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Several dead in Canadian mass shooting, CBC reports

A Royal Canadian Mounted Police spokesperson told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp that several people were killed in the shooting, but did not specify how many. The victims were homeless, and police believe the attack was targeted, according to the CBC.

Agencies and A News WORLD
Published July 25,2022
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Several people were killed in a mass shooting early on Monday in the Canadian province of British Columbia, local media reported.

Police had earlier issued an emergency alert for multiple shootings in the city of Langley and asked residents to stay alert and away from the area of the incident.

"Multiple shooting scenes in the downtown core in the city of Langley with 1 incident in Langley township involving transient victims," an alert sent to B.C. residents' phones read.

A Royal Canadian Mounted Police spokesperson told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp that several people were killed, but did not specify how many.

Earlier reports had suggested the assailant may have targeted homeless people, but this was not immediately confirmed by authorities in Langley, a town of 130,000 people about an hour southeast of Vancouver.

"I can confirm that four people were shot by what is believed to be a lone gunman," Langley police chief Ghalib Bhayani told a news conference. Two of the victims died, while a third -- a woman -- remained in critical condition, and a fourth person was shot in the leg.

Bhayani said authorities were still working to identify the victims and suspect, and to establish whether there was any connection between them.

"Right now we're determining the exact nature of who these people are and we aren't able to confirm that they are in fact homeless," homicide investigator David Lee said of the victims.

Several Langley residents tweeted images of emergency alerts they received from police at about 6:15 am local time (1315 GMT) confirming "multiple shooting scenes" in the city's downtown area.

A subsequent alert informed residents that the suspect was no longer a threat, but urged them to keep away from the area.

Firearms-related violent crimes account for less than three percent of all violent crimes in Canada -- but since 2009 the per capita rate of guns being fired with intent to kill or wound has increased five-fold.

Following a wave of mass shootings in the neighboring United States, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced a proposed freeze on handgun ownership that would effectively ban their importation and sale.

Canada banned 1,500 types of military-grade or assault-style firearms in May 2020, days after the country's worst mass shooting left 23 dead in rural Nova Scotia.