Saturday, July 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Suspicious fire scorches church in northwest B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2021 12:21 PM
  • Suspicious fire scorches church in northwest B.C.

The Mounties say they are investigating a suspicious fire at an abandoned church in northwestern British Columbia.

New Hazelton RCMP say the fire was reported early Saturday morning on the Gitwangak First Nation and was quickly extinguished with minimal damage and no injuries.

Staff Sgt. Darren Durnin says in a statement that police want to know if the blaze could be linked to four recent fires at churches within Indigenous communities in the south Okanagan.

A social media post from the Gitwangak Band says the former Anglican Church in that community is no longer used and it is in "no way affiliated" with residential schools.

Two tiny Catholic churches, one outside Hedley and the other at Chopaka, were destroyed by fires early Saturday, just days after separate fires near Osoyoos and Oliver levelled Catholic churches on band land there.

The fires come less than a month after the discovery of what's believed to be the remains of 215 children in unmarked graves at a former residential school site in Kamloops.

The Cowessess First Nation in southeastern Saskatchewan is also investigating after ground-penetrating radar indicated 751 unmarked graves at the site of the former Marieval Indian Residential School. (CFTK)

 

MORE National ARTICLES

10 more arrested at old-growth logging protest

10 more arrested at old-growth logging protest
Mounties arrested 10 more protesters Thursday as they continued to enforce an injunction against blockades near old-growth forest logging areas west of Victoria. RCMP say all the arrests were made at an encampment in the Braden Mainline Forest Service Road area near Port Renfrew, B.C.

10 more arrested at old-growth logging protest

Walk-on passengers can now book on BC Ferries

Walk-on passengers can now book on BC Ferries
BC Ferries has announced walk-on passengers can book online starting Thursday for routes departing Tsawwassen, Swartz Bay, Duke Point, Horseshoe Bay and Departure Bay.

Walk-on passengers can now book on BC Ferries

75 COVID19 cases for Thursday

75 COVID19 cases for Thursday
77.5% of all adults in B.C. and 76.0% of those 12 and older have now received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccin

75 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Facial recognition by federal Liberals questioned

Facial recognition by federal Liberals questioned
Michael McEvoy says he is reviewing a request the Canadian Civil Liberties Association made to the federal Liberals to stop using facial recognition technology as part of its process to select candidates in the next federal election.

Facial recognition by federal Liberals questioned

TransLink invests $125 million into upgrading regional walkways, cycling paths, and roads

TransLink invests $125 million into upgrading regional walkways, cycling paths, and roads
For the first time since the program’s inception, all 23 local governments in Metro Vancouver will receive funding for various types of infrastructure improvements within their community.

TransLink invests $125 million into upgrading regional walkways, cycling paths, and roads

Burnaby RCMP is asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect who punched another man in the face after a dispute at Metrotown

Burnaby RCMP is asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect who punched another man in the face after a dispute at Metrotown
Burnaby RCMP is asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect who punched another man in the face after a dispute at Metrotown. The incident happened on Friday, May 28 around 6:30 p.m.

Burnaby RCMP is asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect who punched another man in the face after a dispute at Metrotown