Crime: At least 10 dead in knife attacks in Canada

At least ten people have been killed in a series of knife attacks in central Canada.

Crime: At least 10 dead in knife attacks in Canada

At least ten people have been killed in a series of knife attacks in central Canada. 15 injured were also taken to hospitals for treatment, said the police in the province of Saskatchewan at a press conference in the provincial capital Regina. Further details on the condition of the victims were not given. The two alleged perpetrators are on the run. They were last seen in an SUV, it said. The motive for the cruel act was initially unclear in the evening.

"It appears that some of the victims were targeted and some were chosen at random," said police officer Rhonda Blackmore. "It would therefore be extremely difficult to name a motive at this point." There are 13 active crime scenes being investigated. "So at some of these crime scenes there might not have been a deceased person, but instead there were injured people who weren't deceased," Blackmore said. Further victims cannot be ruled out because it is unclear whether all those affected have reported to the authorities.

First emergency call at 5:40 in the morning

Blackmore said the victims were attacked in two places in Saskatchewan -- the James Smith Cree Nation reservation and the village of Weldon. The first emergency call was received at 5.40 a.m. in the morning, and further attacks from nearby crime scenes were reported in the minutes that followed. Shortly after seven o'clock, the police issued an initial warning to the population. Four hours later, the two suspects are said to have been seen in the provincial capital Regina, almost 300 kilometers further south. The reserve's elected leaders declared a state of emergency.

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was shocked by the attacks. "Today's attacks in Saskatchewan are horrifying and heartbreaking. My thoughts go out to those who have lost loved ones and to those who have been injured," Trudeau wrote on Twitter.

The provincial prime minister tweeted his condolences on behalf of his government. "All of Saskatchewan mourns with the victims and their families," wrote Scott Moe of the Saskatchewan Conservative Party. Canadian Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said on Twitter that Saskatchewan police are using all available resources to find the two suspects and will keep the public informed of further developments.

Area five times the size of Germany

Police were searching for the two male suspects, aged 31 and 30, in Saskatchewan and the adjacent provinces of Manitoba and Alberta. The area of ​​these three provinces in central Canada is more than five times the area of ​​Germany. Saskatchewan alone is almost twice the size of Germany, but very sparsely populated with just under 1.2 million inhabitants.

"At this time we have no indication that they have traveled to any other province," Blackmore said. Particular attention is paid to the provincial capital Regina with around 230,000 inhabitants. There, people were asked to stay in a safe place and not pick up hitchhikers. Additional forces were also ordered to a game in a football stadium, it said.

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