Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP, Conservatives support foreign aid to India

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Apr, 2021 05:52 PM
  • NDP, Conservatives support foreign aid to India

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh both say Canada should send aid to India as it struggles with a deadly surge in COVID-19 cases.

U.S. President Joe Biden pledged to send help to the country of nearly 1.4 billion people, where hospitals are reporting that they are running out of oxygen to treat patients.

The White House says it will send raw materials needed to make Covishield, the version of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine produced at the Serum Institute of India, along with therapeutics, rapid-testing kids, ventilators and potentially oxygen.

Procurement Minister Anita Anand has said Canada will "stand ready" with personal protective equipment, ventilators and "any items that might be useful," but the federal government has yet to provide more details.

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole says he supports Canada helping "our friends in India," while also halting international flights to keep out more transmissible strains of the virus.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says India's situation is "catastrophic" and Canada needs to act as a global citizen, because when the novel coronavirus spreads badly in one region, it affects others.

Early in the pandemic O'Toole was critical of the Liberal government sending personal protective equipment to China, but says that was because Canada didn't have enough of its own supply, which is no longer the case.

Canada says it has procured 2.7 billon items of personal protective equipment, with 1.5 billion pieces already delivered for use.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Two bodies found inside home in B.C. after fire

Two bodies found inside home in B.C. after fire
The Mounties say in a news release officers were assisting with traffic control around the fire at the residence when the bodies were found.

Two bodies found inside home in B.C. after fire

B.C. money laundering report gets extension

B.C. money laundering report gets extension
A commission statement says the COVID-19 pandemic created delays by forcing the hearings and much of its work to be done online.

B.C. money laundering report gets extension

Meng border exam only of interest to U.S.: lawyer

Meng border exam only of interest to U.S.: lawyer
Mona Duckett told a B.C. Supreme Court judge hearing Meng's extradition case that some questions posed by Supt. Sanjit Dhillon had nothing to do with her admissibility into Canada.

Meng border exam only of interest to U.S.: lawyer

B.C. completes most surgery delayed by first wave

B.C. completes most surgery delayed by first wave
He said the province opened new and unused operating rooms, added hours on weekdays and weekends, and also hired more staff including surgeons, nurses and anesthesiologists as part of its plan to catch up on procedures.

B.C. completes most surgery delayed by first wave

NDP members enter debate over anti-Semitism

NDP members enter debate over anti-Semitism
Nearly 50 NDP riding associations have endorsed a motion that opposes a working definition of anti-Semitism set out by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance.

NDP members enter debate over anti-Semitism

Trudeau hints at openness to gun bill changes

Trudeau hints at openness to gun bill changes
The families, survivors of the mass shooting and witnesses said in a letter to the prime minister this week he would no longer be welcome at annual commemorations unless his government strengthens the bill.

Trudeau hints at openness to gun bill changes