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Accused parents allowed to attend funeral of daughter taken off life support

 

Islamic faith ensures that an Edmonton toddler, allegedly abused and starved for most of her young life by her parents, is on her way to paradise.

 

When children die they immediately pass into the next life where there is “no pain, no agony, no suffering,” Mustafa Khattab, the imam of the Al Rashid mosque, said Friday.

 

He confirmed the funeral for the two-year-old girl will be held at his mosque, the largest in the city, on Saturday afternoon.

 

The girl’s parents, who face several criminal charges and remain in custody, will also be allowed to attend.

 

A judge granted an order Friday allowing the pair, who cannot be named, to be escorted by security officers to the service. A condition remains in effect that they not have any contact with each other.

 

Mr. Khattab said the father and mother are not members of the Al Rashid, but the community is supportive of their difficult situation.

 

“We pray that God will make it easier.”

 

The girl, known in court documents as M, spent the last three months in a coma, virtually brain dead, while judges decided whether to side with her Muslim parents and keep her on life support or take the advice of doctors and stop life-sustaining treatment.

 

Doctors testified that the girl had suffered repeated bouts of pneumonia and would have had to face many invasive, risky medical procedures.

 

They said she had an irreversible brain injury and would never regain consciousness.

 

Thursday night, after the Supreme Court of Canada rejected an emergency stay of an Alberta Court of Appeal ruling that allowed doctors to remove the girl from a ventilator, she was taken off the machine and died.

 

The mother and father were each allowed a 20-minute escorted visit with their daughter earlier in the day.

 

Alberta’s top court had agreed with a lower court decision that recognized the religious views of her parents but was concerned about their obvious conflict.

 

The parents face charges of aggravated assault, criminal negligence causing bodily harm and failing to provide the necessities of life – offences that are expected to be upgraded now that the girl is dead.

 

Paramedics called to their home on May 25 found the girl and her twin sister suffering from injuries and severe malnourishment. Police said they weighed just 13 and 16 pounds.

 

The surviving girl is now in foster care, as is an older brother, who had also been living in the home but wasn’t injured.

 

It’s not known if the siblings will be allowed to attend the girl’s funeral.

 

Lydia Bubel, a lawyer for the girl’s father, told the court Friday that the funeral needed to be arranged quickly because Islamic traditions dictate the girl’s body cannot be embalmed.

 

Members at the mosque are to wash the girl’s body, wrap her in white cotton or linen and spray her with special perfumes, said Ms. Bubel.

 

Mr. Khattab said people will say prayers before the girl is transported to a Muslim cemetery on the south side of the city.

 

Custom states she will forever lay on her right side, with her head facing towards the holy city of Mecca.

Funeral for starved Edmonton girl draws hundreds

Parents attend funeral under guard, mother visibly distraught

 

Last Updated: Sep 22, 2012 6:23 PM MT -- Source

 

Mourners carry the casket of the two-year-old girl out of the Edmonton mosque after the service Saturday. (CBC News)

 

Hundreds of people gathered in an Edmonton mosque Saturday to pray over the the body of a young girl allegedly starved and beaten by her parents.

 

Khama Assaf came to the service to pray for the girl and her family, saying the death has devastated many in the community.
Khama Assaf came to the service to pray for the girl and her family, saying the death has devastated many in the community.

 

The toddler, who can only be identified as M, died Thursday night only hours after the Supreme Court of Canada denied a motion to keep her on life support.

 

Her parents, who also cannot be named, are facing several criminal charges and remain in custody.

 

"It's very sad. It's very sad to see a child go through this and the parents go through this," said Khama Assaf, who attended the service, but did not know the family.

 

"It's very, very sad for the whole community. Everybody knows. The whole community knows. And [anyone] who has time today, they came for the funeral."

 

In May, paramedics were called to the family's home where they found the child with a head injury and in cardiac arrest. Both the girl and her twin sister were severely malnourished. The second girl is recovering.

 

Both parents were allowed to attend the funeral while under guard, but were not allowed contact with one another.

 

The girl's mother was visibly distraught during the service, barely able to stand at times.

 

Imam Mustafa Khattab said the family were not members of his mosque, but he took responsibility for the girl's funeral after being called in to pray over her while she was in hospital.

 

Khattab said that although many of the mourners did not know the family personally, the news of her death has nonetheless hit the community hard.

 

"It's a very devastating experience for everyone; it’s a very difficult moment," Khattab said.

 

Parents could face more charges

The Supreme Court of Canada on Wednesday rejected a stay of the Alberta Court of Appeal ruling that allowed doctors to remove M from a ventilator.

 

The parents face charges of aggravated assault, criminal negligence causing bodily harm and failing to provide the necessities of life.

 

More charges could be laid after the results of a toxicology report are completed, which police say could take a few weeks.

 

None of the allegations have been proven in court.

 

With files from Canadian Press
FM

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