It was June, 2010, Grand Prix weekend in downtown Montreal, and on
two straight nights the 19-year-old stayed out past dawn against her
parents’ wishes.
For her mother, Johra Kaleki, the behaviour confirmed that all her
efforts to steer her eldest daughter on the right path had failed. “I felt like she would never be fixed,” she told Sgt.-Det. Alexandre Bertrand in an interrogation video played Wednesday in Quebec Court.
As her crying husband spoke to Bahar in the basement of their
Dorval home, Ms. Kaleki went upstairs and grabbed a large knife from the
kitchen counter, the one she used to chop meat, she recounted. “I said,
‘This is the time.’ ”
She hid the knife under her T-shirt, returned to the basement, and
told her husband the problem would best be resolved between mother and
daughter. “Just leave us alone for five minutes,” she said she told him.
“Don’t come until I call you.”
He left and she cuddled her first-born and told her to lie on her stomach so she could give her a back massage. “Then I stab her, stab her neck,” she confessed. “She said, ‘No Mom!’ I said, ‘It’s for your good. Let me finish.’ ”
Earlier in the interrogation, Sgt.-Det. Bertrand has asked whether
the knife blade was sharp. “No, it wasn’t,” she replied. “I wish it was.
I wanted to give her the peace that she needed.”
Bahar survived the attack, suffering serious knife wounds to her head
and shoulder. Ms. Kaleki, 40, is charged with attempted murder,
aggravated assault and illegal use of a weapon. READ THE NATIONAL POST ARTICLE
Monday, October 1, 2012
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