Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Girl Stabs 6 Students, 2 Teachers At Suburban Toronto High School In Pickering, Ont.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2016 11:17 AM
    PICKERING, Ont. — High-school students described a chaotic scene at a suburban Toronto high school on Tuesday after a female classmate ran down the hallways knifing people, leaving six students and two teachers with non-serious injuries.
     
    Police say the girl was taken into custody and two people were transported to hospital for treatment, although none of the injuries were considered grave.
     
    Sgt. Bill Calder of Durham Regional Police says officers were called to Dunbarton High School in Pickering, Ont., at 8:32 a.m. in response to reports of a stabbing. He added that two staff members wrestled the suspect to the ground and held her down until police arrived.
     
    "People will call them heroes, but I'm sure they'll say they were doing what anyone else would have done, but it was brave thing to do in such a dangerous situation," said Calder.
     
    Police have not released the name and age of the female student, but said charges are pending. There was no information about the girl's motive.
     
    Dave Selby, a spokesman for Durham, said a lockdown remained in place at the school, but there was no active threat. Police said the school would close for the day and were interviewing witnesses.
     
     
    Students described running from a girl brandishing two kitchen knives careening down the hallways of the school.
     
    An emotional Kristina Petrovska, 14, said she came face-to-face with the suspect, who slashed the knives at her.
     
    "I just ran for my life," the girl said as she began to cry. "I just can't believe it happened. She almost got me."
     
    Stephen Pim said he saw a girl with a long black coat chasing students in the hall of the school's tech wing waving a knife in each hand.
     
    "I heard the teachers say 'clear the halls' so I started to run outside informing people that there's a student with a knife, you need to get to safety," the 16-year-old said in a text message as he sat in a locked classroom inside the school.
     
    Dalton VanderElst said he got to school at 8:30 a.m. and a teacher yelled to get out, that there was someone with a knife. So he bolted outside where he said he saw four tactical officers with guns drawn entering the school.
     
    Zakyr Rhemtulla, a Grade 9 student at Dunbarton, says he was faced with chaos from the moment he arrived at school this morning.
     
    He says as soon as he opened the front door, he saw students running in all directions.
     
    "I'm like 'oh, what's happening,'" he said in a telephone interview. "So I just kept on walking and some teacher told me, 'oh, come into this room.' So I ran into the room. They locked the door, closed the curtains, turned the lights off."
     
    Rhemtulla and a few other students remained in the classroom while the school was in lockdown and police combed the property for evidence.
     
     
    He said the initial shock of the situation eased up as students monitored social media and learned that no one appeared to be in danger.
     
    "Students are calm, I guess," he said. "Police are gone, kids are just joking around."
     
    Lynn Sharma dropped her son off at school around 8:30 a.m. and shortly after received a text from him saying there was an attack on other students, but that he was safe.
     
    "I just want to see my boy," she said outside the school.
     
    "He says he's fine, but I really just want to get him in my arms. It's hard to believe this happened at my son's school."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    ISIS Propaganda Machine Goes Mobile, Prompting Radicalization Concerns

    ISIS Propaganda Machine Goes Mobile, Prompting Radicalization Concerns
    Move Over Angry Birds, Angry Extremists Are Looking To Capture More Than Just Market Share And Give New Meaning To The Phrase Killer App.

    ISIS Propaganda Machine Goes Mobile, Prompting Radicalization Concerns

    Ship's Master Interviewed As TSB Probes Possible Grounding At Squamish, B.C. Terminal

    Ship's Master Interviewed As TSB Probes Possible Grounding At Squamish, B.C. Terminal
    SQUAMISH, B.C. — Transportation Safety Board investigators are sifting through the details as they try to determine if a cargo ship actually ran aground at the deep-water bulk terminal in Squamish, B.C.

    Ship's Master Interviewed As TSB Probes Possible Grounding At Squamish, B.C. Terminal

    One Big Doggy Bag: Alberta Couple's Lottery Luck Due To Misbehaving Pets

    One Big Doggy Bag: Alberta Couple's Lottery Luck Due To Misbehaving Pets
    Christian and Monique Etienne of Airdrie purchased the winning ticket for the Lotto 6-49 draw on Dec. 12 while getting supplies to clean up after their rescue animals.

    One Big Doggy Bag: Alberta Couple's Lottery Luck Due To Misbehaving Pets

    B.C. Mill Fined $56,000 Over Pellet Plant Explosion That Injured Three

    B.C. Mill Fined $56,000 Over Pellet Plant Explosion That Injured Three
     British Columbia's workers' compensation authority has fined a Burns Lake company $56,000 in the wake of a 2014 explosion at a wood pellet plant that injured three workers.

    B.C. Mill Fined $56,000 Over Pellet Plant Explosion That Injured Three

    Ottawa Posts $941m Deficit For October Compared With $3.21b Deficit A Year Ago

    Ottawa Posts $941m Deficit For October Compared With $3.21b Deficit A Year Ago
    Ottawa's fiscal monitor says the improvement came as revenue increased 11.1 per cent, boosted by higher personal income tax and Goods and Services Tax revenues.

    Ottawa Posts $941m Deficit For October Compared With $3.21b Deficit A Year Ago

    Newfoundland And Labrador's Fiscal Outlook Dims As Oil Prices, Production Drops

    Newfoundland And Labrador's Fiscal Outlook Dims As Oil Prices, Production Drops
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Newfoundland and Labrador's latest fiscal forecast has taken a dramatic turn for the worse amid slumping oil prices and declining offshore production.

    Newfoundland And Labrador's Fiscal Outlook Dims As Oil Prices, Production Drops