Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Death Of 22-Year-Old Arun Bains In Gang War Leads To Plea From Surrey Mayor To Stop Shooting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Apr, 2015 04:48 PM
  • Death Of 22-Year-Old Arun Bains In Gang War Leads To Plea From Surrey Mayor To Stop Shooting
SURREY, B.C. — The mayor of a Metro Vancouver city plagued by a gang war has implored those shooting at each other to stop before more people are killed, adding police will get the necessary resources to deal with the violence.
 
Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner was flanked by the area's top officers Monday as politicians and police presented a united front against the suspects behind 22 shootings since March 9 in that city and in neighbouring Delta.
 
The latest victim was shot a day earlier and identified Monday by provincial NDP Leader John Horgan as the nephew of Harry Bains, one of the party's members of the legislature, whose riding is in Surrey.
 
Condolences to the family of 22-year-old Arun Bains were the first thing Hepner delivered at the news conference.
 
"This has to stop before any more lives are lost," she said. "I am imploring those that have been involved in these shootings to take a sober look at the grim reality of your action.
 
"While you may have been fortunate to escape any serious injury to date, what happened yesterday is a fate that can easily befall you."
 
 
Police were called to reports of gunfire early Sunday and found Bains inside a vehicle that had crashed into a pole.
 
Mounties have said Bains was known to be connected to the street-level drug trade and became the first person to lose his life since the shootings began six weeks ago.
 
RCMP assistant commissioner Dan Malo said groups of individuals who want to violently take over profits from the drug trade and target vulnerable people are involved.
 
"What's lost on these individuals' minds is that our citizens have the right to live, have the right to play, and have the right to work in our communities without fear or concern."
 
He said his plan focuses on community outreach and changing behaviour.
 
 
Police will meet with the individuals they believe to be behind the violence and inform them that they will no longer have the right to roam around freely like other citizens.
 
He said every police officer in the region will be informed about the suspects and that officers will also talk to their family, friends and associates in an effort to convince them to provide investigators with information.
 
Chief Supt. Bill Fordy, who is in charge of the Surrey RCMP, said police have organized a community meeting at a high school on Tuesday evening.
 
Police have also set up a tip line for members of the public.
 
Horgan said in Victoria that he spoke with Harry Bains, who was not at the legislature on Monday.
 
"He's devastated. His family is trying to figure it out, as all of us would."
 
 
Horgan said he will attend the community anti-violence meeting Tuesday.
 
"Extraordinary efforts may be required to get this under control," he said.
 
Last week, police released photos of people they identified as victims in some of the shootings. Mounties said they took the unusual step of naming victims because no one was co-operating and public safety was at risk.

MORE National ARTICLES

Interim CEO And President At B.C. Lottery Corporation, Jim Lightbody, Promoted By Board

Interim CEO And President At B.C. Lottery Corporation, Jim Lightbody, Promoted By Board
Jim Lightbody has been working in the position at the Crown corporation since his appointment in January 2014. That's when Michael Graydon left the agency to take a job with PV Hospitality ULC, an affiliate of Paragon Gaming Inc.

Interim CEO And President At B.C. Lottery Corporation, Jim Lightbody, Promoted By Board

Canadian Tourism Industry Wants To Direct More Marketing Money To The U.S.

Canadian Tourism Industry Wants To Direct More Marketing Money To The U.S.
Tourism Minister Maxime Bernier says visits from places where Canada marketed itself increased by an average of 11 per cent, and that marketing in the U.S., combined with the Canadian dollar's lower value, could have a positive impact.

Canadian Tourism Industry Wants To Direct More Marketing Money To The U.S.

Shots Fired From One Vehicle At Another As Cars Rolled Down Surrey Street

Shots Fired From One Vehicle At Another As Cars Rolled Down Surrey Street
RCMP say witnesses watched a male passenger firing from a silver vehicle towards a black Honda around 11:40 Wednesday morning while both were rolling through an intersection in Surrey, B.C.

Shots Fired From One Vehicle At Another As Cars Rolled Down Surrey Street

Town Relieved After B.C. House Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His 3 Children Torn Down

Town Relieved After B.C. House Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His 3 Children Torn Down
Allan Schoenborn stabbed his daughter and smothered his sons at the home in April 2008 and is now at a secured psychiatric facility in Coquitlam, B.C.

Town Relieved After B.C. House Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His 3 Children Torn Down

Toronto Transit Officers Caught Punching Men On Video, Toronto Police Start Investigation

Toronto Transit Officers Caught Punching Men On Video, Toronto Police Start Investigation
Toronto police are now investigating a violent confrontation between transit enforcement officers and two men which was captured on a video that surfaced online.

Toronto Transit Officers Caught Punching Men On Video, Toronto Police Start Investigation

B.C. Grandpa Given Jail Time For Starting Pot Grow-Op To Supplement Pension

B.C. Grandpa Given Jail Time For Starting Pot Grow-Op To Supplement Pension
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia grandfather who started a marijuana grow-op to augment his small pension has been sentenced to six months in jail.

B.C. Grandpa Given Jail Time For Starting Pot Grow-Op To Supplement Pension