Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jun, 2018 11:28 AM
    SURREY, B.C. — A talk show host in Surrey, B.C., says bullets were fired at her car and her opinions on gang violence might be to blame.
     
     
    Ashiana Khan is CEO of Media Waves Communications, an internet radio station that streams in English, Punjabi and Hindi. She hosts a show that tackles local and national social and political issues.
     
     
    On Saturday night she was driving home from a family dinner when she heard a loud gunshot, she said. It felt like someone had hurled a rock at her vehicle, but when she heard a second shot, she realized it wasn't a rock.
     
     
    "I thought I was dead," she recalled. "When I got to my senses, I started feeling my body, touching my body, (to see) if I'm alive or dead."
     
     
    Khan was so stunned she barely remembers speeding away and pulling over, she said, and it was only once she reached the roadside that she realized she wasn't hurt. She called 911 and waited inside her car until police arrived, too terrified to get out.
     
     
    Surrey RCMP confirmed they're investigating an apparent shooting on Saturday night and the vehicle had damage consistent with being struck by bullets. 
     
     
    Mounties haven't said whether they believe the shooting was targeted, but Khan fears she was attacked because of her outspoken views.
     
     
    She was one of the organizers of a recent rally against gang violence that drew thousands after the deaths of two teenagers in the city.
     
     
    On stage at the rally, other organizers ripped up a letter from five British Columbia MPs expressing their regret for not being able to attend, she said.
     
     
    Khan publicly disagreed with the decision to tear up the letter, which she said prompted an onslaught of threatening social media comments directed at her.
     
     
    She also said she's spoken out against gang violence in general, as well as other political and social issues in Surrey.
     
     
    "There are so many things I've been mouthing off about, I don't know who got angry," she said.
     
     
    Khan added she can't be sure the shooting was targeted because police have not said anything that would suggest they believe the bullets were meant for her.
     
     
    Since the shooting, she said she has felt shaken and sometimes finds herself not hearing or processing anything when people talk to her. Her family is also traumatized and worried about her.
     
     
    "It's scary. I can't really do things as I used to," she said. "I was a person who had no fear inside me, but right now I'm going through this fear."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lightning Sparks More Than 100 Wildfires In B.C., With Further Storms Expected

    The B.C. Wildfire Service says more than 100 new blazes started after lightning storms rolled across the province Wednesday.

    Lightning Sparks More Than 100 Wildfires In B.C., With Further Storms Expected

    B.C. Crown Says Polygamous Leader Took 15-Year-Old Girl Across Border For Sex

    B.C. Crown Says Polygamous Leader Took 15-Year-Old Girl Across Border For Sex
    VANCOUVER — A special prosecutor is urging British Columbia's Court of Appeal to overturn the acquittal of a polygamous leader who was accused of  taking a 15-year-old girl across the border for a sexual purpose.

    B.C. Crown Says Polygamous Leader Took 15-Year-Old Girl Across Border For Sex

    Police Dive Team Searches Alice Lake For Missing Man From Delta, B.C.

    Police Dive Team Searches Alice Lake For Missing Man From Delta, B.C.
    An RCMP underwater recovery team is searching a lake for a 20-year-old man who went missing while swimming with friends in Squamish, B.C.

    Police Dive Team Searches Alice Lake For Missing Man From Delta, B.C.

    Oregon Family Found Safe After Abandoning Their Car In Remote Northwest B.C.

    Oregon Family Found Safe After Abandoning Their Car In Remote Northwest B.C.
    DEASE LAKE, B.C. — Search and rescue teams in northwestern British Columbia say a family of four from Oregon has been found safe in a remote and rugged area just 250 kilometres south of the Yukon border.

    Oregon Family Found Safe After Abandoning Their Car In Remote Northwest B.C.

    Surrey Man Ranjit Sangha Arrested For 2017 Murder Of Joseph Jandrew In Vancouver

    Surrey Man Ranjit Sangha Arrested For 2017 Murder Of Joseph Jandrew In Vancouver
    The 33-year-old was critically injured in a stabbing in Vancouver on Oct. 12 and died later in hospital.

    Surrey Man Ranjit Sangha Arrested For 2017 Murder Of Joseph Jandrew In Vancouver

    Police Search For Family From Oregon After Car Found Abandoned In Dease Lake, BC

    Police Search For Family From Oregon After Car Found Abandoned In Dease Lake, BC
    DEASE LAKE, B.C. — Police in British Columbia say they are searching for a couple and their two young children after a car with Oregon licence plates was found near a highway in the community of Dease Lake.

    Police Search For Family From Oregon After Car Found Abandoned In Dease Lake, BC