http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/manito...-of-emergency-over-suicide-epidemic-1.2810573CTV said:A remote Manitoba First Nation declared a state of emergency Wednesday after six suicides in the last two months and 140 attempts in the last two weeks alone. Officials from the Pimicikamak Cree Nation, known as Cross Lake, say health workers on the northern reserve can no longer cope. Band councillor Donnie McKay said the nursing station is only staffed by two nurses overnight.
"They're going 24 hours and they're ready to drop."
The community of 8,300 is traumatized and needs immediate help from the provincial and federal governments, McKay said. A meeting with Manitoba Health Minister Sharon Blady last month resulted in one mental-health worker being sent to the community for an eight-hour shift, he said.
[...] Acting Chief Shirley Robinson said the reserve -- about 500 kilometres north of Winnipeg near a Manitoba Hydro generating station -- has an 80 per cent unemployment rate. Frustrated residents occupied the generating station in 2013. They said their traditional lands are regularly transformed into a floodway and none of the promised economic development and employment programs has materialized. Premier Greg Selinger personally apologized a year ago for the damage caused by the hydro development to Cross Lake's traditional land, way of life and cultural identity. After that apology, Robinson said there was a sense of hope, but that quickly vanished.
"There is lots of despair."
Robinson's 33-year-old cousin, a mother of three, was the sixth person last weekend alone to commit suicide. The community has been drawing on every resource it can to save lives, said Robinson.
"We've been using clergy. We've been using our local elders. We've been using our local nurses and doctors," she said. "It's been very difficult for everyone."
"[...] The band is asking for at least six mental-health workers immediately, as well as for a child psychologist and family therapist. Council is also calling for after-hours counsellors and physicians. In the long term, the reserve is asking for a hospital and recreational facilities for its youth. Shirley Robinson said, with every minute that passes, people are worried about losing another loved one. There were two suicide attempts Tuesday, she said.
"It seems like we're (keeping) a watchful eye -- every minute, every hour. We don't want this to happen anymore. The whole community is in grief."
One of the reasons why it's gotten so bad is because of how sad people have become due to the people around them committing suicide.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/pimicikamak-youth-fundraise-for-suicide-prevention-1.3487672CBC said:Theodra Thomas shared her experience with suicide. She was close with the teenage boy who killed himself this year. She said she is now getting home schooled because she can't bear being in class without him.
"I seen him the day he killed himself. He came to me and gave me a big hug. That was the last time I seen him," said the 18-year-old.
Thomas said she tried to kill herself twice in February.
"I texted everyone on my contact list and told everyone I love them." She said her friend called the RCMP, who showed up at her house just in time.
"I thought if I killed myself, will I feel this way still? Will I feel it over there wherever I go?" she said.
"It was scary, it just seemed like suicide was the answer. But it wasn't."
I think that the root cause is PTSD from residential schools and colonisation. Manitoba's premier has promised help from additional support workers for 8 weeks at the most.