Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Aboriginal leader threatens legal action over teacher's Facebook comments

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2014 11:41 AM

    WINNIPEG — An aboriginal leader says a Winnipeg high school teacher should be fired immediately over social media comments about First Nations.

    Grand Chief Derek Nepinak (NEE'-pih-nack) of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs also says he is planning to sue for defamation.

    Brad Badiuk, a technology teacher at Kelvin High School, was placed on leave last week and is being investigated by the Winnipeg School Division.

    Posts on a Facebook page under Badiuk's name described aboriginals as lazy people who are seeking money from non-aboriginals.

    Attempts to reach Badiuk for comment have been unsuccessful and the Facebook page has been taken down.

    The school division has said Badiuk must be given due process and the investigation could take some time, but Nepinak is calling for the teacher's immediate dismissal.

    "To think that there could be children being subjected to this kind of thinking is appalling, and we have a responsibility to seek the full scope of available sanctions against persons making racist and hateful statements towards our children", Nepinak said in a written statement.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Family of 16-year-old girl attacked in Winnipeg thankful she survived

    Family of 16-year-old girl attacked in Winnipeg thankful she survived
    WINNIPEG — The family of a 16-year-old Manitoba girl who was beaten and left for dead in an icy Winnipeg river is thankful she survived the attack and is now recovering.  

    Family of 16-year-old girl attacked in Winnipeg thankful she survived

    Canada Remembers War Dead, Past And Present

    Canada Remembers War Dead, Past And Present
    OTTAWA - Tens of thousands of people surrounded the sunshine-bathed National War Memorial on Tuesday as Gov. Gen. David Johnston formally rededicated the monument in the name of all who have died in the service of Canada.

    Canada Remembers War Dead, Past And Present

    Attorney General Sues Truck Driver In Crash That Killed Working Mountie

    Attorney General Sues Truck Driver In Crash That Killed Working Mountie
    VANCOUVER — Canada's attorney general is suing a transport truck driver involved in a crash that killed a Surrey, B.C. Mountie who was working in the line of the duty.

    Attorney General Sues Truck Driver In Crash That Killed Working Mountie

    Ceremony Honours WWII Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff In B.C.

    Ceremony Honours WWII Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff In B.C.
    VICTORIA — Four lost airmen have finally been laid to rest — 72 years after they disappeared while on a Second World War training mission on Vancouver Island.

    Ceremony Honours WWII Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff In B.C.

    No Sign Of Two Viruses In Some B.C. Salmon: Canadian Food Inspection Agency

    No Sign Of Two Viruses In Some B.C. Salmon: Canadian Food Inspection Agency
    VANCOUVER — Two viruses that can be fatal to some B.C. salmon species have failed to turn up in tests conducted by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

    No Sign Of Two Viruses In Some B.C. Salmon: Canadian Food Inspection Agency

    RCMP Announce Charges In Two Separate Cold-case Murders In Surrey

    RCMP Announce Charges In Two Separate Cold-case Murders In Surrey
    Homicide investigators in the Vancouver area have announced arrests in two separate cold cases. Both involve murders in Surrey, B.C. — the first in 2006 and the second in 2009.

    RCMP Announce Charges In Two Separate Cold-case Murders In Surrey