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pjhp Summer construction in Halton Hills impacting these roads
« le: Novembre 08, 2024, 02:56:48 am »
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 TORONTO 鈥?Confusion over whether an accused Canadian terrorist is dead or not is hampering efforts to resolv stanley mugs e a legal battle over police demand for a journalist   background materials, a request that has alarmed media-rights groups.Federal prosecutors and the RCMP are holding fast to a production order that a Vice Media reporter produce stanley vaso  information related to his interviews with Farah Shirdon, a Calgary man who is charged in absentia with various terrorism-related offences.Vice Media is currently seeking leave to appeal the RCMP   demand to the Supreme Court of Canada, arguing among other things that it infringes on media freedom and could make it harder for journalists to access sources.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Last month, American stanley cup  military officials said Shirdon had been killed in Iraq in 2015, prompting Vice Media   lawyer, Iain MacKinnon, to offer to withdraw the Supreme Court leave request if the RCMP dropped the production demand as moot.However, federal officials noted that the U.S. State Department in April had slapped Shirdon with a terrorist designation, suggesting he was in fact still alive.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 The RCMP have advised the Crown that they are unable to confirm whether or not Mr. Shirdon has been killed, two lawyers with the Public Prosecution Service of Canada said in a letter to MacKinnon obtained by The Canadian Press.  82 Tsth High court will hear Vice Media appeal
 OTTAWA 鈥?Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he realized o stanley cup nly recently that his government would not be able to make good on its long-held promise to lift all drinking-water advisories in First Nations communities by March 2021.In a year-end interview with The Canadian Press, Trudeau said he always knew reaching that goal would be tough but it became clear within the last month or so that advisories would remain in about a dozen communities after the deadline has passed.Trudeau said COVID-19 restrictions have blocked access to certain Indigenous communities. He said until recently, he kept hoping that putting a little more money in or a little more pressure on it would be enough to speed things up.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                     stanley shop                     Those last ones are the last ones for a reason, because they are particularly complex, he said Wednesday. We are not going to slow down until we lift them.Trudeau said creating systems and structures that are supported by the community and sustainable over the long term requires a lot more work than short-term solutions.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 We ;re going to work on this as best as we can, as hard as we can, he said.Indigenous Services Canada said earlier this month that 97 boil-water advisories have been lifted si stanley flask nce 2016, but it expects 22 to remain in place after the March deadline.