Tumbler Ridge shooting victim, 12, 'loved being at school' before he was 'murdered in cold blood,' father says | Page 18 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Sharon Kirkey
Publication Date: February 11, 2026 - 14:33

Stay informed

Tumbler Ridge shooting victim, 12, 'loved being at school' before he was 'murdered in cold blood,' father says

February 11, 2026

A grieving father whose son was killed in the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting said his 12-year-old son loved school so much he cried when his father once suggested home schooling.

“Our son went to school this morning and it happened that someone came to school with a GUN went to my kids classroom shot some kids and my son was killed too just like that,” Abel Mwansa said in an emotional Facebook tribute to his son, Abel.

Mwansa wrote that he raised his son “to respect elders, answer to one call, be strong, work hard,” focus on his studies and “never miss school.”

“One day I came up with an idea that he should do home school but he cried that I love being at school,” he said.

Mwansa said that before his son picked up his backpack and left for school Tuesday morning, he asked that his father pick him up after class at church, where he would be attending a youth meeting, “for he loved the Lord.”

Hours later, Mwansa learned that his son had been shot “like a stray dog murdered in cold blood.”

He said he treasures the “12 years and 11 months we spent with you” and said God didn’t take his son, “but death did.”

In one of the worst mass school shootings in the nation’s history, nine people were killed and at least 27 more injured in the community of Tumbler Ridge in northeastern B.C. Tuesday.

Six victims were found dead inside Tumbler Ridge Secondary School. Another died on the way to hospital.

Two more were found dead in a home nearby. Police said the only suspect was found dead inside the school from a self-inflicted injury.

National Post

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
MUMBAI, INDIA AND OTTAWA — As the United States and Israel launched a major assault on Iran, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s office said on Saturday that Canada supports the attempt to stop Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon and urged Canadians in the country to shelter in place. “Canada supports the United States acting to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and to prevent its regime from further threatening international peace and security,” said a statement from the Prime Minister’s Office on Saturday morning. The statement said the government is closely following the...
February 28, 2026 - 07:20 | Stephanie Taylor , Stuart Thomson | National Post
MUMBAI, INDIA — Confronting concerns over India’s ties to violence on Canada’s streets and attempts to meddle in its elections can only be done through direct engagement, says Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand.  Anand, who is in Mumbai as Canada seeks to deepen its trading relationship with the country of 1.4 billion people, faced a barrage of questions on Saturday over comments a senior government official made to media before the trip downplaying India’s alleged role in ongoing acts of extortion and homicides. “How are we going to actually address effectively issues of...
February 28, 2026 - 06:54 | Stephanie Taylor | National Post
When I try to trace back my fascination with dreams, a certain memory pops into my head. I was nine years old, sitting in the kitchen of my childhood home in Oshawa, Ontario. My feet snaked around the legs of a creaky wooden chair. My parents hadn’t renovated the kitchen yet, so I was surrounded by faded blue-flowered wallpaper. I pulled my long hair off my face and tilted my head back. Our German shepherds, Pepper and Spice, circled the room, then paused to take a closer look. My father wrestled with a tangle of colourful wires and a pot of sticky white paste. He consulted an official-...
February 28, 2026 - 06:30 | Karen van Kampen | Walrus