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Manitoba

Manitoba hockey player suspended amid allegations of racist gesture

A Manitoba hockey player has been suspended after a weekend game in which he appearedto make a racist gesture against a visiting team fromWaywayseecappoFirst Nation.

'We all must remember that these are young men who are still learning,' Dauphin Kings tweeted about incident

A Dauphin Kings player, left, makes an apparent bow-and-arrow gesture during a weekend game against the Wolverines from Waywayseecappo First Nation. (Twitter)

A Manitoba hockey player has been suspended after a weekend game in which he appearedto make a racist gesture against a visiting team fromWaywayseecappoFirst Nation.

The incident happened just as the horn was sounding to end the game between the Dauphin Kings and the visitingWaywayseecappoWolverines on Saturday.

The Kings scored with less than 30 seconds left to win 3-2 and as their players were celebrating near their goalie, and someWolverines players were skating away, a Dauphin player raised his stick and made what seemed to be a bow-and-arrowgesture.

The playerwas immediately givena gross misconduct penalty, which isa minimum one-game suspension, according to the rule of theManitoba Junior Hockey League.

In a vague statement on social media on Sunday, the MJHLconfirmed the suspension and said it "takes situations of this nature very seriously."

It did not name the player or the reason for the suspension, saying an investigation is being conducted by an outside consultant.

When reached for comment by CBC News on Mondayan MJHLspokesperson declined to offer anything more.

In an email, the spokesperson said "out of respect of the ongoing process to deal with this matter, at this time please refer to the statement and information issued last night by the MJHL."

Therearepostings by others on social media, claiming aWolverines player made the same gesture first, after tying the game with 14 minutes left to play. He allegedlyskatednear the Kings' bench to do the celebration from one knee.

The Dauphin playerwas responding in the same way, the posts say.

No one from theWolverines was willing to comment on Monday. Head coachDoug HedleyandMorley Watson, chair of the team's board of directors,saidin fairness to the MJHL's ongoing investigation and the player involved,it is premature to say anything at this point.

The Dauphin Kings also posted a message on social media on Sunday, saying they along with the MJHL are reviewing "the actions of one of our players" but that"we all must remember that these are young men who are still learning."

The post called it anopportunity for the hockey club to educate all involved.

The post was met with a mixed reaction fromHockey Indigenous, anon-profit organization that promotesIndigenous hockey in North America.

In a response to the King's tweet, Hockey Indigenous thanked the team for looking into the matter but alsochided it for not usingWaywayseecappo'sproper name the tweet cut it down to Wayway.

It also criticized the comment about the incident being a learning opportunity, saying "one does not have to learn how not to be racist. Being racist is a choice."

In a separate tweet, Hockey Indigenous called the incident an "arrow attack" that is "beyond disgusting and hurtful."

Olympic hockey star Brigette Lacquette, who is fromDauphin, also weighed in on the matter, saying it is unacceptable and must be addressed.

"We can no longer sweep behaviour like this under the rug. It doesn't matter if it's 'getting back at the other team'it's racist," she posted.

Lacquetteis the first First Nations hockey player to becomea member of theCanadian women's national hockey team, and won a silver medal with them at the2018 Olympics inPyeongchang.

Last month, the American Hockey League suspended San Jose Barracuda forward Krystof Hrabik 30 games for making a "racial gesture" at Tucson Roadrunners left-wing Boko Imama during a game.

A couple of days later, the East Coast Hockey LeaguesuspendedJacksonville Icemen defenceman Jacob Panetta for an apparent racistgesture towardopponent and fellow Canadian Jordan Subban of the South Carolina Stingrays.

Jacksonville Icemen later released Panetta, who was in his second season with the team.

About a month before those incidents, an investigation was launched by Hockey P.E.I. after a16-year-old goalie from Nova Scotia wasallegedly subjected of racist abuse in Charlottetown.

Al MacIsaac, Hockey P.E.I.'s president,toldCBC News: Compasshe was "sickened" when he learned that Mark Connors, who is Black, had said he was called the N-word multiple times by young kids in the stands.

The Halifax Hawks U-18 AAplayer also said that following the game members of another P.E.I. team told him that hockey "was a white man's sport."

With files from Lauren Donnelly