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Vol 20 - Issue 17
10 things you need to know about BCs Covid-19 restart plan On Tuesday, British Columbia launched a restart plan laying out a post-COVID-19 pandemic life. Here are 10 big things to look forward to: Social gatherings Effective Tuesday, a social gathering indoors can take place with one other household or up to five visitors. Outdoor personal gatherings of up to 10 people are also allowed. By June 15, outdoor personal gatherings will go up to 50 people, though indoor ones will remain at up to five visitors. Playdates for kids will be allowed. The goal is to return to normal for indoor or outdoor personal gatherings by July 1 and an encouragement to have sleepovers. Travel - Starting June 15, British Columbians will be encouraged to travel across the province. Until then, people are urged to stay in their health region. As of July 1 at the earliest, the province will open up to recreational travel across Canada. Recreational sports Outdoor recreational sports are now back on for adults and kids. Low-intensity indoor fitness classes can also restart. High-intensity indoor fitness classes are expected on June 15 at the earliest. Indoor team sports are back in the same time frame, with up to 50 fans allowed for outdoor sports. All indoor fitness classes are set for July 1 at the earliest with limited indoor spectators. Movies - Movie theatres are expected to Continued on page 10
Saturday, May 29, 2021
Widow of Surrey murder victim seeking referendum vote on policing transition The widow of a Surrey murder victim has filed an application with Elections BC seeking a binding referendum vote on whether the Surrey Police Service should replace the Surrey RCMP. Darlene Bennett is a registered nurse. Her late husband Paul Bennett was shot dead in front of their Cloverdale home in 2018 in what police believe was a case of mistaken identity. The case has not been solved. She’s spearheading the Surrey Police Vote campaign based on guidelines prescribed under the B.C. Referendum Act, which permits cabinet to
order one, and the B.C. Recall and Initiative Act. “Surrey residents are seeing the costs of this proposed Surrey Police Service go up and up,” Bennett said. “Later this month, homeowners will receive inflated property tax bills to pay for this expensive and unnecessary transition. There has been no feasibility study, no clear plan, and no obvious public safety benefit. Surrey voters have been asking for a definitive say on this with no response, and now we’re asking government to hold a referendum.”
Joe Biden nominates Indian American Arun Venkataraman to senior administration post US President Joe Biden on Wednesday announced his intent to nominate Indian American Arun Venkataraman to a key position in his administration related to foreign commercial service. Venkataraman is the nominee for Director-General of the United States and Foreign Commercial Service and Assistant Secretary for Global Markets, Department of Commerce, the White House said. With over 20 years of experience in advising companies, international organisations and the US government on international trade issues, Venkataraman is currently the Counselor to the Secretary of Commerce, advising the
department on trade and other international economic matters. Before joining the BidenHarris administration, he was a senior director at Visa, leading global government engagement strategy on a range of international policy issues including digital economy, trade, tax and sanctions. Venkataraman previously served as the trade and investment policy advisor at Steptoe & Johnson LLP, where he counselled multinational firms and other organisations on e-commerce, intellectual property rights, and US and foreign trade policies. Continued on page 7
IMA slaps Rs 1,000-crore defamation notice on Yoga Guru Ramdev The ongoing confrontation between the Indian Medical Association (IMA) and yoga guru Ramdev escalated further on Wednesday with the medical body serving a Rs 1,000-crore defamation notice on the latter, besides writing to the PM seeking sedition charges against him. In the notice, the IMA’s Uttarakhand branch demanded a written apology from Ramdev in 15 days and a video statement clarifying matters on “anti-allopathy” remarks made by him last week. It also demanded removal of “misleading Coronil advertisements that claim to address the side-effects of Covid vaccines”. The IMA also questioned the
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Haryana Government’s move to distribute Coronil among Covid patients, saying the product was scientifically not proven. In a letter to the PM, the IMA questioned Ramdev’s recent contentions that “10,000 doctors died” after taking both doses of Covid vaccine. It said he should be booked for sedition as the statements tantamount to misinforming the public about inoculations. Noting that 753 doctors had died in the first Covid wave and 513 in the second, the IMA said it was painful to see services rendered by nearly 10 lakh modern medicine practitioners being ridiculed as a “stupid system”.