Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada suspends Turkish arms exports

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2020 08:52 PM
  • Canada suspends Turkish arms exports

Canada is suspending arms exports to Turkey while it investigates claims that drone-sensor technology created by an Ontario company is being improperly used in renewed fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne announced the new move today after ordering an investigation last week.

Champagne was responding to calls from arms-control watchdogs, Armenian Canadians and New Democrats to suspend the export of a targeting sensor made by a Burlington, Ont. company that is allegedly being used in Turkish attack drones.

Turkey is a Canadian NATO ally and faces allegations it is involved in the renewed fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan in a disputed region of the Caucasus.

Champagne says he is suspending the permits to allow time to assess the situation.

Canada and Britain have called on Azerbaijan and Armenia to settle their differences in negotiations before the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta expects deficit of more than $24B

Alberta expects deficit of more than $24B
The double blow of collapsing oil prices and the COVID-19 crisis has pushed Alberta into a historic deficit of $24.2 billion — more than triple what the United Conservative government projected in its February budget.

Alberta expects deficit of more than $24B

Spike in requests for mail-in ballots in N.B

Spike in requests for mail-in ballots in N.B
New Brunswick's chief electoral officer says there's been a spike in requests for mail-in ballots as voters prepare to choose their next provincial government in the first election in Canada called during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Spike in requests for mail-in ballots in N.B

Canadians with disabilities struggling financially: survey

Canadians with disabilities struggling financially: survey
A Statistics Canada report suggests that more than half of Canadians with disabilities who participated in a crowdsourced survey are struggling to make ends meet because of the financial impacts of the COVID-19 crisis.

Canadians with disabilities struggling financially: survey

Canada united, U.S. divided by COVID-19: poll

Canada united, U.S. divided by COVID-19: poll
Canadians believe the COVID-19 crisis has brought their country together, while Americans blame the pandemic for worsening their cultural and political divide, a new international public opinion survey suggests.

Canada united, U.S. divided by COVID-19: poll

Alert system ready for N.S. Mi'kmaq communities

Alert system ready for N.S. Mi'kmaq communities
A new alert system that will issue emergency messages to residents in five Nova Scotia Mi'kmaq communities is the first of its kind among Indigenous peoples in Canada, according to developers.

Alert system ready for N.S. Mi'kmaq communities

Prison oversight panel to get its data: Blair

Prison oversight panel to get its data: Blair
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair is stepping in to ensure an advisory panel tasked with overseeing the segregation of federal inmates will get the data it needs to do its job.

Prison oversight panel to get its data: Blair