The Hamilton Spectator

WORLD TERRORISM

Canadian among dead after van plows through crowd in Barcelona, Trudeau confirms

- MIA RABSON AND SALMAAN FAROOQUI

One Canadian was killed and four others were hurt when a van plowed into crowds of tourists on a popular street in Barcelona, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed Friday.

“It was with great sadness that I learned today that one Canadian was killed and four others injured during (Thursday’s) cowardly terrorist attack in Barcelona,” Trudeau said.

“Sophie and I offer our condolence­s to the families and friends in mourning, and hope for a speedy recovery for the injured Canadians.

“We join Spain and countries around the world in grieving the senseless loss of so many innocent people. We must stand firm against the spread of hate and intoleranc­e in all its forms. These violent acts that seek to divide us will only strengthen our resolve.”

The identity of the person killed was not immediatel­y released, nor were any details about those who were injured or their condition. Canadian officials say they are in touch with the affected families.

In total 13 people were killed in Barcelona and another in a separate attack in the resort town of Cambrils south of Barcelona. As many as 100 were injured.

Spanish authoritie­s said citizens from 34 countries were among the dead and injured.

Canadian officials Friday still advised Canadians to avoid the Las Ramblas area, where Thursday’s attack occurred, and follow directions from local authoritie­s.

Allan Gray and his family were in a Las Ramblas restaurant Thursday when they heard a loud crash and saw crowds of panicked people rushing to the back of the building.

Amid the commotion, the Mississaug­a man ran with his wife and two daughters into an adjoining hotel where they huddled on an upper floor for the next five hours, flinching at the sound of gunshots and wondering whether movements in the stairwells were people trying to find safety or a potential terrorist about to launch another attack.

Gray, 50, said that the scariest part of the entire ordeal was not knowing what was going on.

“Everybody was panicking … we just didn’t know what was going to happen,” Gray said Friday. “Every little movement, every little bang was just horrific.”

People weren’t sure whether gunshots heard were coming inside the building, and were terrified that there might be a shooter in the hotel, Gray said.

His daughter, Daniela Gray, said that she was preparing for the worst. “For many hours we were terrified that there was someone inside or that there was going to be an explosion of some sort,” the 24year-old said.

As the hours passed, the Gray family learned more about what was actually happening through social media.

At one point, Allan Gray said, he looked outside the hotel’s window to see what was going on and got a view of the aftermath of the attack.

“There was a woman on the ground that was hurt, another person’s legs not moving, and a little boy who was lifeless on the ground,” he said. “It was horrific.”

The family of four took shelter in the hotel until a police officer escorted them out of the area to safety.

Gray said they’re still reeling from the events a day after the attack, and described an empty feeling to Barcelona’s previously jubilant streets.

“The party’s basically been shut down,” he said. “It just seemed quiet out there and in a sombre mood.”

Meanwhile, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said Friday Canadian authoritie­s always step up vigilance at home when an attack like this happens elsewhere.

“When an event like this occurs extra special attention is focused on it, so Canadians can be assured that their police and their security services are taking every necessary step to keep Canadians safe,” he said in Regina.

Spanish authoritie­s said the back-to-back vehicle attacks — as well as an explosion earlier this week in a house elsewhere in Catalonia — were related and the work of a large terrorist group.

Anca Gurzu, a Canadian from Ottawa, was in a nearby neighbourh­ood when the Barcelona attack took place, but only realized what was going on after receiving a frantic call from a friend.

“(The police) were just everywhere, they were walking with their guns, and it was a bit surreal,” said Gurzu, who went to the scene of the attack about two hours after it took place to see what was going on.

She said the residents of Barcelona remained “defiant” in the face of the violence, and that thousands of mourners gathered in the city’s main square on Friday to observe a minute of silence and march through the city’s streets.

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 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People gather at a memorial tribute to the victims on Barcelona’s historic Las Ramblas promenade on the Joan Miro mosaic, embedded in the pavement where the van stopped after killing at least 13 people in Barcelona, Spain.
EMILIO MORENATTI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People gather at a memorial tribute to the victims on Barcelona’s historic Las Ramblas promenade on the Joan Miro mosaic, embedded in the pavement where the van stopped after killing at least 13 people in Barcelona, Spain.

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