Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Family Says Quebecer Living In Ecuador Shot Dead On Cocoa Plantation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Aug, 2016 12:31 PM
    Relatives of a Quebecer living in Ecuador say he has been killed under suspicious circumstances.
     
    Yvan Dionne was shot in the back of the neck and killed at his cocoa and coffee plantation over the weekend in a rural area about 200 kilometres outside the capital, Quito.
     
    Dionne's sister-in-law, Denise Lavoie, says the slaying occurred some time late Friday or early Saturday morning in the nearby fields.
     
    Lavoie says Dionne's wife made the grisly discovery of her husband's body.
     
    Dionne spent years travelling and working as an aid worker in Africa and South America, but had called Ecuador home for several years.
     
    Dionne, originally from Rimouski, Que., was 56.
     
    The Canadian government says officials on the ground are trying to gather information about Dionne's death.
     
    Lavoie says Dionne's two adult children were heading to Ecuador to be with their grieving mother.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Joins Mission That Aims To Uncover Mysteries Of The Deep Ocean

    Canada Joins Mission That Aims To Uncover Mysteries Of The Deep Ocean
    HALIFAX — Canada is joining a new mission to research Earth's most unexplored frontier: the deep ocean.

    Canada Joins Mission That Aims To Uncover Mysteries Of The Deep Ocean

    Justin Trudeau Defends Military Spending Record By Pointing To Eastern Europe Mission

    Justin Trudeau Defends Military Spending Record By Pointing To Eastern Europe Mission
    NATO reported this week that Canadian defence spending hit record lows last year, falling to 0.98 per cent of gross domestic product.

    Justin Trudeau Defends Military Spending Record By Pointing To Eastern Europe Mission

    'It Was A Big, Big, Big Fish': Man Fishing For Cod Hooks Two-metre Shark

    'It Was A Big, Big, Big Fish': Man Fishing For Cod Hooks Two-metre Shark
      Jim Mansfield was fishing off New Melbourne in Trinity Bay early Saturday when he snagged what he thought was the bottom.

    'It Was A Big, Big, Big Fish': Man Fishing For Cod Hooks Two-metre Shark

    Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices

    Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices
    Residential property sales in Metro Vancouver totalled 4,400 in June, an increase of about 0.5 per cent compared to one year earlier, but a drop of nearly eight per cent since May.

    Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices

    B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends

    B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends
    The 78-hectare fire in Burns Bog, south of Vancouver, is estimated to be about half contained, and Delta fire Chief Dan Copeland hopes roughly eighty firefighters will have it fully contained sometime today.

    B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends

    Dry Conditions Prompt Voluntary Water Restrictions On Haida Gwaii

    Dry Conditions Prompt Voluntary Water Restrictions On Haida Gwaii
    The province says stream and groundwater levels have dropped on the remote islands coast and the effects of recent precipitation were short-lived.

    Dry Conditions Prompt Voluntary Water Restrictions On Haida Gwaii