www.theasianstar.com Vol 19 - Issue 31
Saturday, August 31, 2019
‘Unexplained difference’ of 13 cents per litre in BC - Enquiry finds The B.C. Utilities Commission (BCUC) has found that the gasoline market in the province is not truly competitive and that there’s a “significant unexplained difference” of about 13 cents per litre in gas prices between southern BC and other parts of the Pacific Northwest. The findings of the public inquiry into gas and diesel prices were announced Friday morning, just as gas prices surge ahead of the Labour Day long
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South Asian suspects wanted on Canada-wide warrants give themselves up to police Two men wanted Canada-wide for multiple charges have turned themselves in, Surrey RCMP say. Shakiel Singh Basra (pictured left) and Amarpreet Singh Samra (pictured right), both 25, were wanted for unlawful confinement, assault with a weapon and uttering threats. According to police, they turned themselves in on Monday and are scheduled to appear in court on Friday. On Aug. 14, Surrey RCMP asked the public for help locating the two men,
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Body of missing South Asian man found in Sylvan Lake RCMP have recovered the body of Palwinder Singh, 19, who had been missing after a wave knocked him off an inflatable on Wednesday. In a press release sent Thursday evening, Sylvan Lake RCMP said they found and retrieved Singh’s body at 6:35 p.m., in an area near the spot he had last been seen. “Family, friends and members of the public have been deeply affected by this tragic event,” RCMP said in the release. Singh’s family and friends watched from the shore as RCMP searched for Singh’s body earlier Thursday. Friend Maninder Kaloti said the family is in shock. “Nobody could believe that happened. Even this morning when we came in, we were still having a hope he would come out from somewhere and we could find him — maybe in rough shape but alive.” Palwinder Singh, 19, of Edmonton, drowned in Sylvan Lake on Wednesday. Police located his body on Thursday at 6:35 p.m. RCMP say two males were floating on the lake west of Red Deer on Wednesday afternoon when a wave knocked both into the water. It was unclear whether they were being pulled behind a boat, or just bobbing on the
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India liberalizes foreign investment rules in a win for Apple India has further liberalized its foreign direct investment (FDI) rules for many sectors, opening new avenues for global investors and giants such as Apple as Asia’s third-largest economy attempts to jump-start its years-low economic growth. New Delhi said Wednesday evening that it is easing sourcing norms for singlebrand retailers like Apple. As part of the new proposal, which has been approved,
the government said single-brand retail companies will be allowed to open online stores before they set up presence in the bricks-and-mortar market. This would allow Apple, which has yet to set up retail stores in the country, to start selling a range of products through its own online store. Currently, Apple sells its products in India through partnered third-party offline retailers and Continued on page 2
Chinese influence in Canada ‘alive and well,’ says student leader threatened by trolls CanadaisfailingtocombatthespreadofChinese influence that is “alive and well” throughout the country, one prominent student leader says. And she argues the presence of politicians like former Ontario trade minister Michael Chan as a headliner at a rally last week to mobilize the Chinese diaspora against pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong is just another sign of
how far Beijing’s influence has spread. “I’m definitely concerned,” said Chemi Lhamo, president of the student union at the University of Toronto’s Scarborough campus, and a Canadian citizen of Tibetan heritage, in an interview with The West Block‘s Mercedes Stephenson.
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Vancouver’s Chinese-Canadian community split over Hong Kong protests Images of police using rubber bullets and tear gas against protesters in Hong Kong in early June spurred Joel Wan to pick up the phone and call the United Nations human rights office from his home in Vancouver. “It was 3 a.m. and I was watching live on my computer. I can’t just sit there and watch, so I have to report this somewhere immediately,” recalled Wan, who is
18 and was born in Hong Kong. Wan called the actions of police in Hong Kong a “trigger” for him, although he was already concerned about a proposed extradition bill that sparked the ongoing mass protests in the semiautonomous Chinese territory. Continued on page 7