Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Winnipeg Police Arrest Boy In Serious Attack On Girl, Both In Foster Care

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Apr, 2015 02:39 PM

    WINNIPEG — Police have charged a 15-year-old boy in an attack that left a teen girl under the care of Manitoba Child and Family Services in critical condition.

    Just a day after the girl was found seriously assaulted and left for dead in downtown Winnipeg, police say they have a youth in custody who faces charges of aggravated assault and aggravated sexual assault.

    At the time of the attack, police say the girl and the boy were in foster care and were being housed in the same downtown hotel. Police say the two knew each other.

    "Winnipeg Police Service members located the injured female eleven minutes prior to her being reported missing," police said in a release Thursday.

    A tearful Family Services Minister Kerri Irvin-Ross promised Wednesday to end the use of hotels to house foster children by June 1.

    The promise has been made before. In 2006, then-family services minister Gord Mackintosh promised to end the practice by July 1, 2007, because "a hotel room is no substitute for a family room."

    Irvin-Ross renewed that commitment in November when 15-year-old Tina Fontaine was killed after running away from one.

    Thelma Favel, Fontaine's great-aunt, wondered how many more tragedies it will take before something changes. The child welfare system should have been fixed years ago, she said.

    "It had to take another young girl to be beaten and left for dead," said Favel, who took Tina into her home in Powerview, Man., and raised her as a daughter for years. 

    "Every time I hear about another child being beaten and left for dead, it breaks my heart."

    Fontaine was reported missing from foster care last August but was picked up at a hospital by child welfare workers after being found passed out in a downtown alley. She was taken to a hotel where she ran away for the last time.

    Her body was found wrapped in a bag in the Red River.

    Social workers didn't take Fontaine inside the hotel but dropped her off outside, Favel said.

    "What kind of care is that?" she said.

    "Tina's death opened a lot of people's eyes, but it had to take my baby to die for them to start to realize there is a problem. But the problem was always there. They just turned a blind eye to it."

    Manitoba has about 10,000 children in care. The vast majority are aboriginal. On any given day, dozens of those children are put up in hotels because there isn't room in a foster or group home.

    The provincial government has been under fire for housing foster children in hotels 15 years.

    Manitoba's Children's Advocate has released several critical reports about the practice since 2000, urging the government to find better alternatives.  

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Students Hope 'Sailbot' Makes History With First Solo Voyage Across The Atlantic

    Students Hope 'Sailbot' Makes History With First Solo Voyage Across The Atlantic
    VANCOUVER — Sailing across the Atlantic Ocean by wind power alone is an impressive achievement by any standard. But contending with the unpredictable weather, busy freight traffic, meddlesome fishing nets and treacherous icebergs without anyone in the pilot's seat is another feat entirely.

    Students Hope 'Sailbot' Makes History With First Solo Voyage Across The Atlantic

    Farmers Enjoying Low Fuel Prices But Waiting For Other Shoe To Drop

    Farmers Enjoying Low Fuel Prices But Waiting For Other Shoe To Drop
    CALGARY — Decades of boom-and-bust commodity prices, worker shortages and being at the mercy of the weather has virtually removed the word optimism from the vocabulary of many Canadian farmers.

    Farmers Enjoying Low Fuel Prices But Waiting For Other Shoe To Drop

    Australian Al-jazeera Reporter Greste Deported, Fahmy And Mohamed Still Jailed

    Australian Al-jazeera Reporter Greste Deported, Fahmy And Mohamed Still Jailed
    CAIRO — Al-Jazeera English reporter Peter Greste left Egypt on Sunday after the president approved his deportation, but there's no official word on jailed colleagues Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohamed.

    Australian Al-jazeera Reporter Greste Deported, Fahmy And Mohamed Still Jailed

    Serious Crash In Whistler Sends Woman To Hospital With Critical Injuries

    Serious Crash In Whistler Sends Woman To Hospital With Critical Injuries
    WHISTLER, B.C. — A woman in her late 30s has been airlifted to hospital in critical condition after a serious crash in Whistler, B.C.

    Serious Crash In Whistler Sends Woman To Hospital With Critical Injuries

    Surrey Sees More Violent Crime, Fewer Murders According To Latest Statistics

    Surrey Sees More Violent Crime, Fewer Murders According To Latest Statistics
    Violent crimes include murders, sexual assaults and robberies, and there were 52 per cent more of such crimes in last year's fourth quarter compared to the same quarter in 2013.

    Surrey Sees More Violent Crime, Fewer Murders According To Latest Statistics

    B.C. Truckers Stage Protest In Surrey Over New Port Metro Vancouver Licensing Rules

    B.C. Truckers Stage Protest In Surrey Over New Port Metro Vancouver Licensing Rules
    B.C. truckers staged a protest on Saturday against new licensing rules at Port Metro Vancouver. They say more than 600 truckers and office staff will lose their jobs because of the new requirements

    B.C. Truckers Stage Protest In Surrey Over New Port Metro Vancouver Licensing Rules