Canadians 'will always be with you' says PM at Tumbler Ridge vigil

PAIGE TAYLOR WHITE / AFP

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told grieving residents of Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, on Friday that Canadians "will always be with you" at a vigil to mourn victims of one of the country's worst mass shootings.

Carney, opposition leaders and provincial officials traveled to the remote town in a show of support for residents following Tuesday's attack, in which a gun-wielding teenager took the lives of eight people before killing herself.

"When you wake up tomorrow and the world feels impossible, know that millions of Canadians are with you," he said.

Carney, a Liberal, was joined by Conservative chief Pierre Poilievre and leaders of several smaller parties at the candlelight ceremony.

Jesse Van Rootselaar, 18, who had suffered a series of mental health problems, killed her mother and stepbrother at home before shooting dead a teacher and five young students at her former school in Tumbler Ridge, a settlement of around 2,400 in the Canadian Rockies, according to police.

Van Rootselaar, who police say was born a male but began identifying as a woman six years ago, then died by suicide.

Van Rootselaar was not targeting anyone specifically at the school, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald said. "This suspect was, for lack of a better term, hunting. They were prepared and engaging anybody and everybody they could come in contact with," he said at a news briefing.

The agency said earlier they had at one point seized guns from the house where Van Rootselaar was living but returned them after the owner, who they did not identify, successfully appealed the decision.

The Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights, a pro-gun lobby group, questioned why weapons had been returned to a house where a person with mental illness was living.

McDonald said the two main weapons used in the attack had not previously been seized by police. He did not address the status of two other firearms that were used in the shooting.

The mass shooting was one of the worst in Canadian history. The deadliest took place in April 2020 when a 51-year-old man killed 22 people in Nova Scotia, before police shot him dead.

Few townspeople wanted to speak to media on Thursday and British Columbia police said families and friends of the victims had requested privacy.

Police named the school victims as Abel Mwansa, 12; Ezekiel Schofield, 13; Kylie Smith, 12; Zoey Benoit, 12; and Ticaria Lampert, 12, as well as teacher Shannda Aviugana-Durand, 39.

Lampert's mother Sarah, speaking to reporters on Thursday, described her daughter as a "blazing light in the darkness...(who) just wanted to bring sunshine to everyone and everything she ever touched".

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