Little government progress on Doukhobor compensation, B.C.’s ombudsperson says
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s ombudsperson says the lack of government progress on compensating Doukhobors who were wrongfully detained in the 1950s is “disheartening.”
A statement from Jay Chalke says it’s been a year since Premier David Eby apologized to the Sons of Freedom Doukhobors for government actions decades ago, but there’s still no clear process or timeline to pay descendants of survivors.
Chalke says the government has made progress making payments to some of those who were held in New Denver as school-aged children, but it’s been slow to say who else will be eligible for compensation, leaving many still waiting for answers.
The children were taken from their homes due to the religious beliefs of their parents, members of an exiled Russian Christian group, and they were held in at a former tuberculosis facility in New Denver, B.C., for up to six years.


