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Pakistani villagers chase relief supplies dropped from a Pakistani navy helicopter at a flooded area of Ghaus Pur near Sukkur, in Pakistan's Sindh province, on Wednesday. (Shakil Adil/Associated Press)

Last Updated: Thursday, August 12, 2010 | 5:06 AM : Millions of Pakistani flood survivors already short on food and water began the fasting month of Ramadan on Thursday, a normally festive, social time marked this year by misery and fears of an uncertain future.

Food prices have tripled in some parts of the country because of damage to crops, roads and bridges, adding to the pain of the 14 million people affected by one of the worst natural disasters to hit the already poor nation.

"Ramadan or no Ramadan, we are already dying of hunger," said Mai Hakeema, 50, as she sat by her ailing husband in a tent outside the northern city of Sukkur. "We are fasting forcibly, and mourning our losses."

During Ramadan, observant Muslims fast daily from dawn to dusk to control their desires and show empathy for the poor. The month is marked by increased attendance at mosques, a rise in charitable giving and family gatherings.

'I cannot disobey God, so I am fasting ... no matter what the conditions are.' —Fazal Rabi, villager

One of the country's top religious scholars, Mufti Muneebur Rehman, said victims living in difficult conditions dependent on charity could skip the fast for now.

Ghullam Fareed, a villager in easter Punjab province, said he would be "sad to miss the first day of fasting."

"Later, when we reach home, we will do compensatory fasting," he said of his family.

In the northwest, where residents tend to follow a stricter form of Islam, many refugees insisted on fasting.

"I cannot disobey God, so I am fasting as it is part of my faith no matter what the conditions are," said Fazal Rabi, 47, from a tent village in Akbarpura.

International aid

People carry relief supplies and wade through floodwater in Charsadda, in Pakistan's northwest, on Wednesday. (Mohammad Sajjad/Associated Press)

The floods hit the country more than two weeks ago, beginning in the northwest before spreading down the country and inundating thousands of villages. At least 1,500 people have been killed, and the UN estimates up to 7 million people need emergency assistance.

On Wednesday, the UN appealed for $460 million to provide immediate help, including shelter, food, clean water, sanitation and medical care.

"Make no mistake, this is a major catastrophe," UN humanitarian chief John Holmes told diplomats from several dozen countries in launching the appeal in New York. "We have a huge task in front of us. The death toll has so far been relatively low compared to other major natural disasters, but the numbers affected are extraordinarily high."

The Canadian government pledged $2 million in aid to Pakistan on Aug. 3, including $1.25 million to help the World Food Programme deliver food to affected areas, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade. The remainder, $750,000, went to the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies for non-food and emergency shelter essentials.

The Pakistani government's own response to the crisis has been criticized by many as too slow and patchy, and the civilian leaders have struggled to rally public opinion in their favour.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani flew to southwestern Baluchistan province Thursday to see flood-hit areas, and said Pakistan still needs more helicopters to assist in the relief work.

"We will try our best to reach millions of people to ensure that they get food and other basic items during and after the month of Ramadan," he said while aboard a military plane.





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Tim Clark won the Players Championship earlier in the season and didn't make a bogey over his first 36 holes at the Canadian Open.

Tim Clark won the Players Championship earlier in the season and didn't make a bogey over his first 36 holes at the Canadian Open. (Frank Gunn/Canadian Press)

The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task, and The diplomatic lines of Republics and Kingdoms of Yemen, Syria , Lebanon , Israel ,Egypt and Poland are , non –grata due to their dishonest works in national and international area.

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Last Updated: Saturday, July 24, 2010 | 11:19 AM ET : The Canadian Press: Tim Clark and Dean Wilson were atop a packed leaderboard as the third round of the Canadian Open got underway.

Clark and Wilson were one shot ahead of Brent Delahoussaye and Steve Wheatcroft heading into Saturday's round at St. George's Golf and Country Club in Toronto.

Thirty players were within five shots of the lead after Friday's round.

Adam Hadwin is the low Canadian in his first ever PGA Tour event.

The 22-year-old from Abbotsford, B.C., was four shots back of the leaders after shooting a second-round 66.

Calgary's Stephen Ames and Jon Mills of Oshawa, Ont., also made the cut.

Clark won the Players Championship earlier in the season and didn't make a bogey over his first 36 holes at the Canadian Open. Wilson was the college roommate of Canada's Mike Weir at Brigham Young University and won his lone PGA Tour event in 2006.

Espionage in Canada and Western Countries: Part One to Five

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Shahram Amiri holds his son Amir Hossein as he arrives at the Imam Khomeini airport just outside Tehran on July 10. (Vahid Salemi/Associated Press)

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Last Updated: Wednesday, July 21, 2010 | 10:16 AM ET /The Associated Press: An Iranian nuclear scientist spy who returned home last week from the United States provided valuable information about the CIA, a semi-official news agency reported Wednesday.


The Canadian Press

Shahram Amiri's tale will be made into a TV movie, the agency reported.

American authorities have claimed Amiri willingly defected to the U.S. but changed his mind and decided to return home without the $5 million US he had been paid for what a U.S. official described as "significant" information about his country's disputed nuclear program.

The Fars news agency quoted an unidentified source as saying that Iran's intelligence agents were in touch with Amiri while he was in the U.S. and that they won an intelligence battle against the CIA.

Iran has portrayed the return of Amiri as a blow to American intelligence services that it says were desperate for inside information about Iran's nuclear program.

Iran has sought to make maximum propaganda gains from the affair, allowing journalists to cover Amiri's return, sending a senior Foreign Ministry official to greet him and preparing to make a movie about his story.

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CSIS evidence excluded over torture concerns

Canada's national security agency does not have an "effective mechanism" for ensuring it does not rely on evidence obtained by torture, the Federal Court has found

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A top UN expert pressed corrections officials worldwide to offer needle and syringe programs to reduce the spread of HIV among inmates.

A top UN expert pressed corrections officials worldwide to offer needle and syringe programs to reduce the spread of HIV among inmates. (CBC)

Last Updated: Friday, July 23, 2010 | 11:43 AM ET The Associated Press : The U.N.'s top investigator on torture and punishment warned Friday that overcrowded prisons are breeding grounds for AIDS.

Often, inmates are held in inhumane conditions in which the HIV virus is spread through the use of non-sterile drug injection equipment, sexual contacts, tattooing and sharing of razors, Manfred Nowak said.

"There is a global prison crisis," he told an international AIDS conference in Vienna.

Nowak, who has visited detention facilities around the world, urged authorities to inform prisoners of the risk of HIV transmission and to offer them free condoms, HIV testing and counselling.

He also pressed prisons to offer needle and syringe programs, opiate substitution therapies and methadone treatments.

"Science tells us exactly what we have to do, it's just a question of political will to implement it," Nowak said.

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'Prison health is public health'

In addition, prison guards should live up to their obligation to prevent rape and other forms of coercion that thrive in packed environments.

"One of the most important measures to prevent HIV transmission would be the reduction of overcrowding," since it leads to violence and conditions that are conducive to the spread of the virus, he added.

Nowak, who is the UN's special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, said although reliable figures are hard to come by, the prevalence of HIV in prisons is generally much higher than in a country's wider population.

In Ukraine, for example, the prevalence of HIV in prison is at least 10 times that of the overall population, he said.

Dmytro Shermebey, of the All-Ukrainian Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS — who was diagnosed with HIV, tuberculosis and hepatitis after spending nine years in a Ukrainian jail — stressed that inmates have a right to both treatment and protection from the disease.

"They have the right because they are human," Shermebey said.

While about 10 million people are incarcerated every year, some 30 million enter and leave prisons annually — making it a public health problem for society as a whole, according to Nowak.

"Prison health is public health," he said.


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Last Updated: Saturday, July 31, 2010 | 5:59 PM ET : CBC NEWS: Ontario’s new zero blood-alcohol level policy for young drivers takes effect at midnight Saturday.

Starting Aug. 1, novice drivers aged 21 and under will be subject to strict penalties if found with any alcohol in their systems, including an immediate 24-hour suspension of their licence, an extended 30-day suspension and up to $500 in fines.

The province announced the change this month in a bid to curb alcohol-related incidents.

"Young drivers between the ages of 19 and 21 are most at risk," Transportation Minister Kathleen Wynne said in a statement. "We are doing what we can to keep them safe."

'There’s been too much bloodshed, too many injuries, too much death.'—Sgt. Tim Burrows, Toronto police

Drivers holding G1 and G2 permits in the graduated licensing system are already subject to a zero-alcohol restriction, but the introduction of a new class of novice driver is a change.

Police are advising young drivers to plan ahead if they plan to go out this long weekend.

"If they leave home tonight to go to a bar, they're perfectly legal," Sgt. Tim Burrows of Toronto police told CBC News. "But if they drink while they're at that bar, and at 12:01 [a.m.] they have any alcohol in their system, they'll be breaking the law."

The Ontario Ministry of Transportation says drivers between 19 and 21 are nearly 1½ times more likely to be involved in fatal drinking-and-driving accidents as any other age group. In the last decade, 235 drivers under 21 have been killed in alcohol-related collisions in the province.

"There’s been too much bloodshed, too many injuries, too much death," Burrows said. "Any amount of alcohol is too much when you’re driving a car."




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Canada'S News

Semrau acquitted of murder
B.C. common-law couples to get marriage rights
Alberta man unarmed when shot by RCMP
N.B. city reverses Anglo Society flag decision
Emergency tundra landing ends well
CBCnews

Semrau acquitted of murder

Capt. Robert Semrau has been found guilty by a military panel of disgraceful conduct but not guilty of second-degree murder in the death of a wounded Afghan insurgent.
Canadian Forces Capt. Robert Semrau was accused of killing a severely wounded insurgent during an encounter in Afghanistan's Helmand province in October 2008.
Canadian Forces Capt. Robert Semrau was accused of killing a severely wounded insurgent during an encounter in Afghanistan's Helmand province in October 2008. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

CBC NEWS: July 19, 2010: Capt. Robert Semrau has been found guilty by a military panel of disgraceful conduct but not guilty of second-degree murder in the death of a wounded Afghan insurgent.

The disgraceful conduct charge carries a penalty of up to five years in prison. Semrau has not yet been sentenced.

The four-member panel in Gatineau, Que., handed down the decision Monday. It came after three days of deliberations in the court martial of the Canadian Forces captain charged in a battlefield death in Afghanistan.

Semrau, 36, was accused of firing two rounds from his rifle into a dying Taliban fighter in Helmand province of Afghanistan in October 2008.

A question from the jury about evidence kept lawyers arguing for hours, preventing a verdict on the weekend.

Semrau never testified, but an Afghan army captain, who was on the patrol with Semrau, testified the Taliban fighter was "98 per cent dead" when he was found.

Semrau was charged with four offences, including second-degree murder, which carries a mandatory life sentence with no chance of parole for 10 years; attempt to commit murder using a firearm and negligently performing a military duty imposed on him. He was found not guilty of the latter two charges.

Now based at CFB Petawawa, the married father of two young children grew up in Moose Jaw,

Sask.

B.C. common-law couples to get marriage rights

The B.C. government wants to make courts the last resort for family dispute resolution.
The B.C. government wants to make courts the last resort for family dispute resolution. (Mike Laanela/CBC)

The B.C. government is proposing major changes to the province's family law for the first time in 30 years.

The B.C. government wants to extend laws governing the division of property to common-law spouses who have lived together for two years or who have children together.

The proposal is part of a package of major changes to the province's family law put forward by Attorney General Mike de Jong on Monday morning.

De Jong said the package is intended to modernize the province's Family Relations Act for first time in 30 years by making it less adversarial and easier to understand.

The changes cover a wide range of issues such as separations, child custody, support payments, division of property and pensions, access responsibilities, children's participation in the legal process and family violence.

One of the most significant changes is a proposal to extend laws governing the division of property in separations to common-law spouses who have lived together for two years or who have children together. Currently, the act's property-division scheme does not generally apply to unmarried spouses.

The proposal also seeks to exclude pre-relationship, gifts and inheritances from property that would be divided 50-50 in any separation.

The far-reaching package of proposed changes also includes reforms to create more options for out-of-court dispute resolutions and improving the tools for enforcing court rulings.

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

Alberta man unarmed when shot by RCMP

Investigators interview neighbours after a fatal police shooting in Okotoks, south of Calgary.
Investigators interview neighbours after a fatal police shooting in Okotoks, south of Calgary. (Jennifer Lee/CBC)

An Alberta man was holding an umbrella and was not armed when he was fatally shot Saturday by an RCMP officer.

CBC NEWS: July 19, 2010 : An Alberta man was holding an umbrella and was not armed when he was fatally shot Saturday by an RCMP officer, says the head of a team investigating the incident.

Corey Lewis was shot at six times by an officer using an M16 rifle, said Clifton Purvis, executive director of the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team on Monday. The provincial body investigates all major cases of death or serious injury involving Alberta police.

Police were called to a home in Okotoks, south of Calgary on Saturday night, after a report that a man had assaulted a teenager.

When officers arrived, a middle-aged man armed with what appeared to be a shotgun threatened them, said the RCMP over the weekend.

Lewis is the husband of Okotoks town councillor, Naydene Lewis.

Driver killed in Hwy 17 collision

The driver of a pick-up truck travelling eastbound on Hwy 17 outside Cobden died Monday morning after his vehicle was involved in a collision with a westbound tractor trailer.

CBC NEWS:July 19, 2010: The driver of a pick-up truck travelling eastbound on Hwy 17 outside Cobden died Monday morning after his vehicle was involved in a collision with a westbound tractor trailer.

Ontario Provincial Police said the collision happened at about 5:30 a.m. Monday morning just west of Flinnerty road in the Township of Whitewater, about 120 km west of Ottawa.

The pickup driver died at the scene, while the driver of the tractor trailer suffered minor injuries, police said. There were no passengers in either vehicle.

Hwy 17 is closed and detours are in place in the area of Mountain Road and Turcotte Road. Regional police, fire and paramedics assisted at the scene.

H1N1 shot averted 1M Ontario cases: study

50 lives estimated to have been saved

Last Updated: Monday, July 19, 2010 | 11:41 AM ET : The Canadian Press A study says Ontario's H1N1 vaccination program averted nearly one million cases of influenza and as many as 50 deaths.

The study said Ontario could have seen an additional 420 hospitalizations, 28,000 visits to hospital emergency departments and 100,000 visits to doctors' offices if it hadn't offered the flu shot program.

The study was done by Beate Sanders, a health economist with the Ontario Agency of Health Protection and Promotion, and was published in the journal Vaccine.

Sanders said that while the $180-million vaccination program was expensive, it was cost-effective.

Sanders noted, though, that if the vaccine had arrived any later the program wouldn't have been as effective as it was. That's because Ontario started vaccinating just before the peak of the second wave of H1N1 infections, the study found.


N.B. city reverses Anglo Society flag decision

The Anglo Society has lost permission to fly its flag outside of Bathurst City Hall on Sept. 18.

The Anglo Society has lost permission to fly its flag outside of Bathurst City Hall on Sept. 18. (CBC)

Last Updated: Monday, July 19, 2010 | 5:14 PM AT: CBC NEWS: The city council in Bathurst, N.B., has reversed its decision to allow a New Brunswick anglophone-rights group to fly its flag outside City Hall to mark what it calls "Anglo Day" in September.

The council issued a brief statement on Monday rescinding permission for the Anglo Society of New Brunswick to place the banner it uses to promote its group in front of City Hall.

The group describes itself as a non-profit organization "dedicated to the promotion and protection of the English language and culture in the province" and is critical of many of the government's bilingualism policies.

The city's statement said that "after many phone calls, emails and street conversations as well as further investigation, council of the City of Bathurst has decided to withdraw its support for the flying of the Anglo Society flag on Sept. 18."

The council voted 4-2 to allow the group to fly its banner outside City Hall a week ago.

The decision sparked immediate concern by the mayor of the nearby community of Petit-Rocher and Michel Carrier, the commissioner of official languages.

Carrier had called on the council to reconsider the decision.

Anne-Marie Gammon, the lone francophone on council, said she had been inundated with emails from people protesting the possibility that the flag would fly in front of City Hall.

Bathurst Mayor Stephen Brunet said last week that the northern New Brunswick city was a multicultural community and that the Anglo Society should be treated as any of the other groups occasionally allowed to fly their flags at City Hall.

The council has a regularly scheduled meeting Monday night.

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North

America and Europe

Emergency tundra landing ends well

Last Updated: Monday, July 19, 2010 | 12:21 PM CST: A pilot safely landed his aircraft on the tundra near Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, after the craft lost power in both engines.

The pilot of the privately owned 1971 twin-engine Aero Commander tried to turn the plane around after the engines died shortly after takeoff on Sunday but didn't have enough power to make it back to the runway at the Rankin Inlet airport.

He brought the plane down in the soft tundra 150 metres from the runway. The U.S.-registered aircraft was damaged, but the pilot and two passengers were unhurt.

"Any time you have an engine failure, multiple engine failure, on an aircraft and you can set it down and walk away, it's good news," said Shawn Maley, director of Nunavut Airports. "It looks like they picked the right spot to put the airplane down."

The Transportation Safety Board is investigating.





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Espionage in Canada and Western Countries: Part One to Four

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She will also deliver a stone from Runnymeade to the Canadian Museum for Human Rights before attending a concert in her honour

Last Updated: Friday, July 2, 2010 /10:12 PM CST : The Canadian Press. The Queen's visit to Winnipeg Saturday is expected to be warmer and less eventful than her last in 2002, when her water taxi broke down on the Red River.

"I have people on a weekly basis come down to my boats and ask which boat the Queen got stranded in," says Gordon Cartwright, owner of the Splash Dash water-taxi service.

A warm fall turned cold that day in October 2002 when the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh boarded one of Cartwright's boats for what was to be a short trip across the Red to St. Boniface, the old French-speaking quarter of Winnipeg.

The boat broke down mid-river and had to be towed by another boat carrying her security detail.

The Queen was not in danger, but British newspapers had a royal field day about the indignity, as well as the failure to provide "rugs" to keep her Majesty's lap warm in the chilly weather.

"That was interesting," said the Queen, as she was helped from one boat into the other to reach shore.

Incident remembered

Even Manitoba protocol chief Dwight MacAulay couldn't resist when asked why this year's early estimate of $42,000 for Manitoba's share of the visit's costs was so much less than 2002, when a longer visit hit around $500,000.

"As you've probably seen in the notes, we're not doing any water-taxi bills," he said.

Even if the Queen were eager for a repeat, the water level on the Red River isn't co-operating this year, with most docks submerged after weeks of heavy rains.

Instead, officials are keeping her Majesty on dry land.

She will be the first passenger to land at the new $585-million Richardson International Airport.

Royal cornerstone to be delivered

She will then re-dedicate a 1970 statue of herself by Winnipeg sculptor Leo Mol that's being relocated to the grounds of Government House. She will also deliver a stone from Runnymeade to the Canadian Museum for Human Rights before attending a concert in her honour.

Runnymeade, near the Queen's home at Windsor Castle, was the site where the Magna Carta was signed in 1215.

The Great Charter, as it is known in English, is part of the foundation of constitutional law in the English-speaking world and the royal rock will become a cornerstone of the new national museum, scheduled for completion in 2012.

"We know the importance of the Magna Carta and what that means to human rights," said Stuart Murray, chief executive officer of the new museum and a former leader of the Manitoba Progressive Conservative Party.

Murray said the Queen's visit is fitting for the first-of-its-kind museum.

"We are the first museum in the world to deal with the broad issue of human rights. It makes sense that her Majesty will be with us on this day."

With files from The Canadian Press .


Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North

America and Europe

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Three https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Four

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eight

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Nine

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Ten

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Elven

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part two

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Twelve

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Three

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Faith groups say they rely on census data to better serve their communities.
Faith groups say they rely on census data to better serve their communities. (Handout photo)

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CBC NEWS, July 16,2010: Faith groups are the latest contingent to complain about the federal government's decision to cut out the long-form census.

Both the Canadian Jewish Congress and the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada have written to the Conservative government to voice their concerns.

They say they rely heavily on the data from the census to better serve their communities.

Questions on religion are included in the long census every 10 years, with the next such version coming up in 2011.

However, Industry Minister Tony Clement said he has received dozens of letters supporting the move to replace the long-form census with a voluntary household survey.

P.O.V.:

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North America and Europe

The Canadian Medical Association Journal also criticized the Tories for what it calls a decision based on "ideology."

The traditional census is an "essential tool" in the planning and delivery of health services, the journal said.

Census: Is it an invasion of privacy?

By POV

By The Canadian Press

Industry Minister Tony Clement says he is willing to testify before a House of Commons committee about his decision to scrap the mandatory long-form census.

Opposition parties have said they want to convene a committee this summer to question Clement about the change.

Several groups, including the Canadian Medical Association, have criticized the move, which they say will hurt the quality of census data.

But Clement told reporters in Montreal Thursday that many Canadians have complained the long-form census violates their privacy.

He said his office has received dozens of letters in the past 48 hours supporting his decision.

The federal privacy commissioner said Wednesday only a handful of complaints were filed about the census in the past decade.

Have you ever filled out the long-form census? Do you think the questions intrude on individual privacy? Is it worth the intrusiveness to have reliable findings on the Canadian population? To vote please, click on the below link:

[http://www.cbc.ca/news/pointofview/2010/07/census-is-it-an-invasion-of-privacy.html]





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Niger has food emergency: UN

Last Updated: Friday, July 2, 2010 /10:00 AM ET : The Associated Press

The World Food Program has declared its work in Niger an "emergency operation" after a survey found a sharp rise in malnutrition rates among young children.

WFP spokeswoman Emilia Casella said 16.7 per cent of children under five years of age suffer from acute malnutrition in the African country. Children under three are particularly affected.

She said that last year the malnutrition rate was 12.3 per cent. The threshold for declaring an emergency is 15 per cent.

Casella told reporters in Geneva on Friday that the WFP plans to boost its child feeding program from 500,000 to 640,000. It will also double food aid in Niger to reach 4.7 million people this year.

Food shortages in Niger have worsened following bad harvests over the past year.

The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Three https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Four

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eight

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Nine

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Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eleven

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Crowd protests police G20 actions

Protesters gather outside Toronto police headquarters on Monday. (Nazima Walji/CBC)

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Another large, noisy, traffic-stopping protest erupted in downtown Toronto on Monday, in reaction to what demonstrators called police overreaction during weekend G20 protests.

About 1,000 people gathered on College Street, outside the headquarters of the Toronto Police Service, chanting, drumming, and calling for the release of those protesters still being held in detention.

The protest closed a section of the street over the dinner hour, affecting car and pedestrian traffic, as well as one of the city's busiest streetcar lines.

Many of the people who showed up for the protest are people who were taken into custody over the weekend and are complaining about the treatment they received.

After about two hours of peaceful protest, the group moved off westbound, then headed south on University Avenue, which is lined with hospitals, insurance companies and the U.S. consulate.

Police and politicians rushed to defend what appeared to be arbitrary searches, seizures, arrests and detentions on the weekend amid a chorus of condemnation from rights activists.

"We were met this weekend with a number of people — certainly several hundred — who wished to use the opportunity available to them during a peaceful, democratic protest to commit violent acts," Toronto Mayor David Miller said.

Officers showed "admirable professionalism" and did an "extraordinary job in almost impossible circumstances," Miller said.

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North

America and Europe

Police activity picked up markedly starting Saturday evening, following afternoon riots where small groups of vandals smashed some windows and set two police cruisers alight.

More than 700 people were rounded up over the weekend. Some were rousted from their beds. Others were dragged from crowds.

The Integrated Security Unit, the police group given the task of securing the G8 and G20 summits, said 900 summit-related arrests were made since June 18. The ISU reported that, as of Sunday morning, eight officers and six civilians suffered minor injuries.

With files from The Canadian Press

The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

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Queen arrives in Halifax

Last Updated: Monday, June 28, 2010 / 3:12 PM AT : CBC News : The Queen got a rainy welcome Monday afternoon as she arrived in Halifax, the first stop on her nine-day Canadian tour.

The Queen came prepared for a wet and windy arrival.

(CBC)

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip arrived at the airport aboard a military plane at 2:20 p.m. AT. They carried their own umbrellas as they stepped onto the wet tarmac.

The royals were greeted briefly by Defence Minister Peter MacKay and Nova Scotia Deputy Premier Frank Corbett before heading to the Garrison Grounds for an official welcome.

Like hundreds of other royal watchers waiting near the Halifax Citadel, Beth Wilson said the wait will be worth it.

"This is an event," Wilson said. "How often do we get to see the Queen?"

The welcoming ceremony will include Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Gov.-Gen. Michaëlle Jean, and senior military officials. The Queen will make a speech and meet some of the Nova Scotians who have lined the fences.

The royal couple will take part in a Mi'kmaq cultural event and celebrate the Canadian navy's 100th anniversary before leaving on Wednesday.

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Four

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eight

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Flood waters inundate the southwestern Chinese city of Chongqing. (AFP/Getty Images / July 20, 2010)

CBC NEWS: July 21, 2010: More than 1,000 people have died or disappeared in severe flooding in China so far this year, and the heaviest rains are still to come, a senior official warned Wednesday.

This year's floods, which have caused tens of billions of dollars in damage already, have exacted the highest death toll since 1998, which saw the highest water levels in 50 years.

The waters have killed 701 people and left 347 missing, officials said.

With the typhoon season rolling in, Liu Ning, general secretary of the government's flood prevention agency, told a news conference authorities must ramp up preparations.

"Since 60 to 80 per cent of the annual rain level occurs in June, July and August, we should be prepared to prevent and combat potential disasters," Liu said.

Tropical storm Chanthu is expected to hit China's southern island of Hainan and Guangdong province this weekend. Six to eight typhoons are expected this year.

Already, three-quarters of China's provinces have been plagued by flooding and 25 rivers have reached record-high water levels, Liu said.

Flooding, particularly along the Yangtze River basin, has overwhelmed reservoirs, swamped towns and cities, and caused landslides that have smothered communities, including toppling 645,000 houses. The Three Gorges Dam faced its highest levels ever this week and water breached the massive dam.

"Although water levels in the upper stretches of the Yangtze River have surpassed that of 1998, the flood situation is still not as severe because the Three Gorges Dam has played a key role in preventing floods along the river this year," Liu said.

The overall damage totals about $21 billion US, Liu said.

Espionage in Canada and Western Countries: Part One to Five

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Last Updated: Thursday, July 29, 2010 / 12:32 PM ET : CBC News

A former guard at the Belzec death camp who is accused of participating in the killings of more than 430,000 Jews during the Second World War has been charged in youth court.

Samuel Kunz, 88, was charged in German youth court, a state court in Bonn said, because he was 20 when he is alleged to have started working at the camp in occupied Poland in January 1942. German law says people between 18 and 21 can be tried as minors or adults.

A judge will have to decide which court Kunz will be tried in, court spokesman Matthias Nordmeyer said.

Kunz was indicted last week.

He is the third-most wanted Nazi on a list maintained by the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

The court documents released Thursday allege that Kunz was involved in all aspects of the camp, including getting prisoners from trains to gas chambers, and, ultimately, throwing their corpses into mass graves.

Kunz is also accused of "personal excesses" in the shooting deaths of 10 Jews.

"In July 1943, the defendant is accused of having shot two persons who had escaped from a train going to the death camp and had been captured by guards," the court statement said.

He is alleged to have killed eight other prisoners who had been wounded by other guards between May and June 1943.

"The defendant then took the weapon from the other guard to shoot the wounded victims to death," said the court statement.

Interest arose in Kunz from the case of John Demjanjuk, who is currently on trial in Munich for allegedly being a guard at the Sobibor camp in Poland.

Prosecutors said Kunz and Demjanjuk trained at the Trawniki SS camp.

Espionage in Canada and Western Countries: Part Ten

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Twenty Sex

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Samantha Martyn, 4, was found safe in Regina on Wednesday morning, police said. (Regina Police Service)

A missing four-year-old girl who was the subject of an Amber Alert has been located in Regina, and her mother is receiving treatment for "visible injuries," police say.

July 7, 2010 CBC NEWS: A missing four-year-old girl has been located in good health in Regina after an intense search that included issuing an Amber Alert, police said Wednesday.

The public alert was issued Tuesday for Samantha Martyn, whom police said might have been taken by her father, Christopher Martyn. The girl's mother, Natasha Sentes, was also missing.

Around 9:30 a.m. CST Wednesday, police cancelled the Amber Alert. Earlier in the day, Regina police said, they received information from a relative that the three had arrived at a residence in the 1300 block of 8th Avenue North in the city's north end.

Samantha was found to be in apparent good health, police said at a midday news conference.

Regina Police Services spokeswoman Lara Guzik said Sentes had "visible injuries" but did not need major treatment.

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

Martyn was "arrested without incident," Guzik added.

Both mother and child are being interviewed, along with family members.

"We are still treating it and investigating it as a suspected abduction," Guzik said.

The Amber Alert was issued midday Tuesday after someone called police expressing concern about the safety of Samantha and Sentes, who hadn't been heard from since Monday night.

Christopher Martyn and Sentes had been in a long-term relationship, but it had ended. Police also said there had recently been a restraining order issued against Martyn.

Martyn will be charged with breaching that order, but the investigation is still underway on other potential charges, Guzik said.

Ambert Alert extended to Man., N.D.

Under an agreed-upon arrangement between the parents, Martyn picked up Samantha at a Regina home Monday night. Sentes was working late and was supposed to pick up her daughter some time after 10:30 p.m.

After that, the three dropped from sight. Police thought they might be heading to Manitoba or North Dakota. The Amber Alert that started in Saskatchewan was expanded to include those two juridictions.

Police said late Tuesday that Samantha had been spotted with her father at a gas station in Manitou, Man. Video from the morning showed a little girl walking with a man to a car. Manitou is about 160 kilometres southwest of Winnipeg and about 540 kilometres southeast of Regina.

Some 40 tips from the public were received, and the co-operation of the media and various police organizations was helpful, Guzik said.

"This is the best possible outcome," she said. "We are pleased that everybody is home safe."

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G20 agrees to deficit reduction targets

G20 agrees to deficit reduction targets
No bank tax in Toronto summit communiqué

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, front row, sixth from left, and leaders of the international community take part in the family photo at the G20 summit in Toronto on Sunday. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)


Last Updated: Sunday, June 27, 2010 | 3:17 PM ET CBC News : The Canadian government has won a significant victory in securing specific deficit reduction targets in the G20's final statement at the Toronto summit, CBC News has learned.

A draft of the final communiqué from Sunday's G20 meeting in Toronto obtained by the CBC's senior business correspondent, Amanda Lang, includes an agreement by G20 leaders on a Canadian-led plan for advanced countries to reduce their deficits in half by 2013 and stabilize debt loads by 2016.

Lang reported sources as saying the document contains "99 per cent" of the final statement.

However, the document recognizes that not all countries are in the same position, which means the policies could be "tailored" to each country's varying circumstances.

As anticipated, a proposed bank tax — a measure vehemently opposed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his government — will not be included in the final communiqué.

Instead, the G20 statement leaves it up to individual countries to decide whether to pursue a financial levy to ensure that taxpayers are not required to foot the bill when banks fail, or "pursue other options."

'A clear message'

U.S. President Barack Obama, left, talks with Prime Minister Stephen Harper during the opening plenary session of the G20 summit in Toronto on Sunday. (Jason Reed/Associated Press)

Harper, the summit's host, used his opening address at Sunday's working sessions to try to convince fellow leaders that the fate of millions of people could suffer if they don't agree to cut deficits.

The prime minister said the G20 needs to take decisive, co-ordinated and balanced action as the world economy struggles to return to growth.

"We need to send a clear message that as our stimulus plans expire we will focus on getting our fiscal houses in order," Harper said.

Some European countries, including Britain, are more concerned with avoiding a financial crisis brought on by too much government spending. Those countries cited the trouble facing Greece earlier this year, when it had to be bailed out because it was close to running out of money.

U.S. President Barack Obama has argued that he would like to see more job creation before agreeing to a deficit reduction timetable, saying such a move could hurt the fragile global economic recovery from last year's financial meltdown.

The G-20 includes the world's major industrial countries — Canada, the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Canada, Italy and Russia — plus major developing nations such as China, India, Brazil. and South Korea.

With files from The Canadian Press

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

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Semrau court martial adjourned

Canadian Forces Capt. Robert Semrau is accused of killing a severely wounded insurgent during an encounter in Afghanistan's Helmand province in October 2008.

Canadian Forces Capt. Robert Semrau is accused of killing a severely wounded insurgent during an encounter in Afghanistan's Helmand province in October 2008. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

CBC NEWS Last Updated: Wednesday, July 7, 2010 /1:09 PM ET The Canadian Press Closing arguments ended Wednesday in the court martial of Canadian Forces Capt. Robert Semrau, who is charged with second-degree murder in the death of an unarmed insurgent in Afghanistan.

Court was adjourned in Gatineau, Que., and the judge may charge the jury tomorrow.

Semrau, 36, is believed to be the first Canadian soldier charged with murder as a result of a battlefield encounter in Helmand province in 2008.

Semrau's trial travelled to Afghanistan in June to hear testimony from witnesses. One Afghan National Army captain who was on the patrol with Semrau testified the Taliban fighter was "98 per cent dead" when they found him.

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

He said the man had lost both legs, his intestines were visible and he was unconscious after being blasted out of a tree by a helicopter gunship.

The captain said regardless of when or how the man died, the end result was a foregone conclusion. The body was never recovered.

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

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Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Elven

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Twelve

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Three

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Thirteen

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Four

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Fourteen

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Five

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Police say Venus Dejong, 2, was taken from her home in southeastern Alberta on Sunday morning.

Police say Venus Dejong, 2, was taken from her home in southeastern Alberta on Sunday morning. (RCMP)

Charges have been laid against the grandmother of a toddler who was taken from her home in southeastern Alberta on Sunday morning, police said Tuesday.

Johan Dejong, 47, of Fort Macleod, Alta., is charged with abduction and breaking and entering in connection with the alleged kidnapping of her maternal granddaughter, Venus Dejong, 2, from her home in Redcliff, about 300 kilometres southeast of Calgary.

Dejong turned the girl over to officers at the RCMP detachment in Jasper, Alta., late Monday morning. Investigators believe she was headed to B.C.

The girl's mother, Lola Katherine Dejong, 25, was charged on Monday with abduction in contravention of a custody order, and breaking and entering.

Johan Dejong is in custody and will make her first court appearance in Medicine Hat provincial court on June 24.

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North America and Europe

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

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Police in riot gear and protesters continued to clash Saturday evening following a massive anti-G20 protest march through downtown Toronto that saw at least two police vehicles set ablaze, store and bank windows smashed, and much of the area put under security lockdowns.

The police cruisers were torched at the corner of King and Bay streets in the heart of the city's financial district, sending plumes of black smoke into the air. At one point, as one vehicle burned, protesters surrounded police officers who were trying to protect the car, CBC reporter Amber Hildebrandt reported on Twitter.

The size of the protest crowd was estimated to be as high as 10,000. Witnesses said tear gas had been used in the area around the provincial legislature at College and University, but police denied any had been used in the city.

Toronto Mayor David Miller said a small group of "thugs" are to blame for the violence.

“People are calling them protesters. That is not fair to the people who came to protest,” he said.

Toronto police Sgt. Tim Burrows said there have been minor injuries. He added he couldn't confirm how many people have been arrested.

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North

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The summit was set to begin later Saturday evening with a working dinner hosted by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

With the violence escalating in the heart of Canada's largest city, the entire area around the summit site at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre — enclosed by concrete barricades and fences — is under a security lockdown.

Transit halted

The area's boundaries include Wellington Street to the north, Lakeshore and Bremner boulevards to the south, Windsor Street and Blue Jays Way to the west and a section of Bay Street to the east.

Subway service in downtown Toronto remained suspended, with no service in the loop between Bloor and St. George stations, and no streetcars or bus service, as well service in and out of Union Station has also been stopped.

A police car burns after G20 summit protesters set fire to it in downtown Toronto on Saturday. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

The airspace over downtown Toronto has also been closed, as has the Gardiner Expressway, one of the city's major traffic arteries.

Some hospitals, hotels, businesses and the tourist attraction the Eaton Centre are also under lockdown.

As the demonstration started just after 1 p.m. ET at the Ontario legislature, the mood was upbeat and peaceful. Protesters danced, clapped and chanted while carrying signs, flags and umbrellas as they first moved from the legislature grounds down one of the city's main thoroughfares, University Avenue.

But the mood turned ugly as anarchists in a splinter groups broke away in attempts to move toward the summit site. They dress similar to members of the Black Block, a group that has used violence such as widespread vandalism in past G20 protests.

Group members are known for wearing black hoodies, masks, balaclavas and skateboard helmets.

As the hours went on, protesters smashed windows on both sides of Yonge Street at the normally busy shopping area in the Yonge-Dundas corridor. Witnesses said rioters smashed the info booth of the large Future Shop electronics store.

"It's a sizable crowd and getting bigger and bigger" in some areas, the CBC's Steven D'Souza reported. "It doesn't look too dangerous, but it is gathering momentum where I am right now."

'Why do they come here and make problems and make problems for every store?'— Myung Hwon Yang, store owner."

Steven Connor, who works at the Hard Rock Café near the Eaton Centre, said several glass store fronts were smashed, with some protesters using street pylons and road equipment, as some people were inside.

No one seemed to be injured, Connor said.

"There's been a lot of damage in the downtown core," the CBC's Michael Serapio reported.

Michael Hyatt, who was at a gym near Yonge and Dundas streets, said the protesters seemed to target a number of U.S.-based chains.

“It is pretty horrible what they have done to a lot of the stores here. They’ve destroyed the windows at an American Apparel — they destroyed all the windows and pulled out the mannequins and [threw] feces into the store.

“It stinks and it is unbelievable. Foot Locker is destroyed. Pizza Pizza is destroyed. They’ve kind of gone up the street and picked at every U.S. vendor they could find. It’s really kind of sad.”

Bricks, rocks thrown

On many downtown streets, many store windows were either broken with bricks or rocks, or defaced with graffiti. One bank on Queen Street West had its windows smashed, and a CBC van was damaged.

One convenience store owner said he was determined to stay open.

Protesters, including some who were wearing masks, take part in Saturday's march.

Protesters, including some who were wearing masks, take part in Saturday's march. (Nazim Walji/CBC)

"It's important for countries to meet, but an island area is better. Why do they come here and make problems and make problems for every store?" Myung Hwon Yang told CBC News.

In one incident, a man dressed in red was arrested and then dragged screaming into a police van. As it happened, a large crowd gathered, denouncing police and chanting "Let him go."

Miller said police took thorough preparations ahead of the summit and did a "commendable job under difficult circumstances."

"I'm sure there have been small moments where perhaps there’s some tensions between a crowd and the police," Miller told reporters. "In the broad brush, I think we should be very confident in their work."

He added that Toronto police Chief Bill Blair had been very clear in recent days that authorities would facilitate a lawful, democratic protest, while expressing concern about groups who "come here just to perpetrate violence."

Surviving the G20 summit

By CBC News
CBC News

The security perimeter stretches past Union Station.

The security perimeter stretches past Union Station. (Ramya Jegatheesan/CBC)



Many Torontonians have fled to greener, fence-free pastures, but if you're stuck in town here's a guide to surviving the summit weekend.

Many Torontonians are fleeing the city to greener, fence-free pastures this weekend, leaving the downtown core looking like a ghost town, but there are a few who must or want to stick around for the G20.

Whether you failed to secure a spot at a friend's cottage or you're a protest tourist or a protester yourself set to hit the pavement, here's a guide for how to survive the summit weekend.

How to dress:

Offices and condominium managers have sent out advice to employees and residents, urging them to dress casual so as not to become a target.

"Business attire," one property management company with two buildings near the perimeter told residents in a four-page guide, "may put you in a susceptible position."

The guide by Enhanced Management Services, which manages of 19 and 23 Brant St. near King Street, advised residents to wear casual clothes. Similar guidelines went out to office workers in the security perimeter area.

As to what casual, non-threatening attire is, that's open to interpretation.

What to stock:

The same condominium manager urged residents to leave town if possible and stock up 72 hours' worth of food and water, suggesting two liters of water per person per day. Other items that may be worth stockpiling for those living or working downtown include:

  • Manual can opener.
  • Flashlight and batteries.
  • Battery-powered or wind-up radio.
  • First aid kit.
  • Cash in smaller bills such as $10.
  • Extra keys for car and house.
  • Change for pay phones.

In case of injury

Hospitals are on high alert this weekend, with co-ordinated plans for deploying staff if large numbers of people require medical attention. Many hospitals have set up outdoor tents to serve as decontamination stations to treat people affected by noxious substances like pepper spray or tear gas.

"Really what we're preparing for in the most part is just minor things like heat and traffic disruptions," said Dr. Harold Ovens, director of the Schwartz/Reisman Emergency Centre at Mount Sinai Hospital.

If you plan to sightsee at a protest or take part, here are a few tips:

  • Drink lots of water.
  • Soak a bandana in lemon juice or vinegar and carry it in a Ziploc bag. Use the cloth to breathe if tear gas is used.
  • Sunblock, light clothing and close-toed shoes are advisable.
  • Watch the protesters around you. If it looks like violence could occur, leave immediately.
  • Watch the police. They're trained in protests. If you see them putting gas masks on, get out your vinegar-soaked kerchief.
  • Bring ear plugs in case you encounter a sound cannon.

Source: Integrated Security Unit, protest groups

Paramedics will also be on hand at protests to help anyone who gets injured.

Location of protests

Whether you want to join in or keep your distance, the Toronto Community Mobilization Network, an umbrella protest group, has a list of planned protests for both Saturday and Sunday.

The protest areas at Queen's Park North and Allan Gardens will likely be popular, Burrows said, as will the downtown summit perimeter fence.

See the list of events for Saturday [http://g20.torontomobilize.org/event/2010/06/26/day] and Sunday [http://g20.torontomobilize.org/event/2010/06/27/day].

Your rights

News emerged Friday [http://www.cbc.ca/canada/toronto/story/2010/06/25/g20-new-powers.html] that recently implemented legislation has given police new powers for the duration of the G20. Under the regulations, anyone who comes within five metres of the security area is obliged to give police their name and state the purpose of their visit, upon request. If they fail to provide ID or give a reason, they can be searched and arrested.

"Our officers have been advising people of the restrictions from the weekend, just not the wording of the act," Burrows said of the legislation.

"We've seen that his concern was justified," Miller said.

Behind the banners: Protester profiles

Behind the banners
By Amber Hildebrandt and Timothy Neesam

For the week leading up to the G20 Summit, thousands of protesters have descended on the streets of Canada's largest city — many visiting but largely drawn from its own communities.

Daily marches and rallies and mock summits have taken over parks and streets and buildings. Drumming, singing, chanting has supplanted the angry hornet strains of the World Cup vuvuzela.

We've heard about the numbers — 1,000 here, 200 there — and the causes, but what about the the faces in the crowd?

The following is a look at what brought the protesters to the streets this week, what drew them into activism in the first place and what, if they could tell the G20 one thing, their message would be.

Behind the banners: Protester profiles.

To see the photos please click here: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/g20streetlevel/2010/06/behind-the-banners-protester-profiles.html

and

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/nphotos/slideshow/ss/events/wl/100525_g20protests#photoViewer=/26062010/2/photo/national-riot-police-walk-burning-police-car-downtown-toronto-during.html

rcmp.gif

The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

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RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-1

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Three https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Four

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-4

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-3

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-5

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/forum/topics/rcmp-canadas-image-and

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eight

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-6

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Nine

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profile/OIPWHRMT


Read more…

The Queen visits Canada

Queen Elizabeth smiles as she greets guests before a state dinner in Toronto on July 5. (Mike Cassese/Reuters)

Tour included stops in Halifax, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg and Waterloo, Ont.


The 22nd official royal visit to Canada by Queen Elizabeth began June 28 and ended July 6. The Queen and Prince Philip visited five Canadian cities over nine days.

The Queen got a rainy but warm welcome as she arrived in Halifax on June 28. (See photos.)

She received a round of applause as she addressed a rain-soaked crowd near the Halifax Citadel. "I'm delighted to be back amongst you all," the Queen said. "My pride in this country remains undimmed. Thanks very much for your welcome. It is good to be home."

The Queen and Prince Philip then visited the nearby Halifax Common, to take part in a Mi'kmaq cultural event and mark the 400th anniversary of the baptism of Grand Chief Henri Membertou. The royal couple wrapped up their first day of official duties by rededicating Government House, the official residence of the lieutenant-governor in Halifax.

On June 29, the Queen inspected dozens of Canadian and foreign warships anchored in Halifax harbour, as part of the celebration marking the navy's 100th anniversary. On board HMCS St. John's, she led the International Fleet Review, which included ships from eight countries. (More photos.)

Later in the day, she presented a plaque commemorating HMCS Sackville, a Second World War corvette that escorted convoys and attacked submarines and is now a museum. She also saw flypasses by Canada's famous Snowbirds, as well as an international aerial contingent.

The royal couple arrived in Ottawa June 30 for a three-day visit, including Canada Day. It was the seventh time Queen Elizabeth has been in Canada for the big national celebration.

The Canadian Museum of Nature was closed to the public during the Queen's first event on June 30. She unveiled a plaque dedicating The Queen's Lantern, a large glass addition to the museum replacing its original tower.

Her first Ottawa afternoon included the unveiling of a life-sized statue of the late jazz great Oscar Peterson created by Canadian sculptor Ruth Abernathy outside the National Arts Centre, a tree planting at Rideau Hall and a meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

On July 1, the Queen praised Canada as 100,000 people gathered on Parliament Hill to celebrate Canada's 143rd birthday.

"This nation has dedicated itself to being a caring home for its own, a sanctuary for others and an example to the world," she said.

The next morning — a quiet day on the royal couple's hectic schedule — the Queen met privately with Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff at Rideau Hall.

After the brief session, Ignatieff declared to reporters, "she's an absolute joy to meet."

West to Winnipeg

The royal couple became the first official passengers at Winnipeg's new airport terminal when they arrived on the morning of July 3.

The Queen dedicated the cornerstone of the new Canadian Museum for Human Rights. The stone came from the fields of Runnymede — near Windsor Castle — where the original Magna Carta was signed in 1215.

She also rededicated a statue of herself crafted by the late sculptor Leo Mol.

Dharby Harrison, 8, travelled from London, Ont., to see the Queen outside Toronto's St. James Cathedral.

Dharby Harrison, 8, travelled from London, Ont., to see the Queen outside Toronto's St. James Cathedral. (Dave Seglins/CBC)

The royal couple arrived in Toronto late that evening.

The next morning, July 4, the Queen and Prince Philip attended a service at Toronto's St. James Cathedral as about 1,500 royal watchers gathered outside in the sweltering heat and humidity.

The royal couple then watched Big Red Mike win the 151st running of the Queen's Plate in the afternoon. The Queen, an avid owner and breeder of horses, presented the trophy to the winning jockey, Eurico Rosa da Silva.

It was her fourth trip to see North America's oldest continuously run stakes race, after visits in 1959, 1973 and 1997.

BlackBerrys and the state dinner

The morning of July 5 began with a quick trip to Waterloo to tour BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion's facility. The Queen and Prince Philip were greeted at the RIM campus at around 11 a.m. by Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty, RIM president Mike Lazaridis and scores of cheering admirers.

The royal couple flew back to Toronto to tour Pinewood Studios, billed as Canada's largest film and television complex.

The two donned 3D glasses to watch a film directed by acclaimed Canadian filmmaker Deepa Mehta and then viewed the Queen's coronation ceremony from 57 years ago.

Prince Philip later made presentations of the Duke of Edinburgh award, which recognizes community service and personal growth among youth aged 14 to 25.

Even a big-time power outage in downtown Toronto — which started during the 4:30 p.m. award presentation — couldn't hamper the final event of the day. The Royal York hotel operated on backup power for the state dinner hosted for the Queen and Prince Philip by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

A royal goodbye

Several thousand people gathered at the Ontario legislature the next morning, July 6, to bid farewell. The royal couple attended a series of events that culminated in an official departure ceremony — complete with a 21-gun salute on the legislature's front lawn.

The Queen unveiled a plaque commemorating the 150th anniversary of the dedication of the legislature, Queen's Park, by her great-grandfather, before he was crowned King Edward VII.

The royal couple departed Toronto for New York shortly afterwards. Queen Elizabeth addressed the United Nations general assembly later that afternoon. It was her first speech at the UN since 1957, when she was 31.

During her reign, the Queen has now spent 222 days in Canada on royal visits as the country's sovereign. She made her first trip to Canada in 1951, when she was still a princess.Read more:

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/06/25/f-queen-elizabeth-royal-visit.html#ixzz0sygaAA99

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North

America and Europe

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The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-1

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Three https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Four

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-4

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-3

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-5

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/forum/topics/rcmp-canadas-image-and

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eight

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-6

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Nine

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profile/OIPWHRMT

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Ten

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part One

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cel...

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Elven

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part two

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cel...

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Twelve

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Three

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cells-of-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Thirteen

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Four

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cel...



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Ottawa International Poets and Writers for human Rights (OIPWHR)