CanadaJun 11, 2020
472 COVID-19 cases and 63 deaths reported in Canada
There are 97,125 confirmed and presumptive cases in Canada.
Quebec: 53,341 confirmed (including 5,081 deaths, 19,841 resolved)
Ontario: 31,341 confirmed (including 2,475 deaths, 25,380 resolved)
Alberta: 7,276 confirmed (including 151 deaths, 6,754 resolved)
British Columbia: 2,680 confirmed (including 167 deaths, 2,328 resolved)
Nova Scotia: 1,061 confirmed (including 62 deaths, 994 resolved)
Saskatchewan: 658 confirmed (including 13 deaths, 624 resolved)
Manitoba: 289 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 285 resolved), 11 presumptive
Newfoundland and Labrador: 261 confirmed (including 3 d
CanadaJun 10, 2020
Opposition parties reject emergency COVID-19 aid bill
Opposition parties have refused to give unanimous consent to speedily pass the Trudeau government's latest emergency legislation.They have also rejected the government's bid to split the bill in two, to allow promised benefits for Canadians with disabilities to go ahead.Those benefits are now in limbo, along with other measures in the bill.The bill includes a proposed expansion of the wage subsidy program to include seasonal workers and some additional businesses, as well as proposed penalties for fraudulently claiming the Canada Emergency Response Benefit.It also proposes changes to the CERB
CanadaJun 10, 2020
Garneau asks Iran to explain to UN aviation council where black boxes are
Transport Minister Marc Garneau says Canada wants Iran to explain why it hasn't yet handed over the black boxes from the Ukrainian jetliner that crashed near Tehran on Jan 8.
Garneau is speaking this morning by video link to the United Nations aviation organization's council and he says it has been 92 days since Iran told the council that it would give the flight data and cockpit voice recorders to Ukraine for analysis.
Iran had refused to hand over the recorders since the crash despite not having the technology to read the damaged machines itself but changed that stance on March 11.
Several
CanadaJun 09, 2020
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says police misconduct is indefensible
Federal Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says police officers who use excessive force or appear to be discriminating on the basis of race need to be held to account.Blair says he is concerned about a number of instances in recent days in which Indigenous Peoples have had violent runs-in with the RCMP and local police.He says while there is a policy designed to ensure bias-free policing by the RCMP, there needs to be more work done on its relationship with Indigenous communities.Demands have increased in recent days for a complete overhaul to the way policing works in Canada, alongside a simil
CanadaJun 09, 2020
NDP won't support Liberal bill that would jail, fine CERB fraudsters : Jagmeet Singh
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says it is irresponsible and wrong-headed for the Liberal government to draft a bill that would fine or imprison people who made fraudulent claims under the Canada Emergency Response Benefit.Singh says a bill the Liberals are proposing would hurt the very people that the CERB was designed to help — vulnerable people who have faced financial hardship because of COVID-19.He also says it was hypocritical for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to take a knee on Parliament Hill during Friday's nationwide anti-racism demonstrations while such a bill was being drafted.He says th
CanadaJun 09, 2020
COVID-19 cases in Canada surpass 96,000
There are 96,244 confirmed and presumptive cases in Canada.
Quebec: 53,047 confirmed (including 4,984 deaths, 18,714 resolved)
Ontario: 30,860 confirmed (including 2,450 deaths, 24,492 resolved)
Alberta: 7,202 confirmed (including 149 deaths, 6,698 resolved)
British Columbia: 2,659 confirmed (including 167 deaths, 2,309 resolved)
Nova Scotia: 1,059 confirmed (including 61 deaths, 999 resolved)
Saskatchewan: 654 confirmed (including 13 deaths, 624 resolved)
Manitoba: 289 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 284 resolved), 11 presumptive
Newfoundland and Labrador: 261 confirmed (including 3 d
CanadaJun 08, 2020
Ban on non-essential crossings at US-Canada border being loosened, but rules need to be followed: PM Trudeau
The ban on non-essential crossings of the US-Canada border is being loosened.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says it is aimed at allowing some families to reunite.
But Trudeau says the rules still require anyone entering the country to self-isolate for two weeks and he warns against breaking that rule.
The border with the United States has been closed since March, except for goods and certain categories of essential workers.
CanadaJun 08, 2020
Trudeau's attendance at protest confusing in COVID-19 era, Scheer says
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says he can understand if Canadians are upset about the prime minister's appearance at an anti-racism rally.Justin Trudeau and several cabinet ministers attended a massive rally in the nation's capital on Friday, held despite public health warnings against mass gatherings due to COVID-19.Scheer says Canadians have been told for months they can't gather in groups, can't visit their elderly relatives or attend funerals to slow the spread of the virus.He says he understands if Canadians are now confused about what advice they ought to be following if Trudeau hims
CanadaJun 08, 2020
Trudeau promises to push police body-cameras with premiers
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he'll propose equipping police with body-worn cameras to the country's premiers this week, hoping for rapid movement.
The cameras document police officers' interactions with the public and Trudeau says they're a relatively simple way to address complaints that police in Canada treat racialized people unfairly.
He says fixing centuries of racial injustice won't happen overnight but recent protests have shown him that more needs to be done quickly.
Trudeau says a look at the distribution of COVID-19 cases in large cities such as Toronto and Montreal shows th