Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two Teenage Girls Struck, Killed By Train In Small Nova Scotia Community

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2016 11:50 AM
    LANTZ, N.S. — Two teenage girls were killed by a train early this morning in a rural community outside Halifax.
     
    RCMP say they were called to an intersection at Mader Street and Highway 2 in Lantz, N.S., around 1:40 a.m. after someone on the train called 911.
     
    They say a 17-year-old from Lantz and an 18-year-old former international exchange student from Germany were pronounced dead at the scene of the collision.
     
    Cpl. Jennifer Clarke said the CN freight train was heading south to Halifax when it hit the young women, who were not at a crossing.
     
    Jim Feeny, CN's director of public affairs, said two crew members were not able to stop the train in time, and have been offered stress counselling.
     
    "Initial reports are that the crew followed proper procedures, sounding the train horn and applying the emergency brakes, but it was impossible to stop the train in time to prevent this tragedy," Feeny said in a statement. 
     
    Debbie Buott-Matheson, a spokeswoman for the Chignecto-Central Regional School Board, says the young woman from Lantz was a student at Hants East Rural High School.
     
    She says grief counsellors and psychologists were at the school today to help students and staff.
     
    Denise Bellefontaine, manager of a café at the nearby East Hants Sportsplex, said she came upon the scene as she drove to work at 8:30 a.m. Friday.
     
    "I came to the train tracks and the lights were flashing. I saw the train was stopped. I didn't know anything had happened," said Bellefontaine.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    MPs, Senators No Longer Need Permission To Visit Bases: Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan

    MPs, Senators No Longer Need Permission To Visit Bases: Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan
    He says MPs and senators should have access free of ministerial interference.

    MPs, Senators No Longer Need Permission To Visit Bases: Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan

    Vancouver Drug Users Appeal For More Safe Injection Sites Amid Overdose Crisis

    Vancouver Drug Users Appeal For More Safe Injection Sites Amid Overdose Crisis
    VANCOUVER — Members of two British Columbia drug users' advocacy groups are calling on the government to open more safe injection sites in an accelerated effort to stop overdose deaths.

    Vancouver Drug Users Appeal For More Safe Injection Sites Amid Overdose Crisis

    New Brunswick Chef Unveils $12.99 French Fries, By Reservation Only

    New Brunswick Chef Unveils $12.99 French Fries, By Reservation Only
    GAGETOWN, N.B. — An East Coast chef has unveiled $12.99 French fries — cooked thrice in imported goose fat, served with his own merlot ketchup and available by reservation only.

    New Brunswick Chef Unveils $12.99 French Fries, By Reservation Only

    Chemical Castration Manages Sexual Impulses, But Courts Can't Order It: Experts

    TORONTO — The treatment Gordon Stuckless hopes will help him secure a lighter sentence is effective in managing sexual impulses, say experts, but the courts can't force the convicted pedophile to undergo so-called chemical castration.

    Chemical Castration Manages Sexual Impulses, But Courts Can't Order It: Experts

    Raveena Aulakh Death: Union Representing Toronto Star Employees Asks For 3rd-Party Probe

    Raveena Aulakh Death: Union Representing Toronto Star Employees Asks For 3rd-Party Probe
    Award-winning journalist Raveena Aulakh, 42, died 'recently,' Star says

    Raveena Aulakh Death: Union Representing Toronto Star Employees Asks For 3rd-Party Probe

    Judge Awards B.C. Man $8 Million For Wrongful Imprisonment

    Ivan Henry sued the City of Vancouver, the province and the federal government after he was acquitted in 2010 of 10 sexual-assault convictions

    Judge Awards B.C. Man $8 Million For Wrongful Imprisonment