CBC Edition

How this non-verbal autistic man was rescued from the northern Ontario bush

- Aya Dufour

Kaelan Shawana's family feared the worst after the 24-year-old left his Mani‐ towaning home on Monday in northern Ontario and was nowhere to be found.

The non-verbal autistic man from Wikwemikon­g First Nation is a big guy at 6-foot-6 and 230 pounds but func‐ tions at the level of a sevenyear-old, according to his fa‐ ther, Robbie Shawana.

"He doesn't understand danger. He has no fear."

Kaelan sometimes wan‐ ders off, especially to go to the nearby playground. He usually wears a GPS tracker so his family can easily locate him.

But on Monday afternoon, he changed his outfit before heading out, leaving his tracker behind.

By the time his family started to realize something was wrong, the sun was going down.

"I was panicking knowing he wasn't dressed for the night and it was only going to get colder," said Robbie, whose son was only wearing an orange golf shirt despite subzero temperatur­es.

"That part really scared me."

OPP, K-9 units and oth‐ ers involved in search

Manitoulin OPP, emer‐ gency response teams, K-9 units, the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, the Town‐ ship of Assignack and com‐ munities across Manitoulin Island mobilized quickly to begin the search.

It turned out to be a very long night.

"We didn't get any sleep," said Robbie.

He said everyone feared Kaelan could run into trou‐ ble, especially if he walked on the unstable ice of the near‐ by lake.

"If he ventured on the ice, then we might be looking at a whole new ball of wax of trying to find him."

The next day, shortly be‐ fore 1 p.m., an OPP heli‐ copter located Kaelan on the shores of Mosquito Bay on Lake Manitou and brought him home.

Based on the dog's track‐ ing work, Manitoulin OPP told the family they esti‐ mated Kaelan walked some 20 kilometres throughout the night.

"He walked around in cir‐ cles, and walked around in squares and walked around in triangles all over the place. He was just kind of wander‐ ing around aimlessly it looked like," said his father.

He suffered bruises, scratches, mild hypothermi­a, dehydratio­n, hunger and fa‐ tigue, but is now recovering, according to his family.

"He seems to be back to his normal self. Even though he can't tell me, I'm sure he did experience some type of trauma," said his dad.

"We're just very full of gratitude and overwhelme­d with joy."

Autism Ontario wants notificati­on system

Kaelan's story sounded fa‐ miliar to Autism Ontario spokespers­on Michael Cnud‐ de.

He cited a recent case in‐ volving a child who won‐ dered off and was found in the ditch of a freeway in an urban area.

"Often these children don't understand the higher risk of something, whether it be a traffic accident or drowning."

Cnudde said parents do their best to prevent this by buying extra door locks or GPS trackers, but these aren't perfect systems.

He said the province should set up some type of notificati­on system, like an Amber Alert, to notify com‐ munities when vulnerable people go wandering.

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