Close X
Sunday, December 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parliament Hill Gunman Michael Zehaf Bibeau Urges Others To Similar Attacks In Missing Video Segment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2015 11:01 AM
  • Parliament Hill Gunman Michael Zehaf Bibeau Urges Others To Similar Attacks In Missing Video Segment
OTTAWA — As calmly as Michael Zehaf Bibeau laid out the reasons for his fateful attack on Parliament Hill last October, he exhorted others to carry out similar attacks, say sources familiar with the unreleased portion of his final video manifesto.
 
The missing video segments also include Zehaf Bibeau mentioning a number of Middle Eastern names, none of which appear to be linked to the Oct. 22 shooting rampage, The Canadian Press has learned.
 
The details come from two sources who spoke to CP about the video, speaking on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss the contents of the portions that have yet to be made public.
 
They say during the missing 18 seconds, the 32-year-old Zehaf Bibeau calls on others to carry out attacks against countries such as Canada.
 
The sources say those named in the video do not appear to have played a role in Zehaf Bibeau's attack, but rather have general Arabic-sounding names. It's not clear if investigators have been able to identify them.
 
Zehaf Bibeau recorded the video in his car moments before the deadly rampage, which claimed the life of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo and ended his own in a hail of gunfire inside Centre Block.
 
RCMP commissioner Bob Paulson has said investigators had "sound operational" reasons for keeping the 18-second portion of the video secret when the other 55 seconds were released nearly three months ago.
 
The redacted portions included 13 seconds at the start of the video and five seconds at the end. The sources did not specify which portions contained what information.
 
As to why the RCMP withheld part of the video, the RCMP wanted to ensure there were no hidden messages contained in it, the sources said. Investigators pored over every frame of the video, which was found on Zehaf Bibeau's cellphone inside the unlocked car he drove to Parliament Hill.
 
In the portion of the video Canadians have already seen, Zehaf Bibeau stares calmly into the camera. He talks in an even tone, his eyes darting around, as he sits in his car in a parking lot steps away from Ottawa police headquarters.
 
 
He says the actions he's taking are a response to Canada's military involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq.
 
"We are retaliating, the mujahedeen of this world," Zehaf Bibeau says. 
 
"Canada's officially become one of our enemies by fighting and bombing us and creating a lot of terror in our countries and killing us and killing our innocents. 
 
"So, just aiming to hit some soldiers just to show that you're not even safe in your own land, and you gotta be careful."
 
Paulson said earlier this week the RCMP would release the remaining video either this week or next, along with an Ontario Provincial Police report into the actions of the Mounties on Parliament Hill on the day of the shooting.
 
Next week, the House of Commons plans to release a similar review of how security personnel responded to Zehaf Bibeau once he managed to get inside the Centre Block with a loaded rifle.
 
Speaking to a Commons committee Thursday, Speaker Andrew Scheer said his office is finalizing what portions of the highly detailed report will be released.
 
"A report that includes names of security personnel, names of constables, where people were standing at what time, and where resources were deployed, some of that information would — it would not be appropriate to release that," Scheer said.
 
"It would do far more damage to security than enhancements. So, we're currently in the process of deciding the best way to make that public."
 
Scheer told the committee the redacted version given to the public would be the same version provided to MPs.
 
The Commons is spending an extra $6.5 million this fiscal year to pay for those new security measures around Parliament Hill, Scheer said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Whistler Stabbing: Two 17-Year-Olds Charged In Luka Gordic's Death Granted Bail

Whistler Stabbing: Two 17-Year-Olds Charged In Luka Gordic's Death Granted Bail
Three of the suspects, who are 17, were charged after Luka Gordic was pronounced dead at a local clinic following violence that erupted last Sunday.

Whistler Stabbing: Two 17-Year-Olds Charged In Luka Gordic's Death Granted Bail

'Some B.C. Elderly Giving Up Basic Needs To Afford Housing'

'Some B.C. Elderly Giving Up Basic Needs To Afford Housing'
VANCOUVER — B.C.'s seniors' advocate is urging the provincial government to accept 18 recommendations to make housing more affordable, available and appropriate for the province's elderly.

'Some B.C. Elderly Giving Up Basic Needs To Afford Housing'

Chilliwack Police Looking For Two Male Child-Luring Suspects

Chilliwack Police Looking For Two Male Child-Luring Suspects
RCMP Cpl. Mike Rail says in a news release that on April 30 an older man driving a red van offered candy to an 11-year-old girl who ran away to a friend's house.

Chilliwack Police Looking For Two Male Child-Luring Suspects

Man Sues B.C. Rodeo Company, Says Bull Called Slow Poke Was Violent Despite Name

Man Sues B.C. Rodeo Company, Says Bull Called Slow Poke Was Violent Despite Name
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A novice rider is suing a rodeo company in Vernon, B.C., over a bull named Slow Poke that he alleges failed to live up to its name and caused him serious injury.

Man Sues B.C. Rodeo Company, Says Bull Called Slow Poke Was Violent Despite Name

Long-Term Offender Robert Semchuk To Live In B.C. Halfway House Under Seven Strict Conditions

Long-Term Offender Robert Semchuk To Live In B.C. Halfway House Under Seven Strict Conditions
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A designated long-term offender who stabbed a 60-year-old woman outside a Kamloops, B.C., hospital has been ordered to live in a halfway house for the foreseeable future.

Long-Term Offender Robert Semchuk To Live In B.C. Halfway House Under Seven Strict Conditions

Woman Travels Back Home To Ireland From Canada To Campaign For Same-Sex Marriage

Woman Travels Back Home To Ireland From Canada To Campaign For Same-Sex Marriage
The 25-year-old began forming her plans as soon as she heard that her home country of Ireland was preparing to hold a constitutional referendum on the status of same-sex marriage.

Woman Travels Back Home To Ireland From Canada To Campaign For Same-Sex Marriage