Saturday, May 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ottawa urges Israel ensure safety, access for media in Gaza

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2025 11:42 AM
  • Ottawa urges Israel ensure safety, access for media in Gaza

Canada is again urging Israel to allow foreign journalists to enter the Gaza Strip, and to better protect Palestinian journalists whom Israel has killed at a record rate in the territory.

Last week Ottawa issued a joint statement with multiple European governments, Australia, Chile and Qatar, calling on Israel to also allow Palestinian journalists who want to leave Gaza to do so.

Israel bars foreign journalists from entering Gaza if they aren’t embedded with Israel’s military, a practice that the Committee to Protect Journalists says is unheard of during modern times.

The press-advocacy group says there is a record-setting death rate in this conflict, and it alleges "Israel is engaging in the deadliest and most deliberate effort to kill and silence journalists" that the group has ever documented.

Israel insists it has only intentionally killed media workers who have been helped Hamas, though Canada and others have rejected Israel's claims that journalists like Al Jazeera reporter Anas al-Sharif were legitimate targets.

An advocacy group called Canadian Journalists for Justice in Palestine is on Parliament Hill today to urge Ottawa to back independent investigations into these deaths, and allow Gaza journalists to seek refuge in Canada.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi

MORE National ARTICLES

Health care, tax cuts and Highway 401 tunnel focus of Ontario campaign trail

Health care, tax cuts and Highway 401 tunnel focus of Ontario campaign trail
Health care, tax cuts and a pledge to build a tunnel under Highway 401 are the focus on the Ontario campaign trail today. NDP Leader Marit Stiles has pledged to connect every Ontarian to a family doctor or nurse practitioner at a cost of more than $4 billion.

Health care, tax cuts and Highway 401 tunnel focus of Ontario campaign trail

Liberal leadership candidates will have to clear $125,000 hurdle today

Liberal leadership candidates will have to clear $125,000 hurdle today
Federal Liberal leadership candidates will have to cross another hurdle today to remain in the race — a payment of $125,000 to the party. The party requires candidates to pay a total entrance fee of $350,000 in instalments.

Liberal leadership candidates will have to clear $125,000 hurdle today

Canada adds 76,000 jobs in January as unemployment rate falls to 6.6%

Canada adds 76,000 jobs in January as unemployment rate falls to 6.6%
Canada's unemployment rate ticked down in January as the labour market added 76,000 jobs, beating economist expectations for the month. The jobless rate ticked down 0.1 percentage points to 6.6 per cent, marking the second straight monthly decline after peaking at 6.9 per cent in November, Statistics Canada reported on Friday.

Canada adds 76,000 jobs in January as unemployment rate falls to 6.6%

Trudeau tells economic summit Trump is serious about taking over Canada

Trudeau tells economic summit Trump is serious about taking over Canada
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Donald Trump is not joking when he says he'd like to make Canada the 51st state, and the U.S. president's desire to annex this country is related to its supply of critical minerals. Trudeau made the remarks to more than 100 business, labour and industry leaders who were invited to an economic summit today in Toronto.

Trudeau tells economic summit Trump is serious about taking over Canada

Chilly temperatures to hang on in southern B.C., forecaster says

Chilly temperatures to hang on in southern B.C., forecaster says
Winter's grip on southern British Columbia may hang on as a few flurries remain in the forecast for parts of Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.  Meteorologist Derek Lee with Environment Canada says anotherlow-pressure system could bring flurries for Saturday and Sunday, but it won't be widespread, and will likely fall in Eastern Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. 

Chilly temperatures to hang on in southern B.C., forecaster says

Armed man arrested in Vancouver after barricading himself in taxi

Armed man arrested in Vancouver after barricading himself in taxi
Vancouver Police say more than 25 officers and its K9 unit were deployed in the city's downtown Thursday night to arrest an armed suspect who was wanted Canada-wide on parole violations. They say that a police sergeant was on patrolling around 7 p.m. when a witness flagged him over to report a man with a gun entering a building near Seymour and Nelson streets.

Armed man arrested in Vancouver after barricading himself in taxi