Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Victims' families thank public for support

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2020 11:48 PM
  • Victims' families thank public for support

Relatives of victims of the Nova Scotia mass shooting marched through the streets of Halifax on Wednesday to thank their supporters for helping them persuade Ottawa and Nova Scotia to call a full public inquiry into the killings.

"I'm so pleased that we're here today in celebration rather than in protest," said Sandra McCulloch, a lawyer who represents the families.

"I'm so proud of the families for their hard work and perseverance. It has been painful for them to have to fight this fight. But knowing it has had such a positive result, it surely takes a bit of the pain out of it."

The families had originally planned a march to protest last week's decision by Ottawa and the province to hold a less rigorous joint review of the circumstances surrounding the April 18-19 rampage that killed 22 people.

Scores of experts, academics, politicians, women's groups, senators and family members had come forward to criticize the review, saying it would lack openness, accountability and legal clout. Three protest marches were held in Nova Scotia in the past week.

On Tuesday, several Liberal MPs in the province broke ranks with the government to call for a full inquiry, and federal Public Safety Minister Bill Blair then announced a joint federal-provincial inquiry with the power to compel witnesses to testify and produce documents.

Harry Bond, whose parents Joy and Peter Bond were killed in Portapique, N.S., on April 18, said the decision to establish a public inquiry was overdue.

"But it was a very happy moment when we heard about it," he said in an interview before the march. "It's the first time I've felt happy since I heard about mom and dad back in April."

A long line of about 100 marchers gathered under bright sunshine and in sweltering heat on the Halifax waterfront before walking north to the legislature, where they circled the building once and headed back to the harbour.

Some carried Nova Scotia flags. Others held photos of relatives who lost their lives during the 13-hour shooting rampage in northern and central Nova Scotia.

Charlene Bagley, daughter of victim Tom Bagley, said the march marked a day to celebrate a victory for the families. She said a public inquiry was what the families had wanted from the start.

"With a full inquiry, everyone will have to be 100 per cent transparent and, hopefully, the families will get all of the answers they've been wanting all along," she said in an interview before the march. "In an inquiry, where everyone will be held accountable."

Bagley made a point of thanking people from across the province who have offered support to her family. She also took the time to talk about her father, who was shot by the gunman as he tried to help other victims.

"The world lost a really great man," Bagley said as she clutched a large sign showing a photo of her smiling father. "Everybody who met him loved him .... He helped everybody, and it's what cost him his life."

The victims' families have said they want an inquiry to compel testimony about the RCMP's response during the shootings, which started on the night of April 18 when the gunman killed 13 people and set fire to several homes in Portapique before fleeing in a car that looked exactly like a marked RCMP cruiser.

Another nine people were killed the following day as the killer drove more than 150 kilometres, shooting some people he knew and others at random. He was fatally shot by an RCMP officer when he stopped at a gas station in Enfield, N.S., about 40 kilometres north of Halifax.

The victims' families and their supporters say they also want to know how much police knew about the killer's alleged criminal behaviour, which according to witnesses quoted in court documents involved the smuggling of drugs and guns from Maine.

MORE National ARTICLES

National parks to open campgrounds for existing reservations next week

National parks to open campgrounds for existing reservations next week
The federal environment minister says Canadians who have campground reservations in some national parks will be allowed to pitch their tents and pull in their trailers starting next week.

National parks to open campgrounds for existing reservations next week

Canada buying 140,000 blood tests to begin immunity testing of COVID-19

Canada buying 140,000 blood tests to begin immunity testing of COVID-19
Blood samples collected from tens of thousands of Canadians will soon be tested for signs of COVID-19 antibodies as the federal government seeks to learn how many people have already contracted the novel coronavirus.

Canada buying 140,000 blood tests to begin immunity testing of COVID-19

Many arrests as Vancouver police enforce injunction against homeless camp

Many arrests as Vancouver police enforce injunction against homeless camp
Police have made dozens of arrests after they say 46 people refused to obey a court injunction and leave a tent encampment on Vancouver's waterfront.

Many arrests as Vancouver police enforce injunction against homeless camp

Mayor wants changes to prison-transfer system after alleged murder by escapees

Mayor wants changes to prison-transfer system after alleged murder by escapees
The mayor of a Vancouver Island community where two inmates are accused of murdering a man after they escaped from a minimum-security prison says they never should have been there in the first place.

Mayor wants changes to prison-transfer system after alleged murder by escapees

Game-Changer in the Fight Against the Covid19 | Will Save Thousands of Lives #coronavirus #Pandemic

Game-Changer in the Fight Against the Covid19 | Will Save Thousands of Lives #coronavirus #Pandemic
Well renowned pediatrician, Dr Pargat Singh Bhurji explains how the steroid Dexamethasone, a relatively cheap and easily available drug can potentially save thousands of life of victims of the novel Corona Virus.

Game-Changer in the Fight Against the Covid19 | Will Save Thousands of Lives #coronavirus #Pandemic

Vancouver Police safely disposes explosive device

Vancouver Police safely disposes explosive device
Vancouver Police safely detonated an improvised explosive device near Burrard and Pender streets today. Officers responded to a 9-1-1 call of a crime in progress at about 9 a.m. Two men were observed by a member of the public, allegedly breaking into a vehicle near Thurlow and Bute streets.

Vancouver Police safely disposes explosive device