Palestinian flags rose over several Canadian city halls and a provincial legislature for the first time, prompting celebration, condemnation, and a vow from one mayor to end all foreign flag-raisings.
The mood was celebratory on the rooftop of Toronto city hall on Monday morning, as dozens gathered in the brisk weather to watch the Palestinian flag fly over the building for the first time. The ...
'We have to do something, because writing letters is a waste of time, saying 'we condemn' is a waste of breath,' said executive director of Tafsik Organization Amir Epstein You can save this article ...
'Commemorating this moment, in the context of rising antisemitism in Canada, is not only insensitive but also reckless and irresponsible,' B'nai Brith Canada's director of research and advocacy says ...
The Canadian Football League’s best and brightest will get the chance to represent their countries on the Olympic stage. The league’s Board of Governors unanimously approved participation in the 2028 ...
KINGSTON - On a chilly November morning, more than 100 volunteers began arriving at a historic cemetery in Kingston, Ont., to help honour soldiers who are buried there. Some came with family members, ...
Many HR leaders in Quebec will need to revise their hiring strategies now that the provincial government announced it is taking decisive action to reduce both permanent and temporary immigration ...
Quebec's deputy health minister Sonia Bélanger speaks in her province's National Assembly. Bélanger told Radio-Canada on Friday that the exodus of Quebec doctors following the passage of Bill 2 last ...
Quebec sets annual target of 45,000 permanent immigrants for next 4 years. The Quebec government has lowered its immigration targets for the coming years to 45,000 new permanent residents annually.
The Canadian government has planted a flag committing itself to legislation that'll regulate stablecoins backed by its dollar, following in the recent footsteps of its U.S. neighbors who passed a new ...
A crowd in as thousands streamed into Montreal from all over Canada to join Quebecers rallying for national unity three days before a referendum on secession in Quebec, Oct. 27, 1995. (Credit: Ryan ...
Josh Freed’s personal depiction of the contradictions between the reality of Quebec’s Catholic place names and the government’s secularist laws and polemics deserves the widest possible circulation.
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