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Fire In First Nation Community In Northern Ontario Kills 9, Including Three Kids

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Mar, 2016 01:31 PM
    PIKANGIKUM, Ont. — Nine people are believed to have died in a house fire on the Pikangikum First Nation in northwestern Ontario, says the region's member of Parliament.
     
    "We're being told nine, including three kids. That's what I was told this morning," Robert Nault said Wednesday in an interview from Ottawa.
     
    All are believed to be members of the same family, Nault said.
     
    Ontario Provincial Police Const. Diana Cole said the fire broke out late Tuesday in the remote community near the Manitoba-Ontario boundary that has been plagued by suicides.
     
    The cause of the fire is under investigation and police remain on the scene, Cole said.
     
    Joseph Magnet, a constitutional law professor at the University of Ottawa who has worked with the First Nation in the past, said he has been in all the houses in the community of about 2,100. 
     
    "They're all wildly overcrowded," Magnet said. "They're in outrageous disrepair. They don't have indoor plumbing. They don't have adequate water. They wouldn't meet anybody's fire code regulations."
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau offered his condolences to the community and said his government will work to improve conditions for First Nations people.
     
    "We continue to be engaged with provincial and indigenous leadership on how to build better infrastructure, how to secure the future for indigenous youth and their communities," he said during a visit to Edmonton.
     
    "This is not just about the moral right thing to do. It's about investing in our shared future in this country."
     
    Nault, who noted that everyone in Pikangikum is closely related, said discussions were ongoing about sending in support to help deal with "the whole issue of mourning."
     
    "It affects everyone in the community whenever there's a tragedy like this or a suicide," he said.
     
    "This is a community that's had a history of suicides ... and tragic situations, so this community has been in a constant crisis for a number of years."
     
    Alvin Fiddler, grand chief of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation which represents First Nations in northern Ontario, said he spoke Wednesday with Pikangikum Chief Dean Owen, who sounded exhausted.
     
    "The shock of losing so many people in one tragic event is overwhelming," said Fiddler. "There's a tremendous loss and overwhelming grief that all of us are feeling."
     
    Fiddler described Pikangikum as "ground zero" when it comes to infrastructure requirements such as housing, access to clean drinking water or the capacity to fight fires.
     
    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, who was attending the funeral for former Toronto mayor Rob Ford, took to Twitter to offer her condolences to the community.
     
    "My thoughts are with the First Nations community of #Pikangikum and those who lost loved ones in last night's devastating house fire," Wynne tweeted.
     
    Nault said he was to meet Thursday with two health ministers to discuss what he called "the crisis in the North."
     
    "Not specifically about this incident, but obviously to talk about mental health, health-care delivery, the suicides," he said. "Pikangikum has the largest suicide rate of any community in the western world ... I think over 400 in the last couple of decades."

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