(Reuters) - The
gunman who killed a soldier in Ottawa and then raced through Canada's
parliament before being shot dead was a misfit and perhaps mentally ill,
according to police, friends and family, while his troubled and
transient past included robbery and drug offenses. Michael Zehaf-Bibeau,
32, a Canadian citizen and convert to Islam, was identified by police on
Thursday as the attacker in the incident that rocked Canada. "(He)
was lost and did not fit in. I his mother spoke with him last week over
lunch, I had not seen him for over five years before that," a woman who
identified herself as Zehaf-Bibeau's mother said in a statement
provided to the Associated Press. Police
said Zehaf-Bibeau shot and killed a soldier stationed at the National
War Memorial in Ottawa on Wednesday before running into the nearby
parliament buildings, where he was shot and killed by guards in a flurry
of gunfire. "He is an
interesting individual in the sense he had a very developed criminality
... a non-national-security related criminality of violence and of
drugs and of mental instability," Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Commissioner Bob Paulson told a news conference on Thursday. He
said Zehaf-Bibeau had applied for a passport to travel and wanted to go
to Syria, but the passport application was delayed, which likely helped
motivate the attack. "I
think the passport figured prominently in his motives and his - you know
I'm not inside his head - but I think it was central to what was
driving him," Paulson said. Paulson also said emails suggested he had associations with people who had shared his radical views. U.S.
officials said they had been advised that Zehaf-Bibeau was a convert to
Islam. His father was a Canadian citizen of Libyan descent and Paulson
said Zehaf-Bibeau may have been a dual citizen of Canada and Libya. A
friend who lived with Zehaf-Bibeau at a Vancouver homeless shelter said
Zehaf-Bibeau had tried unsuccessfully to get off drugs. "We referred to him as Muslim Mike," Steve Sikich told Reuters. "He didn't seem like a bad guy." Sikich
told Reuters the last time he saw Zehaf-Bibeau he appeared gray and
sickly, back on drugs, and was rambling about wanting to travel to Libya
and then join the Islamic State. He said the encounter was "a month or
two ago." "He was crying
on my shoulder, because he and I were friends, and he says, 'I can't
take it anymore. I'm going back home to Libya,'" said Sikich. "He
kind of went into a rant. He seemed very emotional about it," he said.
But first Zehaf-Bibeau said he had to go to Ottawa to get his passport. "I AM MAD AT OUR SON" Several
years ago Zehaf-Bibeau attended Vancouver's Masjid Al-Salaam mosque,
where he met David Bathurst, also a convert to Islam, David's father,
John Bathurst, told Reuters. Bathurst offered Zehaf-Bibeau some work
with the family's sprinkler company in 2011, but he only lasted two days
on the job. "We made a
mistake in trying to help someone out," Bathurst said. "We didn't fire
him, I don't even remember why he quit. He probably just didn't show
up." Bathurst, who described Zehaf-Bibeau as "nondescript," said he believed mental illness, not Islam, was behind the attack. Zehaf-Bibeau
stayed at the Ottawa Mission homeless shelter in a downtrodden part of
the city for about 10 days before Wednesday's attack, several people at
the shelter told Reuters. One man, who identified himself only as Randy, said he frequently saw Zehaf-Bibeau praying in the hallways. Court
records in Montreal showed Zehaf-Bibeau was born to Susan Bibeau in
1982 after she had a brief relationship with Bulgasem Zehaf. The two had
a rocky relationship but were married in 1989, Bulgasem said in an
affidavit. "After (his)
birth, his mother, Susan Bibeau and I renewed our relationship and I
also established links with my son," Zehaf said in the affidavit. "I was
entitled to ... look after his education, his security, and to give him
all my love." The parents
petitioned in 1995 to change their son's name from Joseph Paul Michael
Bibeau to Joseph Paul Michael Abdallah Bulgasem Zehaf Bibeau. Zehaf was
also registered as the child's father at the time. "We
have no explanation to offer. I am mad at our son, I don't understand
and part of me wants to hate him at this time," his mother, a civil
servant, said in her statement. A
Michael Joseph Paul Zehaf-Bibeau was charged with robbery in Vancouver
in December 2011, according to court documents, and was later found
guilty of a lesser count of uttering threats. He
also had multiple run-ins with police in the French-speaking province
of Quebec. Court records show three 2004 cases involving a Michael
Zehaf-Bibeau. He pleaded guilty to two drug-related offences and one
charge of failing to comply with a judge's order. At the Ottawa Mission, one resident who identified himself as Mark suggested the man they knew briefly had two sides. One day, Zehaf-Bibeau "snapped" and acted aggressively with other residents, Mark said. He later apologized. "It
just floors me because he was all right," Mark said. "Maybe he was
mentally challenged or something. What causes somebody to snap like
that?"
Man who attacked Canada's parliament had troubled, transient past
Reuters
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