A soldier, police and paramedics tend to a soldier shot at the National Memorial near Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday Oct.22, 2014.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
October 22, 2014 - 9:09 AM
GUNMAN STORMS PARLIAMENT HILL; AT LEAST TWO HURT, INCLUDING A SOLDIER
OTTAWA - Police are expanding a security perimeter in the heart of the national capital after a gunman opened fire, targeting a soldier at the National War Memorial before injuring a security guard on Parliament Hill, where he was reportedly shot dead by Parliament's sergeant-at-arms.
Security staff on the Hill have told some MPs offices they believe there may be three shooters, and police were searching rooftops in the immediate parliamentary precinct.
Police say they are investigating "several shooting incidents in downtown Ottawa."
Tony Zobl, 35, witnessed the soldier being gunned down at the War Memorial from his fourth-floor office window directly above the monument.
"I looked out the window and saw a shooter, a man dressed all in black with a kerchief over his nose and mouth and something over his head as well, holding a rifle and shooting an honour guard in front of the Cenotaph point blank, twice," Zobl told The Canadian Press.
"The honour guard dropped to the ground and the shooter kind of raised his arms in triumph holding the rifle."
Zobl said the shooter then ran up the street toward Parliament Hill.
The Ottawa Hospital says it has received three patients, two of whom are listed in stable condition. The hospital would not comment on the status of the wounded soldier.
The Langevin Block, home of the Prime Minister's Office across the street from Parliament Hill, has been evacuated. All three party leaders are confirmed to be in safe locations, party officials say.
Police herded bystanders off the street into a major office building and warned people to stay away from the windows. They have told people in the precinct that if they cannot lock their doors, they should barricade them.
The U.S. embassy, adjacent to Parliament Hill, has also been locked down, and U.S. President Barack Obama has been briefed on the ongoing incident.
Conservative MP Bob Zimmer has tweeted that a gunman was shot and killed, a report repeated by several other MPs' offices but unconfirmed by police.
Two sources told The Canadian Press that Kevin Vickers, the sergeant-at-arms for the House of Commons, shot an assailant inside the Hall of Honour, the main entrance to the Centre Block beneath the Peace Tower.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper was rushed away from the building to an undisclosed location.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who were attacked," Harper's communications director Jason MacDonald said in a statement.
"The prime minister is safe and not on Parliament Hill and being briefed by security officials."
Ottawa police confirmed they had a call at 9:52 a.m. with a report of shots fired.
Scott Walsh says he was working in a manhole near the East Block building, between the memorial and the Centre Block, when he heard two gunshots echo down the street.
Walsh says in the ensuing panic people around him started screaming, including a woman pushing a child in a stroller.
He said she started to run, so he went to help her.
That's when he saw man with long black hair, his face covered by a white scarf with decals on it and wearing a black jacket.
"He had a double-barrelled shotgun, he was about five feet from me, and he ran right beside us, ran past the woman with the stroller and child," he said.
The gunman then hijacked a dark car at gunpoint, he said, and drove it up towards the Peace Tower.
A second vehicle, with no rear licence plate, was parked directly in front of the Langevin Block in a no-parking zone. Sources say the vehicle remains a source of concern to authorities.
Bomb-detecting robots have been deployed in the area.
Cabinet minister Tony Clement tweeted that at least 30 shots were heard inside the building, where Conservative and Liberal MPs were holding their weekly caucus meetings.
Karl Belanger, a senior aide to NDP Leader Tom Mulcair, says security told them to remain locked in the Opposition leader's office as there may be two or three gunmen.
Witnesses said shots were fired in several different corridors inside the Centre Block, the central parliamentary building that includes the Peace Tower and the House of Commons. Some people fled the building by scrambling down scaffolding erected for renovations.
Chuck Bronley of Ottawa said he was near the memorial when he heard four shots and saw a man running away carrying what he said was a rifle.
Jan Lugtenborg, a tourist from the Netherlands, described the shooter as having very long, black hair.
"We heard four shots," said Lugtenborg. "You don't expect that when you're on holiday in Canada."
Police were yelling at bystanders, shouting that there was still a shooter on the loose.
"DND member is down," one officer was overheard saying.
Bronley and Lugtenborg said the victim appeared to be one of the ceremonial guards at the War Memorial.
Two people vigorously pumped the victim's chest on the stairs of the War Memorial, until the victim was finally placed on a stretcher and ushered into an ambulance shortly after 10 a.m.
The incident comes just two days after two Canadian soldiers were run over — and one of them killed — in Quebec by a man with jihadist sympathies.
— With files from Jennifer Ditchburn, Steve Rennie, Jim Bronskill, Murray Brewster, Stephanie Levitz, Joan Bryden, Andy Blatchford and Lina Dib
UPDATES AND LINKS:
OBAMA ON THE OTTAWA SHOOTING: 'WE'RE ALL SHAKEN BY IT'
NO THREAT BUT TORONTO POLICE STEP UP PRESENCE AFTER DEADLY ATTACK IN OTTAWA
ATTACK ON CANADA'S PARLIAMENT MAKES NEWS AROUND THE WORLD
PM HARPER CANCELS MALALA CITIZENSHIP CEREMONY IN LIGHT OF OTTAWA SHOOTING
LEAFS-SENTATORS GAME POSTPONED AFTER SHOOTINGS ON PARLIAMENT HILL
ATTACK ON OTTAWA: POLICE IN PURSUIT OF MULTIPLE SHOOTERS
ONTARIO PREMIER ON OTTAWA SHOOTING: "WE REFUSE TO BE SILENCED"
News from © The Canadian Press, 2014