Tuesday, April 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Komagata Maru memorial in Canada vandalised for third time

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Feb, 2023 01:49 PM
  • Komagata Maru memorial in Canada vandalised for third time

Vancouver, Feb 1 (IANS) The historic Komagata Maru Memorial in Vancouver, Canada, has been vandalised with weird bitcoin messages for the third time in a row between 2021 and 2023.

The memorial honours 376 Indians, including Sikhs, Muslims and Hindus, who sailed to Canada from India in 1914, but were turned away by the country, which left them stuck on the ship for two months with dire conditions. Jindi Singh, National Director of Khalsa Aid Canada, expressed his disgust over the act via a Twitter post.

Singh said that the incident was brought to his notice by some visitors from the UK who came to see the Memorial in Coal Harbour.

"We appreciate the heads up and we are actively investigating this incident," the Vancouver Police Department wrote in response to Singh's tweet.

"Thank you very much for bringing this to our attention. It has been reported to the appropriate department," the City of Vancouver, which was flagged in Singh's tweet, responded.

The message defacing the memorial said: "No more Fiat build on Bitcoin."

According to Daily Hive, a portion of the message was erased from the wall of the memorial.

In October 2022, Vancouver Police shared images of shattered glass on the memorial, saying that the damage was "intentional".

In August 2021, white paint was splattered on the wall bearing the names of the victims, white handprints were also visible and '893 YK' had been written on it.

Police had made one arrest seven months after the launch of the investigation.

MORE National ARTICLES

Experts call for enforcement of new LTC standards

Experts call for enforcement of new LTC standards
The Health Standards Organization released updated standards Tuesday that say residents should get at least four hours of direct care every day. The standards from the panel of experts at the non-profit standards organization also say those who work in those residences must be paid more.

Experts call for enforcement of new LTC standards

GM to invest US$650 million in Lithium Americas

GM to invest US$650 million in Lithium Americas
Lithium is a key component in batteries used by electric vehicles. In the first tranche of the investment deal, GM spend US$320 million for 15 million shares or a 9.999 per cent stake in Lithium Americas.

GM to invest US$650 million in Lithium Americas

Decriminalization starts as OD death data released

Decriminalization starts as OD death data released
Health Canada approved B.C.'s application for decriminalization through an exemption from federal drug laws so people 18 and over could carry up to 2.5 grams of opioids such as heroin and fentanyl, as well as crack and powdered cocaine, methamphetamine and MDMA. Users will not be arrested or have their drugs seized by police in what is a three-year pilot project.    

Decriminalization starts as OD death data released

Fraser Valley bus drivers give strike notice

Fraser Valley bus drivers give strike notice
The union has 213 members including drivers, utility workers, bus washers and mechanics. It says the two sides have engaged in more than 20 days of bargaining since talks began in late spring 2022.

Fraser Valley bus drivers give strike notice

Roller-coaster at West Edmonton Mall to be removed

Roller-coaster at West Edmonton Mall to be removed
The Mindbender was known as the world's tallest and longest indoor, triple-loop roller-coaster. In 1986, three people were killed on the roller-coaster, which forced the mall to shut it down for a year for safety modifications.

Roller-coaster at West Edmonton Mall to be removed

Federal departments failed to spend $38B last year

Federal departments failed to spend $38B last year
Canada rang up a $90.2 billion deficit — $23.6 billion less than had been projected in the budget. The unprecedented amount of lapsed funding, much of which has been returned to the federal treasury, has one observer suggesting it is a sign of long-standing challenges delivering on big federal projects for the country.

Federal departments failed to spend $38B last year