Nova Scotia mass killing helped drive high national homicide rate in 2020: StatCan
HALIFAX — The mass killing in Nova Scotia and the COVID-19 pandemic helped push the number of homicides nationally in 2020 to its highest level in nearly 30 years, Statistics Canada reported Thursday.
The new survey says 743 homicides were reported by Canadian police in 2020 — a figure that was the most since 1991 and includes the 22 victims of a gunman’s rampage that began in Portapique, N.S., in April of last year.
“This attack contributed to an uncharacteristically high homicide count and rate for the province of Nova Scotia in 2020 and is also reflected in the increase in firearm-related homicide for the province,” the report says. It says the national increase in homicides was mainly driven driven by “notable increases” in Alberta and Nova Scotia.
As a result, the overall number of homicides was 56 more than in 2019, pushing Canada’s homicide rate up by seven per cent — from 1.83 homicides per 100,000 population in 2019 to 1.95 per 100,000 population in 2020.