Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Feb, 2025 12:59 PM
  • Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers

Quebec is taking steps to cut the number of international students in the province, but can't say by how many.

The government will issue a maximum of around 124,000 acceptance certificates to foreign students this year, down from more than 156,000 last year. 

The measure targets private colleges that the government has said are using education as a business model to sell citizenship. 

But not everyone who receives a certificate ends up enrolling, and Higher Education Minister Pascale Déry says it’s hard to know whether the new limit will lead to a drop in registration.

The government says there were 120,000 international students in Quebec in 2023, up from 50,000 nearly a decade earlier. 

Quebec has promised to reduce the number of non-permanent residents in the province, which it pegs around 615,000 people. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Mounties in Squamish, B.C., recover stolen search-and-rescue equipment

Mounties in Squamish, B.C., recover stolen search-and-rescue equipment
Mounties in Squamish say they have recovered BC Parks and search-and-rescue equipment that was stolen this fall.  They say in a news release that police received a report on Oct. 18 that a BC Parks storage unit had been broken into overnight and "large items" stolen.

Mounties in Squamish, B.C., recover stolen search-and-rescue equipment

Wet and windy Christmas for B.C. coast, as holiday procession of storms takes aim

Wet and windy Christmas for B.C. coast, as holiday procession of storms takes aim
The weather office says a "powerful frontal system" will then arrive on the south coast and Vancouver Island Christmas morning, with strong winds and heavy rain expected to last late into the night. 

Wet and windy Christmas for B.C. coast, as holiday procession of storms takes aim

Bright Nights Train cancelled

Bright Nights Train cancelled
Vancouver's parks board says its popular Bright Nights Stanley Park Train will not return for the rest of the holiday season. It says in a news release that operations were stopped last week after exhaust from one of the train’s locomotives caused a driver to get sick. 

Bright Nights Train cancelled

Former B.C. premier Glen Clark has been appointed as the new BC Hydro chair

Former B.C. premier Glen Clark has been appointed as the new BC Hydro chair
Former B.C. premier Glen Clark is returning to the public eye, two years after leaving his high-profile position as president of Jim Pattison Group. The provincial government has announced that Clark has been appointed to chair BC Hydro's board of directors, taking over for Lori Wanamaker, whose term ends on Dec. 31. 

Former B.C. premier Glen Clark has been appointed as the new BC Hydro chair

B.C. mayor gets calls from across Canada about 'crazy' plan to recruit doctors

B.C. mayor gets calls from across Canada about 'crazy' plan to recruit doctors
A British Columbia community's "out-of-the-box" plan to ease its family doctor shortage by hiring physicians as city employees is sparking interest from across Canada, says Colwood Mayor Doug Kobayashi. The mayor said the community has hired its first family doctor for a city-operated medical clinic, and the Victoria-area city is looking to hire seven more under the first-in-Canada pilot project.

B.C. mayor gets calls from across Canada about 'crazy' plan to recruit doctors

Sentencing hearing for parents in death of Calgary toddler set for March

Sentencing hearing for parents in death of Calgary toddler set for March
A sentencing hearing for a Calgary couple in the death of their badly burned and emaciated toddler has been scheduled for next year. Sonya Pasqua and Michael Sinclair pleaded guilty last week to manslaughter. Gabriel Sinclair-Pasqua, who was 18 months old, died in 2021 after suffering major burns to a third of his body.

Sentencing hearing for parents in death of Calgary toddler set for March