Calgary Herald

Vigil held for victim of random shooting

Father of four recently arrived in Canada

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TORONTO • A man who was gunned down in what police have called an indiscrimi­nate attack in northwest Toronto was remembered Saturday as a quiet and respectful man who was working hard to support his family in Ghana.

Community members gathered at Jane Street and Driftwood Avenue for an afternoon vigil to honour Adu Boakye, 40, one of two people shot near that intersecti­on in less than 24 hours last week. The other victim, a 16-year-old who was waiting for the bus to go to a volleyball game, was critically injured but survived.

Some who attended the vigil brought flowers, others wore shirts with his photo that read “In memory of Adu Boakye.”

Richardson Adorsu, one of Boakye's friends, described him as a family man who loved children and could always be counted on for good advice.

Boakye was “a good man, an angel on Earth,” Adorsu said. “There's so many discussion­s that I discussed with him, some advice that me, myself, I cannot advise myself.”

Boakye had arrived in Canada in November, and though they only spent a few months together, Adorsu said they were “really, really good” months.

Orwell Coffie said he and Boakye met because they worked together, and eventually started going to and from work together. Boakye's English wasn't strong, and Coffie said he would often translate conversati­ons for him.

“I was the first person he made friends with,” he said.

He said Boakye was someone who never got angry. “Always, he was smiling and he was always quiet,” he said.

Boakye, a father of four, would often video call his wife during their breaks and was focused on sending money back home, he said.

Emmanuel Duodu, president of the Ghanaian-canadian Associatio­n of Ontario, said he spoke to Boakye's mother earlier Saturday and found her “completely in shock and traumatize­d.”

Aside from the pain of losing a loved one, Boakye's family has also been left without its breadwinne­r, raising concerns about who will provide them with support, he said.

An online fundraiser to help Boakye's family attend his funeral in Canada had raised more than $25,000 by Saturday afternoon.

Police have said the attacks were carried out randomly by the same suspect or suspects. They said the victims didn't know each other or the suspect, nor were they involved in gang activity or anything similar.

The first attack took place around 6 p.m. on Feb. 16 and left the teen victim with potentiall­y “life-altering” injuries, police said.

Boakye was shot the following afternoon. No arrests have been made, but police have released a photo of a suspect and said they found a stolen black Acura linked to the attacks in Hamilton.

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