Canada removes parole from 6 Muslim shooters

Bissonnette’s 40-year sentence was unconstitutional.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, OTTAWA – Supreme Court Canada reduced the parole of André Bissonnette, the 27-year-old man who shot dead six Muslims in the country. Previously, Bissonnette was able to get parole after serving 40 years in prison. But now he only has to serve 25 years in prison before being released on parole.


In its decision on Friday (5/27/2022), the Supreme Court of Canada said the shooting at the Islamic Cultural Center in Quebec which killed six people and injured 19 others on January 29, 2017 was a horrific event. The Supreme Court of Canada said the incident left a deep and painful scar.


However, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled Bissonnette’s 40-year sentence unconstitutional. “The finding that the imposition of a 25-year ineligibility period following parole is unconstitutional should not be viewed as degrading the life of an innocent victim,” the Supreme Court of Canada said in its decision. Anadolu Agency.


The Supreme Court of Canada said that everyone would agree that the murder that took the lives of several people was the most serious crime. “This appeal is not about the value of every human life, but rather about the limits of the state’s power to punish offenders, which, in a society based on the rule of law, must be implemented to a manner consistent with the constitution,” he said.


“Life in prison without a realistic possibility of parole can also have a devastating effect on offenders, who have no incentive to rehabilitate and whose detention will end only after their death,” added the Supreme Court of Canada.


The decision of the Supreme Court of Canada was strongly criticized by the organization Justice for All Canada Muslim (JACM). “The events of 2017 were the worst acts of terror in Canada and the victims and their families deserve sympathy and justice,” said Taha Ghayyur, Executive Director of JACM.


According to him, the clemency granted to Bissonnette did not send a strong message to the perpetrators of such hatred. “His parole cut has also not helped those determined to take their hatred to the next level. Given the number of mass shooters inspired by Bissonnette, the world should look to Canada for the de-radicalization of mass shooters who continue to threaten minorities,” Ghayyur said.


André Bissonnette was sentenced to up to 40 years in prison before his parole in 2019. At that time, lawyers and prosecutors appealed the court’s decision. Bissonnette’s lawyer argued that his client’s parole period should be reduced to 25 years. Meanwhile, prosecutors want Bissonnette released on parole after serving 50 years in prison.

Robert Butler

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