The Daily Courier

Toronto angry after little girls caught in playground crossfire

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Mayor vows action after girls 5, 9 shot while playing at local park

TORONTO — A close-knit Toronto community was questionin­g the safety they once took for granted as police searched Friday for a man who sprayed bullets into a local park, injuring two young sisters as they played among other children.

While residents struggled to come to terms with the gun violence that sent the girls aged five and nine to hospital, the city’s mayor pledged “swift justice” for those responsibl­e and said the perpetrato­rs had no place in Toronto society.

The brazen daylight shooting was the latest in a string of gun crimes in the city, several of which have taken place in bustling areas.

In the east Toronto neighbourh­ood where the girls were hit by bullets intended for another target, residents said they were focused on the impact the shooting would have on the community they no longer see as a safe haven.

“This is where they play every day, right next to where they live,” Grace Ballantyne, a longtime resident said of the small park where 11 children were playing around 5 p.m. on Thursday.

The playground has long been a hub of activity for the children of the east-Toronto complex, said Ballantyne, adding that the shooting was unpreceden­ted in her nearly 28 years of living there.

The violence at the heart of the community has left the 69-year-old and her neighbours feeling as though they’re “not safe anywhere,” she said.

If that feeling persists, it would mark a drastic shift for a community that resident Albert Tsui views as particular­ly trusting.

“We are a very friendly community here,” said Tsui, who lives next door to the girls and said he’s accustomed to seeing them and their family members nearly every day.

“We say ‘hi,’ we say ‘bye,’ and honestly sometimes we forget to lock the door.”

Evidence of Thursday’s violence was still visible around the playground. Ten bullet holes, meticulous­ly numbered by police and circled in black marker, dotted the wooden fence that separates the small play space from a condominiu­m parking lot.

The pavement just steps from the playground was stained with what appeared to be dried blood.

Derek Wellwood, a landscaper working at the nearby condo, said the stains were on the spot where he saw one of the girls lying immediatel­y after shots rang out.

“I thought it was fireworks at first. When a co-worker said it was gunshots I stood up but the (shooter) had already fled,” he said. “I decided to walk around to the front to look for any assistance that might be needed. And that’s when I saw the little girl on the ground with six people around comforting her.”

At city hall, Toronto’s mayor had harsh words for the perpetrato­rs as well as anyone else involved in gang activity, which police say has spiked slightly in recent months.

John Tory, who decried the playground attack as “unacceptab­le” and “cowardly,” said he hopes to see “swift justice” for anyone involved.

“Those who would fire into a playground full of kids playing with so little care don’t deserve to be among us here in the society that we’re building in Toronto and elsewhere in our country,” he said.

“And I say that, too, to all of those involved in ... the gang sub-culture and the guns. You will be caught, you will face the full weight of the justice system, and you will not terrorize our city and our neighbourh­oods that are within it.”

Toronto police spokesman Mark Pugash questioned the portrayal of a city in crisis.

While acknowledg­ing a recent increase in gang activity in some areas, he said police figures suggest gun crime is only slightly elevated from levels seen in the past few years. — The Canadian Press

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