The New Zealand Herald

Police: Toronto suspect posted cryptic message

-

Nichola Saminather

in Toronto The man accused of ploughing a rental van into pedestrian­s on a crowded Toronto sidewalk on Tuesday, killing 10 people in Canada’s deadliest mass killing in decades, left a “cryptic message” on social media before his attack, police said yesterday.

Suspect Alek Minassian, 25, was charged with 10 counts of murder and 13 counts of attempted murder in the incident.

One possible clue to his motive emerged yesterday as Facebook confirmed Minassian wrote a post before the incident that referenced an “incel rebellion”. The term is shorthand used in some online message boards for “involuntar­y celibacy”, a loose social media movement of men who blame women for their celibacy.

Canadian authoritie­s have declined to say whether anger toward women had motivated the attack.

The post also voiced admiration for a man who killed six students before taking his own life in California in 2014 and who cited the “cruelness of women” for his virgin status.

“The accused is alleged to have posted a cryptic message on Facebook minutes before” the attack, Graham Gibson, a Toronto police detective sergeant, told a news conference.

The majority of the victims were women, ranging in age from their mid-20s to early 80s, Gibson said. He said the question of whether the attack was driven by anger against women was “going to be part of our investigat­ion”.

Facebook has since deleted Minassian’s account, a representa­tive said.

Minassian kept his shaved head down during a brief court appearance in Canada’s largest city, speaking quietly with a defence lawyer and stating his name in a steady voice when asked to do so.

The incident had the hallmarks of deadly vehicle assaults by Isis (Islamic State) supporters.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there was no reason to suspect any national security connection.

Trudeau called on all Canadians to stand united with Toronto as flowers and scrawled messages in multiple languages piled up at a makeshift memorial in the city’s north end, an ethnically diverse neighbourh­ood of towering office buildings, shops, restaurant­s and homes.

“We cannot as Canadians choose to live in fear every single day as we go about our daily business,” Trudeau told reporters outside of Parliament in Ottawa.

The Prime Minister said the incident had not changed the country’s threat level or security preparatio­ns for a G7 summit in Quebec in June.

Minassian had briefly served in Canada’s armed forces in late 2017 but asked to be voluntaril­y released after 16 days of training, Defence Ministry spokeswoma­n Jessica Lamirande said.

The suspect’s two-storey red-brick home in a suburb north of Toronto was a crime scene yesterday, taped off and surrounded by police vehicles. Officers went in and out of the house.

South Koreans, a Jordanian and a Canadian were said to be among those killed but Ontario Chief Coroner Dirk Huyer said it could be days before all the victims are publicly identified. — Reuters

 ?? Picture / AP ??
Picture / AP
 ??  ?? Alek Minassian Flowers and messages of support have been left on the street of the attack.
Alek Minassian Flowers and messages of support have been left on the street of the attack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand