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NDP leadership candidate Heather McPherson takes part in a media scrum following the NDP French language leadership debate, in Montreal on Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025.

A petition pushing for investigations into and even charges against Canadians who served in Israel’s military is an “antisemitic witch hunt,” says a Jewish advocacy group.

The Jan. 7 

petition

, sponsored by Alberta MP Heather McPherson and directed at the Minister of Justice, alleges that there is “credible evidence of serious violations of international law by the IDF in the Middle East” that suggests the involvement of Canadian citizens or residents. McPherson is also an NDP leadership candidate.

The petition calls upon the Canadian government to “direct the Canada Border Services Agency to screen Canadian citizens/residents returning from Israel for foreign military service,” to issue “warnings that Canadians serving/volunteering with the IDF may face criminal liability under Canadian law” and to create a website “to collect information from Gaza/West Bank war crime victims/witnesses.”

The petition “unduly singles out Jewish and Zionist Canadians, by making unfounded accusations against them” and “problematically insinuates that service in the IDF necessitates a degree of culpability,”  B’nai Brith Canada’s CEO Simon Wolle told National Post.

Wolle pointed out that the RCMP already launched a structural investigation into the Israel-Hamas conflict. In a

news release from June 2025

, the RCMP said it had not identified anyone who committed “core international crimes,” and thus had not initiated a criminal investigation into any Canadian.

“Canadian IDF veterans are no different than any other foreign veterans who have made Canada their home,” said Wolle.

“Malicious attempts to prosecute them contribute to an environment where Jewish and Zionist Canadians are increasingly persecuted for their beliefs. This petition should be denounced by MPs for what it is, a baseless attempt to incite against and ostracize Canadians who support the existence of a Jewish nation state.”

McPherson did not respond to National Post’s request for comment.

In November, she released

a statement

saying she was concerned about IDF soldiers visiting Canadian universities and condemned them for “platforming” the soldiers. The statement came the same week that

five people were arrested at an anti-Israel protest

at an off-campus event hosted by Jewish students from Toronto Metropolitan University.

McPherson said she would be raising her “concerns with the Canadian government that IDF soldiers are freely touring Canadian universities while the genocide continues.”

Shai DeLuca is a Canadian-Israel who served in the IDF from 1995 to 1998. “Let me be absolutely clear: this does not make me ashamed of who I am or what I did. It does the opposite. It makes me more all the more proud,” the 48-year-old told National Post. He is a designer and on-air expert on Canadian lifestyle television program, The Morning Show.

No individual in Alberta, no province in Canada, and no foreign political movement gets to lecture Jews or Israelis about our service or our right to self-defense,” he said.

He referred to his service as “one of the proudest accomplishments” of his life.

“The IDF is not a militia, not a rogue group…It is Israel’s lawful military, recognized as such under international law,” he said.

“History teaches us to be very clear-eyed about what happens when people begin compiling lists of Jews based on identity, association, or service. We have seen this before, including in Canada and it has never been about justice. It has always been about targeting.”

In February 2025, National Post reported on a publication that created

a list of Canadian Jews

who served in the IDF. DeLuca was one of the then-85 Canadians included. National Post reported last month that the same publication went on to create

a database of Jewish institutions

“associated” with the IDF, including summer camps, schools and synagogues.

“We will not be intimidated into silence, and we will not disavow our own legitimacy to satisfy those who deny it,” said DeLuca, about McPherson’s petition.

The CEO of Jewish advocacy group Tafsik, Amir Epstein, said that the petition is a “transparent attempt to appease radical ideologues by targeting law-abiding Canadian citizens.”

“It is telling that the MP expresses no concern over the presence of ISIS or

Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-affiliated individuals in Canada, yet seeks to criminalize young Canadians who stepped up to rescue hostages and combat terrorism,” he said.

He said the Tafsik Organization views it as “shameful harassment of the Jewish community.” He added that Tafsik would offer its legal service pro bono to “any lone soldier targeted by these baseless and discriminatory efforts.”

“We trust that the moral integrity of the Canadian people will ultimately reject this divisive rhetoric,” he said.

Meanwhile, Richard Marceau, the senior vice president for strategic initiatives and general counsel for CIJA, told National Post that McPherson should “focus on issues that matter to Canadians, not on rhetoric that demonizes Jewish Canadians.”

“Basely attacking members of the Jewish community who have honourably served the Jewish people and a democratic ally of Canada, in an effort to pander to extremists, is reprehensible,” said Marceau.

“At a time of rising hate and violence, as we have

recently seen in Australia

, placing a target on the backs of Canadian citizens is dangerous. We call on Ms. McPherson to end this demonization before tragedy strikes.”

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Iranian-born Goldie Ghamari, who was just a year old when her family fled for Canada in 1986 – seven years after another revolution deposed the Shah of Iran. The former Ontario Progressive Conservative MPP, now hosts a daily podcast with 800,000 followers. She is a supporter of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the former Shah.

Millions of Iranian citizens have taken to the streets since Dec. 28 in an unprecedented, widespread revolt against the Islamic Republic’s regime.
Watching events closely from Canada is Iranian-born Goldie Ghamari, who was just a year old when her family fled for Canada in 1986 – seven years after another revolution deposed the Shah of Iran and installed Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
The former Ontario Progressive Conservative MPP — she was removed from caucus by Premier Doug Ford in 2024 for what he described as “serious lapses of judgment” and did not run again — now hosts a daily podcast and livestream, The Goldie Show, with 800,000 followers across several platforms.
She is an explicit supporter of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the former Shah who has encouraged the protests and hopes to return to Iran.
Ghamari has appeared on Glenn Beck’s show, as well as with Piers Morgan, Erin Molan and other broadcasters. Senator Ted Cruz and author J.K. Rowling have retweeted her messages.
Estimates vary, but dozens of protesters have been killed and more than 2,200 arrested. Authorities in Iran have imposed an internet blackout.
Dave Gordon interviewed Ghamari on Friday for National Post.
Can you describe the scenes on the ground, in the videos that you’ve been able to acquire?
 
There are things that I have never seen in the last four decades. The bravery of the Iranian people is incredibly inspiring. However, at the same time, we’re also seeing footage of Iranians being slaughtered by the Islamic Republic. So, it’s very emotional.
We know that the Islamic Republic is incredibly vicious. They’ve been oppressing us for the last 47 years. And so we knew that the closer it gets to the end, the more vicious and more brutal the Islamic Republic is going to be. Despite all of this, Iranians are more determined than ever to overthrow the Islamic Republic. It’s literally now or never. It’s life or death. So we are right now in the middle of the Iranian revolution, and the fight is not over yet. We still have a long way to go, but Iranians are mobilized. They’re determined.
We’re seeing millions of Iranians out in the streets chanting “Death to the dictator, Death to the Islamic Republic.” They’re also chanting, “this is the final battle. Pahlavi will return.” Pahlavi, of course, is his royal highness, the crown prince of Iran. And the reason that they’re calling for Pahlavi to return is because Pahlavi is the only person that Iranians trust to transition them from a totalitarian Islamic dictatorship into a functioning secular, democratic society.
At the same time, we’re also seeing horrific footage of Islamic regime terrorists who are literally just opening fire, shooting into crowds of unarmed Iranians. But, we’re also seeing videos of Iranians who are fighting back. Some of them are using homemade Molotov cocktails. I don’t condone violence, but when you have a population that’s unarmed and being brutally murdered, this is how Iranians are fighting back. At this point, Iranians have nothing left to lose, and these are the true freedom fighters of the 21st century.
How are these protests different from anything prior?
We’ve never seen these numbers in the past. That’s the first thing. The second thing is that for the first time in 47 years, we’ve had a president of the United States who is siding with the Iranian people. This has never happened before in past protests. Obama, for example, in 2009 when he had the opportunity to stand with the Iranian people, he instead chose to stand with the Islamic terrorists and threw them a lifeline, and then he sent planes full of cash to the Islamic Republic.
President Trump, however, with his statement where he says that he’s standing with the Iranian people, we’ve never seen anything like that. That has encouraged Iranians to go out and demonstrate even more and to fight for their rights, because now they know that the leader of the free world is standing on their side.
What do you think it’ll take for the regime to fall?
No totalitarian dictatorship has ever fallen by just people going out. Totalitarian dictatorships have always fallen when there has been a military coup d’etat. On top of that, no revolution has ever been successful without outside interference.
We need to see, I would say, some sort of assistance from the United States. What President Trump has said so far has been really helpful, but Iranians right now are being slaughtered, and President Trump promised Iranians if the slaughtering continues, then America will respond, and that America is locked and loaded.
The other aspect is military defection. So we’re already starting to see military defections continuing, and so that just needs to continue.
How has Israel affected what’s going on in Iran now?
 
The only reason that Iranians are now able to have a fighting chance against the Islamic dictatorship is because of what Israel did back in the summer during the 12-day conflict (in a joint effort with the U.S. bombing military installations and nuclear factories). They severely weakened the Islamic regime. And so it’s a large reason for why Iranians have been so successful right now, and are continuing to fight back.
 
How much of the protest has to do with the economy?
The protests were sparked by the failing economy. That is true. On Sunday, Dec. 28, it was the collapse of the rial that sparked the merchants in Tehran to go on strike. However, within two hours that spread like wildfire, not just around Tehran, but it spread around the country. The collapsing economy is the straw that broke the camel’s back.
It’s about the complete and total oppression of Iranians for the last 47 years. It’s about the fact that Iranians don’t want sharia law. It’s about the fact that there’s no water, there’s no electricity. It’s about the fact that people are just done with this Islamic dictatorship.
Why do you believe this is a point of no return?
 
Because the Islamic Republic has never been weaker, and Iranians are also putting their names and faces out there. That in itself is treason. The reason they say it’s now or never, is because the situation is so bad and they have put everything on the line.
We are never going to have another opportunity like this to free Iran, where, you know, all the stars seem to have aligned.
Thanks to Israel, thanks to the president of the United States, who is standing on the side of the people.
If they don’t win, it’s pretty much game over. Iranians have also never been more determined, so that their determination is something that is just incredibly inspiring.
What can you say about what countries, if any, are supporting the regime during these protests?
Maduro was definitely a big ally of the Islamic Republic. However, when President Trump liberated Venezuela from the dictator Maduro, that actually was a huge blow for the Islamic Republic.
Venezuela actually holds billions of dollars of assets from the Islamic regime.
Venezuela has also been a base where the Islamic Republic has built drones, and has military factories and trains Islamic terrorists there.
And, of course, Hezbollah.
So by President Trump going after Venezuela, that has eradicated one of the strongest allies that the Islamic regime had.
Russia still, however, maintains as a player, but, what’s interesting is that no country has actually come out in support of the Islamic Republic, not even Russia or China. Everyone’s remaining silent because, again, like the allyship of these rogue states, it’s very tenuous. You know, there’s no honour amongst thieves.
There is a rumour circulating that Khamenei has a plan of escape now, to go to Russia.
It’s more just, you know, a place that terrorists might be able to escape to, similar to how Bashar Al Assad escaped Syria and went to Russia.
What would you like the Canadians, and the Government of Canada, to say or do in response to the protests?
 
I would say the best thing that Canadians can do right now is to keep all eyes on Iran and to, you know, pressure Mark Carney to speak out, and support the Iranian people.
The Iranian national revolution is anti-Islam, anti-Islamic, anti sharia law. It’s pro-revolution, pro-shah.
-This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

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Vehicles outside a Canada Post facility in Mississauga.

An arbitrator has ordered the reinstatement of an Ontario postman fired for hoarding at least 6,000 pieces of mail during the summer of 2022 because Canada Post wasn’t aware of his post-traumatic stress disorder.

Hyun Min Jang was terminated from his job as a rural and suburban mail carrier in King City, Ont., “for misdirection and delay of mail, as a result of the discovery of thousands of pieces of undelivered mail in his personal vehicle,” according to a recent decision from Kathleen G. O’Neil, the arbitrator.

“Items retrieved from (Jang’s) vehicle included a great variety of mail, some of significant importance to customers such as wedding invitations, cheques, health cards, tickets, jury summons and immigration documents,” O’Neil said.

“The delay in delivery ranged from days to over two months. As well, keys to community mail boxes and other property belonging to the employer were found.”

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers grieved Jang’s termination.

“The union acknowledges the undelivered mail as major misconduct for a mail carrier, but asks that (Jang) be reinstated to his position with appropriate accommodation for a health condition that affected the conduct that led to his discharge,” O’Neil said.

“The employer asks that the discharge be upheld.”

The union argued “that the medical evidence negates some of the intentionality in (Jang’s) delay of mail, and efforts to conceal the problem from the employer, despite the fact that he knew what he was doing was wrong,” said the decision.

“His underlying PTSD left him more vulnerable to the avoidant behaviour that partially explains his inability to deliver the mail and failure to alert management, in the union’s view. Counsel argues that this is the only plausible explanation supported by the evidence. Further, union counsel underlines that (Jang) derived no benefit from the situation, and was coming in early and working late, amounting to many unpaid hours trying to deal with the backlog.”

The arbitrator sided with Jang.

“I have decided to reinstate (Jang as a rural and suburban mail carrier) without compensation, given that at the time of the discharge, the employer was unaware of (his) medical condition, or its effect on his ability to do his job,” O’Neil said.

“He is to be returned to his position at King City, or such other position on which the parties can agree, on the condition that he can provide adequate medical evidence to establish his fitness to return to duty, and whether any current medical conditions would impact his ability to perform his duties to the extent that he would need accommodation.”

Until Jang “can provide evidence of his fitness to return to work, with or without accommodation, (he) is to be considered to be on authorized leave without pay, with access to such benefits as the collective agreement provides,” she said.

Jang, who needed a Korean interpreter for the arbitration hearing, “worked successfully for Canada Post for approximately eight years, starting in 2014,” said O’Neil’s decision dated Dec. 16, 2025.

“In late June 2022, he transferred from a route in Brampton to one in King City (40 kilometres north of Toronto), which he found considerably more challenging. He fell seriously behind over the summer and by mid-September, he had accumulated about six thousand pieces of undelivered mail in his vehicle.”

A psychiatrist who testified in the case indicated Jang’s PTSD symptoms “originated in early life, and that his vulnerability to having symptoms surface would likely be lifelong,” said the decision.

Jang “found the route at King City very difficult, with the need to manually sort a high volume of mail, which was different from his previous assignment in Brampton,” it said.

He also “found the mood at the King City facility ‘dark,’ and felt intimidated by his colleagues, interpreting facial expressions and lack of greetings as unwelcoming, especially as compared to what he described as a family atmosphere in Brampton.”

Jang “recognized in his evidence that his colleagues might not have felt that way, but said that memories of his childhood abuse came flooding back,” said the decision.

“At some point in his tenure at King City, a colleague noticed some error (Jang) had made, and commented that if he made another mistake, he would be fired. She later said it was a joke. Nonetheless, in the context of the general atmosphere at King City, (Jang) testified it had a deep effect on him. He said that he felt suffocated at King City and he experienced this as similar to when he was young and bullied, sometimes violently, at school.”

Jang “described a variety of symptoms from the summer of 2022,” that included “difficulty sleeping and eating, intrusive memories of childhood bullying and abuse, a frequently racing heart, feeling mentally and physically exhausted to the point of suicidal ideation at times.”

Jang “was also unsure of the supervisory structure at King City, which did not have an embedded manager,” said the decision.

“He was supervised by a non-managerial postmaster at King City, whose role he was unclear about, while he had had a supportive onsite manager in Brampton.”

Complaints from customers on his route about delayed or missing mail led a postmaster to discover mail left in Jang’s vehicle on Sept. 14, 2022.

Canada Post has been in dire financial straits. Its most recent quarterly report in November included a $541-million before-tax loss, the largest in its history.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Some of the 70 fighter jets and ground-attack aircraft Russia has stationed at an airfield in Kaliningrad, a small enclave bordered by Poland and Lithuania, whose runway was recently lengthened. The satellite image was part of a presentation by a group of private analysts documenting Russian military buildup near the borders of NATO countries.

Sprawling training sites. Huge oil storage areas. Countless anti-aircraft missile launchers. Ponds for testing amphibious vehicles. And nuclear-tipped missiles that could reach Western European capitals in mere minutes.

A group of private intelligence analysts using commercial satellite images and other evidence has put together a graphic illustration of the Russian military buildup on NATO’s Eastern flank, a threat that has most of Europe scrambling to bolster its defences.

In

a video stitching together that evidence

and presented to the Toronto-based Mackenzie Institute think tank last month, the group provides a sobering overview of the heavily armed Russian presence near the borders of Poland, Lithuania and Finland.

They hope their research will turn some heads in North America, where attention has focused on Russia’s war against Ukraine but largely missed what President Vladimir Putin’s forces have done elsewhere in Eastern Europe.

“I think people need to know Russia is not this benign thing,” said Jeff Nyquist, a writer and blogger on geopolitics who presented the group’s findings in Toronto. “They want to dominate Europe, they want the United States to not be a great power any more … America can’t survive losing its allies in Europe. People need to understand what this means.”

The group’s analysis is “pretty good,” said Frédéric Labarre, a professor at the Royal Military College and an expert on NATO-Russia relations. The research serves the important function of letting Moscow know it is not operating in secrecy, he said.

“Their work is extremely, extremely useful if it gets published because it’s a way of telling the Russians ‘We see you. And whenever you move, we know where you’re going.’ ”

That said, Labarre is not convinced that the preponderance of Russian military equipment close to NATO countries — much of which he said is of poor quality — indicates an imminent plan to invade. It is more likely defensive, based on misconceptions about countries to its west.

NATO does not pose a military threat to Moscow but, said Labarre, “you cannot express this to a Russian, who has an ingrained paranoia about encirclement. This is not new. This is centuries-old, this fear of being encircled.”

Nyquist’s concern is linked to what he sees as a troubling turn by conservatives in the United States, who once were hawkish about confronting the Russian threat. Nyquist says he voted for Donald Trump in last year’s U.S. election, but now says the MAGA movement Trump leads is “obviously penetrated by the Russians.”

Trump himself has courted Putin as the White House tries to broker an end to the Ukraine war, halting direct U.S. military aid to Kyiv, hosting the Russian president in Alaska and at times harshly criticizing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Trump’s capture this month of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and assertions about U.S. dominion over the Western hemisphere have

triggered concerns

that he is willing to see Russia and China hold sway in their respective domains of Europe and East Asia.

But if the U.S. is sanguine about Moscow’s martial ambitions, Europe is waking up to the threat.

“We are Russia’s next target,” Mark Rutte, NATO’s secretary general,

said in a speech

last month, one of several cautions he has issued lately. “Conflict is at our door. Russia has brought war back to Europe. And we must be prepared.”

German

Defence Minister Boris Pistorius warned

that Russia’s readiness to invade other European countries is accelerating. “Some military historians even believe we have already had our last summer of peace,” he said.

 Photo taken by bystanders of Iskander intermediate-range ballistic missiles on a highway 19 kilometres from the Polish border during a Russian military exercise in Kaliningrad last year. The Iskander is capable of carrying conventional or nuclear warheads. The photo was obtained by a group of private analysts documenting Russian military buildup in Eastern Europe.

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk

has also raised the alarm

, as his country blamed a rail-line sabotage, drone incursions and the burning of a shopping mall on Russian agents. To prepare for more aggression, “we will accelerate the building of the strongest army in Europe,” Tusk vowed.

The group that put together the information on Russian forces is led by Lee Wheelbarger, who developed night-vision devices, communications equipment and a ground-breaking telemedicine system as a “senior technologist” with the U.S. Army.

He and his colleagues are not professional intelligence analysts. But he said he’s been studying Russian and other military movements for a decade – posting results on his KLW News online video channels – and has done work for the Ukrainian forces. Wheelbarger said he collects publicly available images from 28 commercial satellites operated by several companies. He and colleagues also access images from ground cameras – sometimes by hacking into them. He employs another video method he declined to discuss on the record, gleans information from human sources around the world and follows aircraft movements with flight-tracking sites.

To help identify what can look to the untrained eye like undefined blobs on the ground, he’s obtained three-dimensional renderings of various military hardware. Those renderings are then placed over the objects revealed by satellite images to see if they match in shape and size, helping identify the equipment. Other objects – like fighter jets and tanks – are clearly recognizable.

His group’s conclusions based on that evidence include:

  • There has been major expansion in recent months of military installations in Kaliningrad, the tiny Russian “exclave” sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania, including an enlarged command centre, several huge new missile storage facilities and a reconstructed nuclear-weapons depot, an assertion backed up by other reports.
  • A runway at an airfield in Kaliningrad was recently lengthened and is lined with fighter jets and supersonic bombers. Nearby is  a storage facility for SS-27s, nuclear-armed inter-continental ballistic missiles. A photograph taken and posted by a cell-phone user – and published by other sites, too – shows a queue of truck-borne “Iskander” missiles, which can carry both conventional and nuclear warheads, on a highway 19 kilometres from Poland. Nyquist said it’s odd to station ballistic missiles – which roar into space then hurtle down to targets up to thousands of kilometres away – so close to the borders where they are more vulnerable. But he said they could also be fired in “low-trajectory” mode and reach NATO headquarters in Belgium, for instance, in five minutes. Nyquist suggested the Russian nuclear weapons stationed near borders would serve as a kind of blackmail to deter NATO.
  • Poland has recently added defences along its border with Kaliningrad, including concrete “dragon’s teeth” and tank ditches for thwarting armoured vehicles. Flight tracking this past summer revealed numerous trips by airliners into Kaliningrad from the Russian far-east at all hours of the night and day, while beaches were empty of tourists, suggesting an influx of troops.
  • As in Kaliningrad, scores of S-400 anti-aircraft missiles and launchers are stationed in Belarus, a close Russian ally. A train that the group tracked from its start point in China delivered military hardware to a Russian base in Belarus, Wheelbarger says. He and his group also spotted more SS-27s, stored just 64 kilometres from the Latvian border.
  • Belarus contains huge military training grounds near Poland, including “fording ponds” where amphibious vehicles are tested.

 A storage facility for what a group of private military analysts say are Russian SS-27s, nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles.  The satellite image was part of a presentation by a group of private analysts documenting Russian military buildup near the borders of NATO countries.

Nyquist argued that the most likely move by Russia, if it were to invade NATO territory, would be to capture the so-called

Suwalki Gap

along the Polish-Lithuania border, both cutting off the Baltic states from the rest of NATO and linking Kaliningrad with Belarus.

Labarre called Russia a ”very nasty neighbour” with imperialist ambitions, but he downplayed the significance of its positioning of military hardware close to NATO-country borders. In Kaliningrad, for instance, the area is so small, it would be difficult not to do so, he said.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


The UAE's list of approved schools has several top schools in Europe, the U.S., and elsewhere, but none of Britain's elite universities such as Oxford due to fears of fears of student Islamist radicalization.

The United Arab Emirates has removed state funding for citizens who want to study in the United Kingdom over fears of campus Islamist radicalization there driven by the Muslim Brotherhood.

The move to formally exclude British universities from eligibility for state-funded UAE scholarship programs appears to date to last summer, and it had been informally implemented even before that, but it has come to light now after British officials inquired about the absence of any British institutions on the list of schools approved for UAE scholarship programs.

The Financial Times newspaper

quoted an anonymous source

who said UAE officials made clear to Britain that the decision was deliberate because people there “don’t want their kids to be radicalised on campus.”

The UAE’s list of approved schools has several top schools in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere, but none of Britain’s elite universities such as Oxford or Cambridge, and none of its larger modern campuses like the University of Manchester, or the various schools in London that attract many of the U.K.’s foreign student population.

The absence of those schools from the UAE’s approved list also means credentials from them are unrecognized and of lesser value in the UAE employment market.

Approximately 8,500 Emirati students were studying in Britain in 2024, the last year for which numbers are available.

Many Emirati students study in Europe and are funded by generous state backing to do so, with their tuition, board, travel and insurance covered for study in several prioritized academic areas.

The move to exclude Britain is part of a wider spoiling of relations between the U.K. and the Gulf state, though until now most of the conflict was over commercial interests such as the attempted purchase of The Daily Telegraph newspaper and the financial problems with the Manchester United football club.

It also reflects growing concern, both in Britain and abroad, about Islamist radicalism at British universities.

The UAE is a leading diplomatic voice in this debate. Since the Arab Spring uprising across the Muslim world in 2011, the UAE has moved vigorously to curb the influence of political Islamist groups, especially the Muslim Brotherhood.

The Muslim Brotherhood was a driving force of the Arab Spring in Egypt where it gained its strongest ever influence, which has since waned. It is a Sunni Islamist organization founded in Egypt almost a century ago.

U.S. Vice President JD Vance posted about this news on social media, saying, “Some of our best Muslim allies in the Gulf think the Islamist indoctrination in certain parts of the west is too dangerous.”

Britain has declined to list the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist group, although Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said it is under review.

This potential British listing has become a political hot issue, with surging Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage vowing to ban the Muslim Brotherhood if he becomes prime minister.

Canada also does not include the Muslim Brotherhood on its list of proscribed entities, although Canada’s listing that bans the terror group Hamas notes that it “emerged from the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood in 1987.”

The UAE bans the Muslim Brotherhood as a proscribed organization, which puts it in the small minority of countries that do so. The UAE has also strongly advocated for other countries, including Britain and France, to ban the group, saying it is the source of rapidly spreading extremism across Europe and elsewhere.

Canada is a popular destination for students from the UAE, although Canada has recently drastically cut the number of foreign students it accepts under annual caps.

The Financial Times also reported that British officials do not regard the ban as total, as there remain some UAE military personnel on scholarships.

It is also not a ban on Emirati students going to Britain for school, as many whose families wish to fund it themselves continue to study there.

The UAE did not comment on the FT’s report, and the British Prime Minister’s officer issued a statement saying: “All forms of extremism have absolutely no place in our society, and we will stamp them out wherever they are found. We offer one of the best education systems in the world and maintain stringent measures on student welfare and on campus safety.”

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Premier Danielle Smith speaks during a press conference at McDougall Centre in Calgary on Friday January 2, 2026.

OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is calling for Ottawa to approve a new heavy oil pipeline to the West Coast by the fall, saying that a United States-backed Venezuela threatens to undercut Canada in the global energy market.

Smith said in a social media post on Friday that she’d raised the issue earlier in the day with Prime Minister Mark Carney, stressing to him the urgency of getting more Canadian oil to non-U.S. markets.

“Today, I had a positive meeting with (Carney) during which we discussed the recent events in Venezuela, and how they underscore the necessity to greatly expedite the approval of a one million barrel per day oil pipeline to Canada’s (P)acific coast,” wrote Smith.

Smith said her government would submit an application for a heavy oil pipeline to northwest British Columbia by June “at the latest” and had asked for it to be green-lit “no later than this Fall.”

She warned that any dithering would risk “ceding market share, losing investment, and undermining Canada’s competitive position in a rapidly changing global energy landscape.”

Smith attached a letter she’d sent to Carney one day earlier expressing the same sentiment.

The U.S. sent shockwaves through the global energy landscape last weekend with a daring raid of oil-rich Venezuela, culminating in the apprehension of socialist dictator Nicolas Maduro and his wife.

U.S. officials, including President Donald Trump, have said subsequently that they hope to secure control over Venezuela’s massive subsoil oil reserves. Trump says U.S.-based oil and gas multinationals will invest $100 billion over the next several years to get the taps flowing.

Canada and Venezuela produce similar grades of heavy oil, meaning that Venezuelan oil can plausibly displace the Canadian product that currently flows into U.S. refineries.

Canadian oil stocks have tumbled on news of the incursion, losing $8 billion of stock market value in just four days.

The U.S. is by far the biggest customer for Canadian oil, accounting for more than 90 per cent of all exports.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Premier Danielle Smith speaks during a press conference at McDougall Centre in Calgary on Friday January 2, 2026.

OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is calling for Ottawa to approve a new heavy oil pipeline to the West Coast by the fall, saying that a United States-backed Venezuela threatens to undercut Canada in the global energy market.

Smith said

in a social media post

on Friday that she’d raised the issue earlier in the day with Prime Minister Mark Carney, stressing to him the urgency of getting more Canadian oil to non-U.S. markets.

“Today, I had a positive meeting with (Carney) during which we discussed the recent events in Venezuela, and how they underscore the necessity to greatly expedite the approval of a one million barrel per day oil pipeline to Canada’s (P)acific coast,” wrote Smith.

Smith said her government would petition the Major Projects Office for

a heavy oil pipeline

to northwest British Columbia by June “at the latest” and had asked for it to be green-lit “no later than this Fall.”

She warned that any dithering would risk “ceding market share, losing investment, and undermining Canada’s competitive position in a rapidly changing global energy landscape.”

Smith attached a letter she’d sent to Carney one day earlier expressing the same sentiment.

The U.S. sent shockwaves through the global energy landscape last weekend

with a daring raid

of oil-rich Venezuela, culminating in the apprehension of socialist dictator Nicolas Maduro and his wife.

U.S. officials, including President Donald Trump, have said subsequently that they hope to secure control over Venezuela’s massive subsoil oil reserves. Trump says U.S.-based oil and gas multinationals

will invest $100 billion

over the next several years to get the taps flowing.

Canada and Venezuela produce similar grades of heavy oil, meaning that Venezuelan oil can plausibly displace the Canadian product that currently flows into U.S. refineries.

Canadian

oil stocks have tumbled

on news of the incursion, losing $8 billion of stock market value in just four days.

The U.S. is by far the biggest customer for Canadian oil, consuming

more than 90 per cent

of all exports.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

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Minister of Public Safety Gary Anandasangaree speaks to reporters ahead of a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025.

OTTAWA

— The federal Public Safety department says
16 people took part in a pilot of its firearms compensation program that resulted in 25 banned guns being turned over and destroyed. 

The department released the figure just days after revealing the results and “lessons learned” from the test it ran in parts of Cape Breton over six weeks last year, where it initially expected to collect up to 200 prohibited firearms.

“A total of 25 prohibited firearms, turned in by 16 participants, were destroyed,” spokesperson Noémie Allard said in a statement on Friday. 

The total compensation paid to pilot participants is $26,535.” 

Later this month, the government plans to launch the long-promised compensation program for individual gun owners with one of the more than 2,500 makes and models of firearms the federal Liberal government has banned since 2020, according to Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree’s office.

While the federal Liberals and gun control advocates say such weapons are too dangerous for public use, many firearms groups, along with the Opposition Conservatives, say the government is wasting taxpayer dollars by targeting lawful gun owners and argue the program will have no impact on public safety.

Lobby groups like the Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights say the results from the pilot demonstrate that the program is destined for failure.

The federal government has instituted an amnesty period for individuals with prohibited guns until October 2026.

As the federal government prepares to launch the program nationally, the Public Safety department is trying to formalize agreements with different provinces and municipal police agencies to assist with collection efforts.

This week, officials announced that a deal had been reached with Quebec that would see the federal government compensate the province to the tune of $12 million for its coordination of that work.

Police in Halifax, Winnipeg, Cape Breton, and Fredericton have said they are willing to participate.

Meanwhile, many police forces in the Greater Toronto Area and elsewhere in Ontario say they have not yet made a decision.

A spokeswoman for the RCMP did not directly say what role RCMP officers in divisions across the country would play in the rollout of the program, saying it could not comment on the government’s “

plans or timing” of the program’s rollout. 

“As part of the rollout, the RCMP Canadian Firearms Program will notify firearms licensees about the (program) and how to participate.”

A spokesman in Anandasangaree’s office this week said that while agreements were in the works with more provinces and police, the banned weapons would be collected through special collection units to be sent around the country.

In its lists of findings from the pilot, the Public Safety department said that a much longer declaration period was needed to allow more time for firearms owners to declare they own one of the government-banned guns, as compared to the several weeks it had during the test run. 

The department also emphasized the need for a clearer registration process and more “timely” guidance on how to participate.

The federal government last year opened the compensation program for businesses, which resulted in some 12,000 firearms being turned over and destroyed.

It has provided no timeline as to when it may reopen the program for dealers, despite the government announcing last fall that it would be reopened in the “coming weeks.”

National Post

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A Canada Revenue Agency building. The CRA has more than 10 million unclaimed cheques.

The start of a new year means the clock is ticking closer to the deadline for taxes to be filed and money owed to be paid. Canadians have until April 30 to

file their income taxes

. If they owe money, that’s also the last day to pay before incurring penalties and interest.

But the opposite side of the ledger doesn’t work in quite the same way. As of last October, The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) says it’s been sitting on a pile of more than 10 million uncashed cheques. Here’s what to know.

How much unclaimed funds are we talking about?

The CRA says its unclaimed cheques — exactly 10,279,770 at last count — are valued at $1,752,004,000. That $1.7 billion means each cheque has an average value of about $170.

That’s equivalent to a stack of cheques a kilometre high, or tucked away in more than 3,000 filing cabinet drawers. (Though to be fair the CRA doesn’t have them all printed out and awaiting pickup.)

What do the funds represent?

The CRA website lists 42 separate types of payments that have been unclaimed. They range from the standard T1 income tax refund and the Canada Child Benefit to more obscure payouts, such as the Newfoundland and Labrador Income Supplement, the Yukon Child Benefit and the

Alberta 2005 Resource Rebate

.

That last one is more than 20 years old!

Yes. The Alberta 2005 Resource Rebate was a one-time payment made to Albertans by the Ralph Klein government under the province’s surplus that year. Tax-free cheques were sent directly to every Albertan over 18 who filed a tax return in 2004, and to any child born in the province up to 2005.

This illustrates two ways that someone might have missed out on one of these government payments. An adult who didn’t file a tax return or a baby (now in their twenties) whose parents didn’t get the cheque might still be owed that money.

“Cheques can date back as far as 1998 and, because government-issued cheques never expire or stale date, the CRA can reissue a payment once requested by the taxpayer,” a CRA spokesperson

told National Post

last year.

What other reasons are there for money not being claimed?

Lack of direct deposit is a big one. Paper cheques that are mailed can get lost, stolen or delivered to the wrong address if a person has moved or is deceased.

The CRA has long pushed Canadians to both file their taxes electronically and to receive payments through direct deposit. In fact, this year the government opted to

stop sending out paper forms

to taxpayers, though they can still request them or print them themselves.

How can I find out if I’m owed money?

The CRA has a

whole web page

devoted to uncashed cheques. The simplest way is to log into your account (conveniently called My Account) and look for the “uncashed cheques” link on the overview page.

It’s worth noting that the page won’t list cheques that are less than six months old, those for COVID-19 benefits and subsidies, those for a business or trust, or those sent by direct deposit. For all of that (or if you can’t access the account online) you’ll need to

call the CRA

directly.

What happens to it if I don’t claim it?

As satisfying as it would be to imagine a big pile of cash (or all those filing cabinets), the money just resides in the government’s general coffers, being used for general government purposes, until it is claimed.

How do I receive the money?

The CRA page has links to a form to fill out, requesting payment. The site notes that processing may take 10 to 12 weeks, and that delivery by mail may take an additional 10 days. (Another reason to sign up for direct deposit.)

What if I also owe the government money?

Ah, there’s the rub. If you’re in arrears to the government, they may take part of your requested payment away to square things before sending the remainder (if any) to you.

How much has already been claimed?

Since 2020, when the online system for uncashed cheques was set up, Canadians have received 4,960,380 cheques valued at just over $1.8 billion. However, the unclaimed tally also continues to grow each year, hitting a record high of $1.8 billion in 2024 before falling slightly to where it is now.

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The ROM, located near Toronto's Yorkville area, is shown in this photo.

A Jewish advocacy group is condemning the use of the “Palestine” label for certain ancient artifacts at the Royal Ontario Museum.

“We were made aware that the label had been in place for some time,” said Tafsik CEO Amir Epstein in a statement to National Post. “This does not excuse the responsibility to correct errors. While we are willing to give the benefit of the doubt that this was an unintentional mistake, we simply ask that the information be corrected to reflect archaeological and historical facts.”

The artifacts in question have been on display at the ROM since 2012. The museum says revisions have already been underway for several months, which is prior to the online discourse that began when Tafsik posted about it on X in late December. The museum did not immediately respond to National Post’s request about what the new labels would be after its revision.

“The @ROMtoronto (Royal Ontario Museum) is rewriting history. Welcome to Canada 2025,” Tafsik posted on X last month. The group also shared a photo of

a swirled marble mosaic bottle

that is located in the museum’s Joey and Toby Tanenbaum Gallery of Rome and the Near East.

It is dated 25 to 50 AD. It is labelled as being from Syria or Palestine.

“From approximately 25–50 AD, the land was known as Judea by the Roman authorities and as Eretz Yisrael by the Jewish people. After the colonizing Romans killed and expelled much of the indigenous Jewish population, they imposed the colonial name ‘Palestine’ with the explicit intent of erasing Jewish history and connection to the land,” Epstein said.

“Historical revisionism is not new to the Jewish people. The Nazis used it to justify the genocide of Jews in Germany, and more recently, Palestinian religious and political leaders have employed similar tactics to justify the genocide committed against our people on October 7, 2023.”

He said that, throughout history, the erasure of Jewish identity has led to violence and genocide, driving the Jewish people to “meticulously” document its history “for thousands of years” — “documentation that has been corroborated through archaeology and, more recently, through recorded testimony.”

Tafsik has been in touch with the ROM and it is optimistic that the museum is taking the matter seriously, he said.

Another example from the ROM,

as reported by the Free Press

, shows blue glass pieces, including a jug, flask, bowl, aryballos (small, spherical flask) and flagon (large drinking container) in the same gallery of the museum.

The items are dated AD 25 to 125. They are labelled as being from Syria or Palestine.

In an emailed statement to National Post, the ROM said its curator has identified displays within the gallery “as requiring several label revisions.” The gallery was originally installed between 2011 and 2012.

“This work has been in process for several months, and related label updates (including for the swirled marbled mosaic bottle) are underway,” the statement said.

“Any changes to labels at ROM are informed by dialogue between curators, interpretive planners, and sectoral peers. Labels use the date of the object as the fixed starting point and, where known, indicate the location as it was named at the time of production. Contemporary place names are also included to aid visitor understanding. The location often includes multiple current place names if the exact area of production within a geographic region is not known, as is common curatorial practice for centuries-old objects.”

Carl Ehrlich, a York University professor of history and humanities, told National Post that labelling artifacts is “very, very complicated,” especially when words take on different meaning in the modern era.

“Until very recently — when Palestine and Palestinian became both the name of a country in preparation, as it were, and of a new ethnic group — Palestine was viewed as a very neutral geographic term, an amorphous term, for the area we could call the southern Levant or southern Canaan,” he said.

“That’s the reason why Palestine is, at least in the scholarly world, a designation that is used for a general geographic territory without necessarily being specific about ancient borders, territories or ethnicities, because there were a number of different ethnicities and a number of different peoples living in that territory.”

Judea was a “relatively small area and kingdom,” he said. “Under Herod the Great, for instance, who ruled in the last few decades BCE, it managed to expand its borders a bit…It moved out of the area of modern-day Israel into the territory of what is now Jordan, the West Bank, etc. It was a little bit larger at that time.”

Christian scholars started archeological investigations into the ancient Near East mostly in an attempt to establish a foothold in the region and look into “the biblical roots of Christianity.”

“They continued using this terminology of Palestine for the southern area, Syria for the northern area,” he said.

Over the course of time, the terms have become more complex.

“Nowadays, the term Palestine and Palestinian is loaded with political implications, and therefore the modern day Palestinians, the ethnicity, has been essentially piggybacking on that term in order to establish an ancient historical tradition leading up to the modern people, that essentially also involves the erasure of the Jewish history and the Jewish connection to the land,” he said.

“So, it’s not a neutral term anymore.”

The entire labelling system could use an overhaul when it comes to presenting ancient artifacts to a modern audience, he said, as the “old scholarly labels” have not “kept up with the changing meaning of the words involved.”

As for the artifacts at the ROM pointed out by Tafsik and mentioned in the Free Press, they don’t include a specific geography in their online profiles that would definitively determine that they came from Judea, Ehrlich said.

“(The curators) don’t know exactly where, so they use the old scholarly designations,” he said.

It only becomes problematic if objects from the territory of modern-day Israel or ancient Judea are referred to as Palestinian “because that then is an erasure of Jewish history.” He said there is an ongoing battle between “modern day labels and imposing them anachronistically on ancient times to fight modern wars of legitimacy.”

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