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Mexico resort beating victim emerges from coma

A Canadian woman who was badly beaten in a Mexican luxury resort hotel over the weekend has been taken out of a medically induced coma but can't talk because her jaw is wired shut, her family says.

Sheila Nabb breathing on own, responsive to questions, say siblings

A Canadian woman who was badly beaten in a Mexican luxury resort hotel over the weekend has been taken out of a medically induced coma but can't talk because her jaw is wired shut, herfamily says.

Sheila Nabb, 37,was found with extensive facial injuries in the elevator of a five-star resort inMazatlan,where she was staying with her husband, Andrew Nabb.

In a statement Tuesday, Nabb's siblings Paul Giles and Kathy Carmichael said she wasbreathing on her ownthrough a tracheotomy without the assistance of a ventilator.

The Hotel Riu Emerald Bay in the Mexican resort town of Mazatlan has several five-star ratings on travel websites. ((riu.com))

They saidNabb, who is being treatedat aMexican hospital's intensive care unit,recognized her husband and father-in-law, was responsive to questions and was able to understand and follow directions.

"She has a long road of recovery ahead of her, but we all know that Sheila will pull through this with the support of everyone she has ever met and many that have never met her," her siblings said.

Mexican federal police told CBC Newson the weekendthat a woman was found lying in an elevator early Saturday inthe Hotel Riu Emerald Bay in Mazatlan. The police officer would not provide his own name, nor reveal details about the victim's age or identity.

In a statement Monday, the government of Sinaloa statesaidit haslaunched a full investigation throughthe state attorney general's office, and is collaborating with Canadian authorities "in keeping them informed of all advances in the investigation."

According to her uncle, Robert Prosser, who lives in Kingston, N.S.,her family has beentold that it could be three to four weeks before they can move her to a hospital in Canada.

Nabb 'like the sunshine in the office'

Meanwhile, Nabb's work colleagues in Calgarytold CBC News that she haddecided to take the trip as a last-minute getaway.

Nabb, whogrew up in Nova Scotia,has been the office manager for Calgary'sActive Back to Health clinicformore than threeyears, said Robert Cumming, adoctor at the clinic.

Cumming saidNabbknew every patient by name and would greet them asthey came in.

"She was like the sunshine in the office," he said. "She brought joy to every person's day. Patients would come incrabby and not feeling well, and she would invariably brighten their day."

Donations for Sheila Nabb

A trust fund has been set up by co-workers of Sheila Nabb and donations can be made at any TD Canada Trust branch.

  • Account number 6519124.
  • Transit number 8072.

Cumming said the couple did have travel insurance, despite theshort trip to Mexicobeing a last-minute idea. The office has set upthe trust fund to help offset any other expenses, he said.

The Hotel Riu Emerald Bay in the Mexican resort town of Mazatlan has several five-star ratings on travel websites, and is a popular travel destination for both Canadian and American tourists.

The attack is the latest in a series of violent incidents involving Canadian visitors to Mexico in recent weeks.

Two Canadian men were shot dead in separate incidents earlier this month, while the body of a Mexican-born University of British Columbia student who disappeared in December was also found stabbed and strangled with her hands tied behind her back near a Mexican beach.