Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Governments Shouldn't Tell Women What To Wear And What Not To Wear: Justin Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2017 01:18 PM
    ALMA, Que. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is again wading into the debate on Quebec's Bill 62, saying it is not a government's business to tell a woman what to wear and what not to wear.
     
    Trudeau says the federal government is going to take its responsibilities seriously and look carefully at the implications of the law.
     
    Campaigning today in the Quebec town of Alma ahead of a federal byelection Monday, Trudeau was asked if that means taking the law to court.
     
    He replied it means studying its implications and continuing to stand up for Canadians' rights.
     
     
    Bill 62 bans people from providing or receiving public services in Quebec with their faces covered and is widely seen as an attack on Muslim women.
     
    On Thursday, Trudeau asserted it is not up to the federal government to challenge its constitutionality.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Almost 800 People Who Survived Isil Now In Canada As Refugees: Ahmed Hussen

    Almost 800 People Who Survived Isil Now In Canada As Refugees: Ahmed Hussen
    OTTAWA — Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen said Thursday nearly 800 Yazidi women and girls and others who survived the cruelties of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant have now arrived in Canada as refugees.

    Almost 800 People Who Survived Isil Now In Canada As Refugees: Ahmed Hussen

    Man In Sweden Charged With Raping Canadian And Other Foreign Girls Over The Internet

    Man In Sweden Charged With Raping Canadian And Other Foreign Girls Over The Internet
    Bjorn Samstrom, whose trial is underway, is charged with dozens of offences, including "gross rape," involving 27 girls, two of them Canadian, according to one

    Man In Sweden Charged With Raping Canadian And Other Foreign Girls Over The Internet

    Trudeau To Apologize In Labrador For Residential Schools Nov. 24: Lawyer

    Trudeau To Apologize In Labrador For Residential Schools Nov. 24: Lawyer
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A lawyer for former residential school students excluded from a national apology in 2008 says Justin Trudeau will be in Labrador on Nov. 24 to apologize.

    Trudeau To Apologize In Labrador For Residential Schools Nov. 24: Lawyer

    Dirty Chinese Restaurant Video Game's Release Cancelled After Being Slammed As Racist

    Dirty Chinese Restaurant Video Game's Release Cancelled After Being Slammed As Racist
    The Toronto-area developer of a video game denounced as racist says the product will not be released as planned.

    Dirty Chinese Restaurant Video Game's Release Cancelled After Being Slammed As Racist

    Two Military Members Charged With Sexually Assaulting Other Personnel

    Two Military Members Charged With Sexually Assaulting Other Personnel
    OTTAWA — Two members of the Canadian Forces have been charged with sexually assaulting other military personnel in separate incidents.

    Two Military Members Charged With Sexually Assaulting Other Personnel

    B.C.'s High Court Rejects Discrimination Suit From Victoria Guide Dog Owner

    B.C.'s High Court Rejects Discrimination Suit From Victoria Guide Dog Owner
    Blind Victoria Man Has Lost His Discrimination Complaint In British Columbia's Highest Court

    B.C.'s High Court Rejects Discrimination Suit From Victoria Guide Dog Owner