Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Montreal newspaper blasted for front-page photo of Trudeau in India

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Apr, 2021 05:18 PM
  • Montreal newspaper blasted for front-page photo of Trudeau in India

The Journal de Montreal newspaper is being criticized for running a photo from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's 2018 trip to India on its front page today to accompany a COVID-19 story.

Trudeau is wearing traditional Indian clothes and holding his hands together in prayer beside a caption that reads, "The Indian variant has arrived."

The cover refers to Quebec's first case of a novel coronavirus variant that emerged in India, and it asks "Justin" whether ties with India will be cut quickly.

Benoit Charette, the provincial minister responsible for fighting racism, said today on Twitter he fears the cover photo could fuel prejudice in the province.

The Journal's cover drew criticism from other politicians in Quebec City, including Liberal Leader Dominique Anglade, who called it "very dangerous."

Dany Doucet, editor-in-chief of the newspaper, said the photo was chosen to illustrate Trudeau's attachment to India and the difficult choice he faces regarding flights from that country.

"Those who didn't understand this certainly haven't read the stories inside, as too many commentators sometimes don't," Doucet told QMI Agency, which is also owned by the Journal de Montreal's publisher, Quebecor Inc.

MORE National ARTICLES

832 COVID cases for Friday

832 COVID cases for Friday
There have been 90 new confirmed COVID-19 cases that are variants of concern in our province, for a total of 2,643 cases.

832 COVID cases for Friday

Charges approved against man in Gastown sex act

Charges approved against man in Gastown sex act
A male suspect approached her and used aggressive language. The suspect followed her to her building.

Charges approved against man in Gastown sex act

Suspect in fatal B.C. stabbing appears in court

Suspect in fatal B.C. stabbing appears in court
Police have said shortly after Bandaogo was arrested near the scene of the stabbing at the Lynn Valley library last Saturday that he underwent surgery for self-inflicted wounds.

Suspect in fatal B.C. stabbing appears in court

Facts on J&J's COVID shot, arriving end of April

Facts on J&J's COVID shot, arriving end of April
Canada approved the vaccine in early March and had pre-ordered 10 million doses, but manufacturing problems from the company led to shipment delays to Canada and elsewhere.

Facts on J&J's COVID shot, arriving end of April

Five million Canadians now have at least one dose

Five million Canadians now have at least one dose
The number of people vaccinated with at least one dose topped five million as of Thursday morning, leaving about 27 million people over 16 still needing a first dose.

Five million Canadians now have at least one dose

Canada-U.S. dispute emerges over whale's death

Canada-U.S. dispute emerges over whale's death
Fisheries and Oceans Canada issued a statement Wednesday saying it had determined the gear, retrieved after a whale known as Cottontail was found dead on Feb. 27, likely came from an American inshore fishing boat.

Canada-U.S. dispute emerges over whale's death