BCMar 11, 2025
BC Conservatives Face Leadership Crisis Over Residential Schools Comments
The BC Conservatives are currently grappling with a leadership crisis over comments regarding residential schools, putting John Rustad's leadership in jeopardy. The party is scheduled to hold a leadership review this fall, and Conservative strategist Allie Blades suggests that recent events will serve as a significant test for Rustad’s leadership.
So far, three MLAs have chosen to sit as independents in the provincial legislature due to the party's internal divide. The dispute began in February after Vancouver-Quilchena MLA Dallas Brodie made controversial comments about the former resident
CanadaMar 11, 2025
Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says Canada should hit the U.S. with matching 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum in reply to U.S. President Donald Trump's latest trade war escalation.
Trump says he will double the steel and aluminum tariffs he promised to deploy on Canadian products tomorrow to 50 per cent in response to Ontario's 25 per cent surcharge on electricity exports to the U.S.
Trump originally vowed to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Canada should use Canadian steel and aluminum for public infrastructure projects
CanadaMar 11, 2025
Mark Carney Talks About Strengthening Trade Relations with India
Former central banker Mark Carney, who is set to become the Prime Minister of Canada, has expressed his intention to re-establish and strengthen trade relations with India. This statement comes amid the ongoing trade tensions between Canada and the United States.
Carney mentioned that, if given the opportunity, he would focus on improving Canada's relationship with India. As he is now set to take office, it is expected that Carney will prioritize diversifying Canada’s trade relationships to reduce its reliance on the U.S.
In related news, the Indian government is reportedly considering the
CanadaMar 11, 2025
Canada's Steel Industry Faces Major Setback
Canada's steel industry has suffered a significant blow as US President Donald Trump has announced a doubling of tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum in response to Ontario's imposition of a surcharge on electricity supplied to U.S. states. Trump stated that a 50 percent tariff would be imposed on these goods starting Wednesday.
In addition to this, Trump used social media to demand that Canada immediately remove tariffs on U.S. dairy products. He also threatened to permanently close Canada's automobile manufacturing industry with tariffs in April. Trump has once again repeated his threat o
BCMar 11, 2025
DNA analysis confirms remains as Mission, B.C., teen, missing since 2007
Mounties says DNA testing has confirmed remains that washed ashore in Washington State almost 17 years ago are those of a teenager who went missing from Mission, B.C., more than a year earlier.
Police say that 17-year-old Jeffrey Surtel was reported missing by his family on April 29, 2007, and despite search efforts and several tips of possible sightings, he was not found.
They say that in August 2008, human remains washed up on Olympic Peninsula of Washington State.
The RCMP say Clallam County Sheriff’s Office investigated, conducted DNA analysis of the remains and compared it with samples
WorldMar 11, 2025
Gunmen open fire on train in Pakistan
There are reports of militants hijacking a passenger train in Pakistan on Tuesday. Several passengers were injured when gunmen attacked a train in Pakistan's troubled Balochistan, prompting the provincial government to direct authorities to take "emergency measures".
"There are reports of intense firing at Jaffar Express, which was heading from Quetta to Peshawar, between Pehro Kunri and Gadalar,” Balochistan government spokesperson Shahid Rind said. the train, comprising nine coaches, had around 500 passengers on board.
Rescue teams and security forces have reached the scene, and an operat
WorldMar 11, 2025
A boat capsizes in Congo and 25 are dead, many of them soccer players
A boat has capsized in southwestern Congo and killed 25 people, many of them soccer players, authorities said Monday.
The players were returning from a match in Mushie city in Maï-Ndombe province on Sunday night when the vessel capsized on the Kwa River, said Alexis Mputu, the provincial spokesman.
Mputu suggested that the poor visibility at night may have been a factor.
At least 30 other people survived, said Renacle Kwatiba, the local administrator of Mushie territory.
Deadly boat accidentsare common in the central African country, where late-night travels and overcrowded vessels are often
CanadaMar 11, 2025
Alberta, nurses union reach four-year tentative agreement
A union representing more than 30,000 nurses in Alberta has reached a four-year tentative agreement with the province after six weeks of formal mediation.
United Nurses of Alberta says the agreement will significantly improve wages, including an immediate hike of about 15 per cent for registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses. Formal mediation began in January after workers voted in October 2024 to reject recommendations that had been reached through informal mediation. The union says the tentative agreement also covers issues like staffing shortages, rural health care and job sec
WorldMar 11, 2025
12 dead in a bus crash on a highway in South Africa
At least 12 people died and 45 were injured when a bus overturned on a highway in the South African city of Johannesburg on Tuesday, emergency services said.
Emergency crews were trying to lift the bus back onto its wheels to see if any more victims were trapped underneath it, said William Nthladi, a spokesperson for the city's Ekurhuleni Emergency Management.
The crash happened on a highway near Johannesburg's main O.R. Tambo International Airport. The bus was lying on its side near the edge of the highway. It had been transporting people from the township or Katlehong, east of Johannesburg,