www.theasianstar.com
Vol 19 - Issue 24
Saturday, July 11, 2020
It’s too early to relax as COVID-19 continues to circulate says Dr. Bonnie Henry 20 new cases confirmed in B.C., but no more deaths recorded onThursday Health officials have confirmed another 20 cases of COVID-19 in B.C., but no new deaths have been recorded in the last 24 hours, according to Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry. The province has seen a total of 3,028 cases of the novel coronavirus to date, of which 186 people have died and 175 cases remain active. As of Thursday, 17 people are in
hospital with the virus, including four in intensive care. Henry reminded B r i t i s h Columbians that it’s far too early to fully relax and return to normal as the virus continues to circulate in the community and around the world. “Things can quickly escalate once again if we let our guard down,” she said. Until there is an effective treatment or a vaccine for the disease, Henry said,
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Anti-China protest outside Chinese Consulate in Vancouver
A large crowd including many South Asian protesters gathered outside Chinese Consulate in downton Vancouver last week. The protesters demand that China free Canadians it is holding as political hostages in China, also China should get out of Indian and Tibetan teritory.
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Trudeau govt has lost track of 34,700 illegal foreigners and refugees slated for removal Canada’s border agency has lost track of tens of thousands of foreign nationals it was supposed to deport from the country, according to a scathing new report from the federal auditor general. “We concluded that the Canada Border Services Agency did not remove the majority of individuals who were subject to enforceable removal orders as soon as possible
Among the missing are 2,800 criminals to protect the integrity of the immigration system and maintain public safety,” says the report released to Parliament on Wednesday. The border agency’s efforts were hindered by poor data quality and basic flaws in case management, resulting in avoidable delays for thousands of cases, the audit by Auditor General Karen Hogan and her staff has found. Deficiencies
Trudeau Liberals to post $343B deficit as part of COVID-19 spending But opposition parties say deficit was high befor pandemic hit presents little in the way of a long-term plan to return the economy to pre-pandemic normalcy. Bill Morneau’s 2020 fiscal ‘snapshot’ “Some will criticize us on the cost of action,” Morneau said in a speech in the House of Commons today. “But our government knew that the cost of inaction would’ve been far greater. “Those who would have us do less ignore that, without government action, millions of jobs would have been lost, putting the burden of debt Continued on page 7
Finance Minister Bill Morneau tabled a fiscal snapshot today that shows the federal government’s deficit is expected to hit $343 billion this year — an eyepopping figure largely attributed to pandemic-related support programs that have pushed federal spending to a level not seen since the Second World War. The 168page snapshot offers a short-term economic analysis and a detailed account of what the government has spent already to shore up an economy on life support. It
in information sharing with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) also delayed cases, it said. “For example, the audit found that CBSA was unaware that it should have been monitoring 1,500 removal orders for enforcement,” the audit found. “A further 2,300 orders were delayed because of the poor flow of information between IRCC and CBSA.”
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Jamie Bacon pleads guilty to conspiracy to commit murder in Surrey Six killings But families of victims unhappy with plea deal Jamie Bacon has pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit the murder of Corey Lal in the Surrey Six killings in October 2007 and counselling someone to murder an associate in 2008. A first degree murder charge will be stayed at the time of sentencing. B.C. Supreme Court Justice Kathleen Ker found Bacon guilty on both counts and set sentencing for July 23. Sentencing will include victim impact statements, both in-person and some read into the record by the Crown.
Earlier story: As far as Eileen Mohan is concerned, Jamie Bacon has been playing the justice system for a fool for the past decade. The mother of one of six people killed in B.C.’s most notorious gangland slaying says she may be in court to watch Thursday — but she’ll get no satisfaction from seeing the gangster plead guilty to one count of conspiring to commit murder in relation to the 2007 Surrey Six killings.
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