Manitoba

'Green bean' pills linked to death of mother of five on Bunibonibee Cree Nation

A street drug dubbed the green bean is believed to have taken the lives of two people in five days on Bunibonibee Cree Nation in northern Manitoba, prompting the community's leader to call for help.

Chief of northern community calls second death in five days 'a punch in the gut'

A northern Manitoba community is reeling as two deaths and several other overdoses believed to be related to a drug that resembles oxycodone tablets and may contain fentanyl. (Submitted by Manitoba RCMP)

A mother of five children is believed to be the second person on the Bunibonibee Cree Nation to die from a pill known as the green bean.

Earlier this week, a father of seven died from an overdose thought to be from the same street drug in the northern Manitoba community.

The tablets have also become a source of concern further north at Shamattawa First Nation, where several people went to the nursing station because of overdoses. 

Bunibonibee is about 575 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg, while Shamattawa is another 175 kilometres further northeast.

Bunibonibee Chief Richard Hart described the whole community as an "extended family" and called the young woman's death "a punch in the gut.... Then the heaviness sets in." 

Hart says the two people who died were friendly people who had good lives.

Several people have also been taken to the nursing station on the First Nation with symptoms of fentanyl overdose.

RCMP issued a warning on Sunday about the drug, which they said resembles oxycodone tablets and may contain fentanyl. Mounties said they believe the tablets are responsible for several overdoses.

"Another death due to this pill they call the green bean — I don't know where it got its name," Hart said Tuesday evening. 

Community rallying support

Hart said while there has been so much sadness in his community in the last few days, they have rallied to support the families who have lost their loved ones to the drug.

"When there are times of trouble and turmoil and grief, we do support one another and help one another and try to get through it the best we can," he said. 

The community needs help with solutions to the drug crisis, Hart told CBC News.

He says they need more recreational and employment opportunities, and especially the ability to counsel and treat people with addictions in the community — not at facilities in Winnipeg or Thompson.

Hart says it's hard to get past the anger at those who bring in and sell the drugs in his community.

"The drug dealers don't care. They put profit above lives and they don't care about the lives they destroy," he said. "It's so sad and it's so maddening." 

But Hart believes his community will recover and will get past the anger. 

"We will rally together and support the family.... We will win this battle together," he said.