Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Child Watchdog Asks Attorney General To Intervene In Metis Toddler Case

Darpan News Desk, 22 Sep, 2016 12:20 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's representative for children and youth is urging the province's attorney general to intervene in the case of a Metis toddler being adopted to non-Metis parents in Ontario.
     
    Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond says she is acting on advice from three leading Metis cultural experts and believes that the little girl's heritage has not been given adequate consideration.
     
    The nearly three-year-old girl has been in the care of a Metis foster mother since she was two days old and the Vancouver Island woman and her husband have lost multiple court battles to adopt her.
     
     
    The Ministry of Children and Family Development removed the girl from the couple's home on Sunday and plans to move her next week to Ontario to live with the adoptive parents and her older sisters, whom she has never met.
     
    Turpel-Lafond wrote to Attorney General Suzanne Anton this week asking that a decision on the child's placement be delayed for a short time so proper indigenous consultation can take place.
     
    The Children's Ministry says it has a cultural plan to preserve the little girl's aboriginal identity, but Turpel-Lafond says the plan is weak, was developed without Metis expertise and relies on stereotypes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana
    VANCOUVER — A study by researchers at the University of British Columbia suggests that while the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana causes laziness, adding a medicinal component of pot doesn't change that behaviour.

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says

    The study, titled "Lovers of the Death"? — Islamist Extremism in Mosques and Schools, says what worried them was not the presence of extremist literature, but that they found nothing but such writings in several libraries.

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says

    Man Hospitalized After Being Found Unresponsive At Halifax Police Headquarters

    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's independent police watchdog is investigating the case of a man found unresponsive in cells at Halifax police headquarters.

    Man Hospitalized After Being Found Unresponsive At Halifax Police Headquarters

    Family Of Toddler Withdraws Sexual Assault Complaint

    Family Of Toddler Withdraws Sexual Assault Complaint
    Halifax police say the family of a toddler who was the victim of an alleged sexual assault are withdrawing their complaint.

    Family Of Toddler Withdraws Sexual Assault Complaint

    Ashley Madison Had Inadequate Security Safeguards, Privacy Officials Say

    Ashley Madison Had Inadequate Security Safeguards, Privacy Officials Say
    Privacy officials in Canada and Australia have found that while Ashley Madison marketed itself as a discreet and secure service, the site for married people seeking affairs in fact had inadequate security safeguards and policies.

    Ashley Madison Had Inadequate Security Safeguards, Privacy Officials Say

    Whoopi Goldberg Eyes Canada As She Looks To Expand Menstrual Marijuana Business

    Whoopi Goldberg Eyes Canada As She Looks To Expand Menstrual Marijuana Business
    Goldberg's product line, which includes a THC tincture, a topical body rub, medicated bath salts and cannabis-infused cacao, is available only to medical marijuana patients in California.

    Whoopi Goldberg Eyes Canada As She Looks To Expand Menstrual Marijuana Business