Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

John Furlong Warmly Received At Fundraiser After Initially Being Uninvited

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Feb, 2017 12:14 PM
    VANCOUVER — Former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong received a standing ovation at a University of British Columbia fundraiser Tuesday while a handful of protesters gathered outside to draw attention to abuse allegations against him.
     
    Furlong said in his keynote speech to student athletes that in times of hopelessness and despair, when you feel like the walls are caving in, the only thing that you can rely on is the truth.
     
    The university initially cancelled his speech in December after a graduate circulated an open letter saying the decision to invite Furlong silenced First Nations people in Burns Lake, B.C., who have accused him of abuse.
     
    Furlong has vehemently denied the allegations contained in a 2012 newspaper article that he beat and taunted aboriginal children while working as a gym teacher in the northern community in 1969 and 1970. Journalist Laura Robinson later lost her defamation suit against Furlong, with a judge ruling her reporting constituted an attack on his character.
     
    University president Santa Ono later apologized to Furlong and reinstated him as speaker. Ono called him an "icon" on Tuesday and thanked him for "graciously bearing with us over the last few months."
     
    About a dozen protesters gathered outside Vancouver's convention centre holding signs that read "It's time to listen" and "We stand with the Babine Lake survivors," referring to a First Nations community in Burns Lake.
     
    The only indigenous professor on a committee that worked on a new sexual assault policy at the university recently resigned from the group after the school decided to allow Furlong to speak at the fundraiser.
     
     
    Daniel Heath Justice said in a letter to university president Santa Ono made public last month that the decision "silenced and erased" allegations that Furlong physically abused First Nations students while teaching at a Catholic school. Several indigenous professors also criticized the university's decision to invite Furlong back.
     
    Furlong has said the school's decision to cancel the speech caused him and his family "deep hurt and embarrassment."
     
    Claire Hunter, a lawyer for Furlong, said last month that he has consistently stated he is innocent and pointed to the ruling in Robinson's case, which included testimony from a nun who said Furlong was "kind and respectful" to students and she never saw him use the strap.
     
    Furlong dropped his defamation suit against Robinson, so the allegations contained in her article have not been tested in court.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts
    TORONTO — Canada has long prided itself on being a multicultural nation that values inclusion, opening its borders to refugees and immigrants, no matter their ethnicity or religion.

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her
    HALIFAX — The husband of Nova Scotia's immigration minister has been taken into custody at a psychiatric hospital on charges he assaulted, threatened and choked her on New Year's Eve.

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her

    Woman Who Killed Two When She Backed Into A Costco Loses Conviction Appeal

    TORONTO — A woman who claimed her foot got caught in the pedals when she drove into a Costco storefront in London, Ont., and killed a child and her newborn sister lost her bid Wednesday to have her conviction quashed.

    Woman Who Killed Two When She Backed Into A Costco Loses Conviction Appeal

    Dutch Prosecutors Seek 11-Yr Sentence For Alleged Cyber Bully, Wanted In Canada

    In an emotional closing statement, prosecutor Annet Kramer urged judges at a court in Amsterdam to sentence the 38-year-old suspect, identified only as Aydin C., to 10 years and eight months in prison

    Dutch Prosecutors Seek 11-Yr Sentence For Alleged Cyber Bully, Wanted In Canada

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Melina Roberge, Quebecer Facing Drug Charge In Australia

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Melina Roberge, Quebecer Facing Drug Charge In Australia
    SYDNEY, Australia — A bail hearing has been postponed for one of three Quebecers accused of trying to import a large amount of cocaine into Australia last year.

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Melina Roberge, Quebecer Facing Drug Charge In Australia

    Fatal Collision In Langley - Alcohol, Winter Driving Conditions Believed To Be A Factor

    Fatal Collision In Langley - Alcohol, Winter Driving Conditions Believed To Be A Factor
    A 24 year old Langley man has died as the result of a collision shortly after midnight this morning 

    Fatal Collision In Langley - Alcohol, Winter Driving Conditions Believed To Be A Factor