Friday, July 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ottawa commits $1.4 million to help community groups fight human trafficking

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2026 11:05 AM
  • Ottawa commits $1.4 million to help community groups fight human trafficking

The federal government is funding six organizations across the country in an effort to combat human trafficking and support survivors. 

Minister of Women and Gender Equality Rechie Valdez was in Halifax on Friday to announce $1.4 million in funding. 

Two community organizations in Nova Scotia will receive money, along with groups in Vancouver, Winnipeg, Windsor, Ont., and St. John’s, N.L.  

One of the programs focuses on Indigenous women and girls, another is trying to prevent the exploitation of newcomers and yet another targets men and boys in an effort at prevention.

The government says 93 per cent of human trafficking victims who reported to police between 2014 and 2024 were women and girls.

About 63 per cent of those victims were under 25 years old. 

The announcement comes a day after Valdez was in Moncton, N.B. to announce $607 million to extend the National Action Plan to End Gender-based Violence. 

“Far too many (victims) are children and youth,” Valdez told reporters Friday. “And behind every statistic we know is a person whose (life) has been changed forever, a family that will never be the same.” 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Devin Stevens

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim drops plan to dissolve city's park board

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim drops plan to dissolve city's park board
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim is dropping his plan to dissolve the city's Park Board, saying his ABC party will instead run candidates for board spots in the municipal election later this year.

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim drops plan to dissolve city's park board

Turkish gun given to PM would have to undergo review before going in museum

Turkish gun given to PM would have to undergo review before going in museum
Canada's national war and history museums say they would have to conduct a review before they could display a personalized revolver and ammunition given to Prime Minister Mark Carney at this year's NATO summit in Turkey.

Turkish gun given to PM would have to undergo review before going in museum

U.S. moves to slap more tariffs on fresh Canadian mushrooms

U.S. moves to slap more tariffs on fresh Canadian mushrooms
The U.S. is moving to slap more tariffs on fresh Canadian-grown mushrooms in response to a U.S. Department of Commerce probe that an industry representative said did not prove Canadian growers are selling unfairly.

U.S. moves to slap more tariffs on fresh Canadian mushrooms

Vancouver police praise teen victim's family after Kane Carter murder sentencing

Vancouver police praise teen victim's family after Kane Carter murder sentencing
Vancouver police are lauding family members, investigators and prosecutors who "did not give up" in finding justice for teenager Alfred Wong, who was killed by a stray bullet in 2018.

Vancouver police praise teen victim's family after Kane Carter murder sentencing

Metro Vancouver workers call off full-scale strike after progress made in talks

Metro Vancouver workers call off full-scale strike after progress made in talks
Metro Vancouver outside workers say they won't launch a full-scale strike after "significant movement" in talks with the regional district.

Metro Vancouver workers call off full-scale strike after progress made in talks

Former Nova Scotia premier John Hamm dead at age 88

Former Nova Scotia premier John Hamm dead at age 88
John Hamm, the small-town doctor who went on to become the 25th premier of Nova Scotia, is being remembered for his soft-spoken but direct approach to politics that helped reshape the province’s economy. 

Former Nova Scotia premier John Hamm dead at age 88