Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Domestic violence continues deadly toll in B.C., says anti-violence association

Dirk Meissner The Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2014 07:49 AM
    VICTORIA - The pending seven-year anniversary of the murder-suicide of a Victoria-area father who killed his six-year-old son, his wife and her parents before taking his own life will provide a reality check for anti-violence groups pushing to increase safety for women and children in British Columbia.
     
    The Ending Violence Association of B.C. and Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, B.C.'s representative for children and youth, are expected to reveal on Wednesday an overview of changes they've been waiting for to protect families from domestic violence.
     
    On Sept. 4, 2007, Christian Lee was stabbed to death by his father, Peter Lee, who also murdered his wife Sunny, and her parents in a homicidal rage over the family's breakup.
     
    Lee, who weeks earlier tried to kill his wife in a staged car accident, was out on bail and under court order to stay away from the family home, when he climbed through a basement window in Oak Bay, B.C., and committed the murders before killing himself.
     
    EVA executive director Tracy Porteous will speak during the event. Survivors of domestic violence, including a relative of Vernon, B.C.'s Gakhal family, victims of Canada's largest domestic violence related massacre in 1996, will attend the event.
     
    The B.C. Liberal government has faced constant pressure to toughen its approach to domestic-violence issues as assaults and deaths of women and children continue. Some police departments facing cost pressures have cut domestic violence units to save money.
     
    Turpel-Lafond has been calling on the government since 2009 to create domestic violence courts.
     
    The recommendation was a major theme in two Turpel-Lafond reports that reviewed the homicides involving the Allan Schoenborn and Lee families.
     
    Turpel-Lafond said earlier this year her files reveal 5,000 incidents in 18 months where domestic violence was a factor in a child welfare report.
     
    Her report into the April 2008 murders of three Schoenborn children in Merritt, B.C., by their mentally ill father, concluded the children could have been saved if the province's social safety net was working properly.
     
    A coroner's jury in the Lee family inquest made several recommendations in December 2009, including calling for the creation of a provincewide domestic violence unit, tighter bail restrictions for accused offenders and the development of a public domestic violence campaign that includes an elementary school program.
     
    In 1996, nine members of Gakhal and Saran families were gunned down by the husband of Rajwar Gakhal in Vernon, B.C. The shooting occurred after the woman told police and those around her about the physical abuse she was experiencing at the hands of her husband.
     
    Last spring, Attorney General Suzanne Anton said the government spends $70 million annually on anti-violence measures, including initiating court reforms and police domestic-violence units, in its effort towards a violence-free B.C.
     
    Anton said the government provides 160 victims-services programs across the province, including funding 100 transition houses and numerous counselling programs.
     
    She said the province is examining the potential of offering dedicated court services for victims of domestic violence beyond the services already operating in Kamloops, Kelowna and Duncan.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan beats B.C. 20-16 for fifth win in a row

    Saskatchewan beats B.C. 20-16 for fifth win in a row
    Two unheralded Saskatchewan players spoiled the B.C. Lions' guaranteed win night Sunday.

    Saskatchewan beats B.C. 20-16 for fifth win in a row

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response
    TORONTO - The pay is a pittance, the conditions are gruelling, and the personal risks are all too real. The need for international health-care workers to help in the response...

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth
    VICTORIA - Google Earth may soon extend it global gaze to some of the most remote First Nations territories in Canada....

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - The head of the BC Teachers' Federation is urging government to enter mediation with teachers in order to end an ongoing strike before the school year starts next week.

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou
    HINTON, Alta. - Scientists studying the ravaged caribou habitat of Alberta's northwestern foothills say they have found so much disturbance from decades of industrial use that restoration will have to be selective.

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back
    A Vancouver man said he was looking forward to a bath and some black forest cake after completing a swim from New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island and back.

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back