Monday, April 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Activists to rally in Halifax for public inquiry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2020 06:46 PM
  • Activists to rally in Halifax for public inquiry

People are gathering at a Halifax park today to demand a public inquiry into the Nova Scotia mass shootings.

The gathering at Victoria Park comes less than a week after the province unveiled a plan for a panel review into the massacre.

Organizers say a 22-minute general strike will begin at noon local time to honour the 22 victims who were killed last April.

Several local women's rights advocates, as well as Dartmouth South MLA Claudia Chender, of Nova Scotia's New Democrats, are expected to speak at the rally.

Many of the victims' families have called for a public inquiry into what happened during the shootings on April 18 and 19 and what led to the rampage.

Activists, lawyers, Nova Scotia opposition parties and federal senators from across Canada have also joined that call over the past several months.

But the federal and Nova Scotia governments said last week that a three-person panel would be set up to review the massacre.

That review body will be led by Michael MacDonald, a former chief justice of Nova Scotia, and includes former federal Liberal cabinet minister Anne McLellan, and Leanne Fitch, the former chief of police in Fredericton.

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil said that he believes the panel will be able to get the answers that the victims' families are demanding.

He also told reporters that the panellists will be able to ask his government for assistance should they need it.

But critics have criticized a perceived lack of transparency and say the panel does not have enough power to lead an in-depth investigation.

The organizers of Monday's rally expressed hope that they will be able to pressure Ottawa and Halifax to reverse course and ultimately order a public inquiry.

"We need systemic and structural change to come from this," Martha Paynter, one of the event organizers, said in an interview on Saturday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case
The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that a class-action lawsuit taking aim at video lottery terminals cannot proceed, saying Friday the claims made in the case are bound to fail.

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case

Helicopter removed from crash site in N.L.

Helicopter removed from crash site in N.L.
Members of the Transportation Safety Board of Canada have completed their work at the scene of a fatal helicopter crash in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Helicopter removed from crash site in N.L.

Mother charged in six-year-old's stabbing death

Mother charged in six-year-old's stabbing death
The mother of a six-year-old girl who died after she was stabbed in an east-end Montreal residence was charged Friday with second-degree murder.

Mother charged in six-year-old's stabbing death

Trudeau should quit over WE deal: Scheer

Trudeau should quit over WE deal: Scheer
Outgoing Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should resign over his role in the controversy involving the WE organization.

Trudeau should quit over WE deal: Scheer

Ottawa urged to hurry domestic vaccine funds

Ottawa urged to hurry domestic vaccine funds
The Trudeau government is being pressed to approve funding for a made-in-Canada COVID-19 vaccine to lessen the risk Canadians will have to line up and wait on a foreign-made pandemic cure.

Ottawa urged to hurry domestic vaccine funds

Violent crime on the rise: Winnipeg police chief

Violent crime on the rise: Winnipeg police chief
Winnipeg's police chief says there was an alarming increase in the level of brazen crime in the city last year, with the number homicides double the average.

Violent crime on the rise: Winnipeg police chief