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Transgender community to gather in remembrance, opposition to Alberta legislation

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EDMONTON – Adebayo Chris Katiiti, jailed for being a transgender man in Uganda, was brutally beaten as a child for wearing his brothers’ clothes.

He says moving to Alberta in 2016 saved his life.

“I found home in Edmonton,” said Katiiti, 29, a therapist and life coach who works with the LGBTQ+ community.

“In Canada, I was able to access gender-affirming care, create a community, a family, and … create environments that are safe, where people can be themselves.”

But in October, and for the first time since he arrived in Canada, Katiiti said he began to feel like his safety is in jeopardy again.

That’s when Alberta’s United Conservative Party government introduced three bills that would affect transgender people.

On Wednesday, when Transgender Day of Remembrance is recognized around the world, harmful effects of Alberta’s proposed legislation are set to be highlighted during an evening event in Edmonton.

Katiiti is helping to organize the memorial.

If enacted, the bills would restrict transgender athletes from competing in female amateur sports, prohibit doctors from treating those under 16 seeking gender-affirming surgeries, and require children under 16 to have parental consent if they want to change their names or pronouns at school.

Critics have called the proposed laws the most restrictive in Canada. Amnesty International and LGBTQ+ groups have condemned the measures.

Premier Danielle Smith has said the proposed legislation is part of an effort to keep children safe and that parents need to know what’s going on with their children.

Katiiti said many in Alberta’s transgender community don’t agree with the premier.

“The bills that have been tabled here in Alberta continue to suffocate and jeopardize the lives of trans individuals. The bills perpetuate stigma,” he said.

“That’s why so many trans people are in isolation, don’t want to come out. We are here having a government, who’s supposed to protect us, passing laws that give voices and space to groups to attack our people.”

At the Edmonton remembrance event, a list is to be read of about 419 transgender people who died from violence or suicide in recent years around the world. One was stoned to death, another burned alive. One was 14 years old.

Through tears, Katiiti said two people on the list — one a friend — were Albertans who died in 2022.

Allison Hadley, a transgender woman in Edmonton, is set to read out some of the names.

She said she’ll also be speaking about the Alberta bills and how they further isolate her and those in the province’s transgender community.

“A lot of our communities’ siblings have their lives cut short for just wanting to exist in a normal way, and I can’t not take that personally because it’s very close to home,” she said.

“If we can’t play sports, then I stay home. If we can’t access health care, we stay home and we die.”

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

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Canadians favour government intervention in Canada Post, port labour disputes: poll

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OTTAWA – A new poll suggests Canadians are supportive of government intervention in the labour disputes at ports and at Canada Post.

Polling firm Leger found 63 per cent of respondents to a new survey were in favour of the Liberal government’s move to step in and ask the Canada Industrial Relations Board to order a resumption of port operations and move negotiations into binding arbitration. Nineteen per cent were opposed, and another 19 per cent said they didn’t know.

Just over half of respondents, 57 per cent, said they would be in favour of the government doing the same in the ongoing Canada Post strike. Twenty-one per cent were opposed, and 22 per cent said they didn’t know.

About 55,000 employees represented by the Canadian Union of Postal Workers have been on strike since Friday, shutting down operations and halting deliveries. The federal government has appointed its top mediator to help reach a new agreement.

On Friday, Labour Minister Steve MacKinnon ruled out early intervention in that strike. 

Earlier in the week, MacKinnon intervened to end the dispute at Canada’s ports. Port workers in B.C. and Montreal were locked out, freezing cargo container movements from two of the country’s busiest ports. 

Leger polled 1,529 people from Nov. 15 to 17. The poll does not have a margin of error because online polls aren’t considered truly random samples.

Fifty-one per cent of respondents said port operations should be classified as essential services and not allowed to stop, while 32 per cent said port workers should be allowed to strike to improve working conditions. 

The unions representing the Montreal and B.C. port workers have pledged to challenge the minister’s intervention in court.

Canadians were more familiar with the strike at Canada Post than the lockout at the ports, with 86 per cent saying they had heard that postal workers could walk off the job, compared to 67 per cent who were familiar with the port dispute.

Sixty-one per cent of those who took the poll said they were worried about potential disruptions to their mail service due to a postal strike, and 57 per cent said they were concerned about possible delays over the holiday season.

Around the same number, 56 per cent, said they were supportive of the demands being made by Canada Post workers, while 29 per cent were opposed.

The union is asking for a cumulative wage hike of 24 per cent over four years, while Canada Post has offered an 11.5 per cent increase. Other issues include job security, benefits and contract work for parcel delivery on weekends.

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

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Human smuggling trial could hear from survivor of frigid cross-border walk

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FERGUS FALLS – The trial of two men accused of human smuggling is expected to soon hear from a migrant who survived a long walk across the Canada-U. S. border in a blizzard.

Steve Shand and Harshkumar Patel are charged with organizing several illegal crossings, from Manitoba to Minnesota, of people from India.

They have pleaded not guilty and their trial is set to run until Friday.

One of the crossings they are accused of organizing saw a family of four freeze to death as they struggled to walk in blowing snow and wind chills below -30 in January 2022.

Border officials caught seven others that day, one of whom is scheduled to take the witness stand as early as today.

Border officials have testified that they saw boot prints in the same area in the weeks preceding that day — a sign that previous migrant crossings had been successful.

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

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B.C. port union challenges constitutionality of labour minister’s back-to-work order

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VANCOUVER – The union representing port supervisors in British Columbia is formally challenging the legal and constitutional authority of the federal labour minister to order them back to work.

In a legal document dated Tuesday, International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 says it’s questioning whether the order issued by Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon last week violates the right to collective bargaining and the right to strike.

The union says these rights are protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

It says the questions will be considered by a panel of the Canada Industrial Relations Board on Dec. 9 and 10.

This isn’t the only challenge the federal government is facing on this issue, as the union representing port workers in Montreal also announced last week it intended to challenge the federal government.

MacKinnon stepped in on Nov. 12 to get ports in both B.C. and Montreal moving again after employers locked workers out.

His order directed the board to order all operations to resume and move both sets of talks to binding arbitration.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 19, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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