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Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Tim Hodgson.

OTTAWA — Natural Resources and Energy Minister Tim Hodgson says he reached out to apologize to Coastal First Nations in British Columbia after suggesting they could meet with him over Zoom to discuss their concerns about Alberta’s proposal to build a new bitumen pipeline to the West Coast.

The exchange happened during a TV interview with Hodgson, who is Carney’s point person in the cabinet for major projects, when the minister was asked on Thursday about meeting with the leadership of the Coastal First Nations, which represents eight nations along B.C.’s coast, as well as the Haida Gwaii islands, home to the Haida Nation.

CBC News Power and Politics’ host David Cochrane raised concerns from the Coastal First Nations that its president was unable to travel to a meeting with the minister in Vancouver after an invitation that arrived on short notice.

“It’s called Zoom,” Hodgson said, smiling while he added to the host who was conducting the interview virtually, “I think that’s what we’re using, David.”

By late Friday, the minister took to X to apologize.

“My comments last night about a virtual meeting with Coastal First Nations were a poor choice of words, which I regret,” Hodgson wrote. “I have reached out to them directly to apologize and look forward to an in-person meeting at their convenience.”

In her own statement, Coastal First Nations President Marilyn Slett, who is also elected chief of the Heiltsuk Nation, called the minister’s comments “deeply disrespectful,” saying they show “a complete lack of understanding of our communities.”

She went on to say that Coastal First Nations have worked with different B.C. and federal governments on different initiatives across the Great Bear Rainforest that protect the ecosystem, create jobs and contribute to Canada’s economy.

“We can only continue that work if we have productive relationships, grounded in respectful dialogue,” Slett said. We expect better from this government moving forward.”

Hodgson’s apology comes as Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government deals with political fallout from a new deal struck with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith to pave the way for construction of a new oil pipeline to B.C.’s northwest coast.

While Carney has touted the plan as an important step in his pledge to transform the country into an “energy superpower” and also secured a commitment from Alberta to strengthen its industrial carbon tax, some B.C. Liberal caucus members have expressed concern about the plan, including over how both B.C. Premier David Eby and Coastal First Nations were not consulted beforehand.

The Coastal First Nations have vocally opposed the government’s openness to the potential lifting of an oil tanker ban off B.C.’s coast, saying in a statement after the deal with Alberta was released, that they “will never allow our coast to be put at risk of a catastrophic oil spill.”

Former Liberal minister Steven Guilbeault, who served as environment minister under Trudeau, resigned in protest over the deal, also citing concerns about the lack of consultation with both B.C. and the region’s Indigenous rights-holders.

Coastal First Nations invited Hodgson back in mid-October to meet by the end of the month to discuss their concerns over the pipeline proposal.

The minister responded, saying he was unable to do so in that time frame, referring its leadership instead to speak with his chief of staff and senior department officials, whom he said he had asked to meet to discuss their concerns.

The minister’s office then reached out on Wednesday, the day before Carney and Smith released their new pipeline pact, to invite Coastal First Nations to meet in Vancouver on Friday, where the minister was set to meet with Eby.

Hodgson is expected to be on hand when the Assembly of First Nations, which represents more than 600 nations across the country, gathers chiefs in Ottawa next week.

The minister’s apology on Friday marks the second one in one week from a key figure of the Liberal government.

Carney himself apologized earlier this week for what he also called a “poor choice of words” when asked by a reporter when the last time he spoke to U.S. President Donald Trump was, to which the prime minister responded by saying, “Who cares?”

— With a file from The Canadian Press

National Post

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According to the latest update, 95.6 per cent of Canadians who died by MAID last year had a

As Canada approaches the ten-year mark of legalized doctor-assisted death, the number of annual deaths appears to be plateauing, according to the federal

government’s latest report on medical assistance in dying (MAID)

.

A total of 16,499 people died by MAID in Canada in 2024. However, the year-over-year annual growth rate in deaths has been shrinking, from 36.8 per cent between 2019 and 2020, to 6.9 per cent between 2023 and 2024, according to Health Canada’s sixth annual report on MAID.

“While the data suggests that the number of annual MAID provisions is beginning to stabilize, it will take several more years before long-term trends can be conclusively identified,” according to the report.

In all, MAID deaths accounted for 5.1 per cent of all deaths in Canada last year, a small — 0.4 per cent — increase from 2023.

There have been 76,475 reported MAID deaths in Canada since the practice was allowed in 2016.

According to the latest update, the vast majority (95.6 per cent) of people who died by MAID last year had a “reasonably foreseeable” death, known as “Track 1” deaths. They were older (78 on average) than MAID recipients who weren’t near death — so-called Track 2 cases — and more likely to have cancer.

Those who received a doctor-assisted death whose natural deaths were not reasonably foreseeable were mostly women (56.7 per cent), slightly younger and had lived longer with a serious and incurable condition than Track 1 cases.

Along with neurological conditions, such as Parkinson’s disease, diabetes, frailty, autoimmune conditions and chronic pain were conditions most often cited among people who weren’t close to dying.

The latest data come amid concerns that some MAID deaths are being driven by

loneliness, hopelessness and isolation,

and that some doctors are taking an over broad interpretation of the law.

Among Canada’s MAID criteria, a person must be experiencing intolerable and “enduring physical or psychological suffering.”

Isolation or loneliness wasn’t reported as a “sole source of suffering” for any MAID cases in 2024, according to the report. However, people approved for MAID often report not one, but multiple sources of suffering.

In 2024, loss of ability to engage in meaningful activities was most common, followed by loss of ability to perform daily tasks of basic living, like eating, drinking, dressing and moving around. But there were some differences: Track 1 (reasonably foreseeable death) people were more likely to say their symptoms weren’t being adequately controlled, or they were worried they wouldn’t be, “while Track 2 MAID recipients were more likely to report isolation or loneliness and loss of dignity.”

In all, Health Canada received 22,535 reports of MAID requests in 2024; 16,499 were approved. Of the remaining, 4,017 died before receiving MAID, 1,327 people were deemed ineligible and 692 ultimately withdrew their request.

The report’s other findings include that people who receive MAID don’t disproportionately come from lower-income or disadvantaged communities, suggesting they’re “more likely to be represented in higher income neighbourhoods.”

They’re also less likely to live in a remote area, suggesting they weren’t driven to MAID due to a lack of access to health services, according to the report.

Most MAID deaths occurred in Quebec (36.4 per cent), Ontario (30 per cent) and British Columbia (18.2 per cent.)

Cancer, especially lung, colorectal pancreatic and blood cancer, was the most frequently reported condition in nearly all age groups of people who died by MAID in 2024, except those 85 and older, “for whom ‘other’ conditions were the most frequently cited.”

“Loss of ability to engage in meaningful activities” was the most commonly reported source of suffering.

Of the 16,104 people who responded to questions around disabilities, roughly one-third (32.9 per cent) reported having a disability.

The United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities earlier this year called on Canada to repeal the 2021 law that expanded MAID eligibility to people whose deaths aren’t reasonably foreseeable out of concerns that people with disabilities are seeking MAID due to “unmet needs, a systemic failure of the State party,” according to a meeting summary.

There were 2,266 doctors and nurse practitioners providing MAID in 2024. However, a small number were doing a lion’s share of provisions: 102 who provided MAID 31 times or more were responsible for 38 per cent (6,185) of all MAID provisions, according to the report.

National Post

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Foreign Affairs Anita Anand takes part in a meeting on Ukraine during the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025.

In response to a question about the Carney government’s relationship with the Indigenous community, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand scolded senators for not beginning the meeting with a land acknowledgement, despite there being no requirement for them to do so.

Anand was attending the Standing Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade on Thursday where the exchange ensued.

“I note and wonder why we didn’t begin this session with a land acknowledgement, which is very important wherever we are, whenever we are speaking and gathering together on the traditional unceded territory of Indigenous peoples,” she said. “This is part of reconciliation.”

Chair of the committee Sen. Peter Boehm told National Post in an emailed statement that “there is no Senate rule or custom requiring a land acknowledgement at Senate committee meetings.”

He said that during the past five years as chair, he has not made land acknowledgements. “My views in support of national truth and reconciliation are well known as is my ongoing support for the rights of Indigenous peoples,” he said.

Anand during the meeting covered a wide range of topics, such as Canada making the Gulf regions, including the United Arab Emirates, a priority for “upcoming engagement on economic diplomacy.” She reiterated Canada’s commitment to human rights after receiving pushback from some senators who said the country was abandoning its position on human rights. There have been

reports

that the UAE has been fuelling the

civil war in Sudan

.

Anand also said Canada would be investing in the Arctic and “doing the work” there alongside Indigenous peoples.

Later in the meeting, Sen. Duncan Wilson commented that he was concerned that “we’re talking about things before we’ve gone out and met with First Nations.”

“And if there’s one thing that we’ve learned over the last decade in reconciliation is we need to start the conversations with First Nations,” he said.

“There’s a real understanding right now that we need to move quickly as a country, but I’m worried that we’re leaving some of those communities behind when they should be more part of the discussion.”

Duncan made reference to Bill C-5, which was approved in June.

The legislation “allows the federal Cabinet to fast-track major projects such as highways, pipelines, and energy projects by designating them as ‘national interest’ projects,” according to the Chiefs of Ontario. The group says it is dedicated to upholding the self-determination efforts of the Anishinaabek, Mushkegowuk, Onkwehonwe, and Lenape Peoples in protecting and exercising their inherent and Treaty rights.

The groups says online that Bill C-5 was rushed, “leaving little time for dialogue, engagement, or accountability.”

“When you mention here at home, it was our government that adopted the Truth and Reconciliation Report, that has adopted the commitments to truth and reconciliation,” Anand responded to Duncan. It was then that Anand questioned why no land acknowledgement was made.

Anand’s spokesperson told National Post the minister addressed the issue with the comments made in the Senate meeting.

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.


Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture Steven Guilbeault makes his way to a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025.

OTTAWA — Liberals had nice things to say about their colleague

Steven Guilbeault, who resigned from cabinet on Thursday

over the Ottawa-Alberta roadmap for a proposed new oil pipeline but they tempered his criticism of the deal which he “strongly” opposes.

Speaking to reporters in Halifax on Friday, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne called Guilbeault a “great friend” and said he “has contributed in many ways to our country and will continue to do so” as he remains a member of the Liberal caucus.

But Champagne went on to explain the importance of the deal struck with Alberta, which he said will ensure that Canada can be a “responsible and sustainable energy producer.”

“I think Canadians understand the world has changed,” he said.

Guilbeault resigned as minister of culture and Canadian identity and minister responsible for official languages, but also as the Liberals’ lieutenant for Quebec. The government had no immediate plans to replace him in his various roles on Friday.

Guilbeault wrote

in his statement published on Thursday

that he appreciates Canada’s relationship with the United States has shifted, leading to profound changes in the economy, but said he remains “one of those for whom environmental issues must remain front and centre.”

“That is why I strongly oppose the Memorandum of understanding between the federal government and the government of Alberta,” he wrote on X.

He slammed his government for failing to consult with British Columbia’s government and with coastal First Nations on the West Coast, as well as for rolling back climate policies that he put in place when he was minister of the environment under Justin Trudeau.

Prime Minister Mark Carney

released his own statement on X

, saying he has been “deeply grateful” for Guilbeault’s counsel and said his government “shares his fundamental commitment to climate ambition and climate competitiveness for Canada.”

“While we may have differing views at times on how exactly we make essential progress, I am glad Steven will continue to offer his important perspectives as a Member of Parliament in our Liberal caucus,” Carney wrote.

Liberal MPs downplayed the divisions in their caucus over this new deal with Alberta.

“We’re absolutely unified. There’s all kinds of room for all kinds of different opinions in our caucus. There always has been,” said Sean Casey. “So, I have absolutely no concerns about the health of the caucus and the state of unity. None, whatsoever.”

Peter Fragiskatos said the Liberal caucus is in his view “quite unified.”

“There are always discussions, and I certainly wish Steven Guilbeault well. Steven’s a great guy, a very good colleague, and we’ll continue to work together,” he said.

Casey said Guilbeault has “dedicated his life to climate issues, and it’s completely understandable that he would stand on that principle.”

“Does that mean that there’s a cancer spreading through the caucus? Absolutely not.”

It is not unusual for Liberal MPs to publicly disagree with government policy. However, Carney’s deal with Alberta has made him vulnerable to his more progressive flank and is causing unrest in his B.C. caucus. — some MPs fear losing their seats.

“I think many of them are deeply concerned with the change of direction that this government has taken,” said B.C. NDP MP Jenny Kwan.
 

She said lifting the tanker ban, even partially, would have “deep implications” for British Columbians and coastal communities.

Liberal MP Charles Sousa insisted that Guilbeault is “not leaving caucus — he’s just finding it difficult for himself.”

Sousa also suggested that the dust will eventually settle on this issue. “I believe, as time proceeds, we’ll come to appreciate and recognize that any agreement between Alberta and B.C. and Indigenous peoples needs to be worked out too,” he said.

“So, we’ll see what happens next, but I believe caucus is supportive of doing what’s in the best interest of Canadians.”

Guilbeault’s resignation came up in Friday’s question period, with the Bloc Québécois wondering if the federal government could also impose a pipeline on Quebec and Conservatives showcasing the cracks into the Liberal caucus over the deal.

“The Liberal caucus is only cracking open wide enough to welcome Conservatives to come join us,” shot back Justice Minister Sean Fraser, referring to

the recent floor-crossing of former Conservative MP Chris d’Entremont

to the Liberal benches.

When asked what he says to progressives who, like Guilbeault, are disappointed by the government’s plan build a proposed pipeline, Casey said: “Give it time.”

He then said the quiet part out loud.

“The MOU does not mean that there will necessarily be a pipeline. There’s a pathway to a pipeline that involves all the checks and balances that will keep those voters happy.”

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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Environment Canada has overhauled its weather alert system into three colour codes, each representing a different level of severity and impact.

Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECC) has unveiled an overhaul to its national weather alert system, aiming to make the risks associated with its weather alerts clearer for Canadians.

Its new colour-coded system “will make it easier to quickly understand the severity of extreme weather and its expected risk at a glance,” said the weather service

in a statement

on Wednesday. “This new system is part of the ongoing modernization of our public weather program and aligns with best practices worldwide, including those promoted by the World Meteorological Organization.”

Going forward, each type of weather alert

 

— warnings, advisories and watches — will include a colour ranging from yellow, to orange, to red, each reflecting a different level of seriousness connected with the weather event.

Why move to colour-coded alerts?

“Moving to colour-coded weather alerts (will help) people understand what weather will do in addition to what it will be,” says ECC.

To illustrate, the weather service points to past weather events that would have been designated red: the

1998 ice storm

in Ontario and Quebec that crippled transmission towers, “

snowmageddon

” in St. John’s, Newfoundland, in 2020 that buried the city and the

2021 atmospheric river in British Columbia

that severely damaged highways.

Weather alerts can be issued for a wide range of hazards, such as thunderstorms, rain or snow, blowing snow, wind, and heat.

What will a Yellow Alert mean?

Yellow alerts will be the most common, issued when hazardous weather may cause damage, disruption or an impact on health that will most likely be “moderate, localized, and/or short-term.”

A yellow alert associated with wind will state: “Yellow Warning – Wind.” In that situation, says ECC, you may see some short-term utility outages, larger tree branches broken and a risk of injury from flying or falling debris.

What about Orange?

Orange alerts will be for severe weather that is likely to cause damage and disruption that could be major, widespread and potentially lasting a few days.

During an an alert stating “Orange Warning – Wind,” you may see: widespread utility outages, some roof damage, small-to-medium trees snapped and increased risk of injury from flying or falling debris.

When will Red Alerts be issued?

Environment Canada expects red alerts will be rare.

“They (will be) issued when very dangerous and possibly life-threatening weather will cause extreme damage and disruption. Impacts have the potential to be extensive, widespread, and prolonged.”

During a “Red Warning – Wind,” you may see: long duration, widespread utility outages, structural damage to homes and buildings, significant damage to trees, including orchards and parks, a high likelihood of injury due to flying or falling debris.

How will meteorologists decide which alert to issue?

In devising which alert to issue, Environment Canada meteorologists will use a new “Alert Colour Matrix.” Drawing on the latest atmospheric data and establishing the degree of confidence that a forecast will come to pass (from low to very high) they will then set out the the impact a weather event will have on people, property, and communities (from low to extreme).

Where can Canadians see the alerts?

Canadians looking for the latest forecasts and severe weather alerts can visit Canada.ca/Weather or download the WeatherCAN mobile app, which is available for free on Android and iOS devices.

What’s next for weather forecasting in Canada?

Meanwhile, says Environment Canada, it will be launching a series of initiatives over the next year to improve severe weather alerts, provide more context to daily forecasts and extend the outlook for possible extreme weather.

“We continue to experience more frequent and extreme weather in Canada, which makes it more important than ever for Canadians to have access to clear, accurate, and easy-to-understand weather alerts,” said federal Environment and Climate Change minister, Julie Dabrusin, in a press release accompanying the ECC announcement. “By improving how severe weather is reported, we are helping Canadians better understand and prepare for potential impacts, so they can make informed decisions about how and when to protect themselves, their loved ones, and their property.”

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A Canadian passport is shown in this image.

Canadians will need “advance permission” to travel to the United Kingdom next year. Without it, they could be denied boarding.

The new policy, which applies to 85 nationalities including Canada, will be enforced starting on Feb. 25, 2026,

according to the U.K. government

. Most Canadians do not need a visa to travel to the U.K.; however, they will need an Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA).

“This is a significant step towards digitizing the immigration system and paves the way for a contactless U.K. border in the future,” the U.K. government says online.

The ETA will be verified by airline carriers. It was initially launched in October 2023, but was not being “strictly enforced, to give visitors ample time to adjust to the new requirement.” Since its launch, more than 13.3 million visitors have successfully applied.

“ETAs give us greater power to stop those who pose a threat from setting foot in the country and gives us a fuller picture of immigration,” said U.K. Minister for Migration and Citizenship Mike Tapp in a news release.

Tapp also said that ETAs allow for a better and “more seamless travel experience.”

Travellers can apply for an ETA through an app. It costs 16 pounds, or roughly CAD$30.

“While most people currently get a decision automatically in minutes, it is recommended to allow three working days to account for the small number of cases that require additional review,” the U.K. government says.

British and Irish citizens, including dual citizens, do not need to apply for the ETA.

The Canadian government’s

travel advice page for the United Kingdom

says that Canadians “must travel on the passport used for your ETA application.” It says that Canadians do not need an ETA if they are transiting through an airport in the U.K. without passing border control or if they have a visa or permission to live, work or study in the U.K.

Similarly, many foreign nationals travelling to Canada, including British and Irish citizens,

require an ETA

to enter the country by plane.

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An Indian groom holds a flower and grains of rice at his bride's house ahead of their wedding.

An Ontario man who admitted to participating in two ‘sham’ marriages to help Indian women immigrate to Canada in return for services and cash has failed in his efforts to prove he’s married to the mother of his three children.

Amratpal Singh Sidhu asked Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice for a declaration that he’s legally married to Amandeep Kaur. She was looking for a judge to say the opposite.

“He openly admitted to participating in two ‘sham’ marriages, for financial gain and in an effort to dupe Canadian immigration authorities,” Justice Frances Wood wrote in a recent decision from the family court division.

“For many years, he declared himself single for income tax purposes and, when transferring real estate, declared that he was not a spouse, which allowed him to transfer the properties without (Amandeep Kaur’s) consent.”

Neither party divulged why it matters if they’re married or not.

“But, as (Sidhu) has made a claim for equalization in his application, this court infers that the importance relates to that claim – if the parties are not legally (married), he has no equalization claim,” Wood said.

An “equalization claim” is a legal process in Canadian family law where spouses seek a fair division of the property and debts accumulated during their marriage.

The court heard Sidhu and Kaur met while they were both working at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport.

“Both were residents of Ontario,” said the judge. “They agreed to travel to India to get married. The wedding plans were made while the parties were in Ontario, and they then travelled together from Ontario to India shortly before the ceremony.”

Both of them agree “that they participated in a traditional marriage ceremony in India on December 4, 1997,” said the decision.

Shortly after that Sidhu “travelled to a nearby town … where he participated in what he refers to as a ‘sham’ marriage ceremony,” it said.

Sidhu testified that “in exchange for care being provided to his ailing mother, he participated in this fake wedding to assist the ‘bride,’ Karamjit Kaur, in immigrating to Canada.”

Sidhu and Karamjit Kaur divorced in Ontario in January 2001, said the decision, dated Nov. 12.

“Despite (Sidhu’s) characterization of the second marriage as a ‘sham’, the fact is that it has been formally recognized in Ontario whereas there is no formal recognition nor registration of the parties’ alleged marriage either in Ontario or India,” Wood said.

“The parties agree that polygamous marriages are not permitted pursuant to the Hindu Marriage Act. (Sidhu) cannot, therefore, have been married to both (Amandeep Kaur) and Karamjit Kaur.”

Sidhu travelled to India again in 2022 “where he participated in yet another allegedly ‘sham’ marriage, once again with the aim of assisting the ‘bride’ in immigrating to Canada. This marriage was to Harjit Kaur. According to (Sidhu) Canadian authorities were not persuaded of the validity of the marriage and Harjit Kaur never did immigrate to Canada. There is a marriage certificate evidencing this marriage,” said the decision.

“Much was made by the parties as to whose idea the 2022 ‘sham’ marriage was. (Sidhu) insisted that Harjit Kaur is (Amandeep Kaur’s) cousin, and that (Amandeep Kaur) had been promised $40,000 to assist in the immigration process. He testified that (Amandeep Kaur and their child) were present at the ‘marriage’ ceremony. (Amandeep Kaur) denied this.”

On “several occasions” between 2000 and 2017 Sidhu “described himself as single and common-law on Income Tax filings and when transferring real property,” said the decision.

Amandeep Kaur “described herself as married in her 2018 Income Tax Return, but as single in the other returns available to the court.”

She “made some attempt to demonstrate that the relationship was ‘on and off’ to argue that they did not live together ‘as a married couple’ but does not deny that the parties lived together for at least some periods of time following the marriage,” said the decision.

“They have three children together. It is not necessary to determine that the parties lived together continuously from 1997 until their final separation.”

Sidhu alleges Amandeep Kaur “deliberately claimed that she was single and insisted that he do the same, to maximize her entitlement to certain tax benefits and credits. He testified that he declared himself single on income tax and real estate documents at (Amandeep Kaur’s) insistence.”

The judge had concerns about the credibility of both parties.

“Neither may rely on their own fraud to bolster their own position with respect to the validity of the marriage,” Wood said.

“Where the court is left in serious doubt as to the credibility of either party, it must have resort to any uncontroverted evidence. Undisputed documentary evidence is particularly helpful.”

When they returned to Canada in 1997, “both declared themselves single to different authorities,” said the judge.

“At no time did either obtain any sort of formal documentation recording their marriage.”

And “significantly,” Sidhu “married Karamjit Kaur immediately after the ceremony with” Amandeep Kaur, Wood said, noting “that marriage has been considered to be valid by an Ontario court when it granted a divorce, a process in which (Sidhu) participated. Since polygamy is not permitted in India, (Sidhu) cannot have been married to both (Amandeep Kaur) and Karamjit Kaur. Whether the second marriage was entered into for immigration purposes or not, that is the marriage that (Sidhu) chose to have formally recognized.”

The judge noted “a valid marriage certificate has been produced” for when Sidhu “married yet again” to Harjit Kaur.

Even if Amandeep Kaur “was an active participant” in that wedding, that doesn’t help Sidhu’s case, Wood said. “Rather, it bolsters the conclusion that both understood they were not legally married.”

The judge found that “neither party entered into the December 4, 1997 marriage with the intention that the marriage would be considered legally valid in Ontario.”

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Iqbal Singh Virk, left, and Ranjit Singh Rowal, co-owners and drivers of an Ontario-based commercial truck, were arrested at the border with cocaine allegedly for Ryan Wedding's large narco cartel.

It was 3:26 in the morning when a long-haul tractor trailer loaded with steel bars pulled up on the U.S. side of the Blue Water Bridge at the southern end of Lake Huron, connecting Ontario and Michigan.

The driver, Iqbal Singh Virk, an owner-operator of the truck based in Brampton, Ont., lowered his window to speak with U.S. Customs officers monitoring overnight traffic on Aug. 28, 2024. In the passenger seat was Ranjit Singh Rowal, who shared the driving.

Virk answered their questions: No, they didn’t they have guns, drugs, or cash over $5,000 with them; no one had given them anything to bring across; they were both Indian citizens with permanent resident status in Canada.

Experienced drivers, it must have seemed routine until Virk was told to pull his truck over for inspection. Less than 10 minutes after they had rolled up at the border, a Rapiscan X-ray system was crawling over their truck.

It’s a system that penetrates steel and it spotted what the drivers hoped it wouldn’t.

At the rear of their trailer was an anomaly — a long, thin compartment above the trailer’s Ontario licence plate that wouldn’t normally be there. Officers were soon pulling bricks wrapped together in cellophane out from that hole, stacking them on the loading bay floor. They counted 115 bricks weighing slightly more than 124 kilos. An officer estimated that if it is high-grade cocaine it would be worth close to US$4 million.

That evidence left little room for the truckers to maneuver.

As they waited in jail over the next few months, the case ballooned into something that would soon burst into clanging news coverage.

Some 3,700 kilometres along the highways Virk and Rowal had just driven, in Los Angeles, U.S. authorities had been investigating a huge international criminal enterprise. That violent and prolific cartel, authorities claimed, was headed by Ryan Wedding, a former Olympic snowboarder for Team Canada. Wedding, born in Thunder Bay, Ont., was named the mastermind behind a deluge of cocaine flowing from Colombia to California and then to Canada, from a safe space in Mexico.

Two months after the border arrests of Virk and Rowal, an indictment was unsealed with Wedding’s name at the top — alongside his nicknames of “Giant” and “El Jefe,” Spanish for the boss — followed by 15 others. Ten of them were Canadian citizens or residents. The allegations called them organizers, traffickers, hitmen, transportation gurus and wheelmen. Last week the FBI called Wedding a modern-day Pablo Escobar and El Chapo Guzman, two of history’s most notorious drug lords.

The last two names on that indictment are Virk and Rowal.

While their role among the alarming accounts of murders and mega-loads seems small, the details of their cases, which have now been proven in court through guilty pleas — the first for any of the Canadians caught in the probe — shows them as an important piece of a jigsaw that knitted a transportation network in Canada to a narco cartel abroad, and reveals how the organizations generated huge amounts of money.

 A U.S. Customs photo of the hidden compartment at the back of the truck where cocaine and heroin was found.

Evidence presented in court while Virk and Rowal tried to quickly settle their cases says that international narcos had negotiated a haulage deal with a network of Indo-Canadian trucking firms and drivers based in Brampton, Ont., northwest of Toronto.

A dispatcher sent by the narcos would meet various drivers of Canada-bound commercial trucks at meeting spots in and around Los Angeles and hand over bricks of pressed cocaine. The drivers would hide the bricks in their trucks and then drive northeast into Canada, where the drugs were distributed by others.

The trucks were also hauling legitimate cargo to camouflage the trips and they got lost in the constant back-and-forth at some of the world’s busiest commercial border points. Members of the cooperating networks used serial numbers from U.S. one-dollar bills, swapped over encrypted communications, as passcodes to identify each other at their rendezvous.

Sometimes it went more smoothly than others.

In early April 2024, Virk — now 65 years old — agreed to collect a load of cocaine in California from the narcos and haul it back when next bringing in a load of regular cargo.

Virk and Rowal, who co-owned a tractor-trailer, drove into the United States on April 28, 2024, and headed for Los Angeles. They pulled the truck into a rest stop on May 3, 2024, and waited for the drugs to be delivered. A dispatcher for the narco said two large deliveries were coming. That was a problem because their compartment could only fit about 250 kilos.

It became an argument at the highest level. Authorities allege that Wedding, through encrypted messaging, asked for a discount on the transportation cost — $150,000 instead of the $220,000 previously agreed. The transport boss in Canada refused the lower price. Wedding allegedly refused to pay full freight for a load 30 per cent smaller and the deal was scrapped after a standoff.

Nobody involved in the deals knew it at the time, but it turns out that the bosses weren’t arranging the deal directly with each other. The FBI had infiltrated the operation and inserted a confidential source as a go-between.

That infiltration helps explain why, three months later, Virk and Rowal were stopped at the border bridge when next trying to cross back into Canada. Their load that day was later found to be split between cocaine and heroin, court records say.

 U.S. Customs photo of the bricks of cocaine, bundled in cellophane, found hidden in Virk’s and Rowal’s truck.

When both men were arrested, through a Punjabi interpreter, Virk told officers he had been a truck driver for seven years and routinely crossed the border, sometimes weekly, but didn’t admit to the drugs. Rowal wouldn’t say anything at all.

They were both arrested on drug charges and detained. They were transferred to California to face courts on the wider allegations.

On Aug. 5, Rowal signed a plea agreement with prosecutors. He agreed to plead guilty to two charges: conspiracy to distribute cocaine and possession with intent to distribute cocaine. Virk signed a similar agreement 10 days later.

They agreed they conspired with two or more people to distribute cocaine, knew they were carrying drugs and knew it was destined for further distribution. Their replacement charge informations for their plea were stripped of co-conspirator names, notably Wedding’s.

Their plea deals said the maximum penalty they faced was life imprisonment but their guilty pleas would lower that. They agreed to forfeit all property involved in the crime, including the truck.

Both men are citizens of India and travelled on an Indian passport who immigrated to Canada where they attained permanent resident status.

After his guilty plea but before his sentencing, Rowal’s lawyers asked the judge to order the return of his passport, Ontario health card, driver’s licence, cell phone and rings he was wearing. His lawyer said he needed the items to prepare for his departure from the United States. His lawyers had hopes that would happen soon, as they argued for Rowal to be sentenced to time already served and released.

One of his lawyers, Haley Huntley urged that his sentencing move quickly, saying Rowal placed “profound emotional and psychological importance” on wrapping it up and was counting “how many squares on the calendar” there were before sentencing.

“He has been planning for this day as one of the most important in his life, and he is eager for his sentencing to go forward as planned,” Huntley told the judge.

By that point, Rowal had been in jail for 449 days.

 Ryan Wedding, a most-wanted fugitive with a US$15 million bounty for his arrest.

The night before sentencing, prosecutors filed a document in court saying they had talked to the RCMP about Rowal’s status in Canada and were told that as a non-citizen permanent resident in Canada he would be considered inadmissible to the country after his conviction for serious criminality and sent for an admissibility hearing. A removal order against him was the likely outcome, they said the RCMP told them, leading to removal to India.

His lawyer lambasted prosecutors for it.

“The government then prepared and filed a public document, giving this useless information to the whole world. The government lawyers are supposed to pursue justice; they should not aim to inflict as much pain as possible, and unnecessary pain, on disenfranchised and indigent defendants.”

In court, Judge Sherilyn Peace Garnett accepted Rowal’s guilty plea and sentenced him to 37 months in prison. She recommended the U.S. Bureau of Prisons place him in a facility close to Canada, an hour’s drive from the border.

Virk, who also goes by the name Mark, pleaded guilty as well, in September, but his sentencing hearing has been delayed. It is now scheduled for March.

Lawyers for the two could not be reached for comment prior to publication deadline.

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NDP leadership candidates, from left: Rob Ashton, Tanille Johnston, Avi Lewis, Heather McPherson and Tony McQuail, following the NDP French language leadership debate in Montreal on Thursday, November 27, 2025.

MONTREAL — The five contenders to lead the NDP took to the stage on Thursday night in Montreal for the first of two official leadership debate.

While more love-in than battle royale, the 90-minute debate still had its share of memorable moments. Here are some of the evening’s biggest takeaways:

Lewis easily clears field in French

Filmmaker Avi Lewis was by far the most comfortable candidate on the stage in French, giving detailed, fluid responses in the language and bantering gamely with francophone media in a post-debate scrum.

Edmonton MP Heather McPherson held her own in French portions of the debate, despite the occasional stilted response and anglicism — for instance, taking a shot at Alberta Premier Danielle Smith for “attaquer les trans kids” in recent legislation.

The other three candidates, who all chose to wear earpieces for simultaneous translation, lagged well behind.

“You’ve heard (this evening) that my French is not perfect,” acknowledged B.C.-based union leader Rob Ashton in the French portion of his closing debate.

Vancouver Island city councillor Tanille Johnston just shook her head and gave a flabbergasted look when asked after the debate to say, in French, how she thought she did.

‘Manly’ nation-building projects a threat to Indigenous women and girls

Lewis’s performance wasn’t without its wrinkes. During a segment on reconciliation with Canada’s First Nations, he bizzarely tied the Carney government’s major projects push to the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

“All of this talk of nation-building projects that has consumed the oxygen of our political conversation … They’re big, manly things with huge work camps entailed in remote areas. The impacts on Indigenous women and girls are intense, are horrifying,” said Lewis.

‘Tony, we only got eight minutes’

Lewis was also at the centre of the closest thing the debate gave us to a confrontation, impatiently interjecting during organic farmer Tony McQuail’s long-winded response on how to rebuild the party.

“Tony, we only got eight minutes!” Lewis chided.

McQuail was flustered but undeterred by the interruption.

“Yea, but you’ve got seven more and there are only four more of you … so let me make my point!” he shot back.

Sartorial signalling

Whoever ends up leader, it’s clear they’ll be a departure from Jagmeet Singh’s rolex and bespoke suits. A few candidates tried to coney their regularness with debate-night fashion choices.

Ashton boasted that he was wearing work boots onstage while taking a shot at “cosplay(ing)” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre. McQuail, for his part, donned his now trademark straw hat.

Host city love

The contenders couldn’t call it a night without trying to score a few brownie points from host city Montreal, a pandering session moderator Karl Belanger teed up perfectly by asking each of them to name their favourite place in Canada.

“C’mon, le Montreal!” said McPherson on cue.

“Alright, so we’re trying to speak to Montrealers?” joked Avi Lewis, who named Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal as his top three cities.

“It’s gonna be Montreal!” drawled Ashton in his best Quebec accent.

Not all candidates were so shameless. Johnston said Tofino, B.C., a noted vacation spot for ex-Liberal prime minister Justin Trudeau, was her favourite getaway.

The next NDP leadership debate will take place in the Vancouver area in February.

National Post
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Premier Danielle Smiths speaks at the Unlock The Pipeline Gridlock conference hosted by the Indian Resource Council-Canada at the Westin Airport hotel on November 27, 2025.

OTTAWA — Deciding how long it will take for Alberta’s industrial carbon tax to hit its new “minimum” of $130 per tonne should be based on what “industry can afford,” says Alberta Premier Danielle Smith.

Smith made the comments fresh off the signing of a new energy and pipeline deal with Prime Minister Mark Carney, which throws the Liberal government’s support behind the construction of a new Alberta-B.C. bitumen pipeline and exempts the province from a set of clean electricity regulations.

Chief among the wins the prime minister has touted from the deal is Alberta’s commitment to strengthening its industrial carbon tax, which Smith had earlier this year frozen at $95 per tonne. Under the current federal standard, systems must progressively hike the tax to reach $170 per tonne by 2030.

The new deal commits Ottawa and Alberta to collaborate on long-term carbon pricing for its oil and gas and electricity sectors through its provincial TIER system. According to the pact, both governments agreed that the system “will ramp up to a minimum effective credit price of $130/tonne.”

Asked what year Alberta intends to meet the price of $130 per tonne, Smith told National Post in an interview Thursday, “we have to negotiate that.”

She said there are partners the province must negotiate with, including a group of oilsands companies proposing to build a massive carbon capture and storage project, which Carney has linked to any future construction of a new bitumen pipeline, that Smith agreed to in the deal.

While industrial carbon pricing is part of that project, the premier said “they’re also on the other side, in wanting to expand production, and knowing that if it goes too high, it could put us in an uncompetitive position compared to the United States.”

“We’ve got to gauge that. We’ve got to see what is happening in the global market. We’ve got to see what’s reasonable.”

Asked whether the new

“minimum” tax agreed to in the deal of $130 per tonne could be reached by 2030, Smith said that she was of the view that “it’s got to be at a level that the industry can afford.”

The next steps on Alberta’s carbon pricing policy will be the subject of another set of negotiations with Carney’s government, set to be concluded no later than next April.

“We wanted to send the signal that we’re open to having a discussion about what it should be, but that hasn’t been determined yet, how quickly it’s going to rise, or what the ultimate top price would be,” Smith said.

Industrial carbon pricing, which applies to heavy emitters, remains a cornerstone of Carney’s climate policy. His Nov. 4 budget promised to also develop a “post-2030 carbon pricing trajectory” by working with provinces and territories.

On the question of whether there was any scenario the premier would be willing to sign on to having that tax reach $170 per tonne, Smith said she did not want to “prejudge” future discussions or what the market may be out to 2050, which is when Canada and Alberta have agreed to achieve net-zero emissions.

“I think what we want to do is ensure that the price is at a level today that will stimulate some of the investment in emissions reduction technology without crushing the industry.”

She added: “I think you can see we all agree $170 by 2030, was too high, too fast, and I’m encouraged by the fact that they made that concession.”

Even with the major new energy deal in hand, Smith predicts no private sector proponent will come forward to build the pipeline proposal until approval is secured from the federal major projects office.

Under the pact, Smith committed to formally apply to that office, which Carney established this fall to help streamline the approvals process, no later than next July, slightly later than Alberta’s initially stated goal of next spring.

“I think we’d have to get approval from the major projects office to get a private sector proponent,” Smith said.

“So we’re prepared to take it through the first couple of stages. Because, let’s face it, our industry has been bitten before,” adding she believes any proponent needs a high level of approval certainty.

B.C. Premier David Eby has slammed the continued lack of a pipeline proponent when it comes to the federal backing of the project, saying it risks serving as a “distraction” from focusing on other major infrastructure projects that currently have private sector support and financing.

“There is not one private company that has stepped up to say, if you build it, we’ll buy it. If the approvals are in place, we’ll build it. Not one,” Eby said on Thursday.

Carney confirmed, while speaking with reporters that day, that without a private proposal, a new pipeline to the B.C. coast would not get built.

An Alberta official who spoke to reporters in a technical briefing before the deal was unveiled said that should the process ahead roll out smoothly, the goal would be to get shovels in the ground for a new pipeline by 2029.

National Post

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