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An Australian dingo photographed at the Australian Wildlife Park near Sydney.

On Jan. 19, 2026, the body of B.C. teen Piper James was found on K’gari, an island off the coast of Queensland. It was discovered in the early hours of the morning, surrounded by a pack of dingoes. An autopsy concluded signs of drowning, as well as extensive dingo bites inflicted after death. “Pre-mortem dingo bite marks are not likely to have caused immediate death,”

the coroner told reporters

.

But have dingoes killed other people, and are attacks frequent? Here’s what you need to know about thsee wild dogs that are native to Australia.

What are dingoes?

Dingoes resemble medium-sized dogs, with ginger-coloured fur, erect ears and bushy tails, according to

the Australian Museum

. They are descended from dogs brought by Asian seafarers around 4,000 years ago. They are the country’s largest mammalian carnivore, with teeth longer than those of domestic dogs.

They live in a wide range of habitats on the Australian mainland, preferring woodland and grasslands that extend to the edge of forests.

As predators, they feed mainly on other mammals such as rabbits, kangaroos, wallabies and wombats, but when those native species are scarce they sometimes hunt domestic animals and farm livestock and therefore can’t count farmers among their fans. Hunting at night, they usually move in solitary fashion but will cooperate to hunt in packs when they are after larger game.

Generally, dingoes are considered low risk, but like any wild animal, they can be unpredictable. Experts told

the BBC

that dingoes are wary and cautious around people. Most will avoid contact with humans.

The Queensland government has warned against feeding them, an issue that can arise with well-meaning tourists. The Department of Environment, Tourism and Science says people who ignore warnings and deliberately feed dingoes can be

fined more than $10,000 Australian dollars

(Canada’s dollar is roughly equivalent).

Have there been many attacks?

Between 2002 to 2012, records show 98 dingo attacks, mostly non-fatal bites or lunges, plus earlier notable cases like a 2001 fatal mauling of a nine-year-old boy on K’gari, reports the

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

.

High-risk incidents, linked to post-pandemic tourism, began increasing in 2023.

A July 2023 attack of a woman resulted in her being transported from K’gari to hospital, reported Australian broadcaster

SBS News

. She was

attacked by at least three dingoes while jogging on a beach on the Queensland island.
They chased her into the water before two men in a four-wheel drive rushed to her aid.

A man with the local Aboriginal community said

he wasn’t surprised the dingoes chased her into the water, as that is
“part of their hunting tactics.” 

Overall, says ABC, human-dingo conflicts remain statistically rare despite increased reporting on popular sites.

Dingo safety advice, according to SBS, includes never feeding them, locking up food and food waste, camping in fenced areas, staying in groups and within arm’s reach of children, and not running.

What’s the most well-known case of a dingo attack?

On the night of Aug. 17, 1980, Azaria Chamberlain, a nine-week-old Australian baby girl, was killed by a dingo during a family camping trip to Uluru in the country’s Northern Territory. Her body was never found.

However, her mother, Lindy was tried for her murder and spent more than three years in prison, while her father, Michael, received a suspended sentence. Lindy was released only after the baby’s jacket was found near a dingo’s den. After f

our inquests

into the matter in 2012, they were absolved. A coroner eventually found that Azaria was indeed killed by a dingo.

“A dingo ate my baby!” became a popular cultural meme in the ’80s and ’90s (think

Seinfeld

). Numerous books have also been written about the case, and the story has been adapted into several media including a TV movie, a feature film starring Meryl Streep and Sam Neill, a television miniseries, a theatrical production and an opera.

How are dingoes part of Australian culture?

Dingoes are culturally important to many First Nations people across the country. They are a regular feature of Indigenous culture and form an important part of totems, dreaming, lore/law and customs, says

Defend the Wild

, an organization dedicated to safeguarding Australia’s unique wildlife and their habitats.

In traditional Aboriginal society, dingoes played an important role in the protection of women and children. Women would often travel with dingoes wrapped around their waists, as they provided hunting assistance and were a living blanket and guarded against intruders.

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 head of a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald is shown torn down following a demonstration in Montreal, Saturday, Aug. 29, 2020.

Set for release Jan. 27, Lament for a Literature is the new book from Richard Stursberg, in which he laments the decline of Canadian literature, for which he blames multiple factors. In this excerpt, he addresses the impact of Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, arguing they took over a badly weakened cultural sector from the Harper Conservatives and threw money at it without addressing the difficult structural issues affecting it, only making things worse. The government, he said, did not understand “that as Canadian media eroded and Canadians embraced the new foreign digital platforms, they walked away from Canada itself. They no longer consumed Canadian news, laughed at Canadian comedies, read Canadian books, watched Canadian documentaries, or heard the opinions of Canadian experts on domestic social, cultural, political, economic, or historical issues. They effectively left the national conversation and moved to another amorphous, filter-bubbling virtual country.”

Instead of attending to the challenges of the creative industries, the new government’s biggest cultural initiative was to fully embrace Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI). In a famous remark, Justin Trudeau, when asked why half his cabinet were women, he simply said, “Because it’s 2015.” He went on to inaugurate a “feminist” agenda that penetrated all aspects of the government’s work. Every initiative, including the budget, had to be accompanied by a detailed analysis of what it would mean for women.

At the same time, the major cultural institutions, falling in line with the government’s new orientation, created measures designed to improve the access of “equity-seeking” groups to their programs. The CBC, the Canada Council, and Telefilm all moved to embrace DEI. In most cases, this took the form of requiring applicants, producers, artists, and publishers to provide detailed accounts of how many BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour) people were involved in their projects and what roles they occupied. If an insufficient number appeared, the project was turned down.

As DEI advanced, another strange aspect of identity politics emerged: the assumption that people have a right not to be offended. In the case of Wendy Mesley, for example, her distinguished career at the CBC was cancelled because she had made reference to Pierre Vailiere’s seminal text on Quebec nationalism, Les Negres Blancs d’Amerique. Someone was apparently offended by the use of the word “negre.” She was dismissed. As Anne Applebaum noted in The Atlantic: “…it is possible to meet people who have lost everything — jobs, money, friends, colleagues — after violating no laws and sometimes no workplace rules either. Instead, they have broken (or are accused of having broken) social codes having to do with race, sex, personal behaviour, or acceptable humour, which may not have existed five years ago or maybe five minutes ago.”

Fear of violating these codes of conduct inevitably leads to caution, particularly when the consequences can be so terrible. Writers, publishers, and booksellers will all be careful not to offend. They will search out the bland, the non-controversial, and the politically acceptable. Again, Applebaum: “How many manuscripts remain in desk drawers or unwritten altogether, because their authors fear an arbitrary judgement?” The resulting chill limits freedom of expression and artistic daring. It is hard, if not impossible, to imagine publishers in 2025 releasing anything as comparably challenging as Beautiful Losers, Bear, or Oh Canada! Oh Quebec!

The movement to right historical discrimination expanded dramatically. The practice had started with the Mulroney government, which had apologized for the internment of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War (1988) and the similar treatment of Italian Canadians (1990). The Harper government apologized for the Chinese Head Tax Act of 1885 (2006), residential schools (2008), and the Komagata Maru incident of 1914 (2008). The Trudeau government accelerated the pace, apologizing again for the treatment of Italian Canadians, the Komagatu Maru, and residential school abuses. It went on to seek forgiveness for the bad treatment of Jews (the MS St. Louis), the Inuit, and the Number 2 Construction Battalion of Black workers.

The legacy of Sir John A. Macdonald, the architect of Confederation and father of the country, was sharply reassessed. He was blamed, often (not always) unfairly, for policies that harmed Indigenous peoples, including residential schools, famine, and cultural suppression. Statues fell and his name was removed from schools and institutions as Canadians erased the narrative of their country’s founding.

The national purification had consequences, some good, some not so good. Most importantly perhaps, it clarified Canada’s relationship to its Indigenous peoples, allowing new voices to be heard. In writing, the emergence of Richard Wagamese, Michelle Good, and Eden Robinson enriched the country’s understanding of itself and its identity. The quality of their novels resulted in significant bestsellers and important prizes, and they also made clear in a way that nothing else could, the terrible sadness and betrayal involved in the government’s policies.

An outpouring of Indigenous nonfiction also resulted in important bestsellers. Tanya Talaga’s Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death and Hard Truths in a Northern City broke new ground in understanding the systemic racism that bedevilled aboriginal children, shipped away from home to go to school. The seven fallen feathers are the seven children who killed themselves in despair over their circumstances. 21 Things You May Not Know About the Indian Act by Bob Joseph documented the discriminatory policies embedded in the almost 150-year-old act that defined and controlled the lives of Indigenous people.

While these books were clearly of value in making sense of Canada’s identity, the sweeping reconsideration of the country’s past inevitably had consequences for Canadians’ sense of themselves. The revelations surrounding the appalling behaviour toward Indigenous people coupled with the seemingly endless apologies for past bad behaviour toward women, Jews, Black and Brown Canadians, Italians, and Japanese Canadians, along with the denunciation of Sir John A. Macdonald, left Canadians questioning the virtue of their country. People of conscience began to feel shame. Canadians’ traditionally intense pride in their country began to erode. What began as a slide under Harper’s Conservatives became a flood under the Trudeau Liberals. By the end of his administration, attitudes had shifted significantly. Where in 1985, almost 80 per cent of Canadians were very proud of their country, by 2024 it had fallen to 34 per cent.

 Lament for a Literature: The Collapse of Canadian Book Publishing, by Richard Stursberg.

The pervasive recasting of Canadian history had the concomitant effect of strengthening Canada’s commitment to DEI. The revelations that many groups had been treated badly created an appetite to make amends. Simple fairness required a recognition and celebration of the different peoples who had been smeared and abused in the past. The history of denigrating LGBTQ+ folks had not only to come to an end, their specific identities needed to be explored, understood, and lauded as Canada itself had been during the nationalist 1970s and 1980s. Identity politics replaced the politics of national identity.

The intersection of the structural changes in the publishing industry with the overwhelming dominance of the multinationals, the emphasis on righting historical wrongs, and the Liberal government’s insistence on DEI strengthened trends that were already evident in the kinds of cultural works and books that were being produced.

Deeply researched narrative nonfiction was already in steep decline. The collapse of the big Canadian independent publishers meant that there was little appetite or money left for books on Canadian society, politics, history, or biography. For their part, the multinationals were principally interested in selling their U.K. and U.S. bestsellers in Canada. Dan Wells, the publisher of Biblioasis, a distinguished Canadian publisher of poetry, novels, and Canadian history did a count of the number of researched Canadian nonfiction books produced by Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, and Harper-Collins collectively. He estimated that: “between these three multinationals they publish between 250 and 300 Canadian books every six months … four or five might be works of Canadian history or researched nonfiction.” He attributed their indifference to traditional Canadian nonfiction to the fact that they’re not Canadian, and that their priorities are either set by or designed to please masters and shareholders in foreign countries. That leaves Canada “in the intellectual position of being more or less a colony in the large extra national entities … We are no longer able to decide which of our stories deserves to be told.”

At the same time, the Canada Council’s zealous pursuit of “decolonization,” and its prioritization of works “of personal reflection where the point of view of the author is evident,” gave further momentum to personal narratives at the expense of history, biography, science, or politics. There was an explosion of memoirs. Many were trauma memoirs, recounting the horrors of growing up gay, Black, female, Indigenous, or some combination of all of them. Others were memoirs by famous people, as we have seen, sports stars, politicians, and media personalities. Charlotte Gray, the distinguished Canadian historian, noted: “The top 2018 Governor General’s award shortlist for nonfiction contained five memoirs; the 2019 shortlist was dominated by personal stories; all five of the 2020 nominations were memoirs. In 2021, there was only one book on the shortlist that was not a memoir.” In 2023, four out of five nonfiction nominees for the Governor General’s Award for nonfiction were memoirs: Gendered Islamophobia; Unbroken: My Fight for Survival, Hope and Justice for Indigenous Women and Girls; Unearthing; and Invisible Boy. The 2024 shortlist is somewhat more balanced with only two memoirs.

The decline of books on Canadian history and its ongoing denigration, accompanied by the celebration of individual life stories, seemed congruent with George Grant’s contention that Canada was slipping away from its historic emphasis on community values and shared experiences to a much more individualistic, more American view of what was important. The things that count are not the large social and political acts of collective effort, for good or ill, with all their warts and triumphs, but how people feel within the confines of their own experiences. Reality manifests itself in the subjectivity of perceptions rather than the hard facts of the broader world in all its tumults and contradictions.

 Former CBC executive Richard Stursberg’s newest book is Lament for a Literature: The Collapse of Canadian Book Publishing.

Also in these years, a new set of Canadian novelists was emerging, still with little direct interest in Canada and Canadians. In 2016–17, almost all the bestsellers were not set in Canada. Only the great Fifteen Dogs by André Alexis and Madeleine Thien’s Do Not Say We Have Nothing (winner of the Governor General’s Award and the Giller) were set at least in part in Canada, although most of the characters in Thien’s book are Chinese and those in Alexis’s are dogs. The wonderfully gifted Omar El Akkad produced American War, an enormous international bestseller. It is set in the 2070s in a United States that has once again split into warring factions as a result of environmental collapse.

More broadly, the Canadian fiction bestseller lists showed ever more clearly the trends that had been emerging over the previous two decades.

The most popular books were very rarely set in Canada or involved Canadian characters. The Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield’s thriller takes place in space; Lawrence Hill’s The Illegal is set in a fictional country called Freedom State; the wildly successful Shari Lapena mysteries — A Stranger in the House, Someone We Know, The Best Kind of People — are all located in New York or Connecticut; and Margaret Atwood’s Booker Prize-winning The Testaments, a follow up to The Handmaid’s Tale, continues her exploration of the fictional republic of Gilead. Only three bestsellers during that ten-year time period were set in Canada: Michael Redhill’s Bellevue Square, set in the Kensington Market in Toronto; The Break, by Katherine Vermette, about a Métis-Anishnaabe family in Manitoba; and Louise Penny’s Glass Houses, featuring Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Sûreté du Québec.

The issue of settings is not restricted to novels. It pervades a lot of the culture. The most celebrated comedy ever created in Canada demonstrated similar unwillingness to have visibly Canadian characters. The producers were quite explicit about not wanting it to appear Canadian, despite the fact that setting it in Canada would have strengthened the show’s main premise: a wealthy, entitled family in Los Angeles goes bankrupt and has to move to a tiny town that they own called Schitt’s Creek, a complete fall from grace and a humiliation. The show was made by Canadians and financed by the CBC. It was picked up by Netflix and garnered a record number of Primetime Emmy nominations for a comedy series. It also received three nominations for GLAAD Media Awards for its portrayal of LGBTQ+ people, winning twice for Best Comedy. Nobody, whether Canadian or American, would know that it was a Canadian show from its content.

The cultural environment in Canada became so constrained that the writer Stephen Marche commented, “There has never been a worse time to try and tell a Canadian story. To come into existence, a Canadian story must either be transferred to an American setting or submit to the national virtue machinery. Either way, the connection to the political entity called Canada perishes in the process. The disappearance of Canada, the end of the Canadian story, would be a strange kind of death. No one is coming to conquer us. No ideology is exploding under our feet. The death of so-called Canada would be a death by willed irrelevance, a narrative suicide.”

During the same period, the rise of previously marginalized voices coincided with a decline in those of White men. As DEI advanced in publishing, it became increasingly difficult for White male authors — unless already famous — to find editors willing to read their work. Joyce Carol Oates remarked that even brilliant young White men “are just not of interest” to publishers.

Some blamed a misreading of DEI as “Diversity, Equity, and Exclusion,” or the Canada Council’s zealous “decolonization” agenda; others noted that with only about 25 per cent of editorial staff male, female editors naturally preferred female perspectives; and some disputed that White male authors were disadvantaged at all, or, if true, that it mattered. Whatever the cause, male writers appear to have fallen out of fashion. The 2025 Sobey Arts Award shortlisted twenty-six women and twelve Indigenous artists among thirty nominees — none of the four men were White. Recent Giller and Governor General’s prizes show similar trends: roughly two-thirds of winners were women, and only one White man among them. These results likely reflect publishing priorities rather than overt bias, yet they signal a profound cultural shift.

————

Fundamental to any program to resurrect Canada’s book business is the necessity to reform its major cultural institutions. Over the last decade or more, they have become deeply politicized, pursuing a specific and polarizing social and economic agenda. They have turned it into a wedge that excludes certain people from consideration, certain forms of address from polite society, and certain manners of speaking as incompatible with good behaviour. The penalties for violating these often ambiguous standards can be devastating. These strictures have narrowed the boundaries of discourse and cast a chill on what can be said, written, or shown, radically restricting artists’ freedom of expression.

Diversity, equity, and inclusion were never supposed to evolve in this direction. Properly understood, it is not a negative, punishing exercise in ideological purity, but a formula for discovering and celebrating what had previously been arbitrarily suppressed. Murray Sinclair, the chairman of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, made the point explicitly when he explained that reconciliation was not about tearing down the statues of John A. Macdonald, but raising up statues to Big Bear. It is a program that calls for a deep understanding of both the good and the bad in historical figures and events. It assumes that people are sufficiently sophisticated to hold two thoughts in their heads at the same time. Some of the things Macdonald did were good; some were bad. There is no need to choose sides, only to see clearly what happened. That is precisely why it was called the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

When major funders like the Canada Council set out to “decolonize” Canadian literature, they are pursuing a political agenda as surely as the censors of the Soviet Union insisting that all writing conform to the dictates of “socialist realism.” When tenured bureaucrats can harass people for wrongthink, and when it’s possible to lose essential public support for straying beyond the boundaries of correct and morally appropriate thinking, creators and cultural workers will be cautious, often second-guessing themselves. Great work flourishes in environments where people can take risks, knowing that the worst consequence will be failure, not penury and banishment.

The DEI project in Canada’s cultural agencies, government, publishing houses, and media needs to be recalibrated. It needs to focus on its original aims of combatting racism, sexism, and intolerance. It needs to seek truth, not for the purpose of punishment, but for learning. When mistakes are made, when the wrong word or hurtful language is thoughtlessly used, it needs to be treated as a teachable moment, not as a call to puritanical vengeance. It needs to start from an assumption that the overwhelming majority of Canadians are people of good will. Do they sometimes make cruel mistakes? Of course. The important thing is to learn together and bank the fires of self-righteous rage.

— A former executive vice-president of the CBC, Richard Stursberg has written widely on Canadian media and cultural policy. His previous books include The Tower of Babble, named by the Globe & Mail as one of the best books of the year, and The Tangled Garden, which was short-listed for the Donner Prize for the best book on public policy written by a Canadian.

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 newsletters here.


OTTAWA

— The member of Parliament representing Canada’s northernmost territory says ever since U.S. President Donald Trump began escalating his desire to control Greenland, constituents have been reaching out, concerned. 

Lori Idlout, speaking from Rankin Inlet, located on the western coast of Hudson’s Bay, where the federal NDP held its caucus retreat this week, recalls a phone call from one man seeking reassurances living in

Grise Fiord, a community of around 144 on Nunavut’s Ellesmere Island. 

“He reminded me, for example, that the flight between Grise Fiord and another community in Greenland is only an hour and a half,” the Nunavut MP told National Post.

Not just that, the parliamentarian says, she was reminded of the relationships that exist between Inuit families in Nunavut and those in Greenland. Like Nunavut, which has a population of around 33,000, Inuit in Greenland make up the majority of its estimated population of 56,000.

“Inuit in (Nunavut) need to be reassured that they will be protected and that they will have some role in that engagement,” she said.

Trump outlined his desire to have U.S. control over the Greenland in an address this week at the World Economic Forum, while ruling out the possibility of using of force. That came after European countries such as Norway, Germany and Sweden deployed some personnel to the Arctic territory, which is part of Denmark, following days of escalated rhetoric coming from the U.S. president.

A meeting between Trump and

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at Davos later led the U.S. president to announce “a framework for a future deal” that appeared to be more about bolstering NATO and American security capacity on Greenland and less about outright seizing the territory, a significant climbdown for Trump. 

Idlout, who has represented Nunavut since 2021, estimates she has heard from between 20 to 30 constituents since Trump began to set his sights on the territory. She says it has been difficult to know how seriously to take the president.

“He changes his mind so frequently, he’s incoherent a lot of the times.”

Trump’s actions underscore the need for more diversification, Idlout said. More than that, she points to how the successive federal governments have “been failing the Arctic for far too long.”

Idlout has not been the only leader to express concern.

Natan Obed, president of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, which advocates for the Inuit in Canada, recently told The Canadian Press that the federal government ought to step up, saying that the Inuit had largely been left out of discussions about bolstering Canada’s sovereignty. 

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand and Governor General Mary Simon are set to visit Greenland to open Canada’s consulate in its capital of Nuuk in the coming weeks.

Carney, in his own speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, voiced his commitment to Arctic sovereignty by emphasizing that Canada supports Greenland and Denmark in over the territory.

Applause for the prime minister’s speech has been heard both domestically and internationally, with political leaders in Australia and Mexico voicing praise. Idlout said Carney’s government must “now match the big words” the prime minister expressed.

She says securing the Arctic includes investing in infrastructure and “investing in the people,” within the territory so those who call it home can help with that mission, tackling long-standing issues such as housing shortages, overcrowding and poverty.

When it comes to the military, which Carney has earmarked tens of billions of dollars more on to help meet its NATO spending commitments and bolster the capacity of the Canadian Armed Forces, Idlout said telecommunications across the territory “is sorely needed.”

She also emphasized the need for any future military efforts to work closely with existing search and rescue teams as well as the Canadian Rangers, responsible for patrolling the country’s northern territories and northern British Columbia.

They are the ones with expertise in the land and marine environment, the MP said.

Idlout recalled one example of a Canadian Ranger who observed some changes in marine wildlife, which he suspected could be be tied to the presence of a submarine.

The MP said she has not spoken to Carney about the issue of Arctic security, but says she has raised the matter with Minister of Northern and Arctic Affairs Rebecca Chartrand, underlining the need for investments and services.

Besides calls about Trump and his rhetoric about Greenland, Idlout said another issue that still comes up is the potential of her crossing the floor to join the minority Liberals.

When that happens, Idlout says, she tells constituents that as an opposition MP she is able to use her voice to push for better housing conditions and supports. Plus, she says, the Liberals hold seats across the other two territories, and in Northern Quebec, which she suggests has made no difference when it comes to improving life in the North.

Idlout says that, should she join the Liberals, she would be joining a government that advances laws like Bill C-5, legislation that ushered in a new process for the building of major infrastructure projects, which Idlout says “disrespected” Indigenous rights.

Carney has promised that Indigenous-rights holders would be consulted.

Asked if that means her answer is no, Idlout suggests her mind is made.

“I’m pretty sure it’s obvious in my response.”

With a file from The Canadian Press

National Post

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 politics newsletter, First Reading, here.


Jamaican immigrant Richard Ricardo Williams was denied permanent residence in Canada because his Canadian wife, Alita Gramigni, is 17 years his senior.

A Jamaican immigrant denied permanent residency because the Canadian wife who sponsored him was 17 years his senior has won another shot at staying here.

Richard Ricardo Williams, who lives with his spouse in Port Coquitlam, B.C., applied to the Federal Court for a review after an immigration officer turned down his application.

The officer “found that the couple’s 17-year age difference was evidence of an ingenuine relationship,” Justice Negar Azmudeh wrote in a recent decision.

That’s an “unfounded assumption or stereotype,” said the judge.

“It is unclear what the officer’s expectation for a reasonable age difference was and why the age gap was relevant. The couple cannot be faulted for not proactively explaining what they did not see as an issue.”

If the immigration officer “saw it as an issue, then they had to raise it (in a procedural fairness letter) or during an interview (which was never given) to give them an opportunity to address it. Regardless, basing the decision on an unfounded assumption creates a gap in the chain of reasoning,” Azmudeh said.

Williams entered Canada as a visitor on July 7, 2022, said the decision dated Jan. 15.

“Shortly after arriving in Canada, he met Ms. Alita Wendy Gramigni, Canadian citizen, at a party. They started a relationship, he moved in with her, and a year later, on June 25, 2023, they got married.”

Williams then applied for permanent residency under the spouse class, with Gramigni as his sponsor.

When the two first met, they didn’t know each other’s ages, she said in an interview Thursday. “People don’t usually think I am a 42-year-old woman, and he definitely didn’t seem like an in his 20s guy. So, we were both kind of shocked when we realized each other’s ages. But I’m not in that mind frame where it matters, and neither is he. So, it never bothered us. We just thought it was kind of funny.”

But on July 14, 2024, an immigration officer “sent a procedural fairness letter to Mr. Williams expressing concerns about the genuineness of the relationship and asking the couple to send specific documents,” said the court decision.

In support of Williams’ application, the couple submitted lots of documents and photos.

“Upon reviewing the documents, the officer found that the relationship was not genuine. In their reasons, the officer found the 17-year age difference (here, the wife is older), the start of the relationship after a month of (Williams’) arrival in Canada, and their small wedding with few details, and few joint documents as reasons that their relationship was not genuine,” said the decision.

The “officer also made credibility findings material to the decision, stating … ‘that the sponsor’s family did not meet the sponsor until September 2023 which was after their wedding — however photo on file shows a photo of sponsor and her mother at the wedding.’”

The officer “never held an interview to test” the couple’s credibility, said the decision.

Lawyers representing Immigration Minister Lena Metlege Diab argued “that the decision was reasonable and was reached fairly.”

The judge disagreed.

“Many of the determinative factors for the officer, such as their determination that the couple’s age difference was suspect without further scrutiny or analysis, are unfounded credibility findings based on stereotypes or unexplained expectations,” Azmudeh said.

“Without explaining the foundation of their finding, the officer found the timeline of the relationship to be too speedy for a genuine relationship. Other than their own unexplained assumption or expectation of what a reasonable timeline should be, it is unclear from their reasons how meeting someone at a party a month after arriving in Canada, then deciding to live together and get married a year later are problematic to the genuineness of the relationship. The gap in the chain of reasoning on a material finding renders the decision unreasonable.”

The judge concluded that the officer’s “reasons were tainted by their reliance on multiple assumptions rather than on evidence supporting their conclusions. That renders the decision unreasonable.”

She allowed the judicial review.

“This matter is returned to a different decision-maker for determination,” Azmudeh said, noting Williams “can make additional submissions” before that happens.

Gramigni, who now goes by Gramigni-Williams, said Thursday that she was pained to learn the immigration officer denied her spouse because of their age difference.

“I was offended. Who are you to say that there’s no way that this younger guy could actually have feelings for me because I am too old now? Does that mean I don’t have value anymore?”

She understands the skepticism. “Maybe it’s not traditional. Maybe it’s not as common,” she said. “But that doesn’t make it wrong.”

What she can’t grasp is why the immigration officer who had doubts about the legitimacy of the marriage didn’t bring them in for questioning.

“I find that absurd that you can make judgement on somebody and really alter their whole future, their whole life, just based off of a number, a birth date; it’s crazy to me,” she said.

“Being Canadian, I thought that we thought differently, and I was proven wrong that day.”

Gramigni-Williams, who cuts hair for a living and runs her own cleaning outfit, has two grown children from a previous relationship. “One’s in university; one just graduated recently.”

Now, while they wait for a new decision on his permanent residency application, they are trying for a child of their own.

“That is the plan,” she said. “I’ve got one more left in me, I think.”

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.


A bruise can be seen on the back of U.S. President Donald Trump's left hand at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

U.S. President Donald Trump says a large bruise on his left hand was caused by bumping it on furniture while in Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum.

“I clipped it on the table,” he

told CNN

Thursday on Air Force One.

Trump takes aspirin, which makes him prone to bruising.

He was

diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency

in July 2025. His physician, Navy Capt. Sean Barbabella, said he takes 325 milligrams of aspirin a day to treat the condition.

Aspirin thins the blood and prevents clots, according to the

Mayo Clinic

. Blood clots inside an artery can slow or stop blood flow to the heart, which can can cause a heart attack.

“I would say, take aspirin if you like your heart, but don’t take aspirin if you don’t want to have a little bruising,” Trump said on Air Force One. “I take the big aspirin, and when you take the big aspirin, they tell you, you bruise. The doctor said, ‘You don’t have to take that, sir, you’re very healthy.’ I said, ‘I’m not taking any chances.’”

How does taking aspirin cause bruising?

Harvard Health

confirms that bruises can occur while taking aspirin due to a minor blow or injury. “Even slight bumps that you don’t even notice can cause bruises … (Aspirin) can make you bleed a little more easily, including the below-the-skin bleeding seen in bruises.”

Small cuts may take a bit longer than usual to stop bleeding, says Harvard Health. And sometimes people find their gums bleed more easily when they floss or brush after starting low-dose aspirin.

Daily aspirin therapy is prescribed for lowering the risk of heart attack and stroke, according to the

Mayo Clinic

. It may be recommended for primary prevention of heart attack or stroke. It can also act as secondary prevention for people who have had a heart attack or stroke or have heart disease.

What is Trump’s history of bruising?

Trump has had bruising on his right hand for some time, according to CNN. It predated his return to the White House but drew more attention after he began covering it with heavy makeup and bandages as well as shielding it from cameras with his other hand.

Then left-hand bruising was spotted late last year, says CNN, raising questions about his health.

The president told the Wall Street Journal

in a recent interview

that he takes a higher dose of daily aspirin than his doctors recommend, arguing “aspirin is good for thinning out the blood.”

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, also said on Thursday that the bruising was caused by Trump bumping a table. She has noted his

frequent hand-shaking

and connected it with daily aspirin use and easier bruising.

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A winter storm on Brockville's Blockhouse Island in Ontario on Jan. 28, 2025. Resident Randy Sloan walked his dog nearby.

Much of the country is facing hazardous or severe cold weather warnings going into the weekend, as a “destructive” winter storm from the United States is expected to hit Canada.

Here’s what to know should you have air travel planned in the coming days.

What are Canadian airlines telling travellers?

Flair Airlines told National Post its forecasters are “actively monitoring a forecasted storm on the East Coast of the U.S. and into the GTA.”

“Flair recommends checking your flight status online regularly and arriving at the airport early,” the airline said.

“Passengers whose flights may be impacted should stay home and check their emails for communications about rebooking and refund options. We will keep all passengers informed about the status of their flights and any available options.”

Porter Airlines told National Post that “winter weather may disrupt travel this weekend across the network.”

“Complimentary moves are available on many routes beginning Saturday evening until Monday; passengers are encouraged to check their flight status and manage their booking on flyporter.com,” it said.

 Road closures and prolonged utility outages are possible as Environment Canada is advising a major winter storm is expected to arrive in the region Sunday evening and continue into Monday night.

Air Canada told National Post it was currently monitoring the situation. “As we always do, we advise customers to check before going to the airport to be sure their flight is operating on schedule,” it said.

“In anticipation there will be some impact, we are reviewing our schedule in anticipation we may be forced to cancel flights and to ensure we have aircraft and crews positioned for a faster recovery.”

The airline said there is a goodwill policy in place so travellers can change their travel plans with no change fee. “This serves the double purpose of enabling those who no longer wish to travel to make changes and it also frees up space on aircraft in the event we need to rebook customers or consolidate flights due to airport weather constraints,” the statement said.

The airline said it would be providing updates “directly to any affected customers as the storm progresses, which is why it is important customers provide us contact information.”

On its website, it says that “extreme cold is causing delays” at Toronto’s Pearson and Montreal’s Trudeau airports.

Travellers flying from those locations can

change their flight at no cost

, the airline says.

This applies to travellers who purchased tickets no later than Jan. 21. (For those going through Pearson, it applies to passengers who booked flights for travel between Jan. 23 and Jan. 26. For those going through Trudeau, it applies to passengers who booked flights for travel between Jan. 24 and Jan. 25).

On Friday, 12 per cent of all Air Canada flights were cancelled and there were nearly 150 flight cancellations at Pearson, according to U.K.-based

air passenger rights firm SkyRefund

. The firm cited the American winter storm as the likely culprit.

“Passengers should be prepared for many difficulties traveling, with the potential of being stuck at an airport for multiple days if the disruption persists. Try to familiarize yourself with your airline’s disruption policies and have a way to keep up to date with any updates they provide,” said SkyRefund CEO Ivaylo Danailov.

WestJet told National Post it recommends that “guests travelling across regions in Canada with cold-weather warnings check the status of their flight before heading to the airport.”

“We also recommend that folks plan to arrive at the airport earlier than usual,” the statement said.

Air Transat did not immediately respond to National Post’s request.

Canada’s busiest airport, Toronto’s Pearson, posted on X Friday morning saying temperatures felt like -22 degrees with the windchill. It said deicing operations for departing aircrafts were underway.

The airport is expecting more than 120,000 people to travel through its terminals, with approximately 60 per cent travelling through Terminal 1.

“In these extreme cold conditions, outdoor crews must take more frequent warming breaks to limit exposure. While this can slow some airfield operations, it is essential to protect the health and safety of everyone working outside,” the airport said on X.

What are air passenger rights should weather disrupt travel?

Travellers who have planned a trip should monitor flights closely. “If a flight is cancelled for genuine weather reasons, the passenger is entitled to a choice between a refund in the original form of payment and alternate transportation,” says president of advocacy group Air Passenger Rights Gábor Lukács.

Large carriers like Air Canada, WestJet, Flair and Porter must rebook passengers on the next available flight of their own or partner airlines departing within 48 hours of the original departure time, if a flight is cancelled due to weather, Lukács said.

 Kiosks at Terminal 3 at Toronto Pearson International Airport.

“If they are unable to do so, they must buy the passenger a seat on the next available flight of ANY carrier, including competitors,” he said. “The airline cannot charge the passenger for putting them in a higher class of service (e.g., business class) if those are the only available seats.”

If the airline does not, “the passenger can buy a ticket on a competitor airline, and then the original airline is liable for the passenger’s expenses caused by the failure to comply with the obligation,” he added.

Lukács advised travellers to be cautious in “distinguishing flight cancellations that are genuinely due to weather as opposed to those that the airline blames on the weather but could have been avoided with due diligence by the airline.”

Is the coming winter storm a big deal?

According to Environment Canada, Manitoba and Saskatchewan will have windchills between -40 and -50 degrees. Meanwhile, Labrador City and Wabush, NL are expecting the same. Most of northern Ontario will get windchills of up to -48 degrees. These areas have received orange warnings, meaning “severe weather is likely to cause significant damage, disruption, or health impacts.” Orange alerts are uncommon, Environment Canada says online.

 Ottawa, along with much of southern Ontario and parts of Quebec, was facing another wallop of a winter storm Sunday, bringing more snow and high winds.

Other regions in Canada — parts of Alberta, southern Ontario, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick and Quebec — are under more common yellow alerts, meaning “hazardous weather may cause damage, disruption, or health impacts.”

Complicating matters, especially for travellers, is what the

Weather Network is describing as a “destructive ice storm”

from the U.S. with “a significant blanket of snowfall.” That storm is “forecast to intensify as it tracks south of Atlantic Canada late Sunday night,”

the Weather Network said

. It could also bring

“significant impacts”

to parts of Ontario and Quebec through Monday.

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Anita Anand, Minister of Foreign Affairs, looks on her phone before a press conference in Quebec City on Thursday January 22, 2026.

QUEBEC CITY — Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said on Friday that Canada will continue to stay true to its “values” in helping the people of Gaza.

Anand’s comments come amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest bombshell that he was

withdrawing Prime Minister Mark Carney’s invitation

to join his “Board of Peace.”

 Trump’s message on Truth Social was brief and to the point.

“Our values have been clear,” she said. “Hamas should have no role in the future governance of Palestine. Hamas must demilitarize and disarm. There must be a ceasefire, and Israelis and Palestinians must be able to live in peace and security side by side.”

Anand said that the Canadian government have already put on the table approximately $400 million in humanitarian aid and will continue to do so regardless of the situation.

“That has been a priority of mine and ours in this government, and we will continue with that process, without question,” she said.

Anand said she is “constantly” in touch with her G7 counterparts on the situation in Gaza.

 Prime Minister Mark Carney, right, and Bonhomme Carnaval hug at the beginning of a Cabinet planning forum in front of the Governor General summer residence at the Citadelle in Quebec City, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026.

Carney’s ministers are in meetings in chilly Quebec City for their “cabinet planning forum” ahead of the new session starting Monday.

On Thursday evening, they were enjoying fine dining at the Château Frontenac when news of Trump rescinding his invitation to Carney to the “Board of Peace” popped on their phones.

“Dear Prime Minister Carney: Please let this Letter serve to represent that the Board of Peace is withdrawing its invitation to you regarding Canada’s joining, what will be, the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time,” he wrote on social media.

The latest turn of events seemingly marks an escalation of the tensions between Canada and the U.S. after Carney offered a widely praised speech at the World Economic Forum.

On Tuesday, Carney declared to the audience that the old “rules-based international order” was dead and exhorted countries to speak out against bullies and “hegemons.” He, however, did not single out Trump or any other world leaders by name.

 U.S. President Donald Trump gestures during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on Jan. 21, 2026.

The later after, Trump told the Davos crowd that Canada — and its prime minister — should be “grateful” to its southern neighbour.

“They should be grateful to us, Canada — but they’re not. Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.”

On Thursday, Carney offered a succinct rebuttal in an address in Quebec City.

“Canada and the United States have built a remarkable partnership in the economy, in security and in enriched cultural exchanges,” he said.

“Canada doesn’t live because of the United States. Canada thrives because we are Canadian.”

Carney had accepted a role on

Trump’s newly formed “Board of Peace”

last week, according to a senior government official, but grew more cautious as the days went by after it was revealed that the U.S. President would ask for a membership fee of $1 billion US.

 U.S. President Donald Trump, far right, pats Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on the knee as Agentine President Javier Milei, left, looks prior to Board of Peace signing event in Davos, Switzerland on Thursday.

“We think there (are) aspects of the governance and the decision-making process that could be improved,” Carney said in Davos.

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Piper James, a 19-year-old from Campbell River. was found dead on an Australian beach on Jan. 19, 2026.

The family of a Canadian backpacker Piper James received preliminary results investigating her death after her body was found on an Australia beach earlier this week.

“The autopsy has found physical evidence consistent with drowning and injuries consistent with dingo bites. Pre-mortem dingo bite marks are not likely to have caused immediate death. There are extensive post-mortem dingo bite marks,” a Queensland coroners court spokesperson said on Friday,

The Guardian

reported.

Police were called to the beach on K’gari, formerly known as Fraser Island, on Monday. The island is located off of the Queensland coast. The 19-year-old had gone for a swim at 5 a.m. A few hours later, James’ body surrounded by a pack of dingoes was discovered by two passersby. A postmortem into how she died started on Wednesday.

 Piper James, the 19-year-old Canadian found dead in Australian, is seen in this image published widely across local Australian media. Piper was found on K’gari (formerly Fraser Island), an island in Queensland in north-eastern Australia.

“(It) was obviously a very traumatic and horrific scene for them (authorities) to uncover,” police Insp. Paul Algie said, per

news.com.au

.

Authorities in Australia said Piper was working at a backpacker hostel and had been living and working on the island with a friend for six weeks.

A day after her death was announced, Piper’s dad Todd James posted a tribute on Facebook.

“Our hearts are shattered as we share the tragic loss of our beautiful daughter, Piper,” he wrote. “We will always remember her infectious laugh and her kind spirit. I admired her strength and determination to go after her dreams.”

The father said Piper “grew into her beautiful self” and that he said he enjoyed hearing about the “bonds and friendships she was developing.”

“She loved and was proud of her work at BC Wildfire Services,” he said. “Piper would work hard so she could play hard. So many are going to miss you, my precious little baby girl. Maybe gone, but how can we ever forget you?”

 Piper James has been identified as a Canadian woman who was found dead, surrounded by dingoes, on an island in Australia on Jan. 19, 2025.

Piper’s close friend Brianna Falk told Canadian Press on Tuesday that she and Piper “had so many plans and she was so young.” The two meet three years ago, in a high school English class they attended in Campbell River, B.C. “You never think that it is going to be somebody that you know, let alone one of your closest friends.”

She described Piper as someone who loved nature and “was always down to talk.”

Falk told the outlet that James’ plan to travel to Australia was “spur of the moment” and was hatched around six months ago. James, who went to Australia with another friend, “mentioned that they didn’t really have a plan, and it was very nice and free-spirited,” said Falk.

“They were having a blast,” she added.

A spokesperson for Global Affairs Canada on Monday extended condolences to the family and loved ones.

“Canadian officials are providing consular assistance to the family. Due to privacy considerations, no further information can be disclosed,” the spokesperson told National Post in an email.

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Marion Buller helmed the National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Indigenous women and girls are killed at rates six times higher than non-Indigenous women — yet the perpetrators are frequently convicted of lesser offences than those guilty in the deaths of non-Indigenous victims.

In virtually all cases involving Indigenous women, the victim and accused knew each other.

The Investigative Journalism Bureau reviewed 1,329 cases in which women and girls were killed or died under suspicious circumstances in Canada between 2019 and 2025. Just over 25 per cent — or  340 victims — were Indigenous. Of those cases, 165 have been resolved in court. 
 

Seventy-six of the Indigenous cases that were resolved in court — or 46 per cent — ended with a finding of manslaughter, which criminal lawyers say is characterized by a lack of intent to kill. Manslaughter was the singlemost common sentencing outcome in the homicides of Indigenous females.
 

In contrast, of the 384 concluded cases involving non-Indigenous victims, only 24 per cent ended with a manslaughter outcome. The most common finding was second-degree murder, the outcome in 137 — or 36 per cent — of these cases.
 

Second-degree murder carries a minimum sentence of 10 years and a maximum of life in prison, while manslaughter carries no minimum sentence unless a firearm is involved.
 
 

The numbers 

appear

 to show differences in how Indigenous and non-Indigenous cases are dealt with, said Michael Spratt, an Ottawa criminal defence lawyer for 20 years.
 

“When you look systemically … [Indigenous women’s] lives and their health and their safety are not valued as highly,”
 he says.
 

“It is something that should cause further inquiry.”
 

The IJB analysis uncovered several anomalies in how the justice system deals with those who kill Indigenous women. 
 
 

For instance, the most serious charge in Canada’s justice system is first-degree murder, carrying a mandatory sentence of life in prison. Only 25 per cent of those accused in the deaths of Indigenous women and girls faced that charge. In cases with non-Indigenous female victims, first-degree murder charges were laid 37 per cent of the time. 
 
 

When an Indigenous woman is killed, 64 per cent of cases end with a plea bargain, compared to 57 per cent in cases with a non-Indigenous victim. (The average sentence for the death of Indigenous and non-Indigenous women remains the same: just over 10 years.)
 

Legal experts say the reasons behind the numerical discrepancies are complex. 
 

Indigenous people are over-represented in the Canadian justice system compared to their share of the population, as both victims and accused, according to StatCan.

Lawyer Marion Buller, a former judge, chief commissioner of the 2016 Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls Inquiry and an elder from the Mistawasis Nehiyawak First Nation, says the IJB’s findings reflect “important systemic problems” that impact the outcomes of cases involving female Indigenous victims.
 

“If police don’t see 

the

 life as being as important … how does that affect how they collect the evidence that goes before the prosecutor? Or a prosecutor says, ‘I’ll take a guilty plea to manslaughter so we don’t have to clog up the courts with three months’ or two months’ worth of trial time,’” said Buller.
 
 

“We Indigenous women, for the most part, live in the margins — in the shadows. Our lives just simply aren’t as valuable as other people’s lives.”
 

The IJB’s analysis also showed 16 per cent of killings or suspicious deaths of Indigenous women in the last seven years are unsolved, a rate four percentage points higher than for non-Indigenous cases. 
 

Ann Maje Raider, executive director of the Liard Aboriginal Women’s Society in the Yukon, says a perception of greater leniency in the justice system around the deaths of Indigenous women is making the problem worse.
 

“(Perpetrators) know they’re not going to get anything,” Raider says. “And the reason is that the justice institution has failed us.”
 

***  

Almost all —

97 per cent

— of female Indigenous victims in the IJB’s database whose outcomes were known were killed by someone they knew. The figure is also high — 90 per cent — for non-Indigenous victims.
 

Of the accused in Indigenous cases whose previous history was available to reporters, almost all — 94 per cent — had red flags in their past, such as arrests and convictions, contact with child services or significant mental health issues. 
 

In remote areas, including reserves, restraining orders are often ineffective in keeping perpetrators away from victims
,
 says Buller. Because of this, Indigenous women and girls face unique challenges to protect themselves from fatal violence. For many, access to resources and shelters is limited or non-existent, while stigma from speaking up is profound. 
 
 

Arrests for violent crimes become a “revolving door,” said Isabel Daniels, an Indigenous woman and co-founder of Velma’s House for survivors of exploitation and human trafficking in Winnipeg. Daniels believes Canada needs a network of 24/7 safe houses and shelters to keep Indigenous females safe, especially in remote communities.
 

“Safety is just a word in a dictionary for Indigenous women,” said Daniels.
 

 Grand Chief Stewart Phillip speaks during a news conference at Justice for Girls in Vancouver on May 5, 2025.

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs says the justice and police systems need improvements that tackle the issues of abusers not being charged or convicted, or sometimes receiving “inconsequential” sentences. 
 

“Until that changes, we’re going to see a continuation and an escalation in intimate partner physical assaults and murder,” said Phillip.
 

— With files from Jenna Olsen, Dori Seeman and Lindsay Carte.
 
 

The Investigative Journalism Bureau 
(IJB) at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health is a collaborative investigative newsroom supported by Postmedia that partners with academics, researchers and journalists while training the next generation of investigative reporters.
 

 

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Rejean Landry with his daughter Emali and son Sebastien during their trip to Portugal in July 2022. (Photo credit: Rejean Landry)

A retired Ottawa business consultant and father has taken on Air Canada and won — twice.

Rejean Landry

‘s plans for a summer 2022 trip to Portugal for himself and adult children were disrupted by Air Canada delays and ticket cancellations. Landry eventually took his complaints about the airline’s handling of trip to small claims court late last year. Then when Air Canada appealed, he fought the airline in the Ontario Superior Court.

But there won’t be a third time. Air Canada has confirmed with National Post that it won’t be appealing again.

Peter Fitzpatrick, manager of corporate communications for Air Canada says the airline appealed the small claims court decision because it disagreed with how the law was interpreted. Canada’s Air Passenger Protection Regulations (APPR) are “fairly new … and there are few cases interpreting them,” Fitzpatrick wrote in a recent email to National Post, adding, “it is important that they be interpreted correctly. Our concern was and remains that they were not.”

Toronto litigators represented Air Canada at both levels of court, whereas Landry represented himself in small claims court and didn’t hire a lawyer until Air Canada filed its appeal.

The judges in both levels of court ruled against Air Canada. The airline will have to pay almost $15,000 in compensation, the

Ontario Superior Court said

 in a decision released on Jan. 12.

 Ottawa man, Rejean Landry with his son Sebastien and daughter Emali decided to enjoy a forced layover in Toronto when their flight to Portugal was delayed. (Photo credit: Rejean Landry)

Landry booked the trip for himself and two adult children from Montreal to Portugal via Toronto, travelling on July 2, 2022. He also bought return tickets for his two children from Lisbon to Toronto on July 16, 2022, and a return ticket for himself, leaving Lisbon for Montreal on Aug. 2, 2022.

His son Sebastien (now 24) and daughter Emali (now 21) had to come back earlier for summer jobs. Only semi-retired at the time, Landry decided to stay on a little longer.

It was that summer when

airlines were getting back on their feet

, restarting travel after COVID restrictions were lifted, recounts Landry.

The Landrys were forced to navigate that post-COVID travel storm. Their flight from Montreal to Toronto was delayed. And since the flight to Lisbon would have been missed, Landry purchased three new higher-fare, refundable tickets from Toronto to Lisbon.

When they got to Toronto, Landry says he was told by an Air Canada agent they should use the new tickets. She also transferred their luggage so it would be connected to the new tickets. Then she told them to go into the city and enjoy themselves, recounts Landry.

Later, when his kids went to the airport in Lisbon to fly back to Canada, they were told their return flights had been cancelled because they hadn’t used the first portion of their tickets to get to Lisbon. So, he had to buy new tickets for them.

 Rejean Landry at Pearson Airport in front of what he called a “mountain of unclaimed suitcases” during the fraught summer of air travel in 2022. (Photo credit: Rejean Landry)

Landry pursued his complaints with Air Canada after returning from his trip, exchanging
emails with the airline for months. Initially, he simply wanted a refund for the new Toronto to Lisbon tickets worth $6,500. But when he didn’t get a positive response from Air Canada, he decided to take his battle to small claims court.

The small claims court ruled in Landry’s favour, ordering Air Canada to pay compensation for the delay of the flights from Montreal to Toronto, the cost of the replacement tickets from Toronto to Portugal,

compensation for “denial of boarding” (his children’s cancelled flights)

and the cost of his children’s return flights from Lisbon.

His tabulation of the costs that went into the roughly $15K award are as follows: $1,000 each for the initial delay, $6.5K for the new tickets, $1.8 for each of his children and the denial of boarding, plus other connected fees and costs.

Air Canada tried to argue Landry shouldn’t have booked replacement flights, and instead should have waited for the airline to rebook them.

“They said I shouldn’t have accepted what the Air Canada agent said, that I should have found another agent to help.”

Neither the small claims court, nor Superior Court Justice Ian Carter found any merit in Air Canada’s argument. Sinclair ruled that there was no evidence Air Canada informed Landry he had to wait to be rebooked.

“In fact, there is nothing … in the Montreal Convention that states a passenger must wait to accept a new flight from the airline,” wrote Sinclair in his decision. (The Montreal Convention is a treaty that governs international travel and airline liability and covers concerns such as passenger injury/death, baggage issues, and delays.)

Justice Carter noted that Air Canada has a rebooking tool that will attempt to automatically re-book a passenger on a later flight if there are delays, and if the tool is successful the passenger will receive notification of a revised itinerary. “However, there was no evidence that the rebooking tool had been activated or that Air Canada made any other attempt to rebook (Landry)” he wrote.

Carter was also abrupt in assessing Air Canada’s handling of the entire matter: “As noted by the (small claims court judge), this entire claim could have been avoided if Air Canada, in its multitude of emails to its waiting passengers in Montreal, had clearly stated words to the effect that he should not make any attempts to rebook and that Air Canada would do it automatically.”

 Rejean Landry enjoying his 2022 vacation in Portugal. (Photo credit: Rejean Landry)

In preparing for his case against Air Canada in small claims court, Landry reached out to

Gábor Lukács

, founder and coordinator of

Air Passenger Rights

, an

 independent nonprofit organization

that advocates for the rights of the travelling public.

“There are three important principles coming out from this decision,” Lukács told National Post in an email.

First, he said, if Air Canada had provided what known as “alternate transportation” (when an airline rebooks on one of it’s own planes or one of its partner airlines within nine hours, or another carrier withing 48 hours), then the compensation for the initial delay would have been $400 each for Landry and his children. Since that didn’t happen, the compensation was set at $1,000 each.

“I

f the airline fails to offer alternate
transportation at all, or offers one that does not meet the APPR’s (Canadian air passenger protection rights)
requirements, then it is in breach of contract. The passenger can and
should buy a flight on another airline (as Landry did), and the airline’s liability is not
for a refund of the passenger’s airfare, but instead for the cost of the
replacement flight , which is often far more than the original airfare
the passenger paid.”

Second, notes

Lukács, as Justice Carter stated in his decision,
there is nothing in the
Montreal Convention that states that a passenger must wait to accept a
new
flight from the airline. “This is also a very important point. The onus
is
on the airline to offer alternate transportation, but if they fail to do
so, the passenger does not have to sit around like a lame duck.”

Finally, he praised Sinclair’s decision as “

an indication that the judiciary sees
through what airlines are doing to passengers, and judicial patience and
goodwill are running thin.
Overall, it is a fair and impartial decision that holds the airline to
the
intent and purpose of the law, and does not cut the airline any slack.”

Indeed, Sinclair dismissed Air Canada’s appeal.

It’s been almost four years since Landry’s case of delayed fight began, but

despite the time the case has taken

, he urges other travellers battling airline complaints to take their fights to court.

Despite the time the case has taken, is Landry pleased with the outcome? “Absolutely,” he says, “but I haven’t received the money yet.”

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