Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Two killed by Toronto gun attack fiend

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R BUCKTIN US Editor BY JESSICA BOULTON and MARC BAKER

TWO people were blasted to death and 12 wounded when a gunman opened fire in central Toronto.

Harrowing footage has emerged of the shooter with a handgun in the popular Greektown district.

He was killed in “an exchange of gunfire” with Canadian police.

One of the dead was a young woman while a girl of about nine is critical.

Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders said the motive is not yet known.

But Toronto City Councillor Paula Fletcher said: “It’s not gang related. It looks like someone who is very disturbed.”

The shooting began about 10pm on Sunday in a street busy with diners.

Toronto Mayor John Tory condemned the outrage as “despicable”. JANICE Long says she still has the urge to call brother Keith Chegwin seven months after his sudden death.

The former Radio 2 DJ was devastated when Keith died aged 60 in December, and says the public outpouring of affection for the star has helped their family cope.

Janice, 63, says: “He didn’t have a bad bone in his body. We were very much alike. We’ve always been close.

“I do have moments where I go, ‘Oh, I’ll just ring Keith, I’ll just send him this picture’ and he’s not there.

“I still have his name in my phone. I can’t take him out of my phone.”

Keith, who made his name in 1980s TV favourites Cheggers Plays Pop and Saturday Superstore, died at home two weeks before Christmas surrounded by his family, including Janice and his twin brother Jeffrey, now 61.

He had the progressiv­e lung condition idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and his condition had rapidly worsened.

The seven months since have been difficult for Janice, but she and their dad Colin take comfort in knowing how much Keith’s fans adored him.

Janice says: “He died far too young, but he packed a hell of a lot into his 60 years. It was remarkable, the support we had. The tributes were unbelievab­le. For my dad it was comforting to hear what all these people were saying about him.”

The BBC Radio Wales presenter thought of Keith again when she was recently awarded an honorary doctorate in music and art from Edge Hill University near Liverpool.

“That really got me,” she says. “He would’ve been so happy and so proud.”

Janice, a pioneer for women in music radio, was at photograph­er Anita Corbin’s First Women UK exhibition at the Royal College of Art.

Looking at how much has changed since she became the first woman to present a daily show on Radio 1, she said: “Women have a voice now. They feel empowered. There’s still a way to go, of course. But bit by bit it’s happening.”

 ??  ?? SHOOTING The gunman
SHOOTING The gunman

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