MPs say Russian activist Vladimir Kara-Murza should be given honorary citizenship
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
OTTAWA — A cross-party group of MPs and senators is hoping to grant honorary Canadian citizenship to Russian political prisoner Vladimir Kara-Murza in the coming weeks.Senators are leading the charge to recognize the prominent Russian opposition politician, who helped shape Canada’s sanction regime.Two Liberal MPs say they have support from the federal cabinet for the move, and they were joined by MPs and senators from multiple parties and groups at a press conference this morning.Both chambers could pass motions asking Ottawa to grant citizenship, or the government could unilaterally make that decision, according to former attorney general Irwin Cotler.Parliamentarians last voted to grant someone honorary citizenship in 2014, and Pakistani women’s activist Malala Yousafzai accepted the honour three years later in Ottawa.Kara-Murza is currently imprisoned and in ill health, a situation that Cotler described as a “slow-moving execution” for a man he referred t...Indianapolis man gets 30 years for fatal 2020 shooting of mail carrier
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Indianapolis man who pleaded guilty to fatally shooting a U.S. Postal Service mail carrier has been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison, prosecutors said.Tony Cushingberry, 24, was sentenced Wednesday after pleading guilty in July 2022 to second-degree murder and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.Prosecutors said Cushingberry was sitting on his porch on April 27, 2020, when he watched postal carrier Angela Summers, 45, of Indianapolis, walk past his home and proceed to the next residence.According to court records, Cushingberry was upset because his postal deliveries had been suspended due to an aggressive dog at his home. After Summers walked past his home, prosecutors said Cushingberry “aggressively approached” her on his neighbor’s porch and demanded his mail several times. He continued pursuing Summers while displaying a handgun before he pulled the gun from his waistband and shot her in the c...Globe and Mail CEO Phillip Crawley to retire, Andrew Saunders named as successor
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
Longtime Globe and Mail CEO Phillip Crawley is retiring later this year, set to be succeeded by Andrew Saunders.Saunders, who is the newspaper’s chief revenue officer, first joined the Globe in 2002 as director of advertising.He will take on the role of president and CEO on Sept. 1, following Crawley’s retirement at the end of August. Crawley joined the Globe in 1998 at a time of heightened competition among national newspapers after the launch of the National Post, and has since seen the company through a migration to online news.Company chairman David Thomson says Saunders has helped lead the newspaper’s transformation from a print-centric organization to a digitally driven model, while emphasizing both subscriptions and advertising.Crawley calls his successor a “natural leader” who believes in fostering a collaborative culture.This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 1, 2023.The Canadian PressAlabama deputies fatally shoot man who fired at utility worker, sheriff says
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
PHENIX CITY, Ala. (AP) — Deputies on Wednesday fatally shot a man who earlier had fired a gun at a utility worker trying to shut off his water and later pointed a firearm at deputies, authorities said. The shooting happened in Russell County, in eastern Alabama near the Georgia state line. The man “fired a round” at the water works employee who had gone to the home to shut off water service, Russell County Sheriff Heath Taylor said at a news conference. Deputies were then sent to the water works building to take a report, and saw the man leaving the parking lot, Taylor said. They pulled the man over during a traffic stop and shot him after he “presented a firearm out the window” of his vehicle, Taylor said. The man’s name was not released. The deputies and the utility worker were not hurt. Taylor said he did not think the man fired at the deputies, but their actions were appropriate. “This is a bad scenario. You don’t point a weapon at law enforcement, whether you are le...Tommy Prine doesn’t dodge his father’s legacy but makes his own way in compelling debut
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Standing before a packed house at The Basement, one of Nashville’s most intimate music venues, Tommy Prine talked about the death of his father.“It sucks to lose a parent at any age — in my case when he was the world’s greatest songwriter,” he said during a recent sold-out show.Prine’s father, singer-songwriter John Prine, died of complications from the coronavirus in April 2020 at the age of 73. His death prompted a surge of worldwide mourning remarkable even for a time in which grief had become an everyday thing.The heartbreak was especially acute in the music world. John Prine’s kindness to aspiring musicians only added to the connections he made with his music. Many channeled their grief into tribute songs, straining to process the unthinkable.It turns out something similar was happening in Prine’s own family.Last year, Tommy Prine released “Ships in the Harbor,” a song as moving and vulnerable as anything written by anyone about Prine’s father. It doesn’...Cyprus ex-bishop who indecently assaulted teen girl in 1981 gets suspended sentence
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — A court in Cyprus on Thursday gave a former bishop in the Greek Orthodox Church to a 12-month suspended sentence after he was found guilty of indecently assaulting a 16-year-old girl 42 years ago. In passing sentence, Larnaca District Court Judge Evie Efthymiou noted the severity of the offense but said she took into account former Kition Bishop Chrysostomos’ advanced age, deteriorating health and clean criminal record, as well as the significant span of time that had elapsed from when the assault took place.According to the Cyprus News Agency, the judge also weighed Chrysostomos’ charity work as an elected bishop for 46 years before his resignation in 2019.But she said the fact that the 85-year-old bishop exploited his position of authority as a senior clergyman “not only runs counter to Christian values, it also lends great weight to his actions.”The judge added Chrysostomos appeared to “cleverly” set his plan in motion by choosing the time and place of thei...UK government refuses to hand Boris Johnson’s unredacted messages to coronavirus inquiry
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
LONDON (AP) — The British government has refused an order to hand over a sheaf of former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s personal messages to the country’s COVID-19 pandemic inquiry. It said Thursday it would try to challenge the order in court, setting up an extraordinary legal battle with an inquiry that Johnson himself set up.The notebooks, diaries and WhatsApp messages between Johnson and other officials form key evidence that the head of the probe, retired judge Heather Hallett, wants to see. The government has handed over incomplete versions, saying it cut personal and private information that is “unambiguously irrelevant” to the investigation. Hallett — who has the power to summon evidence and question witnesses under oath — wants to judge for herself, and set a deadline of 4 p.m. (1500 GMT) Thursday for the government to hand over the unredacted documents, covering a two-year period from early 2020.Soon after the deadline passed, the government said it would seek to challenge...Cannabis price ‘race to the bottom’ hurts market’s future: OCS CEO
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
TORONTO — The head of Ontario’s cannabis distributor says the “race to the bottom” happening with pot prices risks hurting the market’s future.“Once you condition consumers to certain prices, it may take a generation to change perceptions and price tolerances,” David Lobo, Ontario Cannabis Store president and chief executive, said in a speech at the Lift cannabis conference in Toronto on Thursday. “In an economy where inflation has impacted every other consumer good, we can’t keep pushing lower.”His remarks come as the cannabis boom that materialized in 2018, when the substance was regulated and money poured into the sector, has since dissipated. Pot companies are taking multimillion-dollar writedowns, laying off staff and rethinking their product mixes as the industry gets a better sense of consumer demand and regulatory hurdles.All the while, the illicit market, where weed is much cheaper and sellers operate outside restrictions imposed on the legal m...Mississippi hostage standoff ends with 1 officer and suspect dead, 1 officer wounded
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
BRANDON, Miss. (AP) — Two Mississippi police officers were shot and one died Thursday during a standoff that started as a hostage situation in a home, the state Department of Public Safety said.The suspect also was shot and killed, at the home in the Jackson suburb of Brandon, state police spokesperson Bailey Martin said in a statement.Several law enforcement agencies responded during the standoff, which lasted more than eight hours. The officer killed was from the police department in another suburb, Madison. The injured officer is from the Brandon Police Department.The Department of Public Safety did not immediately release the names of the officers or the suspect. The Madison officer was killed while trying to enter the home.Brandon police told WLBT-TV that the standoff began as a domestic dispute between a man and a woman. Police Chief Wayne Dearman said the department received a call at 1:45 a.m., WAPT-TV reported. After talking for more than an hour with the suspect, the depar...Minnesota plans rewrite of rules for copper-nickel mining near popular wilderness
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:26:58 GMT
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Minnesota regulators have concluded that state rules governing where copper-nickel mines can be built are insufficient to protect the pristine Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness from noise and light pollution, creating another potential obstacle to the proposed Twin Metals mine in northeastern Minnesota.But the Department of Natural Resources declined as part of that decision Wednesday to declare a watershed that flows into the Boundary Waters off-limits to copper-nickel mining altogether, which had been a goal of the environmental group that challenged the regulations, Minnesota Public Radio reported.“We concluded that Minnesota’s nonferrous mine siting rule is largely protective of the Boundary Waters … but should be reopened to better address the potential for mining-related noise and light impacts,” DNR commissioner Sarah Strommen said in a statement. Twin Metals, a proposed underground mine near Ely, outside the wilderness, was already in trouble. It s...Latest news
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