Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

First Nation Chiefs Wants Investigation Into Aboriginal Teen's Death In Vancouver Downtown Eastside

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2015 12:24 PM
    VANCOUVER — The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs is demanding police investigate the government agencies whose alleged inaction led to the overdose death of an aboriginal teenager in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.
     
    Union President Grand Chief Stewart Phillip says workers in health care, education, policing and community agencies may have broken the law by repeatedly failing to report that 19-year-old Paige needed protection.
     
    Provincial legislation states that failure to inform the government of a child needing protection is punishable by a fine of up to $10,000 and six months in jail.
     
    Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer says that an investigation into Paige's death is necessary and that it should be conducted at arm's length by the RCMP.
     
    A report released earlier this year by B.C.'s Representative for Children and Youth slammed the province for what Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond called persistent indifference by front-line workers.
     
    The report describes the circumstances of Paige's life of violence, neglect, open drug use and police encounters that ended with her death outside a communal washroom in a city park in April 2013.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Talks To Continue After BC Rail Buys Coal Licences In 'Sacred' Area: B.C.

    VICTORIA — Sixty-one disputed licences to mine coal will be bought by a Crown corporation in an area of northwestern British Columbia consider sacred by First Nations, says Mines Minister Bill Bennett.

    Talks To Continue After BC Rail Buys Coal Licences In 'Sacred' Area: B.C.

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster
    VICTORIA — Alaska's Lt.-Gov. Byron Mallott says he wants to see up close the aftermath of the Mount Polley tailings-pond collapse, including evidence of British Columbia's commitment to preventing a similar mining disaster.

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know
    TORONTO — A parent-led campaign to keep children home from class in protest of Ontario's new sexual-education curriculum gained early traction on Monday as at least one school reported that nearly all of its students were absent.

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know

    Seniors Filing For Insolvency With Bigger Debts Than Young, Report Finds

    Seniors Filing For Insolvency With Bigger Debts Than Young, Report Finds
    OTTAWA — A new report says seniors and those approaching retirement are making up a growing proportion of those filing for insolvency in Ontario and have bigger debts compared with younger people.

    Seniors Filing For Insolvency With Bigger Debts Than Young, Report Finds

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial
    OTTAWA — Mike Duffy's trial is taking a short detour as the Crown and defence haggle over a piece of evidence.

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service
    HOLTEN, Netherlands — Prime Minister Stephen Harper paid tribute to Canada's war dead at a service in the Netherlands this morning.

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service