Fatal stabbing in Toronto highlights frequency of knife crime

Toronto's homicide tally for the year rose to 10 early Tuesday, after a man stabbed multiple times in the city's west end died in hospital of his injuries.

Of those 10 victims, four were shot, three were stabbed to death and three died by other means, figures that roughly align with the numbers from previous years.

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Knife crime, however, while showing no great leap in frequency, has garnered headlines in Toronto lately.

And nationally, it remains the most frequent type of murder.

In this latest incident, a 20-year-old man was stabbed in the back and upper body at Nairn Avenue, in the Eglinton Avenue and Dufferin Street area, shortly before 9:30 p.m. Monday.

He was rushed to Sunnybrook hospital with life-threatening injuries and was pronounced dead shortly after midnight.

His name was withheld as the homicide squad spoke with his relatives at the 13 Division police station.

There was no word on suspects.

On Monday, a bail hearing was postponed for 20-year-old Cassim Celani Cummings of Toronto, charged with attempted murder and six other offences in the stabbing last week of a 35-year-old man aboard a subway train as it approached the Davisville station.

Mr. Cummings, who has a lengthy criminal record, is being investigated in relation to several other incidents, including attacks on other passengers riding the transit system.

The previous week, an argument at the Dundas West subway station between two men riding the escalator ended when one of them allegedly pulled a knife and stabbed the other several times; two hours later, following an extensive manhunt, a 21-year-old man was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and various weapons offences.

In Britain, where the relative rarity of guns makes knife crime a perennial concern, even as the over-all crime rate dips, the government last year implemented tougher laws to combat stabbings: a new offence of aggravated possession of a knife, aimed at people who wield knives in public or threaten to cause harm with one.

And neither is Canada immune. The country's homicide total for 2011 was 598, an increase of 44 over 2010, and in its annual snapshot of the crime landscape Statistics Canada said that stabbings, accounting for roughly one-third of the deaths, were chiefly responsible for the increase – 39 more than in 2010.

Nation-wide, stabbings accounted for 35 per cent of homicides in 2011; firearms for 27 per cent; beatings for 22 per cent and strangulation for seven per cent.

The other 9 per cent of killings chiefly involved cases where for different reasons the cause of death could not be ascertained.

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