Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. 'terror' victim didn't know motive: relative

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2023 10:09 AM
  • B.C. 'terror' victim didn't know motive: relative

SURREY, B.C. - Family members of a man whose throat was slashed Saturday on a Surrey, B.C., bus say his assailant gave no indication of his motive during an attack that RCMP allege was an act of terrorism.

Abdul Aziz Kawam is charged with attempted murder, assault causing bodily harm, aggravated assault and assault with a weapon, all in association with terrorist group the Islamic State.

Kawam is to reappear in Surrey provincial court today for a hearing whose details are covered by a publication ban.

Chris Jensen, whose partner is the victim's sister, says the injured man told him "he had no idea" what motivated the attacker who did not call out or say anything at the time.

Jensen says the man told him "there was no warning" before the attack, and terrorism didn't enter the minds of the family until police announced the charges.

None of the allegations have been proven in court.

Metro Vancouver Transit Police have alleged a man took out a knife and slashed another man across the throat before being arrested at the scene by transit police and Surrey RCMP.

Jensen said the victim, who he calls his brother-in-law, described getting onto the bus and then turning to help a man he thought was falling before he saw the knife.

"He just attacked him," Jensen said.

The victim struggled with the armed man and eventually succeeded in pushing the attacker off the bus after being wounded.

"It was a heroic act," Jensen said. "When the guy cut his throat, he could have given up, he could have curled up and just let the guy attack somebody else. But he kept fighting, and in the end he may have saved every person on that bus from injury."

The victim returned home from hospital Tuesday after receiving a knife wound that Jensen said stretched from the back of his neck to near his throat, just below the left side of his jaw.

Jensen said the nurse tending to the victim said the attack could have been fatal if the knife had been sharper.

He said his brother-in-law suffered some vocal-chord damage, but the knife did not strike any major tendons or arteries, and doctors are hopeful he can make a full recovery.

Jensen has set up a GoFundMe page for the victim, who he said is Indigenous.

He said on the page that his brother-in-law is "one of the most unassuming, kind, shy, gentle, and caring people you could ever meet."

He said the victim will not be able to perform the physical labour required at his work for at least several weeks. That wasn't taking into account the mental trauma.

"He's able to move, but emotionally he is in another place," Jensen said. "He may have trouble getting on the bus the next time he tries. He may not trust certain people around him because they look very much like this person.

"He doesn't even want to go to court to ever see this guy."

Transit police say they discovered during their investigation that Kawam, who was born in 1995, made several concerning comments, leading investigators to notify the RCMP Integrated National Security Enforcement Team, who then consulted with the Public Prosecution Service of Canada on the terrorism charges.

They say the suspect also allegedly displayed and held a knife to the throat of another individual at a bus stop about four blocks from the scene of the slashing attack. That person was able to push the assailant away and escape unharmed, police say.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. budget spends more on health, housing

B.C. budget spends more on health, housing
Finance Minister Katrine Conroy says now isn’t the time to start making cuts, so there is more money for things like health care, addiction treatment, foster care, rent control and family supports.

B.C. budget spends more on health, housing

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.
Environment Canada says another winter blast is hammering northwestern parts of the province and is expected to hit the south coast before Thursday. The weather office says 5 to 15 centimetres is expected over higher elevations of the North Shore, west and central sections of the Fraser Valley and along the Sea-to-Sky corridor.

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act
Christopher Ram, 36, pleaded guilty to the March 27, 2022 offence, as well as another indecent act that occurred April 17 at Foster Park, near Kingsway and Boundary Road. 

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP
Attempts to negotiate and deescalate the situation were unsuccessful, and shortly after 11:40 p.m. the male attempted to lower himself from a third story window. He was arrested at ground level with the assistance of a police dog and taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries. 

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP

Police seek suspects who rammed an occupied Police vehicle

Police seek suspects who rammed an occupied Police vehicle
The suspects are believed to be driving a grey newer-model Toyota Tacoma with significant front-end damage. The vehicle was last seen driving west-bound on Pitt River Road in Port Coquitlam. The officer was transported to hospital for non-life-threatening injuries.

Police seek suspects who rammed an occupied Police vehicle

B.C. advocates cheer free contraception plan

B.C. advocates cheer free contraception plan
The new program set to take effect April 1 will cover prescription contraception options, including most oral hormone pills, contraceptive injections, copper and hormonal intrauterine devices and subdermal implants, along with so-called Plan B, also known as the morning-after pill.

B.C. advocates cheer free contraception plan