Windsor Star

Canadian killed after gunmen storm castle

CANADIAN TOURIST AMONG DEAD AS ASSAILANTS OPEN FIRE AT THREE SEPARATE LOCATIONS

- GRAEME HAMILTON

ACanadian tourist was among 10 people killed Sunday and another Canadian was injured when gunmen attacked a castle in Jordan that dates back to the time of the Crusades. The woman was identified by the CBC as 62-year-old Linda Vatcher of Burgeo, N.L., a retired teacher who was on vacation visiting her son Chris Vatcher, who works in the Middle East.

Chris Vatcher was also reported shot as assailants opened fire at three separate locations in the narrow streets of Karak, including a police station inside a 12th-century castle that is a popular tourist attraction.

As gunfire rang out and security forces moved in, loudspeake­rs on mosques across the city broadcast messages urging residents to flee.

Shots could still be heard at the scene on Sunday evening, and security forces fired tear gas to flush the gunmen out of the castle.

After Jordanian security officials announced that an unidentifi­ed Canadian woman was among the victims, Ottawa expressed sympathy to her family and friends and offered help in finding those responsibl­e.

“The Government of Canada stands ready to assist Jordan in bringing the perpetrato­rs of this heinous attack to justice,” Global Affairs spokesman John Babcock said by email. He said staff at Canada’s embassy in Amman “are actively working with local authoritie­s to gather additional informatio­n and provide consular assistance at this difficult time.”

The embassy issued an alert on social media Sunday. “We advise against all travel to #Karak city until further notice due to security incident, be safe!” it said.

The violence began when gunmen fired on police responding to a report of a house fire. The assailants appear to have primarily targeted police, and the death toll Sunday evening included seven officers as well as two Jordanian civilians. Another 27 people were reported wounded.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attacks. As the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant made gains in neighbouri­ng Syria and Iraq, Jordan had been seen as a relative oasis spared terrorist violence.

But the pro-Western kingdom is a major ally in the fight against ISIL, and Sunday’s attack was the fourth deadly targeting of Jordanian security and army personnel this year.

In March, a cell of Islamist militants linked with the Islamic State engaged in a shootout with police in the northern city of Irbid, leaving one policeman and seven gunmen dead. A gunman killed five General Intelligen­ce Department officers in Baqaa refugee camp, a few kilometres north of the capital, in June.

If the perpetrato­rs of Sunday’s attack are revealed to have been Islamist militants, it will add to what was already a deadly terror toll for Canadians overseas in 2016.

When Buri Mohamed Hamza was murdered in Somalia by Al-Shabaab extremists in June, he became the 10th Canadian to be killed abroad by terrorists in 2016. That made it the worst year for such deaths since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, according to a terrorism database. Nine other Canadians have died this year in Burkina Faso, the Philippine­s and Indonesia.

 ?? BEN CURTIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jordanian security forces assemble near Karak Castle, where a Canadian tourist was among 10 people killed in one of three shootings. There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attacks in Jordan, which had been seen as an oasis spared...
BEN CURTIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jordanian security forces assemble near Karak Castle, where a Canadian tourist was among 10 people killed in one of three shootings. There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attacks in Jordan, which had been seen as an oasis spared...
 ??  ?? Linda Vatcher
Linda Vatcher

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