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CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH, N.L. — Police say they pulled over a driver in Conception Bay South, N.L., and discovered he had $18,000 in unpaid fines.

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary says officers made a traffic safety stop at about 10:20 p.m. on Saturday.

They say the man was also driving with a suspended licence and no insurance.

Police say he was ticketed under the Highway Traffic Act and his vehicle was impounded.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Off to a 13-1 start, Angelo State rose to No. 1 in the first regular season rankings of the 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll. The Rambelles received half of the 16 first-place votes and 381 points. 

With the regular season underway, there were a few shakeups since the preseason poll was announced on Jan. 30. Six programs entered for the first time, while six others dropped out. The biggest jump was West Florida, which is off to a 13-1 start, and No. 10 this week. Joining the Argos as newcomers are No. 11 Carson Newman (9-0), No. 14 and NFCA DII Leadoff champions Florida Tech (10-2), No. 19 Central Oklahoma (13-1), No. 21 Cal State San Bernardino (7-0) and No. 23 Southern New Hampshire (5-1).

Angelo State has a neutral site win over then-No. 18 Palm Beach Atlantic and two at Florida Tech. The Rambelles have hit 22 home runs and are averaging 10.1 runs over their first 14 games.

Moving into No. 2 is 2018 national runner-up Saint Anselm. The Hawks (5-0), opened with five wins in Myrtle Beach, S.C., garnered four first-place votes and 374 points. North Georgia remained at No. 3 receiving three first-place nods and 356 points. The NightHawks (12-3) put forward a 4-1 showing at the Leadoff Classic with a win over then-No. 19 Lenoir-Rhyne. Southern Arkansas (9-3), which received the final first-place vote, slipped to No. 4 after dropping three contests, two of which did come at the hands of new-No. 7 Valdosta State and Palm Beach Atlantic.

In at No. 5 is another Lone Star Conference member, Texas A&M University-Commerce. The Lions (12-1) have three triumphs over then-No. 20 Arkansas Tech with their lone defeat coming at the hands of No. 25 Augustana.

Chico State is No. 6 after a 6-1 start. Following the Wildcats, is Valdosta State who catapulted from No. 22 to No. 7. The Blazers (10-2) opened the season with eight wins, half of which came against nationally-ranked foes –North Georgia, Palm Beach Atlantic, Lenoir-Rhyne and Southern Arkansas – all courtesy of a shutout.

Rounding out the top 10 is No. 8 Tarleton State, No. 9 Concordia-Irvine and West Florida. The Texans (11-2) sandwiched 11 consecutive wins between a pair of losses. The Eagles (4-1) have won four straight following a season-opening defeat. The Argos were the runners-up at the Leadoff Classic with their only defeat of the season to Florida Tech. UWF has wins over Saint Leo (2), Palm Beach Atlantic and then-No. 8 West Chester. 

Falling out of the poll are No. 1 Southern Indiana (3-5), No. 5 Saint Leo (7-7), No. 8 West Chester (0-5), No. 18 Palm Beach Atlantic (5-6), No. 19 Lenoir-Rhyne (6-5) and No. 20 Arkansas Tech (6-6).

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regions. Records reflect games play through Feb. 17, 2019.

 

2019 USA Today / NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – Feb. 20 (Week 1)

Rank

School

Totals

2019 Record

Previous Week

1

Angelo State (8)

381

13-1

6

2

Saint Anselm (4)

374

5-0

4

3

North Georgia (3)

356

12-3

3

4

Southern Arkansas (1)

348

9-3

2

5

Texas A&M-Commerce

336

12-1

9

6

Chico State

321

6-1

7

7

Valdosta State

303

10-2

22

8

Tarleton State

283

11-2

14

9

Concordia Irvine

279

4-1

10

10

West Florida

244

13-1

NR

11

Carson-Newman

230

9-0

NR

12

Illinois Springfield

222

6-2

12

13

Dixie State

191

6-1

17

14

Florida Tech

183

10-2

NR

15

Winona State

176

0-0

15

16

Grand Valley State

160

0-0

16

17

UC San Diego

147

9-2

23

18

Young Harris

144

7-3

13

19

Central Oklahoma

128

13-1

NR

20

UAH

80

10-5

11

21

Cal State San Bernardino

72

7-0

NR

22

Colorado Mesa

56

7-3

21

23

Southern New Hampshire

50

5-1

RV

24

Gannon

32

0-0

24

25

Augustana

31

5-3

25

 

Receiving Votes: Newberry (27), Saint Leo (17), Arkansas Tech (16), Harding (6), Lenoir-Rhyne (6), Oklahoma Christian (1).

New to Poll: No. 10 West Florida, No. 11 Carson-Newman, No. 14 Florida Tech, No. 19 Central Oklahoma, No. 21 Cal State San Bernardino, No. 23 Southern New Hampshire.

Dropped Out: No. 1 Southern Indiana (3-5), No. 5 Saint Leo (7-7), No. 8 West Chester (0-5), No. 18 Palm Beach Atlantic (5-6), No. 19 Lenoir-Rhyne (6-5), No. 20 Arkansas Tech (6-6).

 

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the NCAA’s eight regions. 

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regions. Records reflect games play through Feb. 17, 2019.

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his staff are controlling Progressive Conservative MPPs through a “culture of fear and intimidation,” one ousted member told reporters Tuesday.

Randy Hillier, who Ford kicked out of caucus on March 15, said that he thought the PCs’ election would give birth to a “dynamic, honest, resurgent Ontario.”

Instead, the MPP for Lanark-Frontenac-Kingston said, the opposite happened.

“My expectations slowly began to erode. And this erosion increased to become a crisis of confidence,” Hillier, who was a PC MPP for 12 years, said.

He said Ford and his top advisors are violating democracy by muzzling MPPs and interfering with their ability to represent constituents.

“As I stated to Doug Ford on many occasions, you can’t hog-tie me and gag me and then complain that I’m not a team player.”

MPPs aren’t scheduled to speak in debates when they’re “out of favour” with the PC leadership, Hillier said. He also said they can’t read petitions from their constituents in the legislature or even discuss an idea for a private members’ bill without permission from Ford’s office.

“You cannot have a representative democracy under such constrained restrictions.”

Government House leader Todd Smith confirmed that MPPs have to seek permission to read a petition or table a private members’ bill, but he said that is just to keep everybody on the same page.

“Of course that’s true,” Smith said. “There has to be some kind of a coherent plan here.”

Otherwise, Smith dismissed Hillier’s claims as a “bunch of baloney.”

Hillier also raised concerns about the amount of power Ford’s chief of staff, Dean French, has over the government. French plays a greater role in caucus meetings than the premier does, he said.

“He’s the most significant presence.”

PC MPPs have told reporters anonymously that French rules with “an iron fist.”

French was featured prominently in a recent report by Ontario’s integrity commissioner, an independent watchdog who oversees lobbying and investigates allegations of MPPs acting with a conflict of interest.

The commissioner looked into questions about how a close friend of the premier, Ron Taverner, got offered a job heading up the provincial police force.

Ford didn’t break the law, Commissioner J. David Wake found, but French acted in a way that would give anyone “serious doubts as to the fairness of the process to the other candidates.”

Smith said that French participates in caucus meetings and in meetings of the planning and priorities committee, a committee reserved for the most senior cabinet ministers.

“The chief of staff sometimes chimes in with his opinions on things too,” Smith said, “as do bureaucrats that are invited.”

Also On HuffPost:

The EU has slapped tech giant Google with a massive €1.5 billion ($1.7 billion) fine for blocking rivals’ ads.

Boom Bust talked to Adam Mesh, CEO at the Adam Mesh Trading Group, who said that since 2017 the Big Tech firm has been fined $9.3 billion.

The bigger concern, according to him, is that the company keeps getting fined and Europe is picking on tech.

“Now we’re seeing same kind of sentiment move toward the US…,” he says.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

Rejoice, fellow Canadians, for the day we’ve all been waiting for is finally here.

Tim Hortons has launched a rewards program after a year of testing. Consumers who join the program can have a free coffee, tea or baked good after every seventh visit — in honour of founder and NHL icon Tim Horton’s jersey number.

The coffee and tea rewards can be any size, and all baked goods except Timbits and bagels are included in the program. All visits where customers spend over 50 cents qualify for the program, but more than one visit can’t be logged in the same half hour period.

The company plans on expanding the products that can be redeemed through the Tims Rewards program going forward, according to Bloomberg.

“Tim Hortons has some of the most loyal guests in Canada and Tims Rewards allows us to say thank you,” Alex Macedo, the company’s president, said in a news release. “We heard from our guests that a new rewards program had to be easy to use and redeem, that’s why we offer both a reusable card and a digital friendly app.”

Customers who have accumulated awards can choose to use them later, and bank up to five at a time, with unused rewards expiring 120 days after being obtained, iphoneincanada.ca reported.

The company said it hoped to start a loyalty program last spring, following high-profile disputes with franchisees that shook many people’s trust in the chain.

“Ultimately why we launched this program was a reaction to the voice of our guests,” Mike Hancock, the company’s COO, told Bloomberg. “We listened to our guests and they said this is something that they wanted.”

Many of Tim Hortons’ competitors have had loyalty programs for some time — McDonalds has paper cards that customers can add stickers to that give them a free drink after they’ve accumulated seven stickers and recently expanded their program to include app functionality, while Starbucks has had its own unique card and app rewards program for years, though the company revamped their program this week to provide different reward tiers.

People interested in joining the new program can get a plastic swipe card from a Tim Hortons location, or download the newest version of the franchise’s phone app to use as a card and track how close you are to your next reward. People with iPhones or Android phones can also add a virtual card to their digital wallets to use instead.

The company says the program will also debut mobile offers and discounts going forward.

Who needs Roll-Up-The-Rim’s supposed one in six prize chances when you now have a guaranteed freebie after seven?

Although we’re still holding out for the car….

The plunge of cryptocurrencies has forced investors to seek other safe havens in traditional commodities, like precious metals. Investing analysts have revealed that many are turning to gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

The world’s most popular cryptocurrency, bitcoin, has been trading below $4,000 for nearly three weeks. Other major digital currencies, including Ethereum and Ripple (XRP) have also fallen sharply since the beginning of the year.

The crypto market selloff has changed the investment climate, CEO of Van Eck Associates told the ETF Edge program. While back in 2017, when bitcoin reached its historic peak above $20,000, demand was “a little bit” shifted away from gold, now investors are reportedly switching back.

“Interestingly, we just polled 4,000 bitcoin investors and their number one investment for 2019 is actually gold. So gold lost to bitcoin and now it’s going the other way,” Jan Van Eck said.

The cryptocurrencies’ falling liquidity raises serious doubts of their ability to serve as a store of value, while the precious metal has already proven itself, the founder and chief investment officer of Seymour Asset Management believes.

“Not only have we lost all liquidity on the underlying [commodity] but truly outside of the existential blockchain argument, it’s been very difficult to argue store of value which is really what we started hearing about,” Tim Seymour said on Wednesday. “Gold is a store of value and there’s no disputing that.”

On Monday, US gold futures rose 2.5 percent to $1,300.6 per ounce, keeping a nearly seven-month peak reached in the previous session on Friday.

At the end of the last year, analysts from the Russian network of audit, valuation and consulting firms, FinExpertiza, called bitcoin the most disastrous investment of 2018. Instead of the cryptocurrency, which cost its investors more than 71 percent in losses last year, it was better to pour money into palladium, which became the best performer among major metals, the research concluded.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

CHIBA Japan – Softball’s road to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games officially began on Thursday, Aug. 2, as the XVI WBSC Women’s Softball World Championship opened in Chiba, Japan.

The Championship was officially declared open as 16 teams were present at NASPA Stadium for the Opening Ceremony, in front of a huge crowd that fully packed the venue.

WBSC Softball Chairman, Tommy Velazquez, said: “This is the most important softball event in the last ten years. During the coming days the best players in the world will battle not only For the Title of World Champions, but also to fulfill their life-long dreams of becoming an Olympic Athlete. At the end of the World Championship one of these 15 visiting nations will join Japan as the first qualified for the next Summer Olympic Games softball competition. The Road to Tokyo 2020 officially begins today.

“Millions of little girls around the world will be watching you and dreaming on becoming the softball stars of the future”, added Velazquez. “Show them the passion for the game, inspire them, keep the softball growing and growing around the globe”.

Prior to the opening ceremony, National Team captains and coaches from 16 countries and territories across six continents (Africa, Asia, Europe, North and South America and Oceania) as well as many members of the media gathered at the official pre-event press conference on the eve of the opening ceremony.

(Press Conference Photos for Editorial Use)

WBSC Secretary General Beng Choo Low said: “This is not just any World Championship, it’s the first qualifier to the 2020 Olympic Games.”

The premier global softball tournament in the world — the WBSC women’s softball flagship event — is the first of five qualifiers for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020. The top finisher in Chiba, not including already qualified/host Japan, will be part of baseball and softball’s historic Olympic return at Tokyo 2020.

Following the opening ceremony, the National Teams of Japan and Italy will play each other in Game 1 at 8:00 p.m. (1:00 a.m. ET). All nations will be in action on Friday, August 3.

The Women’s Softball World Championship will be played across 73 games in 10 days. The Final will be held on Sunday, August 12 at 7:00 p.m. local time (midnight ET), at ZOZO Marine Stadium. All the games will be available to watch around the world, on TV or via live-stream.

For complete tournament news and updates, the official tournament website at https://wswc.wbsc.org is available in six languages (English, French, Japanese, Korean, Spanish and Traditional Chinese).

— Courtesy of WBSC

Billionaire chief executive of electric carmaker Tesla Elon Musk has vowed that his company will hit the Indian car market as early as this year.

“Would love to be there this year. If not, definitely next!” Musk said in a Twitter post, responding to a question about Tesla’s long-delayed entry to India.

The claims come just 10 months after the businessman, famous for his inflammatory tweets, accused India’s challenging regulations of preventing the manufacturer from coming to the world’s fourth-largest automobile market.

Bringing sexy back: Elon Musk unveils Tesla’s 2nd electric SUV Model Y

Tesla had previously expressed hopes of entering India’s market. In 2014, Tesla’s former CIO, Jayaprakash Vijayan, announced plans to launch a distribution network in the country. However, India’s taxation policy and high import costs prevented the world’s leading electric vehicle brand from taking the step.

Two years ago, Anand Mahindra, the CEO of Indian multinational conglomerate Mahindra Group, invited Tesla to set up a base in the country.

“You don’t want to leave that whole market to Mahindra, do you?” the executive asked Musk in a friendly tweet after Tesla’s CEO commented on India’s ambitious plans to sell only electric cars by 2030.

Earlier this month, the country’s government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi approved a proposal aimed at implementing an eco-friendly policy called “Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Electric Vehicles in India Phase II.” The three-year program, which will receive an initial investment of around $1.5 billion, will be launched in April.

India’s market looks promising for Tesla, but the country is still lagging behind neighboring China, where the manufacturer launched its first production facility outside the US. According to data compiled by Bloomberg, only 6,000 passenger electric cars are currently on Indian roads, compared to 1.35 million in China. India reportedly had just 425 publicly available charging points as of the end of 2017.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

LOUISVILLE, Ky. –  Emporia State’s Danielle Sprinkle and Winona State’s Jordyn Kleman garnered the final Louisville/Slugger NFCA Division II National Player and Pitcher of the week recognition of 2018 for contests played April 23-29.

Sprinkle played a pivotal role and was the offense’s table setter in eighth-seeded Emporia State’s run to a 2018 Mid-American Intercollege Athletic Conference championship and a berth into the NCAA Tournament. In the first inning of three of their four wins, the senior first baseman knocked in the first run of the game. She finished the five contests with a .714 average (10-for-14), two doubles, a home run and seven RBI.

In their opening upset of top seed Washburn, Sprinkle drove in the game’s first run and scored in the 3-0 victory. She also knocked in the first run in victories over Lindenwood and Central Oklahoma. In the championship clincher against the Bronchos, she was 4-for-4 with an RBI. A native of Salina, Kan., Sprinkle went 3-for-3 with a homer and three RBI in a wild 11-10 win over Northwest Missouri.

Kleman recorded three complete game victories, including a perfect game, to help No. 5 Winona State clinch its fourth Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference regular season title and first since 2007. Her perfecto came in a five-inning win over Minnesota State Moorhead in which she fanned 11 of 15 batters faced.

Kleman struck out 14, allowed a run on five hits and did not walk a batter in a 2-1 win over Northern State. She also struck out six in a complete-game effort against Concordia St. Paul. Fort the week, the La Crosse, Wis. Native was 3-0 with a 1.47 ERA with 31 strikeouts to just on walk in 19 innings of work.

Top Performances

Lani Van Zyl, Winona State– .722, 13 H, 4 2B, HR, 8 RBI, 8 R; Robyn Wampler, UC San Diego– 2-0, SV, 0.88 ERA, 25 K, 3 BB, 9 H, .167 opp BA; Ashley Hardin, West Texas A&M– .750, 9 H, 2 2B, 4 HR, grand slam, 10 RBI, 1.917 SLG; Lakyn Wagoner, Illinois Springfield– .615, 8 H, 3 2B, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 6 R, 1.308 SLG; Kilee Halbert, West Texas A&M– 2-0, 0.64 ERA, SHO, 3 H, R, 2 BB, 11 K, 11 IP, .083 opp BA, no-hitter vs. Eastern New Mexico; Sarah Ingerick, Gannon– .563, 9 H, 2 2B, 3 HR, 8 RBI, 9 R, 1.250 SLG, .611 OBP; Bekah Slattery, Lock Haven– 3-0, SV 3 SHO, 0 R, 6 H, 34 K, 22 IP; Rachel Griffin, Davenport– .550, 11 H, 2 2B, 2 HR, 12 RBI; Mariah Jameyson, Texas A&M University-Commerce– 1.000 (3-for-3), 10 BB (9 IBB), 1.000 OBP, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 3.000 SLG; Michaela Hynes, Palm Beach Atlantic– .500, 6 H, 2 HR, 7 RBI, 2 R, 1.167 SLG; Makayla McCarthy, Wilmington– .438, 7 H, 2B, 3B, 2 HR, 10 RBI, 3 R, 1.000 SLG, .500 OBP; 2-0, 0.41 ERA, SV, SHO, 22 K, 2 BB, 6 H, 17 IP; Ashton Adkins, Palm Beach Atlantic– 2-0, SV, 0 R, SHO, 5 H, 10 K, 13.2 IP, .109 opp BA; Maggie Hall, Bloomsburg- .619, 13 H, 5 2B, HR, 8 R, 4 RBI, 0 K, 2 BB, 2 SB; Amanda Gjertsen, Concordia Irvine– .429, 9 H, 2 HR, 8 RBI, 0 K; Jayda Alaan, Academy of Art– .625, 5 H, 2 2B, HR, 11 RBI, 7 R, 1.250 SLG, .733 OBP; Kylee Smith, North Georgia– 2-0, 0.42 ERA, SV, SHO, 2 CG, 18 K, 3 BB, 7 H, 16.2 IP; Melanie Murphy, Florida Tech– 2-0, 0.58 ERA, 12 K, 1 BB, 1 H, no-hitter vs. Lynn; Brooke Harner, West Chester– 2-0, 2 SHO, 15 K, 6 H, 14 IP; Emilee Downing, California– 2-1, SV, SHO, 1.67 ERA, 36 K, 29.1 IP, 6 app.

Halifax House Fire Kills Family's 7 Children

April 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

HALIFAX — Seven children, all members of a Syrian refugee family who arrived in Canada about two years ago, died in an early morning fire Tuesday that witnesses said quickly engulfed a home in a Halifax suburb.

Their parents, identified as Ebraheim and Kawthar Barho, were in hospital Tuesday, where Ebraheim was fighting for his life after apparently trying in vain to save his children.

Kawthar Barho was also injured but is expected to survive. Their children ranged in age from about three months to the mid-teens.

“We’re here in hospital with a desperate mother who lost seven of her kids,” he said, noting that officials are conducting DNA tests to confirm identities before they can proceed with a traditional Islamic burial process.

“She’s saying to us, ‘Am I going to get my children back?’ … It’s so hard. It’s so sad.”

Many people from Halifax’s tight-knit Muslim community had gathered at the hospital, he said.

“People want to try to help, but how can we … how can we provide her with anything?” said Haridy. “It’s a shock. It’s a tragedy.”

The family is among 1,795 Syrian refugees who have come to Nova Scotia in recent years, including 345 privately sponsored refugees.

For the Nova Scotians who sponsored the Syrian family, the news of the deaths of the children they’d grown close to came as an “unthinkable” blow.

“I think everyone is devastated and our loss pales in comparison to the parents,” said Natalie Horne, vice president of the Hants East Assisting Refugees Team (HEART).

Family was days from moving

Horne said the family arrived on Sept. 29, 2017. She said the children who died are: Ahmad, 14; Rola, 12; Mohamad, 9; Ola, 8; Hala, 3; Rana, 2 and Abdullah, who was born in Canada in November.

She said the family lived in Elmsdale for over a year and then came to Halifax to be closer to refugee support services, such as English-language training.

But she said they had missed the support of the community and the HEART society and had decided to return to Elmsdale.

The tragedy struck just days before the move back would have taken place.

“We were expecting them back in our community on March. … It was a huge loss for the family, when they moved. And they were looking forward to coming back. The children especially,” she said.

The group added in a Facebook post: “For the past year and a half, the children have been able to enjoy life as kids should be able to: going to school, riding bicycles, swimming, having friends, running in the yard, celebrating birthday parties and hanging out with the neighbours on their porch swing. They loved every minute of it, and it seems impossible we won’t hear their laughter and feel their hugs again.”

Halifax Fire Deputy Chief Dave Meldrum told reporters it was the deadliest fire anyone could remember in Nova Scotia.

“Words fail when children are taken from us too soon, especially in circumstances like this,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a tweet. “My heart goes out to the survivors of the horrible fire in Halifax this morning, and the loved ones who are mourning this tremendous loss.”

‘It was just awful’

Danielle Burt, who lives next door to the family on Quartz Drive, said she heard a loud bang and a woman screaming just after 12:30 a.m. Tuesday.

She fled the house with her four children and saw the parents outside in a harrowing scene.

“The mother was on the grass, praying I guess, bowing her hands down, and pulling on my husband’s arm to call 911,” she said, becoming emotional.

“She said the kids were inside and the dad was sitting on the steps. I think he had gone back in because he was really burnt. It was just awful.”

Burt said her children had become good friends with the children lost in the fire.

“They were just over at our house yesterday,” she said. “It’s just something out of a horror movie that you just never would wish on anybody.”

Rich Farrell, who lives down the street, said he and other neighbours ran up to the house as soon as the fire broke out to see if they could help. First responders were not yet on scene.

“It’s so frightening but in the space of 30 seconds, it went from what looked like a little bit of flame to the whole thing just becoming engulfed,” said Farrell, standing on his porch on a bitterly cold, sunny day.

“You can’t say for sure what happened, but it makes you think about fire safety and what you might be able to do to protect your family.”

Funerals to be held Wednesday

Imam Abdallah Yousri of the Ummah Mosque and Community Centre in Halifax said the family was from Raqqa, Syria.

He said the funerals would likely be held Wednesday.

“Our entire municipality is heartbroken and our thoughts are with the loved ones of the family,” Halifax Mayor Mike Savage said in a tweet.

Jennifer Watts, the CEO of the Immigrant Services Association of Nova Scotia, said in an interview that staff members who worked directly teaching the family English and providing services are heartbroken by the deaths.

“It is very, very sad this has happened … for the Syrian community here and the wider community in Halifax,” she said in a telephone interview.

“It’s shocking and very sad. It’s had an impact on our clients who knew them and on our staff who were working with them,” she said.

Doug Hadley, a spokesman for the Halifax Regional Centre for Education, said four of the children attended schools in the area — two at Central Spryfield Elementary and two at Rockingstone Heights.

“This is a tremendously difficult day for both school communities,” he said in an emailed statement.

“We have additional staff in place at both schools to provide support to students. They will provide support on site for as long as necessary.”

The family’s home, which was extensively damaged in the blaze, is situated in a newly built residential neighbourhood. The entire backside of the home was gutted by the blaze, and adjacent homes were also damaged.

Colourful children’s toys could be seen piled in the open garage. Nearby, mourners had placed flowers and a teddy bear at the foot of a lamp post.

A neighbour who didn’t want to be identified told The Canadian Press that she was startled awake by screams.

“We heard horrible screams and then got up and saw the flames,” she said. “It was horrible. We called 911 but it took a long time to get through because apparently everyone was calling 911 at the same time.”

‘It was really scary’

The fire spread very quickly as they watched, she said.

“It was really scary,” she said.

“I was nervous it was going to hit the house next door but it didn’t. And then the fire crews finally got here, but there were flames shooting out the front of the house, like shooting out the windows. It was horrible.”

When Meldrum was asked why a fire would spread so quickly through a new home, he declined to speak about the nature of the fire in question, but he general terms he said: “New homes are built with light-weight construction. Once fire barriers are penetrated, rapid fire spread is possible in new construction.”

Halifax District Fire Chief Mike Blackburn said the fire was very heavy when they arrived, but firefighters were able to “knock it down” quickly.

He suggested firefighters were deeply affected by what they saw.

“They’ll process this over time but it’s very difficult and it’s not going to get any easier.”

Watts said the immigrant services association was providing trauma counselling to friends and people shaken by the tragedy.

“This is a moment for all of us in our communities to think about reaching out to immigrants and newcomers who don’t have all the family and friends in the community and building those relationships … so that people don’t feel alone and disconnected when something like this happens,” she said.

A fundraising campaign, organized by family friends including the Imam Council of Halifax, has been launched to help the grieving parents.

“They have lost all their children,” the Go Fund Me page, called Halifax House Fire Tragedy, said. “Mother is thankfully safe but the husband is facing life threatening injuries.”

“We need to support them in facing their calamity and help them finding a new shelter and pay for expected expenses,” the page said. “It’s hard to estimate how much they’ll need to restart their lives.”

— With files from Brett Bundale, Keith Doucette, Michael Tutton and Michael MacDonald