Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada accepting 1M Moderna doses from U.S.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2021 10:18 AM
  • Canada accepting 1M Moderna doses from U.S.

Canada will receive a donation of 1 million doses of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine from the United States today.

The doses are part of the U.S. promise to donate 80 million doses of vaccines by the end of June.

Jeff Zients, the White House COVID-19 response co-ordinator, says the shipment to Canada will arrive today, following a donated shipment to Mexico on Tuesday.

The donation won't cost Canada anything, and will be on top of the 44 million doses Canada has purchased directly from Moderna.

Procurement Minister Anita Anand took to Twitter to highlight the securing of vaccines from the US.

It comes less than a week after Canada promised to donate 13 million doses to the COVAX vaccine-sharing alliance, which will entirely come from the remaining share of doses Canada had purchased from COVAX itself.

Canada has been heavily criticized for buying three times as many doses of COVID-19 vaccine than it needs and not sharing any doses from its own direct purchase agreements with vaccine makers.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

WSO Rejects Allegations Of Rising Sikh Radicalism In Canada

THE World Sikh Organization of Canada said on Friday that following up to and during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s visit to India, a number of media sources reported allegations of “rising Sikh radicalism in Canada”.   

WSO Rejects Allegations Of Rising Sikh Radicalism In Canada

Suspect To Face First-Degree Murder Charge In Death Of 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl

Suspect To Face First-Degree Murder Charge In Death Of 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl
ST-JEROME, Que. - A 51-year-old man will face a first-degree murder charge in connection with the violent death of a teenage girl who was found by the side of a road in Quebec's Laurentians region.    

Suspect To Face First-Degree Murder Charge In Death Of 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl

Ontario Confirms Seventh Coronavirus Case; Man Had Travelled To Iran

TORONTO - Ontario now has seven confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, with the three most recent patients all having recently travelled to Iran.    

Ontario Confirms Seventh Coronavirus Case; Man Had Travelled To Iran

Manitoba Pushes Ahead With Carbon Tax Court Challenge; Still Hoping For Deal

WINNIPEG - The Manitoba government is pushing ahead with a court challenge of the federal carbon tax although Premier Brian Pallister says he'd still like to see a deal with Ottawa.    

Manitoba Pushes Ahead With Carbon Tax Court Challenge; Still Hoping For Deal

Lawsuit Over African Mine Can Be Heard In British Columbia: Supreme Court

Lawsuit Over African Mine Can Be Heard In British Columbia: Supreme Court
OTTAWA - A human-rights lawsuit against a Canadian mining company can be heard in British Columbia, even though it involves events in Africa, the Supreme Court of Canada says.

Lawsuit Over African Mine Can Be Heard In British Columbia: Supreme Court

Federal Government Runs $11-Billion Deficit For April-To-December Period

OTTAWA - The federal government ran a deficit of $11.0 billion over the first nine months of its 2019-20 fiscal year.    

Federal Government Runs $11-Billion Deficit For April-To-December Period