Quebec's Muslim community to have their own cemetery, mayor says

The city had promised a separate Muslim graveyard after a shooting attack by a white supremacist at a mosque in January that left six people dead

People attend a vigil for victims of Sunday's shooting at a Quebec City mosque, at the Grand Parade in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Monday, Jan. 30, 2017. The 27-year-old suspect in the attack against Muslims at the Quebec City mosque was charged Monday with six counts of first degree murder and five counts of attempted murder. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press via AP)
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Quebec's mayor announced that the city's Muslim community will have their own cemetery, despite objections from right-wing groups and rising anti-Muslim sentiment.

The city had promised a separate Muslim graveyard after a shooting attack by a white supremacist at a mosque in January that left six people dead.

The Muslim cemetery will be set up on land adjoining one of the city's main cemeteries.

"The city of Quebec has accepted, subject to the approval by City Council, an offer submitted by the Islamic Cultural Centre of Quebec to purchase municipal land that will allow the construction of a cemetery for the Muslim community in the greater Quebec City region," City Hall said in a statement on Friday.

"For over 400 years, Quebec has been a welcoming city for all cultures, languages and religions," said Quebec's mayor Regis Labeaume.

Negotiations over a possible Muslim cemetery had been dragging on for more than a decade, but the debate became more heated after the mosque shooting. The Muslim community was outraged that the remains of some of the victims had to be to be taken to Montreal, 150 miles away, to be buried in a Muslim cemetery.

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Last month, plans to build a Muslim graveyard in a small town just outside the city had to be scrapped when local residents rejected the idea in a referendum. Local media said far-right groups had lobbied in favour of a "no" vote.

Several days after that local poll, the Quebec Muslim centre received a package containing a desecrated Koran and a hate message.

Anti-immigration and anti-Muslim messages have been on the rise in towns across Quebec province and on nationalist websites.

A spokesman for a right-wing nationalist group, The Federation of Native Quebecers (FQS), in July called on the airwaves of Radio-Canada for a poster campaign against what he called "massive immigration" which he said Quebecers did not want.