NewsRescue
According to the CBC, a cult led by self-proclaimed Queen of Canada Romana Didulo has occupied an abandoned school in a tiny community in Saskatchewan and is now threatening people with dreadful judgement and “execution” if they do not heed the group leader’s demands. According to the public broadcaster, the threat has prompted rising alarm in the community.
The Queen of Canada group arrived at Richmound, Saskatchewan, in mid-September, after being evicted from Kamsack, where hundreds of residents had protested their presence. Richmound residents held their own protest on September 24, parading cars near the school, blasting horns, and demanding for the cult to leave. Didulo’s supporters wrote at least four threatening emails to Richmound officials on Monday, according to the mayor.
CBC reported that one of the letters from Didulo’s followers stated that if the villagers of Richmound didn’t comply with the “queen’s” decrees, they would face “publicly broadcast execution” and “undeserved devastation upon their children, grandchildren and families.” The sect also urged people to be “forewarned and prepared.”
The mayor stated that once the letters were distributed, a village council meeting was immediately summoned. According to local media, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) established a temporary detachment in Richmound on Friday.
“We are aware of the presence of a group sometimes referred to as the Kingdom of Canada,” Tyler Bates, commander of the South District of the Saskatchewan RCMP, was quoted as saying. According to the official, there had been a lot of calls regarding “this group’s presence in the community over the last two weeks or so.”
Didulo is a QAnon conspiracy theorist on the far right. QAnon members think there is a cabal of devil-worshiping paedophiles, led by Hollywood actors and Democratic politicians, that runs a global sex-trafficking network while conspiring against former members.