The outside of La Loche Community School is shown on Friday Jan. 22, 2016. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the shootings occurred at a high school and another location but did not say where else.
(AP)
(AP)
- The school shooting is Canada's deadliest in 26 years.
Shots rang out at a school in western Canada on Friday, leaving four people dead and several others critically injured in the nation's worst such shooting in a quarter of a century.
"Obviously, this is every parent's worst nightmare," said Prime Minster Justin Trudeau.
Trudeau held a news conference in Davos, Switzerland, where he was attending the World Economic Summit, to announce the death toll in the remote northern aboriginal community of La Loche in the province of Saskatchewan.
Trudeau said five people had been killed and two others were in critical condition but a Royal Canadian Mounted Police spokeswoman later revised the death toll down to four.
The suspected shooter was taken into custody after police received an emergency call about "a person discharging a weapon in the community," RCMP superintendent Maureen Levy told reporters.She said police were also investigating a second location in a nearby residential neighbourhood, but provided no further details.
Authorities did not disclose the age and identify of the shooter and victims.
"We all grieve with and stand with the community of La Loche and all of Saskatchewan on this terrible tragic day," Trudeau said.
La Loche students said they heard six or seven shots ring out at around 1:00pm (1900 GMT).
"Every parent's worst nightmare:" Justin Trudeau on Saskatchewan school shooting
Several witnesses reported seeing a "boy," who was either a student or formerly attended the school, opening fire inside the building.
"I ran outside the school," Noel Desjarlais, a Grade 10 student at the school, told public broadcaster CBC.
"There was lots of screaming. There was about six, seven shots before I got outside. I believe there was more shots by the time I did get out."
The town's hospital told AFP they were treating the victims for gunshot wounds.
The high school and a nearby elementary school were locked down as police responded.
"It's just tragic and everybody's running around," said Kevin Janvier, acting mayor, adding that to his understanding the shooting took place when an individual walked in and "opened fire in the building."
Located deep in Canada's northern boreal forest, 600 kilometres (375 miles) north of Saskatoon, this town of about 3,000 is particularly isolated and authorities had to send in police reinforcements and dispatch a medical helicopter to airlift some victims to a hospital.
Suspect caught
La Loche acting Mayor Kevin Janvier told the Associated Press that his 23-year-old daughter Marie, a teacher, was shot to death in La Loche.
He also said police told him that the gunman first shot two of his siblings at home and then made his way to the school.
A neighbour and a family friend both said the suspect had shot his two younger brothers before going to the school and shooting the teacher and an assistant.
“After he shot his two brothers, he walked back to school and he shot ... a teacher and a girl. They’re both dead. Four of them died,” said Joe Lemaigre, a family friend who lives on the outskirts of La Loche. “I know the family. Their mother worked in Fort McMurray and his grandfather went to Meadow Lake to do some shopping. That’s when he shot them.”
The shooting occurred in the high school, called the Dene Building, and another location in Saskatchewan, Trudeau and Canadian police said.
Police took the suspect into custody outside the school and seized a gun.
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