Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Challenging Search In B.C.'s Jervis Inlet Ends With Recovery Of Teen's Body

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2016 11:49 AM
    SECHELT, B.C. — Operators of a Christian retreat say they are doing all they can for the family of a South Korean teenager who drowned while attending the camp north of Vancouver.
     
    A post on the website of the Malibu Club Young Life camp thanks the RCMP, coast guard and camp staff who scoured the waters of the Malibu rapids in Jervis Inlet.
     
    Searchers using sonar located the body of the 16-year-old on Friday, two days after he fell into the water. 
     
    The RCMP has confirmed in a news release that the teen's body was recovered at slack tide, when the powerful rapids between Jervis and Princess Louisa inlets were at their least turbulent.
     
    The victim was an exchange student attending high school in the central Idaho community of Challis and was at the camp with other students.
     
    A post on the school's Facebook page says counsellors were on hand at the school over the weekend to support grieving students.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Northerners Prepare For Largest Cruise Ship In Northwest Passage

    Northerners Prepare For Largest Cruise Ship In Northwest Passage
    The Northwest Passage which he and his doomed crew of Arctic mariners sought is to be plied this summer by a ship roughly eight times as long and carrying 25 times as many people as Franklin's flagship in 1845.

    Northerners Prepare For Largest Cruise Ship In Northwest Passage

    Life-Insurance Industry Wants Assisted Dying Treated Differently Than Suicide

    Life-Insurance Industry Wants Assisted Dying Treated Differently Than Suicide
    Frank Zinatelli of the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association said if someone follows the legislated process, which is expected to be announced as early as next week, then providers would pay out on policies that are less than two years old.

    Life-Insurance Industry Wants Assisted Dying Treated Differently Than Suicide

    Human Rights Ruling Could Change Reaction To Miscarriage: Survivors And Experts

    Human Rights Ruling Could Change Reaction To Miscarriage: Survivors And Experts
    TORONTO — A recent ruling branding miscarriages as a type of disability has the potential to change the way society tackles a stigmatized issue, survivors and experts say.

    Human Rights Ruling Could Change Reaction To Miscarriage: Survivors And Experts

    Kathleen Wynne To Meet With Opposition Leaders To Discuss Fundraising

    Kathleen Wynne To Meet With Opposition Leaders To Discuss Fundraising
    TORONTO — The leaders of Ontario's main political parties are meeting Monday to discuss fundraising reforms following two weeks of unrelenting opposition attacks over expensive and exclusive dinners for Liberal donors.

    Kathleen Wynne To Meet With Opposition Leaders To Discuss Fundraising

    Child Care Advocates Fear Consequences If Liberal Funding Promise Falls Through

    Child Care Advocates Fear Consequences If Liberal Funding Promise Falls Through
    OTTAWA — A federal promise to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on a national child care system is not a sure thing — and advocates are wondering happens to the money if the Liberals can't reach agreements on a long-sought day care framework.

    Child Care Advocates Fear Consequences If Liberal Funding Promise Falls Through

    'He Did Everything For The Art:' Toller Cranston's Final Paintings Come Home

    CALGARY — The final paintings of Canadian figure-skating great Toller Cranston have returned home after his untimely death in Mexico more than a year ago.

    'He Did Everything For The Art:' Toller Cranston's Final Paintings Come Home