No. You have to prove intent to kill.
Intent to injure is not murder.
Also the intent to kill must be formed with a clear mind, not in the heat of a confrontation.
Intent to kill is extremely hard to prove, so prosecutors rarely use it unless they have definitive evidence that will convince a judge or jury
Writing this big old paragraph so emphatically incorrectly to try and dunk on someone else, including implying insight into the habits of prosecutors, then expecting us to believe you know off hand the criminal code of Canada, supported by cropped screenshots which have been misread/misunderstood/wilfully misinterpreted, all whilst not even understanding the basis of UK law is all pretty epic wtf from where I'm sat.
Writing this big old paragraph so emphatically incorrectly to try and dunk on someone else, including implying insight into the habits of prosecutors, then expecting us to believe you know off hand the criminal code of Canada, supported by cropped screenshots which have been misread/misunderstood/wilfully misinterpreted, all whilst not even understanding the basis of UK law is all pretty epic wtf from where I'm sat.