Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trudeau highlights risk of COVID-19 variants

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2021 07:04 PM
  • Trudeau highlights risk of COVID-19 variants

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says “rare exceptions” to new travel restrictions will be made on compassionate grounds, but that more contagious COVID-19 variants now taking hold in Canada mean tough rules must be implemented in the next few weeks.

Trudeau announced last week that passengers returning from abroad will have to quarantine at a hotel for up to three days after taking a PCR test at the airport, but no date has been set for when this will take effect.

The move is one of several measures meant to choke off entry of the virus into Canada, but comes after case numbers of more transmissible variants have begun to rise.

Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam says 148 cases of the variants that first emerged in the United Kingdom and South Africa have been confirmed across the country, even as overall case counts continue to decline.

Health authorities in Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia have identified both mutations, with Ontario's single confirmed case of the variant that first emerged in South Africa found in a Peel Region patient who had no known contact with travellers, raising fears of community spread.

The Public Health Agency of Canada says foreigners can still apply to enter the country for non-essential reasons that include supporting a critically ill person, attending a funeral or being with a loved one who is dying.

MORE National ARTICLES

Downtown Calgary Daycare Closed After Child Tests Positive For COVID-19

A two-year-old who recently returned from a family vacation in Florida is among four new COVID-19 cases confirmed in Alberta, prompting a daycare in a downtown Calgary office tower to temporarily shut down.

Downtown Calgary Daycare Closed After Child Tests Positive For COVID-19

Manitoba Confirms Three Presumptive Cases Of COVID-19

Manitoba Confirms Three Presumptive Cases Of COVID-19
WINNIPEG - Manitoba announced its first presumptive cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, and officials are warning people to stop shaking hands, rethink travel plans and reconsider attending large public events.

Manitoba Confirms Three Presumptive Cases Of COVID-19

Bank Of Canada Pumps $7B, Expands Bond Buy-backs To Ease Economic Concerns

Bank Of Canada Pumps $7B, Expands Bond Buy-backs To Ease Economic Concerns
The Bank of Canada prepared to increase the cash it pumps into the financial system and Finance Minister Bill Morneau stressed the need for fiscal measures to manage the impact of COVID-19 as official Ottawa responded to another market plunge.

Bank Of Canada Pumps $7B, Expands Bond Buy-backs To Ease Economic Concerns

Allan Schoenborn Case Returns To B.C. Review Board For Annual Hearing

The British Columbia Review Board is considering whether a psychiatric hospital director should have the discretion to allow limited, unescorted access into the community for a man who was found not criminally responsible in the killing of his three children.

Allan Schoenborn Case Returns To B.C. Review Board For Annual Hearing

Second B.C. Care Home Reports COVID-19 Cases As Officials Prepare For Worse

A resident and a worker at a retirement home in West Vancouver have both tested positive for COVID-19, marking the spread of the novel coronavirus to a second care home in British Columbia.

Second B.C. Care Home Reports COVID-19 Cases As Officials Prepare For Worse

World Women's Curling Championship In Prince George Cancelled

World Women's Curling Championship In Prince George Cancelled
Adrian Dix, Minister of Health, and Dr. Bonnie Henry, B.C.'s provincial health officer, have issued the following joint statement regarding the World Women’s Curling Championship in Prince George:  

World Women's Curling Championship In Prince George Cancelled