Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

National Post Appeals $50,000 Libel Suit Launched By B.C. Environmentalist

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2015 01:02 PM
  • National Post Appeals $50,000 Libel Suit Launched By B.C. Environmentalist
VANCOUVER — The National Post is appealing a defamation ruling that ordered it to pay $50,000 to a British Columbia environmentalist-turned-politician.
 
Andrew Weaver successfully sued the newspaper, its publisher and several writers over four columns that were published in late 2009 and early 2010. The paper was also ordered to publish a full retraction and remove the content from it website.
 
At the time, Weaver was a University of Victoria professor who had participated in a U.N. panel on climate change, though now he is a Green party member of B.C.'s legislature.
 
Weaver alleged the columns implied that he tried to divert public attention from a scandal involving the climate-change panel by linking the fossil fuel industry to break-ins at his office. In 2009, hackers leaked thousands of emails from a British climate centre in a scandal that became known as "Climategate."
 
Weaver also alleged that the columns had falsely implied he distorted and concealed scientific data in exchange for government funding.
 
During the previous case, the newspaper argued the articles were about Weaver's public actions and words, not his character, and said they amounted to fair comment.
 
The judge rejected the fair comment defence and concluded the writers were "careless or indifferent to the accuracy of the facts."
 
The Post filed a notice with the B.C. Court of Appeal last week asking that the decision be overturned, though the document does not outline the legal arguments the paper intends to make.
 
In an article published Tuesday by the newspaper, editor Anne Marie Owens said “the case raises some important issues and we respectfully believe the judge fell into error.”
 
Weaver could not be immediately reached for comment.

MORE National ARTICLES

CAPP predicts oil investment will drop by a third as prices languish

CAPP predicts oil investment will drop by a third as prices languish
FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers is expecting oilpatch investment to drop by a third — or $23 billion — this year compared with 2014, while output is seen growing at a slower clip than previously predicted.

CAPP predicts oil investment will drop by a third as prices languish

Vancouver's Housing Market Among Least Affordable: International Survey

Vancouver's Housing Market Among Least Affordable: International Survey
TORONTO — Vancouver has been ranked among the most unaffordable real estate markets in a recent international report, leaving economists concerned about the potential impacts of rising mortgage rates on the city's homeowners.

Vancouver's Housing Market Among Least Affordable: International Survey

Three Lawmakers To Join President Obama On India Trip

Three Democratic lawmakers, including the lone Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera, whose parents moved to the US from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home state of Gujarat in the 1950s, will join President Barack Obama on his India trip.

Three Lawmakers To Join President Obama On India Trip

Former B.C. Children's Ministry Worker Facing Child Pornography Charge

Former B.C. Children's Ministry Worker Facing Child Pornography Charge
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — A former employee with British Columbia's Ministry of Children and Family Development is facing child pornography charges over allegations that occurred while he was still working with the department, the RCMP confirmed Tuesday.

Former B.C. Children's Ministry Worker Facing Child Pornography Charge

Five-year-old Boy Fatally Shoots His Brother In US

Five-year-old Boy Fatally Shoots His Brother In US
A five-year-old boy accidentally shot dead his nine-month-old baby brother in US' Missouri after he found a gun lying around the bed, media reported Wednesday.

Five-year-old Boy Fatally Shoots His Brother In US

Rocky Mountaineer Train Company To Refurbish Fleet Of 16 Domed Rail Cars

Rocky Mountaineer Train Company To Refurbish Fleet Of 16 Domed Rail Cars
VANCOUVER — Rocky Mountaineer, the Vancouver-based train company known for its sightseeing trips through the Pacific Northwest and Canadian Rockies, says it will refurbish its most luxurious class of rail cars, its GoldLeaf fleet.

Rocky Mountaineer Train Company To Refurbish Fleet Of 16 Domed Rail Cars