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Canada announces $151 million for polio eradication, after outbreak in Gaza Strip

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OTTAWA – Canada is setting aside $151 million for the fight to eradicate polio worldwide.

International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen announced the news at a Rotary International conference in Toronto.

The funding comes a month after Palestinian officials announced the first cases of polio in 25 years in the Gaza Strip.

The funding will support the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, which provides vaccines to children worldwide, including more than a half-million kids in Gaza.

Hussen’s office says the cash should help “the most vulnerable populations” such as girls in conflict situations where there is limited health-care access.

The World Health Organization says the world is on the verge of eradicating polio, with a 99 per cent drop in cases since 1988.

Over the last 24 years, various Canadian governments have spent $1 billion on the effort.

“Together, we will end polio and build a healthier future for children everywhere,” Hussen wrote in a statement.

There is no cure for polio, which can cause paralysis that tends to be permanent, including to the muscles used to breathe.

Still, vaccination campaigns have come under strain as humanitarian crises and the COVID-19 pandemic divert resources and make it harder to inoculate children.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 20, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Canadian cricketers defeat Oman for second straight win in World League 2 play

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KING CITY, Ont. – Harsh Thaker scored 93 runs and captain Nicholas Kirton added 57 to help Canada defeat Oman by 59 runs Friday in ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 play.

It marked a second straight half-century for Kirton, who scored 73 runs not out in Monday’s decisive 103-run win over Nepal in the opening match of the triangular series.

The Canadians finished at 276 for eight in their 50 overs Friday. In response, Oman was 217 all out with four overs remaining in a determined effort after battling back from 105 for seven.

The 19th-ranked Canadians face No. 16 Nepal on Sunday and No. 18 Oman next Thursday. Oman and Nepal meet Tuesday, All the games are at the Maple Leaf Cricket Ground.

Oman edged Nepal by one wicket Wednesday, scoring the winning runs on the penultimate ball.

The eight World League 2 teams each play 36 one-day internationals spread across nine triangular series through December 2026. The top four sides will go through to a World Cup qualifier that will decide the last four berths in the expanded 14-team Cricket World Cup in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia.

The bottom four teams still have a chance to get to the World Cup qualifier, via another tournament from which the top two teams move on.

Friday’s win moved Canada (6-4) into a tie on points with the 14th-ranked Dutch (6-2) atop the World League 2 table. Oman (2-3 with one no-result) is fifth.

Oman won the toss and elected to field. And the decision paid immediate dividends when Aaron Johnson was caught on the first ball and fellow opener Navneet Dhaliwal was removed lbw on two with Canada at 14 for two in the eight over.

Canada rallied after that with No. 3 batsman Pargat Singh scoring 42 runs, with Thaker and Kirton next up.

Thaker, who was dropped on 30, notched his half-century with a six that just missed a sponsor’s car on display just outside the boundary. Thaker hit four fours and four sixes in his 103-ball knock while Kirton slammed four sixes and two fours off 50 balls.

Saad Bin Zafar and Dilon Heyliger provided a sting in the Canadian batting tail with 22 and 37 runs respectively.

The Oman bats faltered early, losing openers Kashyap Prajapati and Jatinder Singh for zero and five runs, respectively. Oman found itself at 17 for four before Zeeshan Maqsood (27) andAyaan Khan (30) steadied the ship.

With Oman down to its last two wickets, Canada turned to Johnson as its seventh bowler of the afternoon. Known as an opening batsman, Johnson conceded seven runs in his first-ever international over as a bowler and just one in the second.

Fayyaz Butt (44) and Shakeel Ahmed (21 not out) frustrated Canada with a stubborn ninth-wicket partnership.

With five overs and two wickets left, Oman needed 62 runs to win. Dilon Heyliger dismissed Butt with Oman at 217 for nine. Kaleemullah, who goes by one name, was caught by Kirton at the boundary two balls late.

Heyliger followed his career-best five-wicket haul with another four wickets Friday, at the expense of 42 runs in eight overs.

Former Canada coach Pubudu Dassanayake is serving an assistant to Oman coach Duleep Mendis at the tournament.

Canada won all four matches in its opening tri-series in February-March, sweeping No. 11 Scotland and the 20th-ranked host Emirates. But the Canadians lost four in a row to the 18th-ranked U.S. and host Netherlands in August.

Canada which debuted in the T20 World Cup this summer in the U.S. and West Indies, is looking to get back to the showcase 50-over Cricket World Cup for the first time since 2011 after failing to qualify for the last three editions. The Canadian men also played in the 1979, 2003 and 2007 tournaments, exiting after the group stage in all four tournament appearances.

The Canadian men regained their one-day international status for the first time in almost a decade by finishing in the top four of the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier Playoff in April 2023 in Bermuda.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 20, 2024

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RCMP officers face firing for ‘atrocious’ racist behaviour, harassment, documents say

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VANCOUVER – Three RCMP members from a Metro Vancouver detachment could be fired over alleged “atrocious,” “racist” and “horrible” behaviour detailed by a fellow officer, including text chats that bragged about “Tasering unarmed black people,” court documents say.

A schedule from the RCMP shows Constables Philip Dick, Ian Solven and Mersad Mesbah are slated to appear next February for code of conduct hearings over allegations including discrimination, harassment and discrediting the police force.

None of the allegations have been proven.

In court filings to obtain a search warrant, an officer in the RCMP’s Professional Standards Unit in Coquitlam, B.C., says another member in the detachment trained by Dick complained about being harassed by the accused officers.

Among the key complaints, according to the filings, is that officers allegedly engaged in comments on a mobile chat group that were abusive, racist, homophobic and misogynistic that matched a “climate of harassment” created by the three officers.

“Members of the (chat) group never talk about their own lives,” the filings said “They use the group to say ‘negative stuff about work or horrible things about people they work with.’

“He (the complainant) described the behaviour in the chat group as ‘atrocious.’ He believed it was racist and horrible, so he used to just ‘skim’ it rather than reading all of it,” the documents say.

The filings also said the complainant tried to leave the chat group but was told it was “used for operational purposes and that he needed to be a part of it,” and was accused of “not being a team member” if he did not rejoin.

(Note Graphic Content)

The documents say that among the list of alleged comments made on the chat are instances where an officer “goes off about … brown people” making the Lower Mainland “unsafe,” using the N-word and the racial stereotype of eating chicken when describing blacks, dismissing a woman reporting a sex assault based on her ethnicity and calling her “dumb,” and making fun of a female RCMP employee’s weight by “insinuating that the shape of her vagina was visible through her clothing.”

The complaint also outlined a number of actions by the three officers outside of the group chat, including belittling Indigenous community members as having fetal alcohol syndrome and saying they are “not going to the reserve … because we’re not going to help those people,” the court document says.

In another instance described by the complainant, one of the members, who was “typically dismissive” of shoplifting files, was going “out of his way to attend” a case and try “to provoke the suspect into a fight” when he found out the suspect was black.

The court document says the complainant said the officer “later lamented that he hadn’t been able to ‘rile up’ the suspect sufficiently to justify Tasering him.”

The document also describes other alleged instances where members justified domestic violence by saying “women deserve it,” swearing in front of a four-year-old child while attending a tenancy dispute, and bragging about concluding police files by making up “whatever” when asked to followup on a case without any filings.

The Coquitlam RCMP standards officer also said in the document that a review of other chat logs from the accused officers from January 2019 to May 2021 “identified a variety of comments that were ‘chauvinist in nature, with a strong air of superiority and include flippant or insulting remarks about clients, supervisors, colleagues, policy and the RCMP as a whole.”

“In the messages, Constables Dick, Solven and Mesbah are frequently offensive,” the court filing said. “Constable Dick and Mesbah use racial and homophobic slurs, and all three frequently deride their co-workers.”

The BC RCMP referred The Canadian Press’s request for comment to National RCMP communications, who have not responded to the allegations or the conduct review.

A legal document released on Sept. 12 says the RCMP intend “to seek termination of the members’ employment at the hearing, and the three members have been suspended since June 2021 when the allegations emerged.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 20, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Joly says about 45,000 Canadians in Lebanon; she’s concerned about pager explosions

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OTTAWA – Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says close to 45,000 Canadians are in Lebanon, months after warning there is no guarantee Ottawa can evacuate them if the situation deteriorates further.

She is also expressing concern that attacks like exploding pagers are only making the situation worse.

“My message to Canadians who even think of going to Lebanon is don’t go, and I’ve been saying that for months,” she told reporters Friday in Toronto.

Since the brutal Hamas attack on Israel last October prompted Israel to bomb Gaza, Hezbollah militants have been shooting rockets at northern Israel. That has caused communities near the border to evacuate, and Israel to strike both civilian and Hezbollah infrastructure.

By late last October, Joly started urging Canadians to leave Lebanon, saying that the military was assessing how to conduct a possible evacuation of citizens if needed.

The government has never been clear on how many people may need to be evacuated, only stating the number of individuals who had proactively registered with Global Affairs Canada. That stood at around 21,400 people in late July, with Ottawa cautioning many have not registered.

At that point, Joly had warned that “the situation on the ground may not allow us to help you” if things get worse. On Friday, she specified how many people could end up trapped.

“We know that we have around 45,000 Canadians in Lebanon,” she said.

“We need to make sure that message (to leave) is clear, that it is also well-followed by Canadians. And we need to make sure, also, that we’re well prepared.”

Joly said suffering in all parts of the region needs to end.

“We are very concerned for what is happening in Lebanon and of course, in the wider Middle East,” she said.

Joly noted escalating violence in Lebanon including the deadly attacks, widely attributed to Israel and said to have targeted Hezbollah militants, which involved exploding pagers and walkie-talkies.

The Associated Press reported that the pager attack killed at least 12 people — including two young children — and wounded thousands more.

“Notwithstanding any form of tactics or different strategies, at the end of the day we need this war to end,” Joly said Friday.

Her statement follows a social-media statement by Global Affairs Canada late Wednesday that drew criticism from Israel advocates.

“We are gravely concerned about the reports that civilians, including children, have been killed or injured,” the department wrote, following the pager explosions. “Canada is calling on all sides to avoid further escalations of violence and to protect civilians.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 20, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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