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Manitoba

'9 years is a very long time to wait': Claudette Osborne's mother pleads for information at vigil

Brenda Osborne wiped the tears from her eyes as she spoke to family and friends in Winnipeg about the pain she feels, as another year passes without any information about her missing daughter.

Brenda Osborne says she still has hope her daughter will come home

Every year family members tape up posters of Claudette Osborne on Selkirk Avenue at King Street because it is the last place she was believed to have been before she vanished in 2008. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

Brenda Osborne wiped the tears from her eyes as she spoke to family and friends in Winnipeg about the pain she feels, as another year passes without any information about her missing daughter.

Claudette Osborne, a 21-year-old mother of four, was last seen on July 24, 2008. The group gathered for a vigil on Selkirk Avenue at King Street on Tuesday evening the last place Claudetteis believed to have been before she vanished.

"Nine years is a very long time to wait," Brenda Osborne told the crowd.

"We pray every day for Claudette to come home, even to find her. But we are not giving up, we keep going, we keep searching, we keep looking for her."

Brenda Osborne is hugged after speaking to the crowd about her missing 21-year-old daughter, Claudette. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

People held candles, prayed and played drums, as others taped photos of Claudette Osborne to nearby polls, a ritual they do every year.

Brenda Osborne said she found strength in her grandchildren and in the group that came for support, many of whom attended because they were family members of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

"It is very hard to lose a child. It's like a nightmare. Everyday getting up I just hope," she said.

"We have each other to stand together. That's what makes me go on because of all of you here standing with us every day."

People held candles, sang and prayed to remember Claudette Osborne. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

One of those in attendance was Cheyenne Chartrand, whosaid decades ago people didn't talk about missing women.

"People didn't talk about it, people didn't gather to make other people remember, to send that message out there to our loved ones and to other people who maybe know and don't say anything," she said.