Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney orders flags at half-mast as MPs react in horror to deadly B.C. shooting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2026 10:48 AM
  • Carney orders flags at half-mast as MPs react in horror to deadly B.C. shooting

Flags on federal buildings will be flown at half-mast for seven days to honour the victims of Tuesday's deadly shooting in B.C., Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday.

A visibly emotional Carney said he has heard from leaders around the world offering condolences, including King Charles.

"Parents, grandparents, sisters, brothers in Tumbler Ridge will wake up without someone they love," he said on Parliament Hill. "A nation mourns with you, Canada stands by you.

"We will get through this, we will learn from this. But right now, it's the time to come together, as Canadians always do in these situations … to support each other, to mourn together and to grow together."

Members of Parliament will forego normal proceedings on Wednesday. Carney and other party leaders are expected to make statements in the House of Commons before adjourning in the afternoon.

MPs reacted in horror to news of the killings that left 10 people dead, including the suspect, in the tiny community of Tumbler Ridge in northeastern British Columbia on Tuesday.

RCMP said about 25 people were hurt at the school, including two with life-threatening injuries.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre called on Canadians to unite in support of the families and the community.

"The fact that this took place at a secondary school, it makes it even more tragic," he said. "As a father, I can't even imagine the phone calls that parents might have received. I can't imagine the heartache and hell that they're living through at this moment."

RCMP have said police don't yet understand what motivated the shooter suspected of killing two people at a home before going to a school and committing one of Canada's deadliest mass shootings. 

The Mounties have not released the suspect's name or said what kind of weapon was involved.

Conservative MP Bob Zimmer, whose B.C. riding includes Tumbler Ridge, posted on social media Tuesday evening to offer his thoughts and prayers to the families of the victims.

"Words can’t express the tragedy that has unfolded today in Tumbler Ridge," Zimmer wrote, adding that details were still to come. Zimmer was on the way home to his riding on Wednesday morning.

Liberal MP Stephen Fuhr, whose riding is close to Tumbler Ridge, said the shooting is a "massive tragedy."

"Who do you lean on, when your entire community is affected by tragedies of this magnitude?" he said.

Fuhr added that "troubled people do unthinkable things from time to time" and the federal and B.C. governments will do everything they can to support the community.

For some in Ottawa, the news brings back difficult memories of similar tragedies.

"I'm sure many of us are watching in horror, but in understanding of what some of those families are going through right now," Nova Scotia MP Chris d'Entremont said.

In April 2020, a gunman killed 22 people, including a pregnant woman, in a series of shootings that spanned several communities across a swath of rural Nova Scotia.

D'Entremont said the federal government needs to listen to the community about the kinds of support it needs in the coming days.

"All of B.C. will have some kind of connection to that, as we did in Nova Scotia," he said.

Buckley Belanger was the provincial representative for La Loche, Sask., when four people were killed and seven injured in a school shooting there. The community marked the 10-year anniversary of the shooting on Jan. 22.

"This really re-triggered a lot of emotions for a lot of people," said Belanger, now the area's Liberal MP.

He offered his prayers for the people of Tumbler Ridge.

"The community is going to have a tough time moving forward. A lot of questions," he said.

Condolences have poured in from across Canada and beyond.

Don Davies, interim NDP leader and MP for Vancouver Kingsway, offered his "deepest condolences to the victims, the families, the friends in the community of Tumbler Ridge as they recover from the horrific attack that occurred last night in British Columbia."

Davies, who said he was briefed by B.C’s public safety minister about the tragedy, also thanked first responders for risking their lives.

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May called the deaths "incomprehensible."

"As to support and federal support," she added, "I'm sure first responders are going to need a lot of support emotionally for what they have gone through, being the first to show up to open the school doors. It's unspeakable, it's a terrible tragedy, and we mourn with those who've lost so much."

Conservative MP Michael Barrett, who was on Parliament Hill Wednesday morning to make an announcement marking "Kindness Week," said he's sending his "prayers to everyone in Tumbler Ridge."

Gov. Gen. Mary Simon said in a statement that she and her husband, Whit Fraser, are devastated by the news. 

"We extend our deepest gratitude to the officers and first responders who bravely risked their lives to protect and help their fellow Canadians, and who continue to support a community that is in crisis," Simon write.

"Tumbler Ridge will need all the support and love we can muster during this dark time."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

RCMP warn against vigilantism in Squamish as concerns circulate online

RCMP warn against vigilantism in Squamish as concerns circulate online
Police in Squamish have issued a warning against vigilante action over safety concerns they say are circulating on social media. The statement from Sea to Sky RCMP says police want to "reassure" residents of the community about 60 kilometres north of Vancouver that "there is no current threat to public safety."

RCMP warn against vigilantism in Squamish as concerns circulate online

Housing targets on track for Vancouver

Housing targets on track for Vancouver
The City of Vancouver says it is on track to meet provincial targets in housing development in its latest progress report. Vancouver's first annual report on the targets showed that more than four-thousand units were built in the city from October 2023 to September 2024.

Housing targets on track for Vancouver

Dozens of criminal charges laid against 3 people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme

Dozens of criminal charges laid against 3 people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme
Dozens of criminal charges have been laid against three people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme that targeted vehicle businesses for what police say was about 850-thousand dollars in losses. R-C-M-P in Richmond say their officers began an investigation in January over allegations that forged bank drafts were used to purchase high-end vehicles, including B-M-W's, Mercedes-Benz and others valued at between 33-thousand and 103-thousand dollars.

Dozens of criminal charges laid against 3 people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation
Mounties in Burnaby say four people have been arrested and large amounts of drugs and cash have been seized following a four-month interprovincial drug trafficking investigation. They say officers executed two search warrants on properties in Coquitlam and Surrey and seized more than 95-hundred Hydromorphone pills believed to be diverted prescription pills, as well as other substances including more than a kilogram of suspected cocaine.

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation

Freeland finds safety in numbers on digital sales tax

Freeland finds safety in numbers on digital sales tax
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland isn’t showing signs of worry that the U.S. can now launch a trade challenge against the Liberal government's controversial digital services tax. The Liberals are slapping a three-per-cent tax on the Canadian revenues of digital giants, which will affect major U.S. tech companies such as Google and Apple.

Freeland finds safety in numbers on digital sales tax

Lab confirms Canada's first case of avian flu infection in humans in B.C.

Lab confirms Canada's first case of avian flu infection in humans in B.C.
Canada's Public Health Agency has confirmed that a British Columbia teenager hospitalized last Friday is the country's first ever human case of domestically acquired avian flu. The agency said in a statement Wednesday that testing at Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg confirms the teen did contract the H5N1 avian flu, the same strain related to viruses found in B.C. flocks in an ongoing outbreak at poultry farms.

Lab confirms Canada's first case of avian flu infection in humans in B.C.