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DNA tests confirm second switched-at-birth case in northern Manitoba

Click to play video: 'Two Manitoba men discover they were switched at birth'
Two Manitoba men discover they were switched at birth
WATCH ABOVE: Two men from northern Manitoba make an emotional statement after recently discovering they were switched at birth – Aug 26, 2016

NORWAY HOUSE, Man. – A second set of DNA tests have confirmed that two men were switched at birth at a hospital in northern Manitoba in 1975.

Former Manitoba aboriginal affairs minister Eric Robinson says the men from Norway House learned of the results Tuesday.

He says the tests show Leon Swanson is the biological son of the woman who raised David Tait Jr.

READ MORE: ‘We want answers so bad’: 2 Manitoba men switched at birth make emotional plea

The 41-year-old men announced at a news conference last month that tests had revealed Tait is the son of the woman who raised Swanson.

Robinson says the latest results were anticipated but needed for Swanson to move on.

WATCH BELOW: Two Manitoba men, both 40 years old, are trying to grapple with some life-changing news. As Eric Sorensen reports, the pair was switched at birth.

It’s the second case of a mix-up at the federally run Norway House Indian Hospital in the same year, and the government has tasked an independent third party to investigate what went wrong.

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Tests last November showed Luke Monias and Norman Barkman of nearby Garden Hill also went home from the Norway House hospital with each other’s families in 1975.

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READ MORE: Another switched-at-birth case from same northern Manitoba hospital

Robinson, who has acted as a spokesman for the four men since they learned of the mix-ups, says he sent federal Health Minister Jane Philpott a letter two weeks ago requesting she sit down with the men and their families to discuss the anguish they’ve been through.

“She hasn’t responded to my correspondence whatsoever,” said Robinson.

“I know she’s got lots of responsibilities but this is equally important.”

WATCH BELOW: Provincial aboriginal affairs minister calls Manitoba switched at birth incident a ‘gross error’

He said other officials have tried to contact the men but they only want to talk to Philpott.

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“They want to deal with the person ultimately responsible for the Indian hospital,” Robinson said.

The two cases have raised the question of whether other babies could have been switched at birth at the hospital.

READ MORE: Two northern Manitoba men discovered they were switched at birth

Shortly after Swanson and Tait held their news conference, Health Canada announced that it is offering free DNA tests to anyone born at the Norway House hospital before 1980, when the facility started fitting newborns with identification bands.

A spokesman said that due to privacy reasons, he can’t reveal if anyone has requested the tests.

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