premier of Quebec, said the city "categorically


rejects this barbaric violence". He added: "Our solidarity is with the victims, the injured and their families. We unite against violence. Solidarity with Muslim Quebecers."


The motive for the attack is still being investigated, says Sky News. Yesterday's shooting follows a number of incidents in mosques in Canada. Last June, a pig's head was left at


the same mosque while in 2012, a mosque in Quebec's Saguenay region was splattered with pig's blood and in 2015, a mosque was set on fire in the neighbouring province of Ontario, a


day after the Bataclan theatre attack in Paris. "Quebec has struggled at times to reconcile its secular identity with a rising Muslim population, many of them North African


emigrants," says CNBC. However, it adds that "mass shootings are rare in Canada, which has stricter gun laws than the United States, and news of the shooting sent a shockwave


through mosques and community centres throughout the mostly French-language province".