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BCMay 22, 2020

Vancouver Police report 'staggering' increase in Anti-Asian hate crimes

Anti-Asian racism has spiked since COVID-19 forced B.C. into a state of emergency in March and Vancouver police say that has driven an increase in overall hate crimes. Howard Chow, the department's deputy chief constable for operations, says investigators have opened 29 files involving anti-Asian racism since March, compared with four over the same time period last year. Chow says there have been 77 hate-associated police files in 2020 and another 10 active files from April and May that could later be classified as hate crimes. Deputy Chief Const. Laurence Rankin says the alleged offences ran
trump-calls-for-reopening-of-houses-of-worship
WorldMay 22, 2020

Trump calls for reopening of houses of worship

President Donald Trump has called for the reopening of houses of worship, declaring them "essential'' services". The president wants governors to allow them to reopen this weekend. "If they don't do it, I will override the governors,'' Trump says. "In America, we need more prayer not less." Trump says the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention also was issuing guidance for communities of faith to hold safe gatherings. The president's comment came one day after he prodded the agency to issue guidelines, so congregations can restart gatherings for worshipers. The CDC previously sent the T
libraries-museums-and-drive-in-movie-theatres-can-soon-reopen-in-quebec
CanadaMay 22, 2020

Libraries, museums and drive-in movie theatres can soon reopen in Quebec

Quebec is reporting 65 new COVID-19 deaths today, bringing the total to 3,865. Deputy premier Genevieve Guilbault said Quebec has 46,141 confirmed cases of COVID-19, an increase of 646, with 13,819 people recovered. She says the province has 1,479 people in hospital with the virus, a decrease of 25 patients. Culture Minister Nathalie Roy announced that libraries, museums and drive-in movie theatres can reopen across the province as of May 29. She says that in libraries, book and document lending will be the only services allowed to reopen, and the public won't be able to circulate beyond the
low-profits-few-customers-in-post-pandemic-recovery-says-b-c-business-survey
BCMay 22, 2020

Low profits, few customers in post-pandemic recovery says B.C. business survey

A survey of British Columbia businesses finds barely one quarter believe they can open and operate profitably as the province gradually eases COVID-19 restrictions. More than 1,300 member businesses of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, the BC Chamber of Commerce and the Business Council of British Columbia were asked about the second phase of B.C.'s restart plan. A statement from the board of trade says 26 per cent expect to open and operate at a profit while 75 per cent worry about attracting customers. Other concerns include a lack of cash to meet expenses or new safety standards and th
conservatives-proposing-motion-to-declare-parliament-an-essential-service
CanadaMay 22, 2020

Conservatives proposing motion to declare Parliament an essential service

Opposition Leader Andrew Scheer wants Parliament declared an essential service so a reduced number of MPs can resume their House of Commons duties amid the COVID-19 crisis.Scheer says his Conservatives are proposing a motion to do that because he says daily briefings by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau from his home are not good enough to hold the government accountable.He says MPs need to be able to ask questions on behalf of their constituents across the country.Scheer says today that up to 50 MPs should be allowed in the House for "normal" sittings, starting Monday, and that 18 of them should
feds-will-fund-covid-19-testing-tracing-and-data-sharing
CanadaMay 22, 2020

Feds will fund COVID-19 testing, tracing and data-sharing

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government will fund provinces' efforts to test people for COVID-19, track the contacts of those who test positive, and help different jurisdictions share data.Trudeau says the measures are essential because COVID-19 remains a serious health threat and the economy can't fully recover until Canadians are confident that the novel coronavirus will be contained anywhere new it breaks out.He says federal contact-tracers are helping public health authorities in Ontario and are ready to make thousands more calls a day when any province asks.He says Ottaw
pakistan-jet-with-98-aboard-crashes-near-karachi-airport
WorldMay 22, 2020

Pakistan jet with 98 aboard crashes near Karachi airport

Pakistan's civil aviation authority says at least two people survived the crash of a Pakistan International Airlines plane in a neighbourhood close to the airport in Karachi.There were 91 passengers and seven crew members aboard the Airbus A-320 flight from Lahore.A recording of the flight's final moments indicates it was trying to land when one of its engines failed.Karachi's mayor says five or six houses were destroyed.The pilot of Pakistani International Airlines Flight 8303 was heard transmitting a mayday to the tower shortly before the crash of the Airbus A320, which was flying from Lahor
vande-bharat-mission-first-air-india-flight-from-vancouver-takes-off-with-200-indians
IndiaMay 22, 2020

Vande Bharat Mission: First Air India flight from Vancouver takes off with 200 Indians

Air India flight took off from Vancouver International Airport on May 20 with over 200 Indians on board.This is the first Vande Bharat Mission repatriation flight from Canada and the first Air India flight to operate from Vancouver."The first Vande Bharat Mission flight from Canada left from Vancouver on May 20, 2020 with 200 passengers on board. Air India-1190 left Vancouver for Delhi and Amritsar with Indian citizens that included elderly, pregnant women, children and students, who were stranded here after travel restrictions were imposed due to COVID-19 outbreak," said Consulate General of
1-182-covid-19-cases-and-121-deaths-reported-in-canada-today
CanadaMay 22, 2020

1,182 COVID-19 cases and 121 deaths reported in Canada today

There are 81,324 confirmed and presumptive cases in Canada. Quebec: 45,495 confirmed (including 3,800 deaths, 13,327 resolved) Ontario: 24,187 confirmed (including 1,993 deaths, 18,509 resolved) Alberta: 6,768 confirmed (including 132 deaths, 5,710 resolved) British Columbia: 2,479 confirmed (including 152 deaths, 2,020 resolved) Nova Scotia: 1,046 confirmed (including 58 deaths, 959 resolved) Saskatchewan: 622 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 509 resolved) Manitoba: 279 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 265 resolved), 11 presumptive Newfoundland and Labrador: 260 confirmed (including 3 de

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airport-improvements-support-economic-growth
BCJun 25, 2025

Airport improvements support economic growth

Communities that rely upon regional airports, heliports and water aerodromes provincewide will benefit from funding provided through the Province of B.C.’s Air Access Program. “Through the B.C. Air Access Program, we’re supporting upgrades to airports that will improve access for vital communities across our province,” said Mike Farnworth, Minister of Transportation and Transit. “These improvements to our rural and regional airports will help keep British Columbians connected and our economy on the move.” This year, the Province is investing $6.2 million through the BC Air Access P
canada-sees-continued-decline-in-both-us-and-foreign-visitors-statistics-canada
CanadaJun 25, 2025

Canada sees continued decline in both US and foreign visitors: Statistics Canada

Canada is seeing a continued decline in both US and foreign visitors, with the latest report from Statistics Canada showing that in April, travel to Canada by US residents fell 8.9 per cent year-on-year, while travel to Canada by other foreign residents fell 0.6 per cent. This is the third consecutive month that travel to Canada by US residents has declined and the seventh consecutive month that travel by other foreign nationals has declined. According to Statistics Canada, the decline in foreign visitors to Canada was driven by a decline in people coming from Asia, who were down 12.6 per
statement-from-the-mayor-urging-federal-government-to-designate-extortion-gangs-as-terrorist-organizations
CanadaJun 25, 2025

Surrey Mayor urging federal government to designate extortion...

Today, I am joining calls for the federal government to declare the Lawrence Bishnoi gang and any other groups involved in extortion and violence targeting Canadians of South Asian descent as terrorist organizations under Canadian law. Whether these groups operate locally or internationally, this designation is a critical step in equipping law enforcement with the necessary tools to dismantle these dangerous networks and protect our residents and businesses. The violence and intimidation our community faces are unacceptable. We have seen a disturbing rise in extortions, threats of violence, an
28-charges-laid-in-northern-bc-drug-trafficking-investigation
BCJun 25, 2025

28 Charges Laid in Northern BC Drug Trafficking Investigation

Four individuals have been charged following a 14-month drug trafficking and firearms investigation led by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit of British Columbia (CFSEU-BC) in Northern BC. The investigation began in April 2023, targeting a drug trafficking network operating in Prince Rupert. On June 5, 2024, following a 14-month investigation, CFSEU-BC North District, in partnership with the Prince Rupert RCMP and with assistance from the Prince Rupert Coastal Unit, executed five search warrants in Prince Rupert. Investigators seized the following items: • Nine (9) firearms, incl
carney-says-canada-to-spend-5-of-gdp-on-defence-by-2035
CanadaJun 25, 2025

Carney says Canada to spend 5% of GDP on defence by 2035

NATO allies, including Canada, have agreed to increase defense spending to five percent of GDP over the next 10 years. This means that Western countries, including Ottawa, are going to invest heavily in defense by 2035. The new target was approved during a NATO summit in the Netherlands today, a significant policy victory for President Donald Trump. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte opened the meeting by praising Trump for increasing defense spending. The five percent target is divided into two parts, with the first 3.5 percent focusing on core defense needs, including fighter jets and weapo