Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Panel Reviewing Domestic-violence Deaths Calls For More Support For Victims

Darpan News Desk, 30 Nov, 2016 01:44 PM
    VICTORIA — A panel that examined 100 domestic-violence deaths in British Columbia says few victims tell anyone what's happening in their lives before they are killed and even professionals may not know how to they can help.
     
    The group of experts ranging from police and a former judges to agencies involved in family services and aboriginal health looked at 75 separate incidents between 2010 and 2015.
     
    Its three recommendations, to be implemented by December 2017, are contained in a report released by the BC Coroners Service.
     
    The report says the overwhelming burden of intimate-partner violence is borne by women, mostly between the ages of 20 and 59, and that their children may endure lifelong consequences from exposure to family violence.
     
    The death-review panel is calling for more public awareness about intimate-partner violence and a review by the Justice Ministry to determine the merits of early case management by a single judge in family and criminal cases.
     
    The panel says the Provincial Domestic Violence Office should also enhance access to data so it can be shared between service agencies to support victims and their children.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PICS: Queen's University Students Throw An 'Extremely Racist' Party

    PICS: Queen's University Students Throw An 'Extremely Racist' Party
      Queen’s University Says A Student Party Where Some People Dressed In Stereotypical Costumes Representing Different Cultures Was “completely Unacceptable.”

    PICS: Queen's University Students Throw An 'Extremely Racist' Party

    Prosecution Expected To Start Making Case In Trial Involving Polygamist Sect

    Prosecution Expected To Start Making Case In Trial Involving Polygamist Sect
    Opening statements were slated for Tuesday, but the case was adjourned while lawyers discussed what evidence will be heard in court.  

    Prosecution Expected To Start Making Case In Trial Involving Polygamist Sect

    Founder Of Iconic Victoria Book Store Munro's Books Dies

    Founder Of Iconic Victoria Book Store Munro's Books Dies
    James Munro, the founder of Munro's Books, died at his home in Victoria on Monday.

    Founder Of Iconic Victoria Book Store Munro's Books Dies

    Tonnes Of Trash From Vancouver Island Beaches Avoids Landfill: Living Oceans

    Tonnes Of Trash From Vancouver Island Beaches Avoids Landfill: Living Oceans
    Living Oceans says just 11.2 tonnes of the 40 tonnes of washed up trash had to be sent to the landfill after being barged to Delta for sorting.

    Tonnes Of Trash From Vancouver Island Beaches Avoids Landfill: Living Oceans

    Court Rules B.C. Doesn't Have To Pay Full $8 Million For Ivan Henry's Wrongful Conviction

    A man who was wrongfully imprisoned for nearly three decades has had his compensation award cut by the British Columbia Supreme Court.

    Court Rules B.C. Doesn't Have To Pay Full $8 Million For Ivan Henry's Wrongful Conviction

    Drug Users Warned After Powerful Drug Carfentanil Seized In Vancouver

    Drug Users Warned After Powerful Drug Carfentanil Seized In Vancouver
    Vancouver police are warning drug users to be cautious after the seizure of an opioid believed to be 100 times more powerful than fentanyl.

    Drug Users Warned After Powerful Drug Carfentanil Seized In Vancouver