Survivor of river tragedy rescued sister from frigid water, woman says - Action News
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Ottawa

Survivor of river tragedy rescued sister from frigid water, woman says

A woman whose family helped two survivors of Wednesday's tragic Rideau River incident said a teen who emerged alivesaved his sister and was upset his two friends were still in thewater.

Ahmed Ahmed and Riley Cotter were found dead in Ottawa's Rideau River

A boy's friends fell through the ice. He came to this woman for help

10 months ago
Duration 1:50
Carly Roome speaks from her family's home on Nicolls Island. She said her family helped the two survivors of Wednesday's tragic Rideau River incident.

A woman whose family helped two survivors of Wednesday's tragedy on the Rideau River said a teen who emerged alive saved his sister and was upset his two friends were still in the water.

"'My friends fell through the ice,'" Carly Roome recalls the soaking wet boy saying Wednesday night.

"He was really, really upset," Roome added. "He had tried to save his friend."

Four teenagers had told family they were going skating beforethey ended up inthe river near Nicolls Island Road, close to the community of Manoticksouth of Ottawa's core.

Two bodies have since been recovered. They've beenidentified by family, friends and the Ontario coroner's officeasAhmed Ahmed, 17, and Riley Cotter, 17.

A vigil in Ahmed and Cotter's memorywas heldat the site Friday night.

Rideau River near Nicolls Island Road in Ottawa December 29, 2023
Four teenagers fell into the Rideau River near Nicolls Island Road in south Ottawa Wednesday night, according to what one of them told a nearby family. Two of the teens died, while two others survived. (Frdric Pepin/Radio-Canada)

'He did everything he could'

Roome's family lives amid a cluster of homes on Nicolls Island.

The neighbourhood isup a small hill and down a narrow road from the shore where police retrieved the bodies, although it's unclear exactly where the teens plunged through the ice.

Roomesaidthe survivorcame to their door yelling for help around 9:30 p.m., wearing a T-shirt, socks and shorts. He didn'tappear to have a phone, Roomesaid.

The family called 911 right away and then went by the water to comfort him and his sister, providing blankets. Policearrived quickly, she said.

"He needed to save his friends," Roome said of what the freezing survivor told her. "He did everything he could. I really feel for [him]."

A portrait of a teen attached to a fence with flowers around it.
Flowers line a memorial for 17-year-old Ahmed Haitham Ahmed, one of two teens who died after falling through the ice on the Rideau River in Ottawa on Dec. 27, 2023. (Flix Pilon/Radio-Canada)

The survivor and his sister were taken to hospital and treated for mild hypothermia, according to paramedics. A police diver was also hospitalized.

Ahmed and Cotter werestudents atJohn McCrae Secondary School, according a spokesperson for theOttawa-Carleton District School Board. They said in anemail the deathswill be deeply feltby students and staff.

"Without diminishing other tragic incidents, it's so much worse that it happened this time of year," said Barrhaven East Coun. Wilson Lo, whose ward includes some of that school's families.

Wednesday's incident and others like it across Canada have officials warning about the dangers of venturing onto thin ice or near bodies of water.

Janet Harrison, Nicolls Island, Ottawa, December 29, 2023
Janet Harrison, a longtime resident of the small neighbourhood on Nicolls Island Road, stands near the site where the teens fell through the ice. (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

River ice 'did not look safe at all'

Janet Harrison was walking her dog by the Nicolls Island site on Friday afternoon.

She's lived on Nicolls Island Road for almost 40 years and said she's never seen anyone skating on the area of the river where police were searching.

Harrison said she also walked by the shoreline on Wednesday afternoon and noticed how thin the ice was.

"It really did not look safe at all," she said.

With files from Frdric Pepin, Andrew Foote, Nick Persaud and Maxim Saavedra-Ducharme