Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Pop star Miley Cyrus joins campaign to protect B.C.'s grizzly bears

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Sep, 2017 10:07 AM
    Pop star Miley Cyrus has added some high-profile clout to the latest awareness campaign launched by a British Columbia-based environmental group seeking a total ban on grizzly hunting across the province.
     
    Pacific Wild has released an online video featuring Cyrus performing a haunting rendition of Teddy Bears' Picnic.
     
    As she sings, the camera pans across majestic scenery devoid of animals except for a leaping salmon and sounds of bird song.
     
    Pacific Wild executive director Ian McAllister says the online campaign was prompted by the B.C. government's announcement of an impending ban on bear trophy hunting, while still permitting bear hunting for food.
     
    The ban is due to take effect next year, but McAllister says there's concern that hunters will circumvent it by removing a small amount of the meat and claiming the entire kill, including the head and pelt, as food.
     
    This is the second foray Cyrus has made into animal welfare in B.C. She visited the province in 2015 and spoke out against a planned wolf cull aimed at protecting endangered caribou.
     
    McAllister is pleased at the support from the singer and is hoping it will raise awareness for the push to implement a B.C.-wide ban on grizzly hunting. 
     
    "Grizzly bears occupy just 2 per cent of their former range in the lower 48 states today. They are also not a necessary or ethical food source," McAllister says.
     
    Pacific Wild says grizzlies are the second-slowest reproducing land mammal in North America and are threatened throughout much of their natural range.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hundreds Of Syrian Refugees Add Costs For New Brunswick Schools

     The sudden influx of Syrian refugees into New Brunswick's school system has caused the province's Education Department to miss a financial target.

    Hundreds Of Syrian Refugees Add Costs For New Brunswick Schools

    Ottawa Faces Pressure To Examine Historic Figures Celebrated In Canada

    Ottawa Faces Pressure To Examine Historic Figures Celebrated In Canada
    Ottawa is facing increased pressure from Indigenous advocates to look at historic figures celebrated in Canada after an Ontario teachers' group passed a motion to remove Sir John A. Macdonald's name from elementary schools in the province.

    Ottawa Faces Pressure To Examine Historic Figures Celebrated In Canada

    John Horgan To Remove 'Unfair' Tolls On Port Mann And Golden Ears Bridges Starting Sept. 1

    John Horgan To Remove 'Unfair' Tolls On Port Mann And Golden Ears Bridges Starting Sept. 1
    The tolls are being eliminated on the Port Mann and Golden Ears bridges in time for the Labour Day weekend. Horgan says the move will save an average commuter $1,500 a year and commercial drivers crossing a bridge at once a day at least $4,500.

    John Horgan To Remove 'Unfair' Tolls On Port Mann And Golden Ears Bridges Starting Sept. 1

    'I'm A Nazi:' Bangladesh-Origin Calgary Teacher Fends Off Racial Attack In Manitoba, Posts Video

    'I'm A Nazi:' Bangladesh-Origin Calgary Teacher Fends Off Racial Attack In Manitoba, Posts Video
    Kaniz Fatima of Calgary posted video of the encounter on social media this week and says women who wear hijabs need to be prepared for such comments.

    'I'm A Nazi:' Bangladesh-Origin Calgary Teacher Fends Off Racial Attack In Manitoba, Posts Video

    Quebec Preparing To Dole Out Welfare To Asylum Seekers: Minimum Basic Monthly Payment Will Be $623

    Quebec Preparing To Dole Out Welfare To Asylum Seekers: Minimum Basic Monthly Payment Will Be $623
    Simon Laboissonniere says an estimated 4,000 people will get money for the month of September.

    Quebec Preparing To Dole Out Welfare To Asylum Seekers: Minimum Basic Monthly Payment Will Be $623

    Justin Trudeau Says No Plans To Join U.S. Missile Defence, Send Troops To Afghanistan

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has thrown cold water on suggestions the Liberal government wants to sign onto continental ballistic missile defence, or that it might send troops back into Afghanistan.

    Justin Trudeau Says No Plans To Join U.S. Missile Defence, Send Troops To Afghanistan