Attacker of the Canadian Parliament Was Drug 
		Addict, Homeless, and Criminal, Not a Jihadist 
		By Hassan El-Najjar
		Editor of Al-Jazeerah 
		October 24, 2014 
		The Canadian government is using the Parliament shooting story to 
		justify its participation in the current NATO war on Syria and Iraq and to 
		tighten its police state measures against Muslim Canadians, particularly 
		through more spying, surveillance, and arrests against them.
		The main media outlets (news agencies, TV and radio stations, as well 
		as printed and online publications) in the US and Canada adopted the 
		story with excitement to attack Islam and Muslims, part of their efforts 
		to keep the population indoctrinated for permanent wars against Arabs 
		and Muslims. 
		Both of the 
		official Canadian story and those of the anti-Arab, anti-Islam media about the October 22, 2014 Parliament shooting 
		in Ottawa are dubious, with many holes, and do not add up to any level 
		of credibility.  
		Here're the facts, as reported by several sources below:
		The suspect, Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, was a criminal, drug addict, 
		homeless and a victim of divorce of his parents! He was rejected by many 
		people who were supposed to give him support. He even begged the police 
		to put him back in prison, and send him to rehabilitation after that, 
		which they did not do. He attempted to go to Libya, his father's country 
		of origin, but the Libyan Embassy refused to issue him a passport, so 
		did the Canadian government. He was even rejected by the Vancouver 
		Mosque he attempted to attend, for his drug addiction. Just before 
		committing his crime, he was living in a homeless shelter in Ottawa.
		This is the truth about Michael Zehaf-Bibeau!
		So, instead of dealing with him as such, the Canadian government, 
		followed by the pro-war media, quickly used the story to promote 
		Islamophobia, calling for an increase in surveillance and spying on 
		Muslim Canadians, and most importantly to justify the Canadian 
		participation in the current NATO war on Iraq and Syria.
		Actually, Michael knew very little about Islam, as he was a Catholic 
		most of his life, but neither the government nor the media mentioned 
		Catholicism as a factor behind their crimes. Instead, they focused on 
		his recent interest in Islam, though he was kicked out of the mosque 
		because of his drug addiction! 
		Just today, there was a school shooting in Washington State, and 
		before that a person jumped over the White House fence but nobody in the 
		US government or media would mention their religion as a factor 
		contributing to their crimes!
		If a Muslim commits a crime, he is automatically described as 
		terrorist and Islam is attacked as a factor but if anybody else commits 
		the same crime, religion is not mentioned!
		A major hole in the official story is not explaining how Michael got 
		the rifle while he has a criminal record, was impoverished, and staying 
		in a homeless shelter? How can anyone with such criminal record obtain weapons 
		in Canada, with its strong system of gun control?
		This is a story of how a normal person is turned to deviance, drug 
		addiction, homelessness, and crime as a result of divorce of his 
		parents, loneliness, lack of social support, and rejection by the larger 
		society. This is the right context that it should be analyzed and 
		reported.
		Abusing the story to smear Islam, repress Canadian Muslims, and 
		justify the Canadian participation in the NATO permanent wars in the 
		Middle East is cheap, immoral, and belittling to the intelligence of the 
		Canadians and Americans. 
		***
		
			
				
				  | 
			
			
				| The suspect Michael 
				Zehaf-Bibeau before entering the Parliament building, photo by 
				police | 
			
		
		Ottawa Gunman's Actions Were 'Linked To His Radicalization,' 
		Authorities Say
		by
		
		Eyder Peralta and
		Scott Neuman
		NPR, October 23, 2014 7:56 AM ET 
		
		
		Susan Bibeau, the mother of Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, 32, who was killed 
		in a gunbattle with authorities, wrote in an email to The Associated 
		Press that she and her husband wanted to "apologize for all the pain, 
		fright and chaos" their son created.
		"We have no explanation to offer," she wrote. "I am mad at our son, I 
		don't understand, and part of me wants to hate him at this time."
		Bibeau, a senior official at the Immigration and Refugee Board of 
		Canada, said her son was "lost and did not fit in."
		During a briefing with reporters, Royal Canadian Mounted Police 
		Commissioner Bob Paulson said while they still don't know the full 
		extent of Bibeau's motivation, his actions were "linked to his 
		radicalization."
		According to Paulson:
		— There is no evidence that Bibeau was linked to Martin Rouleau-Couture,
		
		the newly radicalized man who ran over two Canadian soldiers on Monday.
		— Bibeau was not on the list of 90 or so Canadians that authorities 
		consider to be a risk and are monitoring for national security reasons.
		— Bibeau's email address, however, was found on the computer of a 
		man, Paulson said, who was arrested on a terrorism charge.
		— Talking to his mother, police learned that Bibeau had intentions to 
		travel to Syria. He had applied for a passport and authorities were in 
		the midst of investigating his application.
		— Bibeau was a Canadian citizen and he may have also held Libyan 
		citizenship.
		NPR's Jackie Northam reports that Zehaf-Bibeau has been described as 
		"a fairly recent convert to Islam" who had a criminal record in multiple 
		provinces. "He was also the son of a very senior official of Canada's 
		immigration department," she says.
		
		
		The Globe and Mail says he was "a labourer and small-time criminal — 
		a man who had had a religious awakening and seemed to have become 
		mentally unstable."
		The newspaper reports: "Mr. Zehaf-Bibeau was born in 1982 and was the 
		son of Bulgasem Zehaf, a Quebec businessman who appears to have fought 
		in 2011 in Libya, and Susan Bibeau, the deputy chairperson of a division 
		of Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board. The two were divorced in 
		1999."
		The Globe and Mail quotes an acquaintance of Zehaf-Bibeau's who said 
		the alleged attacker had frequently spoken of the presence of devils or 
		demons in the world and had recently expressed 
		a desire to go back to Libya to study. He apparently had been 
		blocked from getting a visa to Libya by Canadian authorities "who have 
		been taking measures to prevent Canadians from joining extremists 
		overseas," the newspaper says.
		The
		
		Canadian Broadcasting Corp. says 
		Zehaf-Bibeau was charged in 2004 with drug possession, pleaded guilty 
		and served 60 days in jail.
		According to the CBC:
		"Zehaf-Bibeau was in trouble with the law 
		again in 2011, this time in British Columbia.
		"Following a robbery in Vancouver, Zehaf-Bibeau was charged with 
		robbery and uttering threats. He was found 
		guilty of the lesser charge of uttering threats and sentenced to one day 
		in jail, with credit for 66 days already served, according to 
		court documents.
		"Quebec court documents from 2004 show Zehaf-Bibeau lived in Montreal 
		at the time, in the north-end neighbourhood of Villeray."
		Meanwhile, Ottawa police said early Thursday they had
		
		finally ruled out the possibility of a second shooter. It wasn't yet 
		clear whether the incident was tied to one the day before in which
		
		two soldiers were run down in a car, one killed and the other 
		injured by someone described as having been radicalized by Islam.
		"It could just be a coincidence, but certainly it did raise concern 
		that the attacks happened so closely together," Jackie reports from 
		Ottawa. "This all comes at a critical time for Canada, when Canada says 
		it's going to help in the fight against the so-called Islamic State and 
		Canada is providing men and support for that effort."
		***
		Michael Zehaf-Bibeau was asked to leave Burnaby, B.C., mosque
		Ottawa gunman objected to Masjid al-Salaam and Education Centre in 
		Burnaby, B.C., allowing in non-Muslims
		
		
		CBC News Posted: Oct 24, 2014 10:21 AM PT 
		Last Updated: Oct 24, 2014 1:12 PM PT 
		
			
				by, B.C., allowing in non-Muslims
				
				
				CBC News Posted: Oct 24, 2014 
				10:21 AM PT Last Updated: Oct 24, 2014 1:12 PM PT
				
			 
		 
		
		
			Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, who shot and killed Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at 
			the National War Memorial earlier this week, was asked to leave the 
			B.C. mosque he attended and objected to its policy of allowing in 
			non-Muslims, a B.C. Muslim Association spokesperson has said.
			Montreal-born Zehaf-Bibeau, 32, lived in B.C. in recent years 
			and had 
			a connection to the Masjid al-Salaam and Education Centre, a 
			mosque in Burnaby, B.C..
			Speaking at a news conference on Friday morning, 
			association spokesman Aasim Rashid denounced Wednesday's attack.
			"These are acts of criminal violence and show utter disregard for 
			human life and the laws of the world, as well as its religions," 
			said Rashid.
			"We openly condemn the propaganda of the lawless groups trying to 
			incite Canadians to hurt other Canadians. Such propaganda is 
			clear evidence that these groups are individuals, are sheer terrorists."
			Rashid told reporters Zehaf-Bibeau had attended the mosque 
			for three to four months in 2011 and described him as keeping 
			largely to himself.
			But, he said, Zehaf-Bibeau did object to the openness with 
			which the mosque accepts non-Muslims.
			"The mosque operates on a foundation of welcome, of 
			community outreach and interfaith dialogue and that cannot take 
			place when we close the doors on our neighbours.
			"If he was not OK with that, he should probably choose 
			another mosque to go to and pray." 
			Finally, Zehaf-Bibeau attempted to sleep at the mosque when 
			he was released from prison in 2012, said Rashid, which led to him 
			being asked to leave.
			
			
			Zehaf-Bibeau was charged with robbery and uttering threats for an 
			incident in Vancouver on Dec. 16, 2011, which court records 
			indicate may have been an attempt to get help.
			At Zehaf-Bibeau's bail hearing, he told the judge himself that he 
			wanted to serve time. The judge agreed to detain him over Christmas.
		 
		***
		Security tight in Canada as police probe Parliament gunman's 
		ties
		By
		
		Randall Palmer and
		
		Richard Valdmanis
		OTTAWA Fri Oct 24, 2014 10:49am EDT 
		(Reuters) - 
		Canada's capital faced a third day of heightened security on Friday 
		as police searched for any clues that the man who shot and killed a 
		soldier and charged into the parliament building had help in plotting 
		his attack.
		Groups of Ottawa residents gathered early around the national war 
		memorial where the soldier, Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, 24, was slain on 
		Wednesday at the start of a brazen daylight attack by a man police 
		identified as Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, a 32-year-old Canadian citizen.
		"I feel tremendous sadness," said April Hall, 43, a doctor from 
		London, Ontario, as she sat near the monument wiping tears from her 
		eyes. "This is a memorial to those who sacrificed their lives for 
		Canada, and there was a sacrifice right here on the spot."
		The attack by Zehaf-Bibeau, who according to U.S. sources was
		a recent convert to Islam, came two 
		days after another incident in Quebec, in which Martin Rouleau, 25 and 
		also a recent convert, drove over two soldiers, killing one.
		Both men were shot dead by security officers.
		The attacks on soldiers came during a week when the Canadian military 
		sent six jet fighters to the Middle East to take part in a campaign of 
		air strikes against Islamic State militants.
		Police said that Zehaf-Bibeau had traveled to 
		Ottawa seeking a passport and that he had intended to travel to Syria, a 
		hot spot of Islamic State activity.
		Canadian officials vowed to continue their military efforts and on 
		Friday two long-range patrol aircraft were due to depart Nova Scotia for 
		the Middle East.
		Separately on Friday, Turkish officials reported that an unidentified 
		yellow powder was found at the Canadian consulate in Istanbul, with the 
		German and Belgian consulates receiving similar packages, according to 
		Turkish media.
		'A REAL SHAME'
		Police were stationed at regular points along the wall surrounding 
		the Parliament buildings in Ottawa, where metal barricades blocked the 
		entrances to an area popular with tourists.
		Bouquets of flowers were stuck into the gate's scrollwork, as workers 
		and visitors adapted to the tighter security restrictions in a city 
		normally proud of its openness.
		"It is a real shame," said Ian Campbell, 57, a government worker. "I 
		don't know how you stop somebody from doing this kind of thing."
		Officials planned to move Cirillo's body from Ottawa to his hometown 
		of Hamilton, Ontario, on Friday, along a 500 kilometer (310 mile) 
		stretch of highway called the "Highway of Heroes" in honor of soldiers.
		Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commissioner Bob Paulson on Thursday 
		said investigators had linked Zehaf-Bibeau to someone charged with what 
		he called a terrorist-related offence. He did not give details other 
		than saying Zehaf-Bibeau's email was found in the hard drive of that 
		person, but vowed to rapidly learn if others had helped Zehaf-Bibeau 
		plan his attack.
		Later on Friday in Calgary, the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada and 
		Muslims Against Terrorism plan to hold a memorial for Cirillo, as well 
		as Patrice Vincent, the 53-year-old warrant officer who died in Monday's 
		attack.
		Zehaf-Bibeau, who was born in Montreal, had lived in Calgary for a 
		period, according to police.
		(Writing by
		
		Scott Malone; Editing by
		
		Chizu Nomiyama)
		***
		Canada's jihadi killer went from Catholic private schoolboy 
		to criminal drug addict just two years after mother's adultery sparked 
		parents' divorce
		Daily Mail, October 24, 2014
		By
		
		Daniel Bates and
		
		Nick Fagge In Montreal For Mailonline
			In one of his statements Zahaf says that, as of the age of 16, 
			Zehaf-Bibeau had no criminal record and had never appeared before a 
			youth court. The family had also not been investigated by social 
			services.
			But that all changed soon after.
			Zehaf-Bibeau's first conviction was in 2001 when he was 19 – the 
			assault during an incident in Montreal. That same year he was 
			convicted of possessing a false credit card and impaired driving.
			Over the next 13 years he racked up 13 
			offences in Quebec including his most serious crime, a 2003 robbery, 
			for which he was jailed for two years and put on probation for 
			three.
			Zehaf-Bibeau drifted between jobs and traveled to Vancouver, 
			where he briefly worked as a laborer and developed 
			a crack cocaine drug addiction. At 
			some point during these turbulent years he converted from 
			Catholicism to Islam.
			A mosque in Vancouver, British 
			Columbia, kicked him out. 'His behaviour was not normal,’ 
			said David Ali, vice-president of Masjid Al-Salaam mosque in nearby 
			Burnaby.
			He said: 'We try to be open to everyone. But people on drugs 
			don't behave normally.'
			In 2011, Zehaf-Bibeau tried to rob a 
			McDonald's restaurant in the city so he could get clean from 
			his addiction while in jail.
			A psychiatrist deemed him fit to stand trial and after being 
			convicted he was sentenced to time served, which was 66 days in 
			jail. A transcript of the hearing reveals he was by then deeply 
			troubled. 
			He says: 'My plan is...I'm a crack 
			addict, and at the same time I'm a religious person. I want to 
			sacrifice freedom and good things, for a year maybe, so when I come 
			out I'll appreciate things of life more, and be clean, or maybe get 
			a therapy like a detox, if you guys could send me to one.'
			Zehaf-Bibeau's last known home was a homeless 
			shelter in Ottawa where he vacillated between preaching and doing 
			drugs.
			Zehaf-Bibeau had traveled to Ottawa to 
			apply for a Libyan passport because he wanted to go to the country 
			to study Islam, but was rejected for undisclosed reasons. 
			His passport had been seized but he was not 
			among the dozens of Islamic radicals being watched by Canadian 
			intelligence.
		 
		***
		
		 
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