Months after a violent attack in Panama, Gatineau couple focuses on recovery
CBC
After being attacked in Panama at the end of October while travelling, a couple from Gatineau, Que., is now taking time to recover from the physical and mental trauma.
"I think it's good to be with friends, with family, but at the same time, my heart is over there. It's somewhere else," said Geneviève Plouffe, who returned home a month ago with her partner Martin Audette.
They were in the middle of a years-long road trip across South and Central America.
"The plan was not to come [home]. The plan was to simply travel and live the life. But I don't know how I feel."
Plouffe and Audette were inside their parked bus, which they had transformed into a mobile home, near the Miraflores Locks of the Panama Canal on Oct. 28 when attackers opened fire and forced their way inside the vehicle.
The men dragged Audette out and beat him with a hammer and the butt of a gun, Plouffe said.
Others entered the bus and demanded money, threatening Plouffe's life.
"I still have some aches, like my sternum still hurts and my ribs. I have scars all over the back of my head," Audette said.
"The recovery process was what it was. It's like, I just got beat up — like, beat up real bad."
The couple said they know recovering mentally will be a long process. Since the attack, they've been struggling with flashbacks and anxiety.
"You feel anger, you feel sadness, you feel a lot of emotions … joy, pain and sadness for what happened," Audette said.
"But it's part of life. We all know life is not always great, with different chapters and different obstacles to go through. They say what doesn't kill you makes you stronger."
Without insurance, the couple says they've incurred $40,000 to $50,000 in hospital and legal fees.
In a written response, Global Affairs Canada confirmed it is aware of the incident involving the two Canadians but declined to comment due to privacy concerns. Canadian consular officials in Panama are in contact with local authorities and are providing assistance.
As people gather with family and friends over the holidays, some tenants of a subsidized housing building in Kelowna, B.C., say they have been scattered and forgotten after their homes were deemed unsafe due to ground settling linked to a UBC Okanagan construction site just metres away. When Hadgraft Wilson Place opened 18 months ago, it was intended as a permanent home for individuals with low incomes and physical or mental disabilities.