Source: INDEPENDENT #Canada
A Canadian farming family is confronting shock and grief after three
young girls were killed after being buried alive in a truckload of
canola seeds.
The girls - 13-year-old Catie Bott and her twin sisters, Dara and
Jana, both aged 11 – were killed at their Alberta farm on Tuesday,
according to the local media reports.
Family members and neighbours struggled to free the girls and perform
life saving techniques. Two of the girls died at the scene; the third
was flown to a children’s hospital where she died from her injuries on
Wednesday afternoon.
“Our kids died living life on the farm, it is a family farm. We do not regret raising and involving our kids Catie, age 13, Dara, age
11, and Jana, age 11 on our farm. It was our life,” the children’s
parents said in a statement.
“Thank you for all of the overwhelming support we have received from
the first responders, neighbours and friends. We would ask the media to
respect our privacy at this time of grief.”
Family friend and local pastor, Brian Allan, told the Calgary Sun: “This is your worst nightmare.”
He added: “They are a wonderful family and very close friends of ours.”
Marcel Hacault, executive director of the Canadian Agricultural
Safety Association, cautioned against children playing around grain,
stressing that it can be more dangerous than it ever was before due to
today's large collection sizes.
“Farms are getting bigger, everything is bigger, and it only takes
ten seconds to get engulfed or buried by grain. You don't have
near-misses anymore. You get the fatalities,” he told CBC News.
“Remember, that the … farmyard is a dangerous place, full of dangers,
and you have to explain it to the kids, even though when you were
younger, you may have played in the grain. Now, with size and scale,
it's just not an acceptable activity.”
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