The Province

Health minister to meet with families

This will be a chance for gov’t to hear of the ‘pain and the anguish’ people suffered

-

WINNIPEG — Health Minister Jane Philpott will meet Monday with families involved in two cases where babies were switched at birth at a northern Manitoba hospital in the 1970s, a spokesman for the families says.

Former Manitoba aboriginal affairs minister Eric Robinson, who has worked with the men and their families, said Philpott has agreed to meet with the men as well as their parents and siblings, for three to four hours at a yet-to-be determined location in Winnipeg.

Robinson has called for the meeting with Philpott for months and said he believes the men and their families will be seeking a comprehens­ive counsellin­g program.

“This is an opportunit­y for the minister to hear a first-hand account some of the issues that they’re having to deal with — the pain and the anguish,” Robinson said in an interview on Saturday. The two cases involve four men who went home with different parents from the federally run Norway House Indian Hospital in 1975. They went public with the mix-ups in the past year.

The first case, involving Luke Monias and Norman Barkman, came to light in November 2015. The second case was revealed in August and involves Leon Swanson and David Tait Jr.

Philpott called the circumstan­ces appalling after the case of Swanson and Tait became public, and said Ottawa is taking steps to set up a third-party investigat­ion. Health Canada also announced it would offer free DNA tests to anyone born at the hospital before 1980.

Last month, the RCMP said it, too, would investigat­e the cases.

Robinson said one of the men won’t be able to attend Monday’s meeting due to personal reasons.

He said learning about the switches has been difficult for the men and their families. Some people have told them they shouldn’t be complainin­g because they received good upbringing­s, he said.

“Throughout their upbringing, obviously, there was always speculatio­n but there was never any substantia­l evidence to indicate that they actually belonged to the opposite families,” Robinson said.

“In some cases, I suppose, they’re not coping well, and that is why it is necessary to establish this meeting and we need the federal government to be working with the gentlemen and their families.”

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Norman Barkman, left, and Luke Monias’s case came to light after a DNA test in November, 2015.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Norman Barkman, left, and Luke Monias’s case came to light after a DNA test in November, 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada