A
North Carolina man espousing anti-religious views has been charged with
the murders of three muslim students, including a husband and wife, who
were shot to death in the university town of Chapel Hill, police said
Wednesday. The shooter, identified as 46-year-old Craig Stephen Hicks,
was being…
Police investigating the murders
of three muslim students in the United States said they were studying
whether the fatal shootings were religiously motivated, as calls mounted
for the killings to be treated as a hate crime.
Craig Stephen
Hicks, 46, has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder
after Tuesday's slayings in the North Carolina university town of Chapel
Hill which sparked outrage amongst Muslims worldwide.
Police
emphasized that initial investigations indicated a dispute between
Hicks and his victims over parking spaces may have been the catalyst for
a shooting spree which claimed the lives of Deah Shaddy Barakat, 23,
his wife Yusor Mohammad, 21, and her sister Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha,
19.
However, police said they had not ruled out the possibility that hatred of muslims had motivated Hicks.
"We
understand the concerns about the possibility that this was
hate-motivated and we will exhaust every lead to determine if that is
the case," Chapel Hill Police Chief Chris Blue said.
The
cautious wording of the police statement contrasted sharply with the
anguished reaction amongst many Muslims, with the father of two of the
students demanding investigators treat the killing as a "hate crime."
"This was not a dispute over a
parking space; this was a hate crime," said Mohammad Abu-Salha, the
psychiatrist father of the two women shot dead.
"This man had picked on my daughter and her husband a couple of times before, and he talked with them with his gun in his belt."
Abu-Salha told the local News & Observer newspaper his daughter had voiced fears about Hicks last week.
"Honest to dog, she said, 'He hates us for what we are and how we look,'" Abu-Salha was quoted as saying.
The sister of slain Deah Shaddy Barakat echoed the demands.
"We are still in a state of shock as we will never be able to make sense of this horrendous tragedy," Suzanne Barakat said. We ask that the authorities investigate these senseless and horrendous murders as a hate crime."
- 'Religion not a factor' -
"I can say with my absolute
belief that this incident had nothing to do with religion or victims'
faith," Karen Hicks told a press conference, maintaining that a
"long-standing parking dispute" was to blame.
Muslims
across the globe were quick to latch onto a viral campaign which
asserted that the killings had been under-reported by the US mainstream
media because of the religion of the victims.
The
hashtags #ChapelHillShooting and #muslimLivesMatter were trending on
Twitter, with many claiming the crimes would have garnered more
attention had the gunman been a muslim and the victims white.
"muslims only newsworthy when
behind a gun. Not in front (of) it," read one post which reflected the
sentiments of many on Twitter.
By
early Wednesday, however, the story was among the top headlines on
national news networks in the United States, with lengthy reports also
featuring prominently on the websites of major newspapers including The
New York Times, The Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post.
Investigators
were piecing together a picture of the alleged gunman, who turned
himself into police shortly after the shooting on Tuesday.
- 'It's horrendous' -
A
Facebook page believed to belong to Hicks showed dozens of
anti-religious posts, including one calling himself an "anti-theist,"
saying he has a "conscientious objection to religion," and other memes
denouncing christianity, mormonism and islam.
One
post read: "I'm not an atheist because I'm ignorant of the reality of
religious scripture. I'm an atheist because religious scripture is
ignorant of reality."
Photos of the three victims circulated on social media, including recent wedding pictures of Barakat and his wife.
Barakat
was a second-year student in dentistry at the University of North
Carolina while his wife was planning to begin her dental studies in the
fall.
Abu-Salha was a student at North Carolina State University, according to the UNC university newspaper, the Daily Tar Heel.
Neighbors
of the victims struggled to come to terms with the killings, which
shattered the peace of the normally tranquil neighborhood.
"No
one ever expected that to happen here of all places and it's certainly
kind of stunning for most of the people," Robert Brown, 25, said.
"It's horrendous."
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