Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hateful Package Sent To Quebec City Mosque Two Days Before Muslim Cemetery Vote

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Jul, 2017 11:33 AM
  • Hateful Package Sent To Quebec City Mosque Two Days Before Muslim Cemetery Vote
QUEBEC — A package expressing hate toward a Muslim cemetery project was delivered last week to the Quebec City mosque where six men were shot dead in January, police said Wednesday.
 
 
Quebec City police spokesman David Poitras said security has been increased around the Centre culturel islamique de Quebec and that authorities are taking the matter seriously.
 
 
He added it's too soon to know whether any charges will be laid.
 
 
The package arrived two days before a referendum on a proposed Muslim cemetery was held Sunday in nearby Saint-Apollinaire, but the mosque did not immediately report it to avoid influencing the vote.
 
 
Voters rejected a zoning change that would have allowed the burial ground project to move forward by 19 votes to 16.
 
 
 
 
Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard condemned the incident, which he described as "unacceptable and repulsive."
 
 
"We should all condemn these acts, they're not unique to Quebec, we see this around the world where communities co-exist," he said in Edmonton as he attended a premiers' meeting.
 
 
He described the parcel as "an offensive document."
 
 
This is not the first time a hateful gesture has been directed toward the mosque.
 
 
Last June, a pig's head was left at the entrance of the mosque during Ramadan. The pig's head was wrapped in paper and was accompanied by a note that read "Bonne (sic) appetit."
 
 
 
 
In January, six men between the ages of 39 and 60 were killed when a gunman burst into the mosque and opened fire during evening prayer.
 
 
The mosque has said it has also received hateful letters since the attack.

MORE National ARTICLES

Nominations OPEN for DARPAN's Extraordinary Achievement Awards 2017

Nominations OPEN for DARPAN's Extraordinary Achievement Awards 2017
Taking place September 15, 2017, at Aria Banquet and Convention Centre in Surrey, the Red Carpet rolls out at 6 pm and will welcome more than 700 people comprising of Vancouver’s top social and business elite in the South Asian community.

Nominations OPEN for DARPAN's Extraordinary Achievement Awards 2017

WATCH: Abbotsford B.C. Pedestrians Hit By Drunk Driver Hope Others Will Learn From Graphic Video

WATCH: Abbotsford B.C. Pedestrians Hit By Drunk Driver Hope Others Will Learn From Graphic Video
A security-camera video shows a car slamming into a group of people walking at a marked crosswalk and then hitting a pickup truck head on.

WATCH: Abbotsford B.C. Pedestrians Hit By Drunk Driver Hope Others Will Learn From Graphic Video

WATCH: Jaw-Dropping Road Rage Incident In Saanich That Stopped Traffic And Stunned Onlookers

WATCH: Jaw-Dropping Road Rage Incident In Saanich That Stopped Traffic And Stunned Onlookers
In the video, posted to Facebook by a witness, two men throw punches and grapple with each other before others step in to break up the altercation.

WATCH: Jaw-Dropping Road Rage Incident In Saanich That Stopped Traffic And Stunned Onlookers

Park Board Approves Bylaw Banning Whales, Dolphins At Vancouver Aquarium

The bylaw goes into effect immediately, preventing the Vancouver Aquarium from bringing new cetaceans to its facility in Stanley Park.

Park Board Approves Bylaw Banning Whales, Dolphins At Vancouver Aquarium

Indian-Origin Google Researcher Neel Mehta Links Ransomware Attack To N.Korea

Indian-Origin Google Researcher Neel Mehta Links Ransomware Attack To N.Korea
As the world struggles to identify the cybercriminals behind the global ransowmware attack that hit 150 countries over the weekend, Neel Mehta, an Indian-origin security researcher working with Google, has claimed on Twitter that the hackers may have links to North Korea.

Indian-Origin Google Researcher Neel Mehta Links Ransomware Attack To N.Korea

Aga Khan Opens Ottawa Pluralism Centre, As Trudeau Chopper Controversy Swirls

OTTAWA — The Aga Khan returned Tuesday to Ottawa to unveil the new headquarters of an international organization that is positioning itself as an antidote of sorts to growing strains of populism and intolerance around the world.

Aga Khan Opens Ottawa Pluralism Centre, As Trudeau Chopper Controversy Swirls