
She lost her mom in South Africa. Now she's safe in the embrace of a new Canadian family
CBC
For 10-year-old Ryleigh Ridland it's been a long wait for a family hug — on Canadian soil.
She embraced her new family on Friday upon arriving at Vancouver's airport, ending the protracted legal fight with both the Canadian and South African governments to get her to this country after the tragic loss of her own mother in South Africa.
"I'm feeling very excited to be here in Canada with my family," she said, her voice wavering as she recounted the long wait to take both her first plane rides and steps in Canada.
"I've been waiting. It was kind of hard."
Ryleigh and her great-aunt Lisa Pyne-Mercier, 53, left Johannesburg for Paris on Wednesday, then after a layover flew to Vancouver. They then headed home to Shawnigan Lake, B.C., about 30 kilometres north of Victoria.
The girl had been in foster care ever since her mother's sudden death in 2021.
Ryleigh, then seven years old, was found all alone in stifling heat on a remote rural property on Jan. 9, 2021, near the South African town of Tzaneen, about 360 kilometres northeast of Pretoria.
Her mother, 31-year-old Jackie Ridland, had died at least eight days earlier of natural causes, according to authorities.
Somehow Ryleigh had survived alone in 40 C heat. She was taken to hospital and treated for malaria, dehydration and malnutrition.
Pyne-Mercier, originally from South Africa herself, fought for four years to bring her to Canada.
She was confirmed as the child's legal guardian by a South African High Court on June 28, 2022. But Pyne-Mercier says she's faced many administrative hurdles trying to bring the girl to Canada.
The main sticking points include the fact that the girl's father still lives in South Africa, and that her mother had named Pyne-Mercier as Ryleigh's guardian in her will, making the case unusual, as most adoptions involve a more direct family member being named guardian.
Pyne-Mercier spent thousands of dollars on a legal push to win guardianship and full parental rights in South Africa so Ryleigh could join her in Canada, but the High Commission of Canada in South Africa turned down Ryleigh's applications for permanent resident status in Canada and a study permit in January 2023.
The High Commission initially ruled that Ryleigh didn't meet the definition of an "orphan" under Canadian law since her biological father is alive. Under South African law, however, she was considered an orphan due to abandonment, as her father had waived all parental rights after divorcing Ridland in 2016.