Wednesday, March 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada secures limited seats on commercial flights from Lebanon as conflict widens

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2026 12:02 PM
  • Canada secures limited seats on commercial flights from Lebanon as conflict widens

The federal government has secured "a limited number of seats" on commercial flights out of Lebanon for Canadians trying to flee the region, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said Wednesday.

Anand said 103,000 people have registered with Global Affairs Canada in the Middle East and Gulf region.

The Canadian government is not offering assisted departures from the region.

"Canadians in the region should prepare departure plans that do not rely solely on Government of Canada assistance," Anand said during a media scrum in Ottawa. "Global Affairs Canada is not currently offering assisted departures, but we are in touch with our partners to identify potential options."

The minister said commercial flights are still operating out of Lebanon, which could be an option for people looking to get out of the country.

Some commercial options are also currently available elsewhere in the region, including Saudi Arabia and Oman, but airspace in others, including the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain, are closed.

Israel's ministry of tourism is operating buses to the border with Egypt and Anand said Global Affairs is communicating these options to people registered in the region.

Canadians are being advised to avoid all travel to a number of countries in the region as the U.S.-Iran conflict widens.

Anand said Canada has added diplomatic staff in neighbouring countries, including Azerbaijan, Armenia, Jordan and Turkey.

Israel's military ordered residents in dozens of southern Lebanon border villages to evacuate immediately on Wednesday as airstrikes on Beirut suburbs intensified and Hezbollah claimed more attacks.

Lebanon was dragged early Monday into the war in the Middle East — which erupted following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran — when Hezbollah fired rockets and drones into northern Israel, triggering Israeli retaliatory airstrikes on different parts of the country. Those retaliatory strikes killed more than 50 people, wounded about 300 and displaced tens of thousands from southern Lebanon, the eastern Bekaa Valley and Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Israeli authorities and Hezbollah agreed to a ceasefire in late 2024 after the Iranian-backed militant group started firing at Israel in response to the war in Gaza.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

MORE National ARTICLES

Defence lawyers continue submissions at hockey players' sex assault trial

Defence lawyers continue submissions at hockey players' sex assault trial
Defence lawyers for five former members of Canada's world junior hockey team are continuing to hammer at the credibility of the complainant as they make final submissions at the players' sexual assault trial.

Defence lawyers continue submissions at hockey players' sex assault trial

Canada joins U.K., other nations in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers

Canada joins U.K., other nations in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers
Canada has joined the U.K., Norway, Australia and New Zealand in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers for "inciting violence against Palestinians in the West Bank."

Canada joins U.K., other nations in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers

B.C.'s biggest major wildfire doubles in size, but nearby highway reopens to traffic

B.C.'s biggest major wildfire doubles in size, but nearby highway reopens to traffic
The BC Wildfire Service is reporting that the largest of the province's major fires in the northeast has more than doubled in size in the past 24 hours.

B.C.'s biggest major wildfire doubles in size, but nearby highway reopens to traffic

Judge says Montreal billionaire Robert Miller too sick for trial on sex charges

Judge says Montreal billionaire Robert Miller too sick for trial on sex charges
A Quebec Superior Court judge has stayed criminal charges against Montreal billionaire Robert Miller.

Judge says Montreal billionaire Robert Miller too sick for trial on sex charges

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation
Canada's new minister of artificial intelligence said Tuesday he'll put less emphasis on AI regulation and more on finding ways to harness the technology's economic benefits.

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists
Another dozen temperature records have fallen in British Columbia thanks to the ongoing spell of warm weather brought to the province by a ridge of high pressure.

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists