Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Armed Forces Warn Pokemon Go Users After 'Occurrences' On Three Bases

The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2016 01:27 PM
    HALIFAX — The Canadian Armed Forces are warning Pokemon Go players — both in and out of uniform — not to search for Pokemon on military property.
     
    A spokesperson said military police have reported "Pokemon Go occurrences" at three bases — CFB Borden and 22 Wing North Bay in Ontario, and 14 Wing Greenwood in Nova Scotia — within the first week of the game's release.
     
    "In the interests of public safety, Pokemon Go players must refrain from attempting to access defence establishments without authorization for the purpose of searching for Pokemon," said a statement released by Natasha Leduc, assistant public affairs officer for CFB Halifax.
     
    "A Pokemon Go player found on a defence installation who is not authorized to be there could face sanctions including a warning, a citation and fine, or arrest and prosecution."
     
    The highly popular game sends players into the real world to search for the mythical digital pocket monsters known as Pokemon with their iPhones or Android devices. Players are encouraged to roam their city to visit so-called Pokestops to collect supplies and visit gyms to battle other players.
     
    Pokemon characters have also been spotted in Canadian police stations and hospitals, prompting polite requests that players stay safe, alert and respectful of their surroundings. Corrections Canada, though, tweeted a warning that players refrain from hunting at Stony Mountain Institution, a federal prison in Manitoba where players were apparently seen on the grounds.
     
     
    At CFB Halifax, officials sent a memo noting the base "is appearing in the virtual world that is the global phenomena of "Pokemon Go."
     
    The memo tells all personnel they must show government ID before accessing the base, and cautions that duty officers will respond to "suspicious activity" including: wandering the base while staring at phones, hopping fences to get into controlled sites, or abandoning vehicles on the side of the road to gain access to the base.
     
    "Remember that your actions while playing this game can look suspicious to others who are not aware of the phenomena and that just because someone is looking down at their phone and wandering the base this does not simply mean that they are playing this game," it said. "If it looks suspicious, say something, or if you feel unsafe, contact the MPs or Duty Watch and report the activity."
     
    Leduc said the augmented-reality game has not yet been banned at bases, but military personnel and civilians are discouraged from playing near defence establishments.
     
    Players have been spotted at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg and the National Cemetery of Canada in Ottawa, where officials said they were welcome so long as they remained respectful.
     
    It’s been a different story elsewhere, with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., and Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia both explicitly asking visitors not to play the game there.
     
     
    There have also been concerns about Pokemon fans playing at the former German death camp Auschwitz and the 9/11 Memorial in New York City.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Rule Changes Make Liquor Taste Tests Easier, Allow Retailers To Charge Fee

    B.C. Rule Changes Make Liquor Taste Tests Easier, Allow Retailers To Charge Fee
    VICTORIA — If you're hesitating to buy a pricey bottle of liquor you've never tried, the British Columbia government has stepped in with a taste-test solution.

    B.C. Rule Changes Make Liquor Taste Tests Easier, Allow Retailers To Charge Fee

    Viral Video Of Failed Parking Attempt Leads To Charges For Vancouver Teen

    Viral Video Of Failed Parking Attempt Leads To Charges For Vancouver Teen
    VANCOUVER — An online video showing the end of a teen's joy ride may be funny to viewers, but it wasn't a laughing matter for his mother or police in Vancouver.

    Viral Video Of Failed Parking Attempt Leads To Charges For Vancouver Teen

    Concerns Raised Over Using Woman In Head Scarf For Syrian Refugee Program Ad

    Concerns Raised Over Using Woman In Head Scarf For Syrian Refugee Program Ad
    The photo was one of five put before eight focus groups run last November and December by the civil servants supporting the Prime Minister's Office.

    Concerns Raised Over Using Woman In Head Scarf For Syrian Refugee Program Ad

    Three Year Investigation Leads To Charges In Brazen Robbery In Fort St. John

    Three Year Investigation Leads To Charges In Brazen Robbery In Fort St. John
    Fort St. John RCMP credit tips from the public and dogged work by officers for the three arrests.

    Three Year Investigation Leads To Charges In Brazen Robbery In Fort St. John

    Ontario Allows Grocers That Sell Beer To Add Craft Cider To Store Shelves

    Ontario Allows Grocers That Sell Beer To Add Craft Cider To Store Shelves
    Premier Kathleen Wynne says craft producers have turned locally made cider into one of Ontario's emerging success stories.

    Ontario Allows Grocers That Sell Beer To Add Craft Cider To Store Shelves

    Late Veteran's Love Letters Give Daughter Window Into Father She Never Knew

    Late Veteran's Love Letters Give Daughter Window Into Father She Never Knew
    VERNON, B.C. — As Cathy Gaetz-Brothen opened the box to show her book club the hundreds of love letters her father had written her mother during the war, she recalls several people recoiling.

    Late Veteran's Love Letters Give Daughter Window Into Father She Never Knew