Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

PM Stephen Harper Helps Redblacks Fans Remember Victims

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 25 Oct, 2014 12:10 AM
    OTTAWA - Stephen Harper sang "O Canada" with thousands of football fans tonight during a pre-game ceremony in Ottawa to honour two Canadian soldiers killed in domestic attacks over the past week.
     
    The prime minister and Gen. Tom Lawson, Canada's chief of the defence staff, sang the national anthem while standing on the field before a game between the Ottawa Redblacks and the Montreal Alouettes.
     
    A massive Canadian flag was unfurled over the field during the anthem and players from both CFL teams helped hold it in place.
     
    The ceremony was dedicated to Cpl. Nathan Cirillo and Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent.
     
    Vincent was killed and another soldier injured Monday when they were struck by a car driven by a man with jihadist sympathies in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que. Cirillo was shot two days later at the National War Memorial in Ottawa before the gunman stormed into Parliament's Centre Block.
     
    There was a significant security presence at the football game as two armed soldiers in full combat gear stood watch nearby during Harper's appearance.
     
    Fans stood and applauded for Harper and Lawson as they left the field.
     
    On Saturday night, the NHL's Ottawa Senators, Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs are scheduled to hold co-ordinated tributes to Cirillo and Vincent.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP's Tom Mulcair predicts three-way fight in 2015 federal election

    NDP's Tom Mulcair predicts three-way fight in 2015 federal election
    OTTAWA - Tom Mulcair predicts the next federal election will be an historic first: a three-way battle for power among Conservatives, New Democrats and Liberals.

    NDP's Tom Mulcair predicts three-way fight in 2015 federal election

    More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school

    More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school
    VANCOUVER - All half a million of British Columbia's public school students remain locked out of their classrooms at the start of the second week of the school year as the teachers strike continues.

    More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school

    One Dead, Another Seriously Hurt In Traffic Accidents In Vancouver Area

    One Dead, Another Seriously Hurt In Traffic Accidents In Vancouver Area
    Two separate traffic accidents have killed one person and sent another to hospital in the Vancouver area. Vancouver police say a man fell off Granville Street Bridge when his motorcycle lost control and struck a guard rail.

    One Dead, Another Seriously Hurt In Traffic Accidents In Vancouver Area

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith
    VANCOUVER - A court ruling at the centre of British Columbia's protracted teachers' strike, which has delayed the school year for half a million students, robs the government of its ability to set education policy, the province argues in documents related to an upcoming appeal.

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith

    Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry

    Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry
    It was a story about rock snot. And if there's a person you want to talk to about the pervasive algae also known by the less-offensive, more scientific name of Didymo, it's Fisheries and Oceans Canada scientist Max Bothwell.

    Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry

    From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice

    From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice
    EDMONTON - Alberta's next premier grew up working "under the bins" of a Crownsnest coal mine, and now hopes to apply those principles to get his PC party back on top.

    From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice