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'I Want Answers So Bad:' Manitoba First Nations Men Angry Over Birth Mix-up

The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2016 12:38 PM
    WINNIPEG — Two men from a northern Manitoba First Nation say DNA evidence that they believe shows they were switched at birth has them confused, upset and angry.
     
    "I want answers so bad," David Tait Jr. told a news conference Friday about what appears to be a second birth mix-up at the same federally run hospital during the mid-1970s.
     
    "Forty years gone," he said after long pauses and barely able to speak through his tears.
     
    Tait was born three days after Leon Swanson in the winter of 1975 at the Norway House Indian Hospital.
     
    "I don't know what to say. I don't know what to say. I don't know what to say," is all Swanson could manage to get out as he wept.
     
    Last November, two men from nearby Garden Hill First Nation discovered through DNA tests that they were switched at birth at the same hospital in the same year.
     
    "I can't describe this matter as anything less than criminal," said Eric Robinson, Manitoba's former aboriginal affairs minister, who has been helping the families.
     
    "We can live with one mistake, but two mistakes of a similar nature is not acceptable. We can't slough it off as being a mistake. It was a criminal act."
     
    Robinson demanded the federal government launch an independent investigation into what happened and provide dedicated counselling for the families. He also wants Health Minister Jane Philpott to meet with the relatives of all four men to hear first-hand how they have been affected by the discovery.
     
    "It's something (the government) can't sweep under the carpet. There are lingering questions out there," said Robinson, who was born at the same hospital.
     
    "These two gentlemen are not the only victims. We have families who are deeply hurt by this. We have siblings ... that are hurt by this."
     
    Philpott said the circumstances are appalling and Ottawa is taking steps to set up a third-party review.
     
    "It's impossible to describe how tragic this situation is, obviously, for the two gentlemen in question, but (also) for their families, for the entire community," she said from Saguenay, Que., where she was attending a Liberal caucus meeting.
     
    "We have reached out to the gentlemen to make sure that they have the appropriate mental-health resources ... to deal with this very unfortunate circumstance," she said.
     
    "It's fundamentally important that we understand how this could have happened at the time."
     
     
    TWO MORE FIRST NATIONS BOYS FROM NORTHERN MANITOBA SWITCHED AT BIRTH: FAMILY
     
     
    NORWAY HOUSE, Man. — Indigenous leaders say two men from a northern Manitoba First Nation have DNA evidence showing they were switched at birth — the second such alleged mix-up in the mid-1970s at the same federally run hospital.
     
    The men, who are to share their story publicly Friday, were born at the Norway House Cree Nation hospital in January 1975. They still live in the community about 450 kilometres north of Winnipeg.
     
    DNA tests revealed just a few days ago that the men are not biologically related to their parents.
     
    "It's disgraceful," Manitoba's former aboriginal affairs minister Eric Robinson, who has been working with the families, said Thursday.
     
    "It's really, really troubling."
     
    The revelation comes after two men from Garden Hill First Nation discovered last fall that they were switched at birth at the Norway House hospital in the same year.
     
    Luke Monias and Norman Barkman were born in June 1975 and raised by each other's families. They learned the truth through DNA tests last November.
     
    Robinson said there was always suspicion among residents in Norway House about the latest case. He wouldn't name the men before their news conference Friday.
     
    Their families are coping as best they can, Robinson said, but they are in turmoil because their lives have been torn apart.
     
    One of the fathers is an elder who shares the same name as his son.
     
    "The boy he raised is known as Junior," Robinson said.
     
    "They're upset and (saying), 'How can this happen?' They are confused and there is a bit of anger."
     
    When the first mix-up came to light, Robinson and others called on the federal government to investigate. Counselling was offered but no action appears to have been taken, Robinson said.
     
    "This matter was just swept under the rug."
     
    Now, he and the Norway House First Nation are renewing the call for an inquiry so the families get the answers they deserve. The federal government must appoint an independent body to conduct a thorough investigation, Robinson suggested.
     
    If this happened to four newborns at the same hospital, he asked, how many other indigenous babies were also switched at birth?
     
    "Other cases may come forward," he said.
     
    "Twice in the same year in the same hospital with indigenous kids? It makes you question."

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