Houses For Sale In Ouagadougou

QUEBEC — Mourners packed a Quebec City church on Saturday to attend a funeral service for five humanitarian workers killed in a terrorist attack in Burkina Faso last month.At the end of the ceremony, children from the victims' families helped to release seven white doves as family and friends gathered around the one coffin and four wooden boxes containing the victims' ashes. Family members stand in front of the church for the joint funeral service for five Canadians who died in a terrorist attack in Burkina Faso in January, on Saturday in Quebec City. (Photo: Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attended the joint funeral for Yves Carrier, 65, his wife Gladys Chamberland, 54, their adult son Charles-Elie Carrier, 21, and Yves' adult daughter, Maude Carrier, 37, as well as their friend Louis Chabot.Trudeau also attended the private ceremony for the sixth victim, Suzanne Bernier, which was held earlier in the day.The six Quebecers were travelling together on a humanitarian mission when terrorists stormed a hotel and cafe in Burkina Faso's capital of Ouagadougou on Jan. 15, killing 28 people.

Louise Carrier, the sister of Yves Carrier, said she was touched by the number of people who have offered sympathy to the family."It gives us courage, it allows us to move forward,'' she said.Families, Children and Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos attended the service, and said afterwards that the word "peace'' stuck out to him as a recurring theme."Peace in our world, peace in our community and peace in our families,'' he said. "These families have endured great suffering and what we wish them is for peace to come as quickly as possible.''
Diy Composting Toilet RvTrudeau arrived early and shook hands with the family and friends of the victims before the service began.
Best Tire Shine No Sling Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stands with PQ MNA Harold Lebel, left, at the beginning of a joint funeral service for Yves Carrier, his wife Gladys Chamberland, their adult son Charles-Elie Carrier and Yves' adult daughter, Maude Carrier, as well as their friend Louis Chabot, who died in a terrorist attack in Burkina Faso in January, on Saturday in Quebec City.
Can You Buy Six Flags Tickets At Kroger

In the wake of the tragedy he was publicly criticized by the husband and the mother of one of the victims for his government's response to the event.Maude's husband Yves Richard hung up on Trudeau after the prime minister spoke to him in what Richard called a "canned manner'' during a phone call, and Maude's mother had said she was ashamed by Trudeau's pledge to pull the six CF-18 jet fighters from the Middle East.Duclos said Trudeau and the federal government's presence at the event was "a matter of respect for the families.''"We are here to listen, to accompany them, to tell them we care about them even if we often know them very little,'' he said.The service was led by the auxiliary bishop of Quebec, along with Bishop Pierre Claver Malgo from Burkina Faso, who flew from Africa to attend.Framed photos of the victims stood near the altar, which was decorated with white lilies and colourful bouquets.Televisions showed photo montages of the victims, four of whom were teachers in a local school board.

Two unidentified family members hug before the joint funeral service for Yves Carrier, his wife Gladys Chamberland, their adult son Charles-Elie Carrier and Yves' adult daughter, Maude Carrier, as well as their friend Louis Chabot, who died in a terrorist attack in Burkina Faso in January, on Saturday in Quebec City. Chamberland worked with the province's natural resource department and Charles-Elie Carrier was a student.The church was packed to capacity, with dozens of people standing at the back and yet others turned away at the door.The funeral was also attended by members of the church group who hosted the six victims in Burkina Faso.Sister Lise Desrocher, who knew the Carrier family, said earlier that they left behind a message of engagement that "several other members of the family intend to follow.''"In addition to the human loss, these were skilled, talented people, who greatly helped the citizens of Burkina Faso,'' she said.A French police officer inspects burned vehicles outside the Splendid Hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, Sunday, a day after security forces retook the hotel from Al Qaeda fighters who seized it in an assault that killed at least 28 people.)

OUAGADOUGOU, BURKINA FASO—As Al Qaeda fighters attacked the café where he worked, Clement Djiguende was saved by chance: A jihadist who had been firing at patrons simply ran out of bullets.The gun stuck for a moment. Then the militant, dressed in black and a turban, tried several times to reload. That’s when Djiguende and another server bolted toward the bathrooms not far from the bar where only moments earlier they had been serving cold drinks on just another Friday night.About 20 other people were already crowding into the toilets in a bid to save their lives as the sound of gunfire resumed at the Cappuccino Cafe. Others tried to climb through the restaurant’s broken windows. Some managed to get to the roof where they waited for the carnage to stop.On the café’s large outdoor terrace, “wounded people were crying out in pain,” the bartender recalled. “The jihadists then started killing the wounded.”At least 10 of the 28 victims of the Ouagadougou attacks lost their lives at the café that night, including the Ukrainian wife and son of the restaurant’s owner, officials confirmed.

An American missionary who ran an orphanage in Burkina Faso was also killed while meeting with a local pastor at the café.An audio tape later released by the North Africa affiliate of Al Qaeda that claimed responsibility for the carnage was titled: “A Message Signed with Blood and Body Parts.” The attackers arrived in a vehicle with licence plates from neighbouring Niger and spoke with an Arabic accent when screaming in French, witnesses said.The café had long been a popular hangout in Ouagadougou, with a menu of Western dishes and a bakery that sold birthday cakes and pastries, among other items.Witnesses said four attackers stormed the café around 7:30 p.m. Not only did they shoot at patrons, they also created another death trap by setting the café ablaze.Soon it began filling with smoke, forcing Djiguende and the others in the restrooms to wet pieces of their clothing in the sink to cover their faces as they tried to escape by crouching close to the ground. Heat from the flames had broken the huge windows and people were trying to crawl out without getting cut by the glass.“

Upon reaching the terrace, my hand touched a body, but oddly enough, I kept it together,” he said. “Then I crossed another and then a third body, where I laid and pretended for a while that I too was dead.”After getting out, Djiguende kept crawling for another six metres beyond the restaurant before springing to his feet and running into another nearby restaurant that had not been attacked.By then, the jihadists had entered the neighbouring Splendid Hotel. Andre Bationo, a waiter at the hotel, said he was cleaning in the dining room when a girl selling handicrafts to guests burst in to say that jihadists were killing people outside.He ran to an employee room by the kitchen but found the door locked. Panicking, he made his way into a bathroom. Bationo turned off all the lights, laid down on his stomach and waited.“I heard people crying and running in every direction in the hallways, but then the sound of gunfire became very loud,” he said.It was an Al Qaeda fighter, who flung open the door to the bathroom and tried to turn the light on.“

I heard a little ‘click-click,’ but the light wasn’t coming on very quickly,” Bationo said.The fighter pulled out a flashlight and his cellphone, then made a call speaking loudly in a language that Bationo didn’t understand. After a few minutes, the jihadi went back into the hotel and gunfire rang out for several minutes before he returned.Bationo, who suffers from high blood pressure, was certain if the Al Qaeda militant didn’t kill him, the stress of him coming in and out of the hiding spot several times surely would.“Each time I heard gunfire, I prayed to God. And each time the sound of weapons stopped, I kept hope that I would get out of here alive,” he recalled. “I stayed there lying on my stomach until 6 a.m., when the French soldiers came and forced me to leave.”French special forces and troops from Burkina Faso searched the hotel throughout the night, looking for the attackers and any explosives they may have left behind. Witnesses said the assailants had fled to another restaurant in the neighbourhood.