As It Happens

Friend pays tribute to victim of Nice attack, a Muslim woman who fed the homeless

Feiza Ben Mohamed arrived at the scene of the Bastille Day massacre minutes after her friend, Fatima Charrihi, was run down by a truck driven by the attacker. She remembers her colleague from the local Muslim community as generous and kind.
Feiza Ben Mohamed (left) is a leader of a Muslim organisation in Nice and a friend of Fatima Charrihi (right), one of the first victims of the attack. (Facebook)

The streets were full and Bastille Day fireworks lit up the sky. But, as people in Nice celebrated, a large truck bore down on the crowds. They didn't stand a chance.

When I looked to my left I saw maybe 30 people. They were all dead.- Feiza Ben Mohamed, witness

Fatima Charrihi was one of the first victims of the attack. Minutes after the driver of the truck plowed over her, killing her on the spot, her friend Feiza Ben Mohamed drove up to the scene and saw Charrihi's son.

People pay tribute near the scene where a truck ran into a crowd at high speed killing scores in Nice, France. (Pascall Rossignol/Reuters)

"I opened the window to say 'hello' and he just showed me someone, a dead person," Ben Mohamed tells As It Happens guest host Susan Bonner. "I got out of the car and I went to him and I saw that it was his mother . . . when I looked to my left I saw maybe 30 people. They were all dead."

Ben Mohamed is a leader of a local Muslim organization in Nice. She says Fatima Charrihi devoted much of her time to feeding the homeless.

French soldiers advance on the street after dozens were killed in Nice, France, when a truck ran into a crowd celebrating Bastille Day. (Eric Gaillard/Reuters)

"When these kinds of things happen, you never believe that it can happen to you. It was unbelievable that something like this happened in Nice, in this city. Why here? Why?"

Ben Mohamed says the fact that the attacker's first victim was a Muslim woman wearing a hijab demonstrates that he was acting out of hate, not faith.

"It means that terrorism doesn't have any religion. It's not possible. You know in the hospital there is about 50 or 60 percent of the victims are Muslim," she says. "This man was just crazy. There was a lot of children who died, who were looking for their parents and they never found them."

A man walks through debris on the street, the day after a truck ran into a crowd killing scores in Nice, France. (Eric Gaillard/Reuters)

Even though she was born in France, does she feel accepted by French society?

"Accepted? Not really, since the [Charlie Hebdo] attacks of January last year. They all show us that they don't want us to stay here, that we are not real French.

The man accused of the truck attack in Nice may have acted alone, which, according to Nathalie Goulet, makes similar incidents impossible to prevent.

"To make people understand that Muslims are not terrorists, it's really, really difficult and I think that after what happened yesterday, it's going to be worse."