Damien Sanderson, left, and Myles Sanderson are
being sought by police in connection with the stabbings.
Myles is 30 years old, six feet and one inch
(185cm) tall and 240 pounds (108kg), with brown hair and brown eyes.
Canada stabbings: police say 10 killed and 15
hurt in Saskatchewan
Police extend search for two suspects over three
provinces after attacks at 13 different locations
Leyland
Cecco in Toronto and agencies
Mon 5 Sep
2022 02.51 BST
A manhunt
was underway in western Canada on Sunday night as police searched frantically
for two men suspected in a series of stabbings that have killed 10 people and
wounded at least 15 others.
The bulk of
the attacks targeted residents of James Smith Cree Nation, an Indigenous
community of 3,400, with other injuries reported in the neighbouring village of
Weldon, north-east of Saskatoon.
The attacks
in the province of Saskatchewan have shocked the country. Canadian prime
minister Justin Trudeau described them as “horrific and heartbreaking. I’m
thinking of those who have lost a loved one and of those who were injured.”
Trudeau
said his government had been in direct communication with the James Smith Cree
Nation community leadership and was ready to assist, adding: “Those responsible
for today’s abhorrent attacks must be fully brought to justice.”
Rhonda
Blackmore, the assistant commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted police
(RCMP) in Saskatchewan, told reporters on Sunday evening that police believed
some of the victims were targeted and others were attacked randomly.
“It’s
horrific what has occurred in our province today,” she said.
Police
identified Damien and Myles Sanderson as the two suspects in the killings.
Damien is is 31 years old, five feet seven inches (170cm) tall, weighing 155
pounds (70kg) with black hair and brown eyes.
Blackmore
said the relationship between the suspects was unclear. She said there was no
motive yet – but the men were presumed to be armed and dangerous.
Bobby
Cameron, the chief of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN),
which represents First Nations groups in Saskatchewan, suggested the attacks
may have been drug-related, saying: “Our hearts break for all those impacted.
This is the destruction we face when harmful illegal drugs invade our
communities.”
As the
communities mourned, the identities of some of the victims emerged.
Residents
identified one of the victims in the attacks as Wes Petterson. Ruby Works said
the 77-year-old widower was like an uncle to her. Speaking to the Associated
Press, she said: “He didn’t do anything. He didn’t deserve this. He was a good,
kind hearted man.
She said
the event has shaken a community where the sounds of sirens are rarely heard.
“No one in this town is ever going to sleep again. They’re going to be
terrified to open their door,” she said.
Two more
victims have been identified as mother-of-two Lana Head and her partner. Head’s
former partner Michael Brett Burns told local media APTN News that the couple
died of their wounds on the James Smith Cree Nation. Burns described the
community as being in mourning, adding that he spent Sunday evening at Melfort
hospital comforting many family members.
Calvin
Sanderson, one of the elected leaders of the three communities that make up the
James Smith Cree Nation, has spoken of the impact the attacks have had on the
close-knit community. He told Associated Press: “Everyone’s been affected …
They were our relatives, friends. Mostly we’re all related here, so it’s pretty
hard … It’s pretty horrific.”
Police
began receiving reports early on Sunday morning from James Smith Cree Nation of
a stabbing in the community. Within two hours, a dangerous persons alert was
sent to residents in the area, asking them to shelter in place.
More alerts
were sent as the scope of the attack, spread over at least 13 sites, became
clearer.
The nation
leadership declared a state of emergency “in response to the numerous murders
and assaults on members of the James Smith Cree Nation”, and established two
emergency operations centers, it said in a statement.
On social
media, residents of James Smith Cree Nation chronicled the terror that gripped
the community on Sunday morning. One posted an image of a broken door handle,
adding that she was glad her younger sister wasn’t home when it was broken
into.
“This is
forever gonna traumatize me,” she wrote.
Others
posted tributes to family members killed in the attack, including a young woman
who had seen her grandfather the night before, only to learn he was a victim in
the attacks.
Doreen
Lees, an 89-year grandmother from Weldon, told the Associated Press she and her
daughter spotted one of the suspects when a car came speeding down her street
early in the morning, as her daughter was having coffee out on her deck. A man
approached them and said he was hurt and needed help, said Lees.
But the man
ran when her daughter said she would call for help.
“He
wouldn’t show his face. He had a big jacket over his face. We asked his name
and he kind of mumbled his name twice and we still couldn’t get it,” she said.
“He said his face was injured so bad he couldn’t show it.”
She said
the man was by himself and “kind of a little wobbly”.
“I followed
him a little ways to see if he was going to be OK. My daughter said ‘Don’t
follow him, get back here.’”
Saskatchewan
premier Scott Moe called the attacks “horrific” and said he offered his
government’s support to all those affected. “There are no words to adequately
describe the pain and loss caused by this senseless violence. All of
Saskatchewan grieves with the victims and their families.”
Throughout
the day, the scope of the search expanded more than 300km (186 miles) south,
towards Regina, the provincial capital, where thousands of fans were gathered
for a sold-out Canadian Football League game between the Saskatchewan
Roughriders and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers.
The men had
initially been spotted driving a stolen black Nissan Rogue but police warned
they did not know if the pair had changed their vehicle. . The RCMP had no
indication they had left the province, but alerts were also issued in
neighbouring Alberta and Manitoba.

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