Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Suspect at large after report of man with knife at University of Manitoba

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2024 04:46 PM
  • Suspect at large after report of man with knife at University of Manitoba

Police in Winnipeg said Tuesday a suspect was at large following a report of a man armed with a large knife at the University of Manitoba.

Const. Claude Chancy said officers were called about 6:30 a.m. to the university's Fort Garry campus for a report of a man dressed in black carrying a large knife into the Allen Building.

The building on the northeast side of the campus houses the university’s physics department.

"The situation has been resolved, and it has been determined there is no longer any immediate threat to public safety,” Chancy told a news conference.

He added that a suspect was not found and there were no reported injuries. Officers were to remain on campus as a precaution.

Emergency alerts were sent out on TV, radio and cellphones using the Alert Ready system, Chancy said. Alerts were distributed to phones that pinged off towers near the university, as it wasn’t deemed necessary to issue a citywide alert, he said.

Police and university officials asked people to stay away from the area in the morning. Students already on campus were told to lock all doors and stay put. In-person classes, exams and events were cancelled for the day.

Last month, police said a man broke into a dorm room at the university and sexually assaulted a woman. A 46-year-old man was arrested and faces various charges.

Chancy said that alleged assault did not influence how police responded to the knife report.

"We don't base that on prior incidents,” he said. “It has to do with this incident and how serious of a nature it was.”

Gordon Perrier, the university’s director of security services, told a separate news conference that an alarm was triggered at the Allan Building around the time police were called to campus.

University security then got a phone call from a person inside the building about seeing a man with a knife, Perrier said.

There’s no reason to believe the suspect is a student at the university, Perrier added.

MORE National ARTICLES

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation
Meet President and CEO of Surrey Hospitals Foundation, Nicole Robson. Robson shares more on her role, vision for the foundation, and pushing the mandate of diversity forward.

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation

DoorDash increasing its fees

DoorDash increasing its fees
DoorDash says it's increasing fees in the province in response to provincial regulations that require it to pay its workers more. Starting this month, a new fee of 99 cents for restaurant delivery orders and up to two-dollars-99 cents for all other delivery orders will be added.

DoorDash increasing its fees

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly
British Columbia NDP Leader David Eby is set to roll out the party's complete election platform as Conservative Leader John Rustad says his government would end the provincial insurance corporation's monopoly on basic vehicle insurance. Eby has a news conference scheduled in Surrey as the province nears the midway point of the election campaign ahead of the Oct. 19 election day.

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly

Expected La Nina weather pattern could ease ongoing drought conditions in B.C.

Expected La Nina weather pattern could ease ongoing drought conditions in B.C.
British Columbia's nagging drought could be eased by an incoming weather pattern that may bring a colder and wetter than normal winter, says Sean Fleming, an adjunct UBC professor of atmospheric sciences. The prolonged drought has caused wildfires to burn year-round, forced some communities to ration water supplies and dangerously lowered water levels in rivers, impacting salmon runs. 

Expected La Nina weather pattern could ease ongoing drought conditions in B.C.

B.C. party leaders tussle over affordability in radio debate before Oct. 19 vote

B.C. party leaders tussle over affordability in radio debate before Oct. 19 vote
British Columbia's party leaders have jousted over affordability in their first and only radio debate of the province's election campaign. The debate brings together NDP Leader David Eby, B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad and Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau for the first time on the campaign trail ahead of the Oct. 19 vote.

B.C. party leaders tussle over affordability in radio debate before Oct. 19 vote

B.C. father and daughter accuse Canadian Tire, security company of racism, profiling

B.C. father and daughter accuse Canadian Tire, security company of racism, profiling
An Indigenous father and daughter in British Columbia are accusing Canadian Tire and its third party security company of racial profiling and racism after they say he was singled out at a store in Coquitlam and an employee responded with a racist comment. The complaint alleges that on January 17, 2020, the pair purchased new tires for installation and shopped in-store while they waited. 

B.C. father and daughter accuse Canadian Tire, security company of racism, profiling