Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

10 People Are Dead In Less Than 24 Hours In Road Accidents Across B.C.

The Canadian Press Darpan, 05 Sep, 2014 10:45 AM
    VANCOUVER - Ten people have died in road accidents across British Columbia in less than 24 hours.
     
    Five people died in two separate crashes near Fort St. John, in northeastern B.C., Thursday afternoon.
     
    RCMP Cpl. Jodie Shelkie says when police arrived at a two- vehicle crash on the Alaska Highway, the drivers and both passengers in each of the vehicles were dead.
     
    An hour later, a 29-year-old man from Fort St. John was killed in a crash near the community.
     
    RCMP in Langley, east of Vancouver, say a male driver was killed Friday morning when he was thrown from his vehicle during a rollover and police are also investigating the death of an 83-year-old man in a pedestrian accident.
     
    On Thursday morning, three people died in a head-on crash in foggy conditions on Highway 97 near Quesnel. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former PMs, First Nations leaders seek to ease tensions between groups

    Former PMs, First Nations leaders seek to ease tensions between groups
    OTTAWA - Former prime ministers and aboriginal leaders are joining forces in a bid to ease tensions between aboriginal and non-aboriginal groups.

    Former PMs, First Nations leaders seek to ease tensions between groups

    Surrey Mother Charged With Neglect After Toddler Ends Up In Hospital

    Surrey Mother Charged With Neglect After Toddler Ends Up In Hospital
    The mother of a two-year-old child in Surrey, B.C., has been charged with neglecting the toddler. RCMP say they became involved after the child was brought to a hospital.

    Surrey Mother Charged With Neglect After Toddler Ends Up In Hospital

    Tuition, Books, Mooning? Frosh-week Rituals Can Be Costly in Toronto, Police Warn

    Tuition, Books, Mooning? Frosh-week Rituals Can Be Costly in Toronto, Police Warn
    A Toronto-area police force is warning students about the hidden cost of some questionable frosh-week rituals such as streaking and putting cement in a public washing machine — both of which carry fines of up to $5,000.

    Tuition, Books, Mooning? Frosh-week Rituals Can Be Costly in Toronto, Police Warn

    Report Pleads For B.C. Government Funding To Help End Domestic Violence

    Report Pleads For B.C. Government Funding To Help End Domestic Violence
    VICTORIA - A new report that pleads with the B.C. government to invest in the fight against domestic violence highlights a brutal set of statistics in the province for 2014.

    Report Pleads For B.C. Government Funding To Help End Domestic Violence

    Canada Pension Plan’s Hidden Costs Make It Three Times More Expensive Than Reported

    Canada Pension Plan’s Hidden Costs Make It Three Times More Expensive Than Reported
    TORONTO - The Canada Pension Plan is hiding the fact that its administrative costs have more than tripled since 2006 because of transaction and external management fees, according to a new report from a conservative think-thank.

    Canada Pension Plan’s Hidden Costs Make It Three Times More Expensive Than Reported

    Mounties Consider Charges As ATV Crashes Into Okanagan Public Library

    Mounties Consider Charges As ATV Crashes Into Okanagan Public Library
    VERNON, B.C. - Two women may be facing charges after crashing an ATV into the front window of a public library in the North Okanagan.

    Mounties Consider Charges As ATV Crashes Into Okanagan Public Library