At least 5,000 people have joined the funeral services for
three young Muslim students gunned down in the US state of North Carolina, in
what family members said could be a "hate crime".
The crowd for Thursday's funeral in the state capital
Raleigh was so large it had to be moved from a mosque to a nearby university athletic
field.
Click to watch Thousands Join Burial Of Slain Muslim Students In USA
The gathering was sombre and silent, with only a few
children crying in the distance. A large blue plastic prayer mat lay on the
field, and some took their own to use. At the service's end, about a dozen
people carried the three coffins to hearses, which headed to an Islamic
cemetery outside Raleigh.
Deah Shaddy Barakat, a 23-year-old University of North
Carolina dental student; his 21-year-old wife, Yusor Mohammad; and her
19-year-old sister, Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, were killed at the university
town of Chapel Hill on Tuesday allegedly by Craig Stephen Hicks.
The 46-year-old suspect has been charged with three counts
of first-degree murder.
Police said a long-running dispute over parking spaces may
have prompted the deadly attack.
However, family members of the victims have questioned the
official explanation.
Mohammad Abu-Salha, the father of the two women, said at the
funeral that he thought the murder had "hate crime written all over
it".
"We don't want revenge," he said. "We don't
care about punishment. We want this acknowledged for what it is."
Gerod King of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives said that agents were in touch with the US attorney's office in
North Carolina that encompasses Chapel Hill and that investigators had not
ruled out a hate crime.
"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," Chris Blue, Chapel Hill's police chief, said in an email to
reporters.
The cautious wording of the police statement contrasted
sharply with the anguished reaction among some American Muslims who viewed the
homicides as an outgrowth of anti-Muslim opinions.
Outrage was voiced on social media with the hashtags
#MuslimLivesMatter and #CallItTerrorism.
"Based on the brutal nature of this crime ... the
religious attire of two of the victims, and the rising anti-Muslim rhetoric in
American society, we urge state and federal law enforcement authorities to
quickly address speculation of a possible bias motive in this case," Nihad
Awad, of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said in a statement.
Hicks, who appeared briefly in court on Wednesday, is being
held without bond. Police said Hicks turned himself in and was cooperating.
Credit to Aljazeera and Tom Maxwell in Chapel Hill who
contributed to this report.
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