Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Family Of Assaulted Winnipeg Teen Now Taken Off Life Support Has Questions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2015 12:08 PM
    WINNIPEG — The family of a 15-year-old girl who was seriously assaulted while in government care says she was a talented musician with a bright future who needed extra support.
     
    Instead, they say, the girl was placed in a downtown Winnipeg hotel and is now in hospital clinging to life after the April 1 attack. A boy who was also in the care of Child and Family Services at the same hotel is facing charges.
     
    The girl's family gathered at the hospital Wednesday and made the agonizing decision to unhook the machines keeping her alive.
     
    Family friend Grand Chief David Harper said the girl's relatives turned to family services for help after she fell in with the wrong crowd. Now they want to know how things could have gone so wrong.
     
    "She won a scholarship (for) music. That young girl had a lot of potential," Harper said Thursday. "They were there to look for help. Instead of giving her that help ... they put her in hotels."
     
    Family Services Minister Kerri Irvin-Ross declined to be interviewed.
     
    Winnipeg police say they will look at upgrading charges if the victim's condition changes.
     
    "We're monitoring this investigation and the status of the victim very, very closely," said Const. Jason Michalyshen. "This was a horrific event."
     
    The girl's story is eerily similar to that of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine, whose great-aunt contacted Child and Family Services when she had difficulty managing the teen last August. Fontaine was brought to Winnipeg where she was reported missing from foster care.
     
    Her family says she was eventually picked up by social workers after she was found passed out in a downtown alley. She was taken to a hotel, but she ran away again.
     
    Her body was found wrapped in a bag in the Red River more than a week later.
     
    Manitoba has about 10,000 children in care. The vast majority are aboriginal. On any given day, dozens of those children are put up in hotels because there isn't room in a foster or group home.
     
    Irvin-Ross has promised to stop housing foster children in hotels by June 1 — a promise the province has made before. For 15 years, the governing NDP have been criticized for housing foster children in hotels.
     
    Manitoba's children's advocate has released several critical reports about the practice since 2000 and has urged the government to find better alternatives. Darlene MacDonald told The Canadian Press recently she is concerned youth in care are staying in police custody longer than necessary because there is nowhere else to put them. She said judges have told her they want to release a youth but don't want to see them housed in a hotel.
     
    Harper said some kids he has spoken to say they would rather be in police custody than in government care.
     
    "Some of the girls in the youth centre say they don't want to go out because they don't want to be put in the hotel. They know it's not safe to be in hotels," he said.
     
    "We have to take this seriously. We need to move on the whole idea of taking care of our children."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Desmond Hague, Puppy-Kicking CEO, Gets $5,000 Fine And Banned For 3 Years From Owning Animals

    Desmond Hague, Puppy-Kicking CEO, Gets $5,000 Fine And Banned For 3 Years From Owning Animals
    Desmond Hague, who resigned from Centerplate Inc. last year, must pay a $5,000 fine and face a three-year ban on owning animals for kicking a puppy.

    Desmond Hague, Puppy-Kicking CEO, Gets $5,000 Fine And Banned For 3 Years From Owning Animals

    B.C. Premier Christy Clark Predicts Jim Prentice Win, Calgary Flames Loss

    Clark says she's made a friendly bet with Prentice over the winner of the Vancouver Canucks/Calgary Flames first-round playoff match.

    B.C. Premier Christy Clark Predicts Jim Prentice Win, Calgary Flames Loss

    Mississauga Man Detained In Egypt Cleared To Come Back To Canada

    Mississauga Man Detained In Egypt Cleared To Come Back To Canada
    TORONTO — The family of an ailing Mississauga, Ont., man detained in Egypt for more than a year says the father of four has been given all the documents needed to return to Canada.

    Mississauga Man Detained In Egypt Cleared To Come Back To Canada

    Canadian Firms Need To Diversify To Emerging Markets Like India: Export Development Canada

    Canadian Firms Need To Diversify To Emerging Markets Like India: Export Development Canada
    Canadian companies need to build links with emerging markets such as India even though the lower value of the Canadian dollar and the U.S. economic recovery are currently boosting exports to the United States, the head of Export Development Canada said Wednesday.

    Canadian Firms Need To Diversify To Emerging Markets Like India: Export Development Canada

    Chiefs Occupy Premier Christy Clark's Office Over Importation Of Biosolids

    Chiefs Occupy Premier Christy Clark's Office Over Importation Of Biosolids
    WEST KELOWNA, B.C. — First Nations leaders are vowing to occupy Premier Christy Clark's constituency office until her government enacts a moratorium to stop the spread of treated human waste on private and public lands in B.C.'s Nicola Valley.

    Chiefs Occupy Premier Christy Clark's Office Over Importation Of Biosolids

    'A Really Hard Day:' Calgary Mayor Reflects On Anniversary Of Stabbings

    CALGARY — Bouquets of flowers, dozens of candles and an unsigned note pinned to a tree were reminders left Wednesday outside a home where five young people were stabbed to death a year ago.

    'A Really Hard Day:' Calgary Mayor Reflects On Anniversary Of Stabbings