US charges man over Muslim cab driver shooting
NEW YORK: United States police in Pittsburgh have arrested and charged a 26-year-old man with shooting a Muslim cab driver in the back in the early hours of Thanksgiving, officials said Wednesday.
Muslim activists allege the shooting was a hate crime, but police told AFP those charges were still under investigation.
Anthony Mohamed, 26, from Hazelwood, a neighborhood in Pittsburgh, in the state of Pennsylvania, is charged with aggravated assault, criminal attempt homicide and recklessly endangering another person, police said.
The victim was identified by a local newspaper as a 38-year-old Moroccan immigrant. His name has not been released and officials say he wishes to remain anonymous for fear of safety.
The driver told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that the passenger asked whether he was from Pakistan and then talked about the militant Islamic State (IS) group killing people.
"I noticed that he changed his tone and he began to satirize my Prophet [Muhammad (PBUH)]," he was quoted as saying by the paper.
Police said the shooter got into the taxi outside a casino at 1:13 am on November 26.
He allegedly asked the driver to wait so he could get money to pay the fare, but returned a few minutes later with a rifle.
As the victim drove off, he was shot in the back by a bullet that blew out the taxi's rear window, police said. He was taken to hospital in a stable condition.
Since the Paris attacks on November 13, activists have warned against an unprecedented anti-Muslim backlash in America, fuelled by right-wing intolerance in the presidential campaign.