Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan NDP Calls For Action After Another Aboriginal Girl Kills Herself

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Nov, 2016 12:35 PM
    LA RONGE, Sask. — There is more heartbreak in northern Saskatchewan where another indigenous girl has committed suicide — the sixth in the province this month.
     
    The NDP Opposition said the 13-year-old took her life on Sunday in La Ronge, a community about 250 kilometres north of Prince Albert.
     
    Premier Brad Wall said the deaths have the undivided attention of northern leaders and the government.
     
    "This is unspeakably tragic, each one of these losses, and to have them one after the other," Wall said Monday.
     
    Five other girls between 10 and 14 have killed themselves in the past few weeks in northern communities, including Loon Lake, Stanley Mission, Deschambault Lake and another teen in La Ronge.
     
    Wall said the province has been working to bolster support for the communities, including an operations centre set up earlier this month to co-ordinate the delivery of mental health services.
     
    There is also an emergency phone line that people who need help can call.
     
    Wall said the provincial and federal governments will do more.
     
    He agreed with a suggestion from the NDP to have the province's new advocate for children and youth make the plight of young people in the north a top priority.
     
    "Everything is on the table," Wall said. 
     
    "It is an all-of-the-above approach we need to take for this because we just can't afford to lose any (more) young girls or young people to this."
     
    NDP Leader Trent Wotherspoon said the suicides are a crisis that requires immediate action from the provincial government to prevent more deaths.
     
    Wotherspoon said there must also be a long-term strategy to deal with the underlying causes of despair among young people in the north.
     
    He said basic social services such as health, community recreation, classrooms, housing, mental health and addiction services are inadequate.
     
    "We have a got a real shortfall to make up for," he said. "We cannot stand by and let this crisis continue. It is beyond sad."
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called the earlier suicides in northern Saskatchewan a tragedy and said the federal government is committed to working with indigenous communities to deal with the problem.
     
    Health Canada has said more mental-health workers and other health-care professionals have been sent to communities that have requested them.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Announces Almost $5 Million In Funding Towards Global Zika Fight

    Ottawa Announces Almost $5 Million In Funding Towards Global Zika Fight
    Jane Philpott has announced an investment of $4.95 million for research into the mosquito-borne virus and for humanitarian aid to countries hardest hit by the epidemic.

    Ottawa Announces Almost $5 Million In Funding Towards Global Zika Fight

    Quebec Government Introduces Bill To Regulate Taxi Industry And Uber

    Quebec Government Introduces Bill To Regulate Taxi Industry And Uber
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government has tabled legislation aimed at regulating the taxi industry and ride-hailing company Uber.

    Quebec Government Introduces Bill To Regulate Taxi Industry And Uber

    Most Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees Now In Permanent Homes: John McCallum

    Most Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees Now In Permanent Homes: John McCallum
    The minister is telling a Commons committee that the remaining two per cent should be housed by mid-June.

    Most Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees Now In Permanent Homes: John McCallum

    Edmonton, Saskatchewan, B.C. Now Meet Requirements For Extra EI, Documents Show

    Edmonton, Saskatchewan, B.C. Now Meet Requirements For Extra EI, Documents Show
    Documents outlining how the federal government chose 12 economic regions for extended EI benefits suggest Edmonton and at least two other areas would now qualify for the same help.

    Edmonton, Saskatchewan, B.C. Now Meet Requirements For Extra EI, Documents Show

    Senators Told They're Last Hope For Suffering Canadians Who Aren't Near Death

    Senators Told They're Last Hope For Suffering Canadians Who Aren't Near Death
    aureen Taylor told senators they're the last hope of people who are suffering intolerably but won't qualify for an assisted death under the proposed new law, which would require a person's natural death to be "reasonably foreseeable."

    Senators Told They're Last Hope For Suffering Canadians Who Aren't Near Death

    Former PM Paul Martin's Portrait The 21st To Hang Beside Confederation Hall

    Former PM Paul Martin's Portrait The 21st To Hang Beside Confederation Hall
    Now, a portrait of Martin has been unveiled that will — just as Martin did in real life — displace his former boss.

    Former PM Paul Martin's Portrait The 21st To Hang Beside Confederation Hall