Sunday, June 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada to send artillery ammunition to Ukraine

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2022 11:56 AM
  • Canada to send artillery ammunition to Ukraine

OTTAWA - Defence Minister Anita Anand says Canada is shipping 20,000 rounds of artillery ammunition to Ukraine.

Anand says the ammunition is "exactly" what Ukraine's government asked for from its allies.

She says the rounds are the standard NATO artillery calibre and compatible with the artillery guns provided to Ukraine by Canada and other countries.

In April, Canada shipped four M777 howitzers to Ukraine, part of more than $130 million in military equipment Canada has donated since Russia launched its unprovoked attack in Ukraine in February.

The new ammunition comes with a price tag of $98 million, drawn from the $500 million in military aid Canada budgeted for Ukraine this year.

Anand says Russian President Vladimir Putin cannot simply remake borders to his own liking and Canada will continue to stand with Ukraine.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. approves plastics bans in 4 communities

B.C. approves plastics bans in 4 communities
The province approved similar bylaws in Victoria, Richmond, Saanich, Tofino and Ucluelet last September to prevent waste such as shopping bags and takeout containers from ending up in landfills and the ocean.

B.C. approves plastics bans in 4 communities

Cache of weapons found by Vancouver police

Cache of weapons found by Vancouver police
Const. Tania Visintin says the "very dangerous" weapons included shotguns, knives, a Taser and pepper spray, along with a gun cabinet, ammunition and rifle cases.

Cache of weapons found by Vancouver police

Liberals to introduce new gun legislation

Liberals to introduce new gun legislation
The long-promised bill would flesh out last spring's ban of many firearms, propose stricter storage provisions and target gun smuggling.

Liberals to introduce new gun legislation

Witnesses sought in assault

Witnesses sought in assault
The alleged suspect, a man driving the SUV, allegedly claimed he was a law enforcement officer before assaulting the cyclist and then left the area.

Witnesses sought in assault

Court considers injunction against churchgoers

Court considers injunction against churchgoers
Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson says public health orders already prohibit such gatherings and it's within the power of provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and the government to escalate enforcement without a court order.

Court considers injunction against churchgoers

NDP proposes doubling gas-tax funding to cities

NDP proposes doubling gas-tax funding to cities
In a release, the NDP leader says the pandemic has been hard on cities and the federal government should give municipalities tools to quickly get back on their fiscal feet.

NDP proposes doubling gas-tax funding to cities