Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Week of Carnage: 20 People Die on B.C. Roads in various Accidents

The Canadian Press Darpan, 05 Sep, 2014 01:16 PM
    VANCOUVER - Twenty people have died on British Columbia's highways and roads in the last week, 10 of them within the last 24 hours.
     
    Coroner Barb McLintock said Friday that investigations have yet to determine if weather conditions and impaired or distracted driving were involved in the carnage.
     
    Five people died in two separate crashes near Fort St. John on Thursday.
     
    RCMP Cpl. Jodie Shelkie said that when police arrived at a two-vehicle crash on the Alaska Highway, both drivers and the passengers in each of the vehicles were dead.
     
    An hour later, a 29-year-old man from the northern community was killed in another crash.
     
    RCMP in Langley, east of Vancouver, said a male driver was killed Friday morning when he was thrown from his vehicle during a rollover. Police are also investigating the death of an 83-year-old pedestrian.
     
    On Thursday morning, three people died in a head-on crash in foggy conditions on Highway 97 near Quesnel.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Omar Khadr trying again to sue Canada for $20M and claim conspiracy with U.S.

    Omar Khadr trying again to sue Canada for $20M and claim conspiracy with U.S.
    TORONTO - Lawyers for former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr are in Federal Court court today hoping a judge will allow him to expand his...

    Omar Khadr trying again to sue Canada for $20M and claim conspiracy with U.S.

    MSF call for military medical help with Ebola response shows outbreak's severity

    MSF call for military medical help with Ebola response shows outbreak's severity
    TORONTO - Just two weeks ago the international president of Medecins Sans Frontieres insisted she didn't want to be quoted saying military hospitals...

    MSF call for military medical help with Ebola response shows outbreak's severity

    Sports-related concussion in youth a public health issue that demands action:paper

    Sports-related concussion in youth a public health issue that demands action:paper
    TORONTO - Sports-related concussions in children and youth constitute a significant public health issue which requires serious reform in public policy to address the...

    Sports-related concussion in youth a public health issue that demands action:paper

    Parents Scrambling For Daycare Spaces As B.C. Teachers' Strike Delays School

    Parents Scrambling For Daycare Spaces As B.C. Teachers' Strike Delays School
    VANCOUVER - Daycare operators in British Columbia are scrambling to keep up with increased demand for child support as more parents need places to babysit their kids because schools will not open.

    Parents Scrambling For Daycare Spaces As B.C. Teachers' Strike Delays School

    Edmonton Woman Is Identified As Victim In B.C. Plane Crash

    Edmonton Woman Is Identified As Victim In B.C. Plane Crash
    CRESTON, B.C. - A woman who died in a plane crash north of Creston, B.C., was a resident of Edmonton.

    Edmonton Woman Is Identified As Victim In B.C. Plane Crash

    How Calgary Brothers Became Terrorists, Thompson Rivers University Teammates 'Flabbergasted'

    How Calgary Brothers Became Terrorists, Thompson Rivers University Teammates 'Flabbergasted'
    One of two brothers from Calgary who reportedly travelled overseas to join a terrorist group in Syria was a quiet but social young man who didn't talk about religion during a short time playing volleyball at a British Columbia university, say people who knew him at the time.

    How Calgary Brothers Became Terrorists, Thompson Rivers University Teammates 'Flabbergasted'