Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

Hundreds of travellers test positive for variants

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2021 09:05 PM
  • Hundreds of travellers test positive for variants

More than 2,000 people returning to Canada since mandatory hotel quarantines began have tested positive for COVID-19 and more than a quarter of them were infected with a variant of concern.

The data supplied to The Canadian Press by the Public Health Agency of Canada comes as the federal government is being pressured to take even more steps to keep new variants from getting into the country.

Data shows between Feb. 22 and April 11, 2,018 returning travellers tested positive on a test taken when they arrived in the country.

The agency says that is about one per cent of arrivals.

Further data shows as of April 22, 557 people had tested positive for a variant of concern, including 518 of the strain first identified in the United Kingdom, 27 of the variant first detected in South Africa and 12 of the strain first found in Brazil.

Nazeem Muhajarine, a professor of community health and epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan, says border restrictions are necessary but will only work well if complemented with local rules and enough testing and tracing to keep cases from spreading.

MORE National ARTICLES

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families
Ottawa and Nova Scotia have announced a review of the April mass shooting that left 22 people and the gunman dead, but the process drew criticism from victims' relatives as being too secretive and lacking the necessary legal powers.

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada
Parents of students in the United States who hoped to begin their university studies in Canada this fall are frantically trying to convince the federal government to relax rules that make it next to impossible for their kids to enter the country.

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death
A young man pleaded for help as he was being led out of a hospital by security before taking his own life in a lake on the Saskatchewan legislature grounds.

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death

Tories, NDP ask for new probe of Morneau, WE

Tories, NDP ask for new probe of Morneau, WE
Opposition parties are asking the federal ethics watchdog to widen his probe of Bill Morneau regarding the WE organization as the finance minister continues to face calls for his resignation.

Tories, NDP ask for new probe of Morneau, WE

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal
For Alberta, the one-year deal will mean more than $45 million this fiscal year to create new licensed child-care spaces through capital and program grants and subsidies for more lower-income families.

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal

Search for N.S. fugitive into third day

Search for N.S. fugitive into third day
RCMP say they continue to get reports of sightings of Tobias Charles Doucette, the fugitive accused of stabbing a police sergeant, assaulting a woman and injuring a police dog, as the manhunt for him enters its third day.

Search for N.S. fugitive into third day