Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. premier at D-Day events, says we must not forget horrors of intolerance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2019 05:28 PM

    British Columbia Premier John Horgan says as a modern, civilized society we need to remind ourselves and future generations that intolerance and extremism have a cost to liberty and freedom.

    The premier attended ceremonies in France to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day and described the event on Juno beach as "powerful" and "very moving."

    Speaking from France in a conference call with reporters on Thursday, Horgan says D-Day is a reminder of the "fragility" of our system, the freedoms that we enjoy and that we must always be vigilant.

    He says if we don't remember the horrors of intolerance and extremism we are doomed to repeat them.

    Horgan joined thousands of Canadians on a stretch of beach on the coast of Normandy to commemorate one of the most pivotal days of the Second World War.

    Several ceremonies were also held across Canada to mark D-Day with some veterans who are the last living link to the largest seaborne invasion in history.

    "I think the reflections on the price of our democracy and the price of our freedom needs to be a constant reminder," Horgan said.

    "We gather on Nov. 11 but we also have to look a little deeper it seems to me and protect and preserve our institutions and be wary of the rise of intolerance, what generated the tyranny of the Second World War in the first place."

    D-Day commemorates the beginning of the liberation of Europe and the end of tyranny, he said adding it represented a symbol of sacrifices that people made so that we could have the system that we have in place today.

    Horgan will also meet business leaders while on his European trip, tour tall wooden structures, look at film and tourism industries and take the high-speed train to the Netherlands to get a "flavour" of it to see how it can help the province with connectivity and reducing green house gases.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Premier Kenney Cleared After Questions Raised About MP Housing Expenses

    The Board of Internal Economy has found that Kenney did nothing wrong based on housing rules in place at the time.

    Alberta Premier Kenney Cleared After Questions Raised About MP Housing Expenses

    Landlord Who Refused To Rent To Muslim Men Settles Lawsuit

    Landlord Who Refused To Rent To Muslim Men Settles Lawsuit
    A Denver landlord who was recorded telling her tenant to find an "American person ... good like you and me" to sublease her property instead of a Muslim father and son seeking to open their second restaurant must pay the men $675,000 under a settlement.

    Landlord Who Refused To Rent To Muslim Men Settles Lawsuit

    Alberta Students Walk Out To Protest Expected Gay-Straight Alliance Changes

    CALGARY — Students across Alberta walked out of their classes today to protest expected changes to the province's rules for gay-straight alliances.    

    Alberta Students Walk Out To Protest Expected Gay-Straight Alliance Changes

    Knockin' On Shinzo Abe's Door: Japanese PM Shows Off Quirky Canadian Souvenir

    In a video posted Thursday to his official Instagram account, Shinzo Abe installs the folksy souvenir at the entrance of his lakeside villa outside Tokyo.

    Knockin' On Shinzo Abe's Door: Japanese PM Shows Off Quirky Canadian Souvenir

    Mother And Four Kids Dead In Fire In Northern Ontario First Nation

    Mother And Four Kids Dead In Fire In Northern Ontario First Nation
    A mother and four of her children were killed in a house fire on a northern Ontario First Nation on Thursday, leaving the remote community struggling to deal with the tragedy.

    Mother And Four Kids Dead In Fire In Northern Ontario First Nation

    Khalsa Aid's Exhibition LAPATA Debuts In Vancouver Showing Impact Of 1984 Anti-Sikh Violence In India - SEE PICS And VIDEO

    Much of the violence against Sikhs began in June 1984 when the Indian Army stormed the Golden Temple, Sikhism's holiest shrine in Amritsar, to root out extremists working toward an independent homeland they called Khalistan

    Khalsa Aid's Exhibition LAPATA Debuts In Vancouver Showing Impact Of 1984 Anti-Sikh Violence In India - SEE PICS And VIDEO