Monday, May 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Man Says He's Father Of Newborn Seized In Hospital By Manitoba Social Workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2019 08:32 PM

    WINNIPEG — A man has come forward saying he is the father of a newborn seen in a social media video being taken from its mother by police and social workers.


    A child protection hearing in Winnipeg today was adjourned for a week at a request by the man's lawyer.


    The request was relayed by a lawyer representing the First Nations child and family services agency in charge of the baby.


    No participant in the hearing can be named under Manitoba law.


    The video of the newborn was broadcast live on Facebook by the woman's uncle in January, and First Nations leaders have said it shows a child-welfare system biased against Indigenous people.


    In the video, the mother is sitting in a Winnipeg hospital bed cradling the two-day-old baby and crying before social workers and police take the child into care.


    Statistics from the Manitoba government show that newborn apprehensions occur, on average, about once a day and that about 90 per cent of kids in care are Indigenous.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    The Latest: Trump Brushes Off Obama Book Complaint About Him

    The Latest: Trump Brushes Off Obama Book Complaint About Him
    The Latest on Michelle Obama's new book, "Becoming" (all times local):

    The Latest: Trump Brushes Off Obama Book Complaint About Him

    Two Youths In Custody After Fire Destroys Iqaluit's Largest Grocery Store

    Two Youths In Custody After Fire Destroys Iqaluit's Largest Grocery Store
    IQALUIT, Nunavut — Two Iqaluit youths are in custody after a series of fires earlier this week in the Nunavut capital, including one that damaged the city's largest store and grocer.

    Two Youths In Custody After Fire Destroys Iqaluit's Largest Grocery Store

    Liberals Again Delay Firearm Marking Regulations Despite Campaign Promise

    Liberals Again Delay Firearm Marking Regulations Despite Campaign Promise
      OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is again delaying implementation of firearm-marking regulations intended to help police trace guns used in crimes — despite a 2015 campaign pledge to immediately enact them.

    Liberals Again Delay Firearm Marking Regulations Despite Campaign Promise

    Assisted-Dying Activist Audrey Parker Remembered At Halifax 'Celebration Of Life'

    HALIFAX — Hundreds of people gathered Friday afternoon to remember a terminally ill Halifax woman whose fight to loosen assisted dying laws captured national attention as she dispensed wisdom about life from the "bed of truth" where she spent her last days.

    Assisted-Dying Activist Audrey Parker Remembered At Halifax 'Celebration Of Life'

    Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting

    Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting
    VANCOUVER — More de-escalation training for Vancouver police is being recommended after a coroner's inquest into the shooting death of a man who was stabbing people on the city's Downtown Eastside.

    Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting

    Ice-Making Company Fined $350,000 After Fish Killed In Surrey, B.C., Creek

    SURREY, B.C. — An ice-making company in Surrey, B.C., has been fined $350,000 after an  solution purged from its equipment ended up in the city's storm sewer system that flows into a creek where fish were killed.

    Ice-Making Company Fined $350,000 After Fish Killed In Surrey, B.C., Creek