Police Chief Mark Saunders said a man walked into the center in the northern part of Toronto around 3:30 p.M. (local time) yesterday, pulled out a knife and attacked a uniformed Canadian Forces member at the front desk.
Saunders said others were able to take down the suspect but a second Canadian Forces member was stabbed in the process. The injuries are not believed to be life-threatening. He said the suspect made unspecified comments that led police to look into a possible terror connection.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canada's intelligence service have also been contacted. Saunders said charges against the 27-year-old man are pending. He said it could have been worse.
"We're very fortunate that the Canadian Forces, through their training, responded and as a result had they not reacted it would have been much more serious," he said.
Also Read
RCMP spokesman Harold Pfleiderer said they are working with Toronto police to determine the circumstances surrounding the stabbing.
Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan tweeted that his thoughts are with the injured soldiers and with those who responded bravely in the face of danger.
In 2014 a gunman killed a Canadian soldier at the war memorial in Ottawa and then stormed Parliament before being shot dead. The man had taken issue with Canada's involvement in war in Afghanistan and against the Islamic State.
The man had been under surveillance by Canadian authorities, who feared he had jihadist ambitions and seized his passport when he tried to travel to Turkey.
Canada's new Liberal government has ended airstrikes against the Islamic State group but has tripled the number of soldiers that train Kurdish soldiers in Northern Iraq.