Police are looking for two male suspects who were allegedly involved in the abduction and sexual assault of a 13-year-old girl last week.

The victim was walking in the area of McLevin Avenue and Neilson Road when she was approached by two men in a dark blue, two-door Honda on the evening of Oct. 27, according to a news release issued Thursday.

The men ordered her to get in the car and one of them forced her into the vehicle.

Police say the victim was then sexually assaulted by one of the men, after which she was pushed out of the car.

The first suspect is described as a 25-year-old brown male with a chubby build and a round face. He stands about five-foot-two and weighs between 180 and 200 pounds. He had short, curly black hair and was clean shaven. He wore dark blue jeans, a baggy Ed Hardy T-shirt and black Nike Airforce shoes.

The second suspect is a 25-year-old brown male who is five-foot-five in height. He weighs 140-150 pounds and had short, black, spiked hair and green eyes. He wore a silver bar piercing in his left ear and also had a goatee. He wore black jeans and a dark blue T-shirt with white writing.

Anyone with information is asked to call police at 416-808-7474, or to call Crime Stoppers at 416-222-8477. Tips can also be passed on to investigators through www.222tips.com, or by texting TOR and a message to CRIMES (274637).

That incident preceded a sexual assault Tuesday in Knob Hill Park, which is slightly more than a half-kilometre north of Eglinton Avenue East and immediately east of Brimley Road.

Police said a man in his late teens engaged a girl in conversation before sexually assaulting her in a secluded area.

A teen sexually assaulted two women in the Bellamy Road and Eglinton Avenue East area last week, prompting a warning by police.

"Our advice as parents is to speak to your children, make them aware," said Const. Wendy Drummond of the Toronto Police Service.

On Thursday afternoon, female students at Dr. Marion Hilliard Senior Public School said their parents were telling them to always having their cellphone with them.

Another girl said she would find it scary to walk around by herself.

With a report from CTV Toronto's Austin Delaney