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Vol 19 - Issue 14
Saturday, May 4, 2019
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Liberals accused of cover-up after report detailed SNC-Lavalin’s illegal political donations Conservatives accused Liberals of a different sort of SNC-Lavalin cover-up in question period Tuesday after a report revealed the names of employees involved in the Montreal firm’s illegal attempts to influence Canadian politics between 2004 and 2011.
Akshay Kumar’s lies about Canadian citizenship gets him in trouble in Indian election A lot of Bollywood and TV celebrities stepped out on April 29 to cast their votes in Mumbai for the Lok Sabha Elections 2019. Stars like Shah Rukh Khan, Priyanka Chopra, Salman Khan, Deepika Padukone and many others had cast their votes. Recently, a reporter asked the Holiday actor why didn’t he vote to which he said, “’Chaliye Chaliye”. Immediately, a lot of people took to their social media and questioned Akshay Kumar for not casting his vote. They trolled him and questioned his love for India as he is Canadian citizen. Akshay shared a long statement on Twitter and admitted that he holds a Canadian passport. Akshay Kumar tweeted, “I really don’t understand the unwarranted interest and negativity about my citizenship. I have never hidden or denied that I hold a Canadian passport. Continued on page 7
A CBC investigation revealed new details about the scheme and listed for the first time individuals accused of indirectly funnelling almost $110,000 of the company’s money to the Liberal Party, and another $8,000 to the Conservative Party. The parties became aware of the lists during a 2016 investigation
by the Commissioner of Canada Elections. On his way into cabinet on Tuesday morning, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his party has “moved forward on transparency and openness and that is not what happens anymore.”
Why is PM Trudeau silent in BC-Alberta gas fight that is in courts now enacted “turn off the taps” legislation. Horgan told reporters he hoped to speak to Trudeau by the end of the day “about what the new owners of that pipeline can do about relieving pressure here in the Lower Mainland.
B.C. Premier John Horgan called on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday to pump more refined fuel through the Trans Mountain Pipeline, hours after his lawyers filed a legal challenge to Alberta’s freshly
India to land on the Moon in September India is likely to have a date with history and destiny on September 6, when Chandrayaan-2 will land on Moon. On Wednesday, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said it’s mulling to launch Chandrayaan-2, India second lunar mission between 9 and 16th of July. The sources, however, hinted that a lot of work
is still pending before the project can be taken for the launch. “All the modules are getting ready for Chandrayaan-2 launch during the window of July 09 to July 16, 2019, with an expected Moon landing on September 06, 2019 9 (sic),” Isro said in a statement. Continued on page 6
Sikh workers toil under gangsters in Italian farms When most people think of the Italian Mafia, cinematic clichés of gangsters fighting turf wars on the hardscrabble streets of blighted metropolises are apt to spring to mind. What likely doesn’t is a lush expanse of Italian farmland lined with giant eucalyptus trees tended by a vast community of Sikh workers under the tight control of criminal organizations.
A Vancouver businessman has South pleaded not guilty to a charge of conspiracy to commit money laundering for his alleged role in a college admissions scandal in the United States. David Sidoo’s lawyer Richard Schoenfeld says the plea was entered in writing after an indictment from the U.S. District Court
in connection with the scandal. An indictment in March alleged Sidoo paid $200,000 in total for someone to take the SAT on behalf of both his sons, and that he also paid an undisclosed amount for someone to fly to Vancouver and take a high school graduation exam on behalf of his older son. Continued on page 3
Asian man pleads not guilty to all charges in college admissions scandal in Massachusetts accused him of wiring about $100,000 in January 2013 from an account in Canada to an account in California. The indictment alleges the money was in the name of college-prep company The Key, and meant to be in exchange for admissions
consultant’s facilitation of a SAT cheating scheme for Sidoo’s younger son. Sidoo, 59-year-old former Canadian Football League player and well-known philanthropist, had already pleaded not guilty to conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud