Man suspected of killing Canadian Muslim family was motivated by hate
-police
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[June 08, 2021]
By Carlos Osorio
LONDON, Ontario (Reuters) -A man accused of
killing four members of a Canadian Muslim family by running them over in
his pickup truck, targeted them in an attack motivated by hate, police
said on Monday.
Police in London, Ontario, citing witnesses, said that 20-year-old
Nathaniel Veltman, jumped the curb in his vehicle on Sunday, struck five
members of the family, ranging in age from 9 to 74, and then drove off
at high speed.
Veltman, a resident of London who was arrested after the incident, has
been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of
attempted murder. He is due back in court on Thursday after being
remanded to custody on Monday.
"There is evidence that this was a planned, premeditated act, motivated
by hate," Detective Superintendent Paul Waight of the London police
department told reporters.
"We believe the victims were targeted because of their Islamic faith,"
Waight said.
Police in London - 200 km (120 miles) southwest of Toronto - were
consulting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and prosecutors about
potentially filing terrorism charges, he said.
The suspect does not have a criminal record, and is not known to be a
member of a hate group, police said. He was arrested in a mall parking
lot without incident while wearing a body-armor-type vest, police said.
There is no evidence he had any accomplices. It was not immediately
known if the suspect had hired a lawyer.
Police have not released the victims' names, but the London Free Press
said that among the dead were Syed Afzaal, 46, his wife, Madiha Salman,
44, and their 15-year-old daughter, Yumnah Afzaal. Syed Afzaal’s
74-year-old mother, whose name has not been confirmed, also died. Their
9-year-old son, Faez Afzaal, is in the hospital with serious but
non-life-threatening injuries.
The family immigrated from Pakistan about 14 years ago, according to
media reports.
Witness Paige Martin told reporters a black truck blasted past her and
ran a red light as she was walking, and then she came upon the scene and
saw "chaos": "It was just absolutely like something that you never want
to see."
The attack was the worst against Canadian Muslims since a man gunned
down six members of a Quebec City mosque in 2017. London Mayor Ed Holder
said it was the worst mass murder his city had ever seen.
"We grieve for the family, three generations of whom are now deceased,"
Holder told reporters. "This was an act of mass murder, perpetrated
against Muslims, against Londoners, and rooted in unspeakable hatred."
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Twitter that he was
"horrified" by the news, adding that "Islamophobia has no place in any
of our communities. This hate is insidious and despicable - and it must
stop."
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Members of the Selamati lay flowers at the fatal crime scene where a
man driving a pickup truck jumped the curb and ran over a Muslim
family in what police say was a deliberately targeted anti-Islamic
hate crime, in London, Ontario, Canada June 7, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos
Osorio
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said on Twitter that
"justice must be served for the horrific act of hatred that took
place."
'TERRORIST ATTACK'
By late evening on Monday, a steady stream of mourners was seen
arriving near the scene of the attack, dropping off flowers and
saying prayers. One placard read: "When does it stop? Enough."
A GoFundMe campaign in support of members of the victims' family had
already raised almost C$120,000 ($99,000) in one hour.
A vigil has been organized at a local mosque on Tuesday night to
remember the victims.
"This is a terrorist attack on Canadian soil, and should be treated
as such," said Mustafa Farooq, head of the National Council of
Canadian Muslims.
London, which has about 400,000 residents, has a large Muslim
community and Holder said Arabic is the second-most-spoken language
after English in the city.
The teenage girl who was killed "will be deeply missed by fellow
students and staff at Oakridge Secondary School," the school said in
a statement.
A man who described himself as a neighbor said in an interview with
Global News he met with the family on holidays.
"He was a family guy, very much involved in the community, a regular
member of our mosque, a really, really great father," the neighbor,
who was not identified, said of Syed Afzaal.
"He loved to walk with his family. Almost every evening, they
walked."
In Pakistan, Prime Minister Imran Khan condemned the attack, saying
it indicated "growing Islamophobia" in Western countries.
"Islamophobia needs to be countered holistically by the
international community," Khan said on Twitter.
(Reporting by Steve Scherer and Carlos Osorio; Additional reporting
by David Ljunngren, Julie Gordon, and Gibran Peshimam in Islamabad;
Editing by Peter Cooney, Robert Birsel)
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