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OTTAWA – Former Liberal MP Raj Grewal was charged Friday with fraud and failure to accept as true with more than millions of dollars in loans, the RCMP alleges that he used his political stance to discharge and conceal the ethics commissioner. The constituency’s workplace budget for non-public self-benefit is supported. “Mr. Grewal categorically denies those allegations, as he has done relentlessly since 2018,” said his attorney, Nader Hasan, via email. “He can’t wait to have his day in court and make his name clear. ” The fees cap an investigation that began in 2017, nearly two years after Grewal’s first term as MP. He left the liberal caucus in 2018 for what he said were non-public and fitness reasons. He remained an independent deputy but did not seek reelection last year. At the time, the prime minister’s workplace said Grewal was seeking a remedy for a gambling addiction, and Grewal subsequently posted a video detailing his disorders. attended the Casino du Lac Leamy in Gatineau, Que. , in early 2016, racking up multi-million dollar debt while playing top-stakes blackjack. He began to borrow cash from the circle of family and friends to continue playing. “On average sitting, I spent between 15 and 30 minutes at a table and made a lot of money, which kept me chasing wins, or lost a significant amount, which plunged me into absolute despair,” he said. “I need to make it clear that each and every non-public loan that was made to me was by check. All have been repaid, and each and every loan and repayment is transparent and traceable. The RCMP said its investigation was entered. based on data provided in 2017 through the firm that tracks suspicious currency transactions in Canada. At the time of his resignation from the liberal caucus, Grewal was also involved in an ethics inquiry into whether he was in all likelihood in a shock. of interest when he invited an executive from the structure, who was paying Grewal for legal services. At the time, on official occasions during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s vacation to India that year. he helps on Friday that he believed the disorders of Grewal started there and just got worse. They are consistent with a trend in liberal government, Angus argued, where MPs pi They teach that the law does not apply to them. “Today’s accusations deserve to remind Trudeau that while he doesn’t like those rules, they don’t put him above him or other liberals. the Law. “Grewal faces 4 counts of failure to accept as true and one of fraud. He is scheduled to appear in court on October 6. This report by The Canadian Press was first published on September 11, 2020.
On Friday, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte called for a non-violent solution to conflicts with China over the South China Sea and said foreign law will have to be respectable amid increased regional friction over army activities in Beijing and Washington. visiting Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe, whose tour of 4 Southeast Asian countries coincides with a rhetorical war between the United States and China over the disputed waterway.
As Quebec Major Junior Hockey League players dress for a season they hope will change their lives, a 17-year-old New Brunswicker pass scorer made the decision not to wait for the puck to drop before repositioning his Yanic Duplessis. an elite points player. who was selected through the QMJHL’s Drummondville Voltigeurs in 2019 revealed he was gay this week, which is vital news in world hockey. One of the reasons the local Saint-Antoine, NB made the decision to step up is to help make those mundane announcements. “It was a struggle for me, and it doesn’t deserve that it isn’t,” he said in an interview with CBC’s AM Quebec channel. Array later added “they don’t deserve to be a big deal. ” And for Duplessis, it was. He counts anxiety attacks at school and called his mom to pick him up; speaks of his concern to be discovered in what remains, in his own words, “a very macho and manly game. ” After revealing the fact to his parents last year, Duplessis made the decision to go public during an interview with the Atlantic Canadian. FDS Podcast Network on Labor Day. The reaction to your ad suggests that you didn’t have to worry. The wave of public aid has been immediate and considerable. It included social media posts from others in global hockey, such as former Montreal Canadiens player Guillaume Latenget Dressede, and former NHL badass and current Quebec MP, Enrico Ciccone, consistent with perhaps the ultimate touch. : the reaction of your peers and colleagues. And one of them in composite. “He came home and started crying because he said, ‘I didn’t know you were going through this alone, and you deserve to have told us,'” he said. It wasn’t that bad, ”but he admitted he heard hurtful words and infrequently hate speech. But he thinks that they commonly came here from a position of ignorance. “The things that have been said,” he said, stopping. “If they knew I was gay, I’m sure they wouldn’t have said what they said. ” However, the fact that he must have heard homophobic language in a game that has taken such things more seriously for more than half a decade proves hockey. the enlightenment related to sexual orientation (and many other things) is not over yet. Former pro Brock McGillis knows it all. He came out here in 2016 and was the first blatantly gay professional gamer. He has been in contact with Duplessis and his circle of relatives for some time, and presented all the recommendations and help he could throughout the process. “I’m a bit hesitant when someone chooses to be a component of men’s hockey culture and game culture in general, especially at a young age. Array . . . because I’m concerned about how they’re doing. Being treated in the game. ” , said. McGillis suffered for the first time from constant homophobia in the locker room. -hand, and half joking “especially since I became a defender. ” But he did. He also says that every time an LGBTQ gamer gets ahead (at least five according to the count), the help he gets gets bigger and bigger. first impression when they saw the help given to Duplessis? “I was so happy,” he says. “The biggest advantage is that when we humanize other people’s problems, they will come up more often. As we humanize, we can teach and have an impact. ” McGillis said that many gay hockey players are rarely reluctant to touch him directly. “I have children all over North America, some go through their fake secret Instagram accounts,” he said. masses of children who suffer from it. And that only makes sense. “But the more role models, the more people the more will accomplish. Duplessis said he hopes to make things a little less difficult for others in his position. This is already happening, he says he has earned messages from various other people in global hockey saying, in fact, “Yes, me too. ” What I didn’t expect was so much public and media attention, “but I’m glad,” he said.
CALGARY – The Alberta government plans to expand the use of personal ambulatory surgery clinics as a component of a plan to develop procedures by up to 150%. contract with Alberta Health Services. The call is also open for new proposals, to ensure that surgeries are performed within a “clinically appropriate time frame” until 2023. “This is what the formula is intended to do, however, it has never been performed in Alberta or anywhere else. ” another province, “Shandro said at a press conference on Friday. ” Beginning in the new year, publicly funded hospitals and licensed surgical services will continue to increase costs. Volumes in the province at more than one hundred percent of pre-COVID titles will continue to reduce wait times. here in Alberta. “The formula will increase at least 125% of the pre-pandemic volumes in the first quarter of 2021. We will be in a position to increase the volumes to 150% if necessary,” Shandro stated that the surgeries were stopped. In mid-March, COVID-19 resulted in a backlog of 25,000 cases. So far, 88% of that backlog has been eliminated, he said, in part thanks to the expansion of night and weekend surgical hours. Acting services now account for approximately 15% of the 285,000 surgeries that are performed annually in the province. The clinics are contracted to provide dermatological and ophthalmic surgeries, ear, nose and throat surgeries, oral and maxillofacial surgeries, some gynecological surgeries and plastic reconstructive surgeries. He said there will likely be six programs for a new First Nations communities Aboriginal grant program, which are eligible for $ 50,000 to help expand the proposals. But he said it was hard to say how much interest there will be when the call for submissions comes out this fall. “We don’t know. Frankly, that’s why we’re asking for proposals, because we’re going to see who the promoters are who are going to make those decisions. ” Shandro joined the announcement through Chief Roy Whitney of Tsuut Nation ‘in an area near Calgary and Chief Ouray Crowfoot of Siksika Nation east of the city. “We live in a province where fitness equity is a priority. However, in the case of other Aboriginal people here on the AlbertaArray, there are a lot of paintings to be done to improve fitness outcomes, “said Crowfoot. Whitney said there was interest in her community, especially in light. ” We had several stakeholders. Seeking to negotiate and expand an authorized status quo, a health care status quo on our reservation. ”The province committed $ 100 million in March to renovate, equip and open new operating rooms in public IC in Alberta so that they can supply more surgeries for Albertans. This report by The Canadian Press was first published on September 11, 2020 Bill Graveland, The Canadian Press
Albertans will soon be able to see how much their doctor charges the provincial government, yet some doctors argue that billing monkeys might not provide enough context. The province will provide physicians with their gross fee-for-service bills in the next 60 days. Data for the province’s last 3 fiscal years, dating back to 2017-18, will be released, according to Steve Buick, press secretary to the Minister of Health. The measure would create a cheerful list, with doctors’ calls and their reimbursement to be posted online for the public to see, similar to the lists already published for well-paid public service employees. However, Alberta’s online medical payments page, which is already in progress, will feature “the maximum full disclosure of medical bills in Canada,” Buick said in an email to CBC News on Thursday. Alberta’s cheerful list will come with gross bills for doctors, but also “things like the number of patients seen,” Buick wrote. The province may also disclose the location where physicians performed medical facilities and the total number of days in the fiscal year that the physician provided insured medical facilities, according to an executive order issued Thursday. Some doctors have expressed considerations about public disclosure of your expenses because they say the figures do not constitute your take-home pay. Officials at the Alberta Medical Association (AMA) need the province to list general prices for the sun. Physicians pay for staff, clinics, liability insurance, and devices in their fee-for-service billing, prices that are not included in their billing. “It is very important that other people perceive what those numbers mean,” said Dr. Christine Molnar, President of WADA. “I think [the doctors] agree with that as long as Albertans generally perceive that it is not what [the doctors] get [their] pocketbook. Those dollars are a source of income for the business, not what [they] bring home. It is vital. Buick said the province will not disclose medical overhead on the provincial online page. He said the province recognizes that doctors’ bills are not the same as the net source of income and that the online page will explain that the figures are gross bills. The remuneration of doctors has been the subject of discussion for several months in the province. Health Minister Tyler Shandro first threatened to make payroll disclosure mandatory in July after the release of an AMA survey that suggested 42% of Alberta doctors expected to leave the province due to adjustments. in its approach to compensation. the exodus of all doctors was imminent and he told the AMA to “stop playing games. ” He said Albertans deserve to “know the facts” about how Albertans are compensated compared to their Canadian counterparts. Some doctors may request an exemption from the sun list, which may prevent your call from being disclosed for security reasons. “It’s one thing if you’re one in a thousand doctors in a giant urban center and you are identified,” Molnar said. “It is a totally different thing if you are a rural or remote doctor and all of a sudden you are now very visual and not anonymous and you can become the target of unnecessary care. “
Photographs from local television showed very tight crowds, with many other people without masks, with attendance estimates going from a thousand to a few thousand more people. “We’re all here today because we have to protect our rights,” Jami said. -Lee Ross, leader of the Advance New Zealand party, one of the organizers of the event. New Zealand, a country of five million more people, gave the impression that it had managed to prevent the transmission of COVID-19 on the net, but a new outbreak in Auckland in August led the government to block the city.
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This week there was an encouraging sign of a critically endangered Canadian fish on the brink of extinction in the wild. Six adult Atlantic whitefish were observed in a remote lake in Nova Scotia for the first time in six years. “There are probably less than a few hundred Americans in the wild, so it’s rare to see them and finding one is significant,” says federal fisheries scientist Jeremy Broome. A former father of salmon, the remaining population of Atlantic whitefish is found in just 3 open-air lakes in Bridgewater. Held over two nights in the largest of the lakes, Minamkeak, through members of Coastal Action, an environmental organization that is part of a federal recovery. At the assignment, the electrofishing team to eliminate invasive predatory species – largemouth bass and chain pike – that threaten device A in the water emits an electric current that stuns passing fish and 3 white fish were stunned and collected inadvertently. the site ended. It is infrequently difficult to identify the fish. ns before dipping them out of the water, but once they were captured, they were known without delay, ”says Assignment Coordinator Shawn Feener. The fish were temporarily released after we decided they were unharmed, says Broome. We hadn’t planned to see those fish, so it was a fluke, ”he says. In addition to the whitefish that were accidentally knocked out, the team saw 3 other adults swimming behind the boat at the edge of the electric field. Minamkeak is part of the Petite Rivière Three Lakes basin, which brings drinking water to Bridgewater, the ladies and other structures between the lakes have alienated them a bit from others An adult was caught in a floating trap in 2018 in the neighboring Milipsigate lake, where the juveniles were captured and taken to an ongoing captive breeding program at Dalhousie University. Although no adults have been detected in Minamkeak since 2014, several juvenile whitefish have been caught downstream. Observation of the adults showed that spawning occurs there. We have this other type of remote population that we have shown. There is a possibility of genetic variability that we don’t see represented in the Milipsigate population, “says Broome. So far, evidence from thirteen mums As of 2018, all juveniles caught at various outlets in the lake formula have been brought to the Aquatron Laboratory, a premier aquatic research facility in Dalhousie and now a Noah’s Ark for whitefish. Meanwhile, the Fisheries and Oceans Decomponent continues to search for a suitable location in Nova Scotia to identify a new population. Look for a basin free of invasive species with a Habitat that will allow them to warm temperatures and decrease oxygen degrees in summer and provide a position to spawn. ”We will collect clinical data based on those formulas and, together, these data will return to a organization of others who will be interested in making the resolution on the most productive position to continue “, dec e Broome. Coastal Action’s Shawn Feener was enthusiastic about this rare encounter: “Very happy, they were healthy adults and they were released unharmed. It gives me long-term hope that I noticed healthy adults. ” MORE STORIES
A contractor in Stewiacke, Nova Scotia, hopes a new dock in Hubbards will motivate Nova Scotians to use recycled plastic lumber in marine applications. “Being able to walk on it, you know, touch it and get a smart concept of the benefits that we can get from recycled material,” said Dan Chassie, president of Goodwooden Plastic Products. Goodwooden Plastic Products grinds recycled plastic at its Stewiacke factory and extrudes plastic lumber in sizes ranging from two to four beams to two to eight feet and eight feet. Chassie says her plastic boards will last several times longer than marine ones. “Instead of” having something that will last possibly 10 years, it will last a few lives, “Chassie said. Greg Veinot’s dock planks at Hubbards Cove cost him about $ 6,500. That’s a million recycled plastic bags and 64 Miles of half-inch recycled nylon fishing line. “I feel smart about that arrangement . . . keep all that stuff out of the landfill and start over,” Veinot said. “And this time [he] won’t go back to the landfill, will be here for a few more years. “Veinot rebuilt his dock himself, using galvanized metal beams on most of the original metal piles. He says running with plastic lumber was less difficult than lumber, as you can also drive screws near the ends of the boards without problems”. drilling wood, screwing wood, it cracks and cracks a lot. This material does not do that, “Veinot said. Chassie said its recycled plastic lumber charged more than treated lumber before the pandemic, but market position adjustments since then have made its product cheaper. ” Before COVID, we were trading around 20%. more than treated wood with certainty. But now the wood treated with a certain amount has increased so much that, in some cases, consumers tell us that we are cheaper, ”said Chassie. His company also turned old plastics into a component of a parking lot paving project. Induscheck Interest Ed Chisholm, the Port of Digthrough Harbor Manager, said he had heard of plastic lumber and was intrigued by the potential environmental and monetary benefits. “I believe that sustainability will be there and it will remain in the marine environment,” he said. “Recycling and disposing of this rope is a great advantage for us. ” Chisholm said his port would possibly build more floating docks in the long term and he would like to review the product. You need to make sure the plastic forums give the staff enough grip in rainy or icy weather. “If we continue, I’ll definitely look to get it in position and check for certain,” he said. MORE TOP STORIES
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Members of the Chinese network on the south coast of Montreal are shaken by Monday’s pair of crashes and runs in Brossard that killed a pedestrian and left a cyclist in combat for his life. Longueuil police claimed that the driving force was in a state of intellectual crisis and was intentionally attacked. those who suffered with their Mazda 6 – one on Niagara Avenue and the other on Pelletier Boulevard a few minutes from Los Angeles The two affected were of Asian origin, and as tensions increased during the pandemic, acts of aggression towards certain teams Minorities also rose, said Xixi Li of the Center Sino-Québec De La Rive-Sud in Brossard. “Personally, I have gained emails attacking us, so it is simple to make that connection with what happened with the recent movements against the Chinese network,” Li said. From other people online to assaults, other people in East Asia have been victimized around the world – blos angelesmed by the coronavirus because it originated in China, Li said. It makes local Chinese citizens nervous, and they need to know if they are affected. But a police investigation concluded that race was not a factor. “We were informed that there were rumors that the two affected had been attacked,” said Longueuil police spokesman Const. Jean-Pierre Voutsinos. “It was vital for us to succeed and deny this rumor. ” The investigation revealed that the suspect, Radoslos angelesv Guentchev, 30, had selected his suspected patients at random. However, he declined to explain why investigators think it was random, saying he cannot make those main points while the case is in court. Nearly 12,000 citizens of Brossard known as Chinese during the 2016 census, out of an angelestion population of another 85,721 people. Xin Huang, of the Alliance of Chinese Associations of Quebec, says he is not reassured by the conclusion of the investigation. Huang says he has won many calls since the story began to circulate in the media, and most Chinese believe that the attack was not random at all. Surprised to be informed that a new immigrant, a woman who was building a hairdressing business in Brossard, died while walking, Huang said. “The whole Chinese network is concerned about this and we are very involved with the fu. ” Most Chinese do not think it is by chance. But the fact that Guentchev was temporarily arrested is comforting, Huang said. Guentchev is expected to return to court next month. His fees come with momentary grade manslaughter, nuisance assault, hit and run causing death, hit and run causing physical injury, injurious handling causing physical injury, and injurious handling causing death. Meanwhile, the network mourns the loss of Huiping Ding. , Li said. The Center Sino-Québec de los Angeles Rive-Sud promotes the well-being of Asian communities in Quebec and is helping newcomers. immigrants to settle in the area. Li says that Ding, who immigrated to Canada two years ago, had temporarily become a well-known hairdresser in Brossard. She left her husband and son behind. s 26 years old. “We feel very sad,” Li said. “We are very sorry for the loss of the family. “
When the citizens of Truro, Nova Scotia vote next month, they will go on to vote by a four-legged factor along possibly or council. The city has been looking to deal with a deer challenge for the past several years, Mayor Bill Mills says the deer population is exploding, ”Mills said. “People don’t plant flowers like they used to. The bushes are damaged, all kinds of things. “After 3 years of executing a plan with the provincial Natural Resource Decomposer, Mills said the last step was to ask the public if they help residents will they be asked a yes or no question: do they help a bow-controlled hunt? / crossbow? to “control and reduce” the urban deer population? The most recent reform has raised fears about the situation. He said they also learned from their mistakes. There was a controlled hunt in the upper component of Victoria Park two years later, where volunteers can also just fill out an application and then go deer hunting with a crossbow. City staff saw a couple of hunters who had left the hunting domain and seeing other people walking in the park with crossbows made other people felt “very uncomfortable” and some were afraid to enter the domain. green space, Mills said. Mills said this search will be another and that they are working on the points. major coughs than it might seem now. He said they had also won donations of equipment that they can also come and do a controlled search of the city. The city’s deer have higher numbers, Mills said. His stool count for 2020 is 79% higher than last year. Another main fear is that deer also bring ticks to Truro, Mills said. A resident showed him a photo of a deer with 10-15 ticks on its back. Mills said he knew how much higher the challenge for ticks and Lyme disease was in the South Shore and that he didn’t need that to happen in his domain. Feeding continues despite warnings Some citizens continue to leave food for deer despite repeated warnings. Seeing other people open the window of their moment ground a component and threw carrots and stuff, and that’s absolutely unacceptable, ”he said. In 2015, a Truro woman was fined $ 233. 95 for violating an ordinance approving the feeding of birds and wildlife, and Mills said she was contemplating a higher fine if things didn’t change. no. President Karen Brodeur said she had mixed emotions about the situation. Sometimes he is not in favor of hunting, but agrees that the city is “a bit in trouble” with deer bringing danger within city limits. Other Truro citizens have told the CBC that a hunt would possibly be the only option as the deer still roam. on the roads and leaving huge amounts of excrement in the yards. Leslie Learning said that her circle of relatives is no longer laying grass because deer destroy everything, and while deer are cute, she said she would help in a sacrifice. “It’s a mess and there is too much,” Learning said. Truro residents vote Oct. 17 and Mills predicts the deer resolution will be “very close. “
Walt Disney Co. ‘s epic live war, “Mulan,” opened Friday with a lukewarm reception in China, as it fought mixed criticism, COVID-19 restrictions on cinemas, and a government ban on primary media policy amid foreign calls for a boycott. in a Chinese popular story, it had raised 46 million yuan ($6. 73 million) at the box’s workplace at 8pm local time (12:00 GMT), according to the Maoyan online ticketing platform, a slow start compared to other box office hits. “provoked a backlash on social media abroad by its star for Hong Kong police and for being filmed in part in the Xinjiang region, where China’s crackdown on Uighur ethnicity and other Muslims has been criticized by some governments and rights groups.
Questionable time zones and web connections make school categories even more complicated this year for foreign scholars who have chosen not to return to Canada as the fall semester begins. at a conference, it is already 11:30 am later in Lucknow, India. Jet lag means you study at night, sleep during the day, and then wake up to begin with. “It’s been 4 months, I’m going to have to paint like this, stay up all night,” Seth told Edmonton AM on CBC Radio. “My social life is stagnant. Being foreign academics, we meet fewer people. at school. In fact, it is difficult for me to network with new people, virtually. It has been quite a challenge. “Almost every category in the U of A transferred online this fall, which means that more than 9,000 foreign scholars had to make the difficult resolution of returning to the main house for the fall semester or taking an expensive trip. AND charged in Canada during a pandemic, “he told Edmonton. AM that she is listening to academics from around the world who have re-entered their home countries and are struggling. One of the main court cases Baweja receives is that the generationArray internet connection and speed are not similar compared to Canada. Baweja said. International scholars who have rejoined their home countries also have to deal with the social isolation that comes from being so far away from their classmates and running incongruous hours. Many have chosen to go back to being old in their home countries to save money, he said. The tuition fees paid through foreign scholars at the University of Alberta are approximately 3 times higher than those for domestic scholars. For a full-time foreign college student, that’s more than $ 12,000 consistent with the semester in tuition alone. The demanding situations of completing courses abroad are so wonderful that some foreign scholars have returned to Edmonton, even if they do not take categories consistent with their children. Computer science sophomore Divij Dhingra returned home to Delhi in March at the start of the pandemic. He had planned to return at the end of the semester anyway, so he figured he would do it before travel was limited. However, taking online categories from Delhi was a huge challenge, he said. He returned to Edmonton this fall and rented space with two other scholars. “India has jet lag and all categories are at night, which was actually difficult for me to handle,” Dhingra said. “And there are bandwidth limitations in Delhi. ” The network was slow or was about to shut down, Dhingra said. In the winter semester, he even missed an exam due to a bad connection. And it was in Delhi, a great city, he said. “It would be very difficult for people in rural areas of India to handle it,” Dhingra said. option for foreign academics, who want to examine to redo their visas. “No foreign student I have ever heard of has dropped out because we are constantly testing according to the admission schedule,” Baweja said. “Regularly 4 years have passed, for every student, so you have to finish on time. ” With files from Ariel Fournier
A truck with Texas license plates was severely vandalized and spray-painted with “Trump” Wednesday night in Victoria. Jonathon Vindalin posted on Twitter that the van, which is owned by his father, also had its windshield smashed and license plates stolen. “[My father] has been here for almost 3 months to make a stop in his circle of relatives and help us,” Vindalin wrote. “My wife and I just had a bath, her first grandson and we just moved. He did his quarantine for two weeks. He is Canadian and cannot even vote or oppose Trump. “Provincial plates have also been vandalized, but nothing too extreme. ” It’s embarrassing that this happened, “said Agent Cam MacIntyre. ” At the beginning of the pandemic we saw victimized vehicles . . . however, this is definitely a step forward. “MacIntyre said there were valid reasons why other people with license plates from outside the province or country were in town. ” We treated them. with a point of understanding and empathy because we don’t know everyone’s story and why they are here, “he said. Vindalin tweeted that his father’s insurance would cover the damages, minus a $ 1,000 deductible.
Much has been replaced since Michelle Jansen tragically lost her son, Brandon, to a fentanyl overdose: government awareness crusades, increased investment for drug centers, and many new overdose prevention sites across the province. It might have given you hope in the past. But with overdose deaths reaching record levels in British Columbia, she fears the crisis is spiraling out of control. “Even though other people are having the conversation, in my opinion, they are not dealing with the overdose crisis with the urgency that is being sought,” Jansen told CBC News outdoors at his Coquitlam home. “We lose five or six more people a day. ” An Insights West vote suggests that the overdose crisis has a greater effect on British Columbia residents than the COVID-19 pandemic when it comes to the fitness they enjoy. Almost a third of those surveyed have friends or family who suffer from addictions or have died of an overdose. Only 10% of voters know someone who has had or died from COVID-19. The researchers behind the survey say they are not looking to downplay the coronavirus pandemic, but show that the opioid crisis deserves to be treated at the same point of emergency as the coronavirus. “The point of the survey is to put things in perspective, that we have two major crises and neither of them,” said Steve Mossop, president of Insights West. Parallel fitness crises BC recorded 911 overdose deaths between January and July 2020. During the same period, another 195 people died from COVID-19, while more British Columbia respondents are involved with COVID-19 than the crisis human. Overdose (91% vs. 81%), the survey found that more people felt the opioid crisis was having an “extremely negative” effect on their community. “[The overdose crisis] is affecting all facets of society. It’s not just Metro Vancouver, it’s across the province, age range, young and old, male and female,” he said. Mossop said. BC has had 3 consecutive months, more than 170 have died of overdoses, and fitness officials reported an increasingly poisonous source of drugs. “Border source chains are closed, drugs are more poisonous throughout the day, infected with benzos,” said Guy Felicella, clinical advisor to the BC Center for Substance Use. Moving On Felicella has been sober for 8 years after suffering a decades-long crusade against drugs on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. As you watch the number of overdoses rise, you find it’s hard not to compare the two fitness emergencies. “The difference between COVID and the overdose crisis is that some lives matter more than others, and if the lives of addicts matter, then we would not be where we are today,” he said. The Insights West ballot suggests that a giant British Columbia primary is helping more awareness crusades, more rehab and remediation centers, and more investment for addiction counselors and humanitarian workers. Being proactive should also be encouraged, like what has been done around the pandemic. “There are probably a series of daily steps that we can all take,” he said. “Reaching out to a friend who is in need or in distress, donating money, providing support to politicians: there are many tactics to bring this to the fore, the same way we’ve gotten closer to COVID. ” In a statement, the British Columbia Department of Mental Health and Addictions said it was determined to address the crisis with the same urgency that the province has put on the pandemic. “Our ministry is doing the same for the overdose emergency and we want everyone in British Columbia to sign up,” a spokesperson said. Those who have lost, like Jansen, say the recent surge in deaths deserves to be a call to action to lower stigma and flatten some other curve. “COVID is a very genuine pandemic that takes lives, just like the opioid crisis,” he said.
Have you ever wondered why the little children so young in old portraits bear such a striking resemblance to Winston Churchill? The National Gallery of Canada explores why young children of the Renaissance were depicted to look like little old men than the ideal cute Gerber. commissioned through the church occasionally featured the Infant Jesus or other holy figures in his infancy. According to art historians, painters were reluctant to assign these respected subjects as vulnerable or weak. Instead, they tried to paint young children to make them appear sensitive and powerful. As the Renaissance progressed into the 1400s and 1500s, artists began to constitute the Huguy anatomy with greater precision. Gallery artist Laurence Vézina Laprise has studied this phenomenon and will take visitors on a “soft” virtual tour of the museum’s curious Renaissance children on Saturday in September. On September 12 at 11:00 am ET, Laprise spoke for the first time with CBC’s Ottawa Morning. How would you describe the appearance of the young children of the Renaissance? He goes from being an old man to a literally muscular bavia. Sometimes they are uglier than fair. Occasionally they have large heads. Can you help us see what the artists’ intentions were? The portraits of the time were basically commissioned through churches. So when they painted a bavia, they painted Jesus. Therefore, they did not necessarily have to paint a bavia “bavia”. They wanted to paint a Bavia Jesus. Was it different in the way they painted Bavia boys from Bavia girls? That is a smart query and the answer is no. We are talking about the Infanta Virgin Mary in one of our portraits and we are also talking about Jesus as bavia. And they look like little adults. When did toddlers start to look like more toddlers? In the early Renaissance there was still a certain medieval influence. So a little bit later in the Renaissance when they used more live models they started to change. They are asked to see the frame in another way. They were allowed to paint anything other than the Jesus of Bavia. So we watch little kids get a little chubby and a little cuter, Laurence, could you share with us one of your favorite representations of a bavia? It’s a portrait of Vincenzo Catena, and it’s called The Rest on the Fgentle Over Egypt (c. 1525), and this bavia is just beautiful. It has a very large head and a very small face. I make a lot of jokes about this bavia. The funny thing is that this bavia is really more of a bavia. So, at first glance, it has a rather strange look, but if you look closely, you can see that it is really very close to what a bavia might look like unless the head is too big. The virtual tour, Babies in Renaissance Art with National Gallery artist Laurence Vézina Laprise, begins online today at 11 a. m. You can access it through the gallery’s Instagram account.
NEW DELHI – The foreign ministers of India and China agreed that their troops deserve to emerge from a tense border standoff, maintain an adequate distance and ease tensions in the Ladakh region, where the two countries met in June, the deadliest. in decades. India S. Jaishankar and China Wang Yi met Thursday night in the Russian capital and declared that “the existing scenario in the border spaces does not benefit either side,” according to a joint statement released on Friday. Since last week, the Asian giants have blamed each other. send infantrymen into rival territory and place precautionary shots for the first time in forty-five years, threatening a primary military conflict. Since May, however, they agreed that “the two sides will abide by all existing agreements and protocols on border issues between China and India, maintain peace and tranquility on the border and avoid any movement that could worsen the issues. ” The disputed 3,500-kilometer (2,175-mile) border separates the Chinese and Indian territories of Ladakh in western India from the eastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which China claims in its entirety. The current stagnation centers on the amounts of a pristine landscape that has the highest airstrip in the world and a glacier that feeds one of the largest irrigation systems in the world. Both parties accuse the other of a provocative habit. Array added that they cross each other’s territory, and the two swore to each other Earlier this week, Jaishankar described the scenario along their shared border, known as the Line of Effective Control, calling it “very serious” and asserting that the state of the border cannot be separated from the state of bilateral relations. On Thursday, the two countries agreed that, as the scenario improves, they deserve to accelerate the tables to conclude “new confidence-building measures to sustain and strengthen the p” Peace and tranquility in border areas. In a separate statement, Wang said: “Sino-Indian relations are back at a crossroads. It is imperative to promptly carry out the most sensitive provocations such as shooting sites and other damaging movements that violate commitments made by either side. Array “” It is also vital to roll back the entire body of painters and devices that have transgressed. The border troops will have to temporarily withdraw so that the stage can be deactivated, “he said, quoting Wang. India has not released its own statement, but a Foreign Ministry official said Jaishankar told Wang that India expects full adherence. to all border domain control agreements and would not aid any attempt to unilaterally replace the prestige quo. The official said the immediate task was to do some complete disconnection of troops at all flash points to avoid incidents, with the main points how this should be painted through army commanders. The official was not allowed to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity. The two ministers met in Moscow on the sidelines of an assembly of foreign ministers of the Organization of Shanghai Cooperation. The organization includes China, India, Pakistan, Russia, Kazakhstan, Krgyzstan, Tay ikistan and Uzbekistan. On Friday, Wang met with the Russian Foreign Minister in Moscow, a Mr. Wang later told a representative speakers that India had expressed its preference for easing tensions through diplomatic and political channels. Wang said the top sensible priority now was not to go beyond the agreements, adding that of not opening chimney sites at the border. and equip the entire front line. In this way, we can enforce the consensus and repair peace and stability on the border, ”he said. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he was very satisfied that the Moscow assembly allowed the Chinese and Indian Foreign Ministers to hold a substantive assembly on In India, Vinod Bhatia, a retired Indian Army general He said resolving the ongoing standoff would be a lengthy process. “The disconnection is the first and maximum vital step that will advise the de-escalation process. The two armies will expand a mutually compatible method of de-escalation, ”said Bhatia. He said: “Now there is political will and leadership for the crisis. ” ended in a complicated truce. Since then, the troops have maintained indefinite border dominance, sometimes with fights. They agreed not to attack each other with firearms. Rival infantrymen fought in May and June with clubs, stones and fists. A clash on an elevated ridge on June 15 left 20 Indian infantrymen dead. China has reported no casualties. After this clash, both parties withdrew from the Galwan Valley site and at least two other locations, but the crisis continued.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the European Union on Saturday that he does not threaten the UK, and said an invoice that would violate a divorce treaty with the bloc was necessary to protect the integrity of the country. As the EU makes plans to end industry talks without an agreement, Johnson has accused his negotiators of threatening to impose a food blockade between Britain and Northern Ireland. “Let’s get the EU to remove its threats from the table,” Johnson said on Twitter.
Toronto will open a center for others with COVID-19 who can’t isolate themselves at home. In statements to reporters Friday, Canada’s Minister of Health Patty Hajdu said the federal government is in a position to help other cities liberate similar sites if necessary.