Monday, April 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

It's Debate Day: 6 Leaders To Take The Stage Tonight For The Campaign's Last English Debate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2019 05:48 PM

    In-The-News is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to kickstart your day. Here is what's on the radar of our editors for the morning of Oct. 7.

     

    What we are watching in Canada ...

     

    OTTAWA — All six federal party leaders are in Ottawa today for an English-language debate that could shake up an election campaign that's seen practically no movement in the polls since it began on Sept. 11.

     

    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and Conservative boss Andrew Scheer, the two front-runners, both have events in Ottawa this morning: Trudeau has a photo-op with teachers and Scheer is promising an announcement at a downtown hotel.

     

    The NDP's Jagmeet Singh and the Greens' Elizabeth May appear to be fighting for third place, both looking to pick up seats especially on the West Coast.

     

    The Bloc Quebecois' Yves-Francois Blanchet has little to gain or lose in front of a national audience primarily of English-speakers, while the People's Party's Maxime Bernier is counting on the national debates to introduce himself as a populist alternative to the major parties.

     

    This is the first of two debates taking place this week in a theatre at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Que, with a French-language version coming Thursday.

     

    Voters go the polls on Oct. 21.

    ---

    Also this ...

     

    VANCOUVER — A group of doctors that's calling on all federal political parties to take action on climate change now has support from four major organizations including the Canadian Medical Association -- and 19 more groups are joining the effort this week.

     

    Family doctor Melissa Lem is on the board of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment and says health professionals are increasingly advocating for a commitment from parties to limit global warming while others push for better policies on issues including gun violence.

     

    Lem's environmental association has met with representatives of all the major federal political parties, except for the Conservatives who formally declined discussions.

     

    She says health professionals are on the front lines treating multiple harms based on government policies and they're combining their scientific knowledge with activism in an effort to improve their patients' health.

    ---

     

    What you may have missed ...

     

    Inuit are hoping to use the alphabet to help keep their far-flung people together.

     

    Canada's national Inuit organization recently decided on a standard way to write their language that could be understood from Inuvik in the northern corner of the Northwest Territories to Nain on the east edge of Labrador. The new orthography replaces a patchwork of nine different, often mutually unintelligible scripts.

     

    "We've never done this before," said Natan Obed of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami. "It's the first time we're exercising our own self-determination to implement our own writing system."

     

    Before European contact, Inuktut was an entirely oral language. Nobody needed to read or write anything down until the 1700s, when missionaries, government workers and businessmen started showing up.

     

    Those groups all worked out different ways of translating the sounds of spoken Inuktut into symbols on a page, which they then taught to the Inuit.

     

    The orthographic hodge-podge has not only made it harder for Inuit kids to get educational material in their own language, it makes it harder to communicate between the Inuvialuit in the west, the Nunatsiavut in the east and all the groups in between.

    ---

    What we are watching in the U.S. ...

     

    WASHINGTON — The disclosure of a second whistleblower threatens to undermine arguments made by U.S. President Donald Trump and his allies that a whistleblower complaint was improperly filed because it was largely based on secondhand information.

     

    Attorney Mark Zaid told The Associated Press in a text message Sunday that the second whistleblower, who also works in intelligence, has spoken to the intelligence community's internal watchdog. This person hasn't filed a complaint but does have "firsthand knowledge that supported" the original whistleblower.

     

    Trump has rejected the accusations he did anything improper.

     

    The original whistleblower, a CIA officer, filed a formal complaint with the inspector general on Aug. 12 that triggered the impeachment inquiry being led by House Democrats.

     

    The complaint alleged Trump was "using the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country" in the 2020 election.

    ---

    What we are watching in the rest of the world ...

     

    BEIRUT — U.S.-backed Kurdish-led forces in Syria say American troops have begun withdrawing from areas along Turkey's border.

     

    This comes hours after the White House said U.S. forces in northeastern Syria will move aside and clear the way for an expected Turkish assault — essentially abandoning Kurdish fighters who fought alongside American forces in the yearslong battle to defeat the Islamic State group.

     

    The Syrian Democratic Forces say the move comes as Turkey is preparing to attack Kurdish-held areas in northeast Syria.

     

    The statement warns the Turkish invasion would be a blow to the fight against IS militants.

     

    The Kurdish Hawar news agency and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also say American troops were evacuating positions near the towns of Ras al-Ayn and Tal Abyad on Monday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    John Buchanan, Folksy Nova Scotia Premier Who Held Office For 12 Years, Dies At 88

    HALIFAX - Former Nova Scotia premier John Buchanan, whose political charm propelled his Progressive Conservatives to four consecutive majority governments, has died in Halifax at the age of 88.    

    John Buchanan, Folksy Nova Scotia Premier Who Held Office For 12 Years, Dies At 88

    Quebec Parents Seek Class Action Against Makers Of 'Addictive' Fortnite Game

    Montreal-based Calex Legal is seeking to sue Epic Games Inc., the U.S. company behind the popular online video game, as well as its Canadian affiliate based in British Columbia.

    Quebec Parents Seek Class Action Against Makers Of 'Addictive' Fortnite Game

    Cyclists, Bear Ok After Bruin Chases Them On North Vancouver Trail

    Cyclists, Bear Ok After Bruin Chases Them On North Vancouver Trail
    VANCOUVER - Mountain bikers are being advised to steer clear of several popular trails on Vancouver's North Shore after an inquisitive black bear gave three cyclists a scare.

    Cyclists, Bear Ok After Bruin Chases Them On North Vancouver Trail

    16-Yr-Old B.C. Boy Arrested For Alleged Bomb Threats Aimed At Montreal's Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport

    16-Yr-Old B.C. Boy Arrested For Alleged Bomb Threats Aimed At Montreal's Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport
    16-year-old boy from British Columbia is facing charges for allegedly making several false bomb threats over the internet aimed at Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport in Montreal.

    16-Yr-Old B.C. Boy Arrested For Alleged Bomb Threats Aimed At Montreal's Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport

    UPDATE: IHIT Seeking Witnesses From Two Vehicles In Clayton Heights Fatal Shooting

    IHIT is requesting public assistance to identify the drivers and occupants of two vehicles – a white SUV (possibly a Honda) and a white Tesla sedan 

    UPDATE: IHIT Seeking Witnesses From Two Vehicles In Clayton Heights Fatal Shooting

    New Westminster Police Looking For Missing 27-Year-Old Scott Kennedy-Dumont

    The New Westminster Police Department is seeking public assistance in the search for 27 year old missing person Scott Kennedy-Dumont.

    New Westminster Police Looking For Missing 27-Year-Old Scott Kennedy-Dumont