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A KLM twin-engine Airbus similar to the one that made a U-turn over the Atlantic on Monday.

A flight this week from Amsterdam to Toronto spent more than five hours in the air before landing — in Amsterdam. The cause was a missed scheduled maintenance that was discovered while the plane was over the Atlantic Ocean, requiring it to do a U-turn and return home.

The aircraft, an Airbus A330-303, had already been delayed 90 minutes from its original departure time of 11:20 a.m. local time, for what should have been an eight-hour flight from Schiphol airport to Toronto. That was due to a last-minute change of plane because the air conditioning on the original one wasn’t working.

But the new plane had its own issues. As reported on the website

View from the Wing

and elsewhere, the crew realized only en route that there was required maintenance for the aircraft that had not been performed.

KLM confirmed to National Post that the U-turn was caused by the aircraft reaching what it called a “maintenance deadline.”

“During flight KL691 from Amsterdam to Toronto, it was decided to return to Schiphol as a precaution after it became apparent during the flight that the replacement aircraft (PH-AKA) would reach its maintenance deadline,” the airline said in a statement to the Post.

“The aircraft was fully airworthy at the time of departure,” it added. “To prevent the license from expiring during the flight, it was decided to return to perform the maintenance in the Netherlands.”

The delay — more than three hours on a flight of more than 3,500 kms — means that,

due to European laws

, each passenger is entitled to 600 euros in compensation, as well as rebooking by the airline.

“Although all passengers were rebooked upon arrival, we naturally find it very unfortunate for the passengers who were affected by this,” KLM said in its statement.

Flight data from

flightradar24.com

shows that the aircraft was south of Iceland and nearly midway across the Atlantic when it turned around.

Last-minute aircraft swaps have caused issues in the past.

View from the Wing

details how, earlier this month, American Airlines swapped out a Boeing 787-8 for a similar 787-9, then sent the latter on a flight from Philadelphia to Naples, Italy. But the runway at Naples wasn’t certified for the 787-9, so it had to be diverted to Rome, 200 kms to the north.

National Post has reached out to KLM for further comment.

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Commander of the Royal Canadian Navy Vice Admiral Angus Topshee, is seen during a scrum with reporters following the ringing of the bell ceremony marking the start of Fleet Week, in Halifax on June 19, 2025.

Canada’s top sailor is so fed up with the dearth of Cyclone helicopters available to fly off this country’s warships, he’ll replace them with drones if he must.

The fleet of 26 CH-148 helicopters was grounded for most of last month due to spare parts problems. And, as of Thursday, only three of the choppers were available to fly off the country’s warships as the problems persist.

“Am I satisfied? No, not at all,” Vice-Admiral Angus Topshee said in Halifax on Thursday.

Naval officers often say maritime helicopters are the eyes and ears of a warship.

“This is why we’re going all-in on drones right now,” Topshee said. “The Royal Canadian Navy is working to get into contract for an uncrewed aerial vehicle that we can operate. It was meant to supplement the helicopter, but the reality is, if the helicopter can’t be more reliable, then we are going to have to rely even more on other systems.”

As a stopgap, the navy is employing Hammerhead target drones

remote-control speedboats it normally uses to mimic small boat attacks

to launch sonobuoys ahead of a fleet so ships can detect submarines.

“One of the things a helicopter can do for us is it can drop sonobuoys to help detect submarines. Now we’ve got the ability to do that in other ways,” Topshee said.

“Whenever we’ve been forced to innovate, we will innovate. We will find a way to get the job done. So, the helicopter has been letting us down, but we will find a way to achieve the effect.”

The navy is hoping to have purpose-built aerial drones in operation by next summer, he said, noting the project went out to tender. “We’re in the process of awarding it.”

 Royal Canadian Navy sailor first class, Bradley Downey, looks on through heavy fog at the arrival of the Danish warship, HDMS (Her Danish Majesty’s Ship) Vædderen (F359) during a sailpast at a ceremony marking the start of Fleet Week in Halifax Thursday June 19, 2025.

Topshee — who was in Halifax to celebrate the start of Fleet Week, where the public can tour warships and meet the folks who crew them — doesn’t want to rely on unmanned drones over helicopters.

“A helicopter is a far better platform,” he said. “A helicopter can do everything. So, what we’re going to need to do is take all of the things that we need a helicopter to be able to do and do them individually” in other ways.

To that end, the navy’s experimenting with large drones that can transport equipment between ships, Topshee said. “That’s not a task that we need a well-armed (anti-submarine warfare) helicopter to do,” he said. “If it can be done by a drone very simply without people involved in the process of actually flying it back and forth, that’s ideal for us.”

Topshee is adamant he’s not replacing the Cyclones.

“We’re not,” he said. “We want the Cyclone helicopter to be an effective part of the force.”

 Members of the Helicopter Air Detachment aboard HMCS MONTREAL conduct helicopter hoist drills with a CH-148 Cyclone helicopter, call sign Strider, during Operation REASSURANCE on Feb. 13, 2022.

The admiral points out that, even when the helicopters are in top shape, they can only operate for 12 hours a day.

“Even if it’s perfectly operational, there’s 12 hours where you don’t have it available,” Topshee said. “Which means we need to be experimenting and ready to operate all of the time.”

Canada has 26 of the ship-borne maritime helicopters, with a final one slated for delivery this year. The $5.8-billion fleet is normally used to provide air support for the navy. Their missions include surface and subsurface surveillance, search and rescue, and anti-submarine warfare.

The Cyclones didn’t fly at all for 27 days in May as the military struggled with spare parts problems with certain components. The Department of National Defence indicated last month that it was working with the military and Sikorsky, which manufactured the helicopters, “to identify potential parts of concern. This includes components of the Cyclone’s landing gear, tail rotor driveshaft flange and auxiliary power unit, as well as engine parts.”

The problems persist, according to Topshee. “It’s a parts issue that’s keeping them grounded.”

Another “messy problem” plaguing the helicopters, he said, is replacing the Cyclones’ ageing datalinks — used to communicate digital information such as radar images to other aircraft, warships and shore bases.

“It is a technology from the 1980s,” Topshee said.

The admiral places the blame for old tech aboard relatively new helicopters, ordered in November 2004, squarely on former prime minister Jean Chretien’s 1993 decision to cancel the contract to buy AgustaWestland’s EH-101 maritime helicopters to replace Canada’s geriatric fleet of Sea Kings, which went out of service in 2018 after flying off navy ships for more than half a century.

“One of the accusations at the time, as we were coming out of the Cold War, was that we had gold-plated the requirement,” Topshee said. “That we were asking for far more than we needed out of a maritime helicopter. The interesting thing is if you were to go back to our initial requirement, it is almost exactly the helicopter we need today because … we’re in a period of great power competition. We need a war-fighting helicopter.”

The military “listened to the complaints,” and watered down the requirements as much as it could, he said. “We specified exactly the systems that we wanted as opposed to saying we need the helicopter to have modern link, modern communications and up-to-date combat systems. We said we needed to have this Link 11 system, which was the state-of-the-art at the time we set that requirement.”

The datalink is “critical” for the Cyclones, he said. “It’s what tells the rest of the force where the helicopter is. It tells the rest of the force everything the helicopter is seeing. So, when it finds a submarine, it uses that link to communicate the position of the submarine to the rest of the force so that we can either target that submarine or avoid the submarine. It also tells us that that’s our friendly helicopter right there so we don’t accidentally shoot it down.”

Canada is negotiating with Sikorsky to get the datalinks updated, Topshee said.

“The timeline is unacceptably long. We’re in negotiations with the company for them to try and deliver it as quickly as possible but right now it’s not quick enough.”

Sikorsky is saying it will take “more than two” years to upgrade datalinks aboard all of the Cyclones, according to Topshee, who wants the choppers upgraded from datalink 11 to datalink 16 and datalink 22.

The Cyclones “can still use the old link … but it doesn’t provide all the functionality that we need,” he said.

“A lot of countries are stopping using it.”

The old datalinks could put Cyclone crews in jeopardy.

“Without the most modern link system, we don’t know exactly where the helicopter is all the time because that system does not provide the same level of positional fidelity that we would expect,” Topshee said.

“The helicopter knows where it is. We just don’t know whether it’s friendly or not all of the time. Can that put them in danger? Yes. In an operational environment where we’re starting to shoot, that could be a problem.”

 The ship’s bell from the former HMCS Athabaskan is seen during a ceremony marking the start of Fleet Week in Halifax Thursday June 19, 2025.

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Lilly and Jack Sullivan have been missing since May 2, 2025.

A reward of up to $150,000 is being offered by the Nova Scotia Department of Justice to anyone with information about the disappearance of Lilly and Jack Sullivan.

It has been “felt across the province and beyond, and my heart goes out to the family, the community and everyone who has been working to find these children since day one,” said Attorney General and Minister of Justice Becky Druhan in

a news release

on Thursday.

The reward is payable in Canadian funds and will be apportioned as deemed just by Druhan as the minister of justice. Law enforcement and correctional agency employees are not eligible for the reward.

On the morning of May 2, Lilly and Jack disappeared from their Lansdowne Station home in rural Nova Scotia. There have been extensive ongoing searches in the area, especially in the thick woods near the property where they lived. As of mid-June, police said they had received

488 tips in the case

. According to authorities, the siblings were last seen with family in public on May 1.

In an interview published on Wednesday, the children’s paternal grandmother opened up about what happened.

Belynda Gray, who

spoke to CBC News

, said she hasn’t seen six-year-old Lilly or four-year-old Jack in almost two years.

Gray’s son, Cody Sullivan, is the biological father of the two children. He was in a relationship with the children’s mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, for about three years, Gray said. When Brooks-Murray decided to end the relationship, she petitioned the court for sole custody, Gray told CBC.

“When she did that, he said that he was done. He just didn’t want no part of it,” said Gray, who also said that Brooks-Murray told her they were “having problems and she wasn’t happy.”

The relationship between Gray and Brooks-Murray, however, remained intact. Gray said that Brooks-Murray would bring the children to visit whenever Gray asked. But those visits faded when Brooks-Murray moved in with her new boyfriend, the children’s stepfather, Daniel Martell. Martell and Brooks-Murray also have an infant daughter together.

Gray learned about the children’s disappearance after receiving a call from a relative. She then texted Brooks-Murray, who said they were, in fact, missing.

“I was in a state of panic, shock, but in the back of my mind I kept saying, ‘Well, they’ll find them,’” said Gray.

She joined the search in Pictou County. She said she called out for the children, even using her nickname for Jack, “Jackie boy.” However, after several days, police announced they were scaling back the search and would focus on specific areas.

Since then, the ongoing investigation has included extensive searches of the home where the children lived and went missing from, the grounds, outbuildings and nearby septic systems, wells, mineshafts and culverts, the RCMP said in

a news release

. Officers have also searched areas around a nearby pipeline, where

a boot print was previously located

.

“My heart tells me these babies are gone,” Gray told CBC. “I just want them back. These are everybody’s grandchildren. They’re not just mine now. It does seem like the whole world cares.”

Gray said she and her son, who lives with her, were both questioned by police.

They are included in the 54 people who police have formally interviewed, which for some, involved a polygraph test. Police have also collected hundreds of hours of video footage from the Landsdowne Station area.

Martell, the children’s stepfather, told

CBC News

that he took a polygraph test. He said he was asked outright if he killed the children and added that he was “extremely nervous.” He said he had offered to take the test and even encouraged police to search the property early on. He was told by an officer that he passed the test, CBC reported.

He also told the CBC that there “is more evidence than what the public knows,” although he was not permitted to “elaborate” more.

He confirmed that Lilly’s blanket was found on the first day of the search, although police have not yet released that information. It was discovered near a bootprint in the area of the pipeline, Martell said.

Both

CTV News

and CBC reported that the bootprint appeared to be child-sized.

Meanwhile, authorities continue to look into the children’s disappearance.

“We’re accessing, evaluating and analyzing a significant volume of information from a variety of sources. We have a very coordinated and deliberate approach to make certain all information is meticulously scrutinized, prioritized and actioned to ensure nothing is missed,”

said

investigation lead Cpl. Sandy Matharu from the Northeast Nova RCMP Major Crime Unit.

“We’re committed to doing what is necessary to locate Lilly and Jack and advance the investigation, which may take longer than we all hoped.”

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Florida Panthers Matthew Tkachuk, front. and Gustav Forsling pour beer from the Stanley Cup onto fans at the Elbo Room, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the morning after defeating Edmonton in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final. The Cup was damaged the night before.

Some hockey fans are understandably bent out of shape over the

Florida Panthers damaging the Stanley Cup

this week, but the coveted trophy has been through worse.

It’s been sunk to the bottom of a swimming pool. It’s been used in the baptism of several infants and at least one baby has pooped in it.

It’s even been dropped — or maybe it was tossed — from a second-storey balcony overlooking a rock star’s whiskey-shaped pool.

“It happens every year, the bowl gets damaged — basically it gets ‘out of round’ if you know what I mean,”

Cup keeper Phil Pritchard told a Washington Capitals blogger in 2018.

“It is nobody’s fault; it just happens every year. It has become part of the lore of sports’ greatest trophy.”

Here are just a small handful of the known stories about what the silver and nickel trophy has endured through its 131 years.

Dents and cracks

At some point after knocking off the Edmonton Oilers in Game 6 on Tuesday night, the Panthers managed to crack the trophy’s bowl and dent the base before even leaving the arena, as evidenced by photos being circulated on Wednesday.

A spokesperson for the Hockey Hall of Fame told

the Associated Press

it will be repaired in time for Sunday’s victory parade in Sunrise, Fla.

It wouldn’t be the first time the Cup has been damaged almost immediately after it was awarded.

As the Colorado Avalanche gathered on the ice for a team photo to celebrate their 2022 championship, Nicholas Aube-Kubel stumbled and dropped the Cup as he skated into the dogpile, leaving a noticeable dent on the base.

Just a year before, the

Tampa Bay Lightning damaged it

at some point prior to or during a boat parade to celebrate a second-straight title.

Because the Stanley Cup spends 24 hours with each player and staff member of the winning team, how the damage occurred is usually a mystery or the stuff of anecdotal legend. But while visiting St. John’s with the Boston Bruins’ Michael Ryder in the summer of 2011, cameras captured the trophy taking a tumble from a table.

Three years earlier, a few days after the Detroit Red Wings claimed the Cup, it was dented after

falling off a table at the restaurant owned by defenceman Chris Chelios.

The Cup makes a splash

The Panthers were the last team to take the hockey’s holy grail swimming when they took it to Fort Lauderdale Beach after last year’s defeat of the Oilers in the final. At points during their revelry, players hoisting the Cup were diving into waves.

Pritchard, in an email to the

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

, expressed concern about possible erosion but said they “managed to clean it as good as possible and dry it off.”

Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk later admitted it wasn’t ideal.

“I think somebody said that’s not technically allowed, but I said it was too late,” Tkachuk said Thursday. “It already happened.”

Other famous dips include the time it ended up at the bottom of Mario Lemieux’s pool following their 1991 win,

tossed there from a 20-foot high waterfall by defenceman Phil Bourque.

“We had to dive in,” Bryan Trottier recounted on the Spittin’ Chiclets podcast in 2022, “Troy Loney and I dive and get the Cup out of the Pool. It was very tarnished the next day.”

The most famous pool story occurred eight years later as the Dallas Stars celebrated the organization’s first championship.

While partying at the home of Pantera drummer Vinnie Paul, the Stars celebrity superfan said

Guy Carboneau tossed the Cup to teammate Craig Ludwig from a balcony above his pool

— that was s

haped like a bottle of Crown

Royal whisky — only for it to hit the pool deck and fall in the chlorinated water.

Carboneau disputed that version of events in a 2022 interview with

D Magazine in Texas

, saying it was an accident as he tried to hand it off to Ludwig.

“If I really wanted to throw the Cup, I would have thrown the Cup. But that was not my intention.”

Ludwig, who admitted in the same article that they were all fairly drunk by this point, couldn’t be sure what happened.

Oh, Baby!

The first known and reported instance of an infant being baptized in Lord Stanley’s Cup came in 1996 when the

Avalanche’s Sylvain Lefebvre used it for his daughter’s

He was followed in 2008 by the Red Wings’ Tomas Holmstrom, whose niece was welcomed into the Christian faith in the bowl from which countless beers and bottles of champagne have been slurped.

The Pittsburgh Penguins’ Josh Archibald had his three-week-old baptized in 2017, and the Avalanche’s Jack Johnson used it for all three of his kids on his day with the trophy in 2022.

In 2008, Kris Draper admitted to

the Toronto Star

that his newborn daughter “pooped in the Cup.”

“That was something. We had a pretty good laugh,” said Draper, who cleaned it out and “still drank out of it that night.”


Hours before Claire Bell’s disappearance, she appeared with her mother in an alarming selfie video posted online on TikTok. Rachel-Ella Todd spoke one line: “You try that again, and this is going to get ugly.”

Along with joy and relief at finding three-year-old Claire Bell alive in eastern Ontario after four days of searching come questions of how she survived and why she was alone at the side of a rural highway 150 kilometres from her home in Montreal.

Police officially aren’t saying much about the case, as their focus moves from the public search into a criminal investigation stage, but published accounts say the girl made a staggering and perplexing statement to her rescuers.

“I’m waiting for mom, she told me to wait for her,” Radio-Canada, CBC’s French-language branch, reported Claire telling police who found her. “Mom told me to wait,” the Journal de Montréal, a daily French-language newspaper reported the girl said.

Police officials would not confirm the conversations, saying there is already an ongoing prosecution in Quebec, after the girl’s mother, Rachel-Ella Todd, 34, was arrested late Monday night and charged with child abandonment while Claire was still missing.

There also may now be a prosecution in Ontario, as the girl was allegedly abandoned about 50 kilometres into Ontario from the Quebec border.

 Quebec toddler Claire Bell, 3, has been found three days after she mysteriously disappeared.

Police credit information from the public for helping solve the girl’s disappearance.

The strange way the girl was reported missing

and distressing twists during the search galvanized public interest in the case. Police asked the public to help them track the movement of a grey 2007 Ford Escape, which helped investigators shift their attention into eastern Ontario.

The SUV was reported to have been seen in the St-Albert and Casselman area.

A drone operated by the Ontario Provincial Police spotted the girl around 2 p.m. on Wednesday in a field along an on-ramp for Highway 417 near the rural community of St. Albert, Ont., about 150 kilometres west of Montreal.

OPP officers following behind the drone then swooped in to rescue her.

Police said Claire was “fine,” and described her as being conscious and able to talk. Photos from the scene show her looking stable and well, although a bit startled and unkempt. She was taken to hospital for a medical evaluation as a precaution.

“We were preparing for the worst, I think everyone was,” an Ontario police source said.

Officers were overjoyed when she was found. Officers were seen celebrating the outcome of their efforts.

“The last few days, officers and members of the community have held our breath and hoped while we searched,” OPP Acting Staff-Sgt. Shaun Cameron. “Now we exhale as one, knowing she is safe.”

“This is why we are police,” said Sûreté du Québec Capt. Benoît Richard.

 Jubilant officers shared the moment after 3-year-old, Claire Bell was found on the side of a highway on Wednesday June 18, 2025.

Cameron said police would not have found the girl in time without “critical information” from the public. “This was a search where we knew, especially given her age, that every hour mattered,” he said.

“This search proves that when a child goes missing, there are no interprovincial boundaries. There is only one goal: to find them.”

Claire’s father, Matthew Bell, thanked the public and asked for privacy in a social media post.

Quebec Premier François Legault described the girl’s safe return as “almost a miracle,” and thanked police as well as members of the public who called in tips.

Todd appeared before a judge on Tuesday by video from a police station, represented by a legal-aid lawyer. She was back in court briefly on Wednesday when the case was put off until Friday for a potential bail hearing.

Claire was last seen Sunday morning, Father’s Day, with her mother, at the apartment where Claire and Todd lived.

News that she was missing was revealed about six hours later when her mother pulled into a roadside fireworks and souvenir store about 55 kilometres west of their apartment. Police said she told an employee she had lost her child and didn’t know where she was.

 A bus of school kids cheer as they go by a police command post west of Montreal and learn toddler Claire Bell was found alive, June 18, 2025..

An enormous search began that shifted and grew from the Sunday missing child report through 72 hours.

Hot days with little or no access to water would have posed the greatest risk to the rescued Montreal toddler’s survival, a search and rescue coordinator who participated in the search

told the Montreal Gazette

.

“Water, normally after about three days, becomes a significant concern,” said Dany Chaput, on-site coordinator for the Association of Quebec Volunteers for Search and Rescue. The three days Claire was missing “were very hot. There was a lot of sun,” he said.

Around 120 volunteers under his direction spent three days combing areas near the Coteau-du-Lac exit where police had found the mother’s car. Those volunteers “drank enormous amounts of water and, despite that, had headaches, dizziness.” Claire wouldn’t have had the same access to water, Chaput said. “I don’t think she necessarily had access to her primary needs.”

National Post with additional reporting by Montreal Gazette and The Canadian Press

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | Twitter:

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The bustling Church Street Marketplace in Burlington, Vt., is a favourite destination for visitors and locals.

The City of Burlington, Vt., has announced it will

rename one of its central avenues

from Church Street to Canada Street, from now until Labour Day (or Labor Day as it’s known there).

The name change was presented by a group of city councillors at their June 16 meeting, led by Councillor Becca Brown McKnight, who wore a maple leaf shirt and handed out Canadian flags to the other councillors.

“We have been fed up with Donald Trump’s damaging and insulting rhetoric towards Canada,” Brown McKnight

told CTV News

this week. “Renaming a street is something quick and easy for us to do, but also sends a message that we are in this fight with you.”

Church Street, named after the First Unitarian Universalist Church that sits at its north end, is a pedestrian-only retail hub of downtown Burlington and home to its popular Church Street Marketplace.

Vermont’s most populous city at 45,000, Burlington is less than 100 kms from the Quebec border by car, and is in one of two states where French is the second most common language spoken after English, the other being Louisiana. So it has also offered Rue de Canada as the French-language name for the street. Back in 2011, Burlington’s city council also voted to

add French to its local signage

, though the move was a recommendation rather than a law.

The new resolution passed unanimously, although one councillor expressed frustration with “performative” actions and said she hopes there will be further actions taken to support tourism and local businesses. Burlington city council says that more than 15 per cent of its summer tourism dollars typically come from Canadian visitors. However, visits by Canadians to the U.S. have fallen off since Donald Trump’s tariff threats and talk of annexation.

In the 1960s, the city joined with Burlington, Ont., to found the

Burlington International Games

, which eventually expanded to include Burlington, Iowa, and some non-Burlington cities, before ceasing in 2010 due to limited participation.

The city says it will spend US$3,000 to change signage and hold celebratory events in honour of the designation.

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Regular season MVP and playoff star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is poised to become the greatest Canadian to play in the NBA.

Professional basketball’s often contentious greatest of all time debate will likely never be settled, but the conversation about the greatest Canadian to play in the NBA could very well be resolved as early as this week.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who this season joined two-time NBA regular season MVP winner Steve Nash of B.C. as the only Canadians to win the award, has dominated this year’s NBA Finals against the Indiana Pacers, a series that continues in a potentially decisive Game 6 tonight in Indianapolis.

Should the Thunder emerge victorious, or in a Game 7 on Saturday back in Oklahoma City, Gilgeous-Alexander is the odds-on favourite to be awarded the Bill Russell NBA Finals MVP Award.

Only a handful of players have won both MVP honours in a single season, all of them among

the game’s true greats

: Willis Reed, Kareem Abdul-Jabar, Moses Malone, Magic Johnson, Lebron James, who did it twice, and Michael Jordan, who was bestowed both honours on four occasions.

While Nash’s MVPs came in successive seasons (2004-2006) when he was key to the Phoenix Suns’ success, he never played in the Finals during his remarkable 18-season Hall of Fame career. (Although he would later become a de facto champion by way of consulting duties with the Golden State Warriors in 2017.)

In an interview with

The Ringer

earlier this year, Nash himself admitted that if Gilgeous-Alexander isn’t already, “he’ll be the best Canadian to ever play the game — and in short order.”

He’s done so by approaching the game — on and off the court — with composure and humility, while developing into a leader who recognizes his broader role for the young team and its fans. A case in point: he signed 429 autographs in the hours before Game 2, thinking he’d only signed a few dozen.

‘Greatest season for a Canadian’

Statistically, the 26-year-old from Hamilton, Ont., conclusively produced the single best regular season by a Canadian player this season. His 32.7 points per game average led the league and was supported by five rebounds, 6.4 assists and a field goal percentage of 51.9 per cent.

His true shooting percentage, a stat used to determine shot efficiency, was an incredible 63.7 per cent.

Only two other players in the NBA’s history have averaged similar figures: Jordan and 2017-18 MVP James Harden.

“Steve (Nash) would tell you this is the greatest season for a Canadian,” said Dwayne Washington, founder of UPLAY Canada, who coached a young Gilgeous-Alexander for several years before he left to finish high school playing against stiffer competition in Tennessee.

“So when the dust clears, people are only gonna look at statistics, and statistically it’s undeniable.”

Similarly, Gilgeous-Alexander, already the recipient of the Western Conference Final MVP award, has produced playoff numbers that put him in rare air.

He has scored 30-plus points in 15 games, tying him with Kobe Bryant for the most in a single postseason and one off the record held by Jordan and Hakeem Olajuwon. He also set an NBA record by scoring at least 30 points in 10 straight home games.

Three of those have come in the Finals, during which he is averaging 32.4 ppg and 2.4 steals, both of which rank among the top five in history, per

the league

. That includes a 35-point performance in Game 4 — highlighted by a 15-point run in the final 5 minutes to help the Thunder come from behind and tie the series up at two apiece — and a 31-point, 10-assist double-double in Game 5.

According to Sportsnet

, his 162 points through the first five games are the fourth most by any player.

He also joined an elite group last week when he became the 12th player with more than 3,000 total points in a single season (regular season and playoffs combined).

Another staggering number: the 429 autographs he signed before Game 2. He thought he’d only done 50 or 60.

Humble and hard-working

Like he was all season, Gilgeous-Alexander has continued to be humble about his success on the court, promoting selflessness and a team-first mentality in post-game interviews, often hailing his teammates’ contributions as being just as vital.

After Game 5, he heaped praise on forward Jalen Williams’ 40-point effort and said he was just “trying to affect winning.”

“Trying to make a basketball play. I was trying to help the team win, trying to be in position for the next rotation, next play defensively. Whatever comes with that, comes with that.”

Washington, whose program has provided coaching and mentorship to other Canadian NBA talent such as R.J. Barrett, Lindell Wigginton, and Shaedon Sharpe, told National Post he’s been impressed with how Gilgeous-Alexander is handling the defensive pressure, even likening it to what Jordan experienced in the playoffs.

“That is so hard to do. Some of the best athletes in the world are double- and triple-teaming you, and you’re still getting 30, 10 assists and winning with a team so young,” he explained. (The Thunder’s average age is just 25.6 years, making them

the youngest squad to play for a title

since the 1977 Portland Trailblazers.)

Washington offered more comparisons to Jordan, along with Bryant, in terms of Gilgeous-Alexander’s approach to the game off the court — “He’s out-studying, outmaneuvering, out-planning, and out-working people before they even step on the court,” he said — and a fall-away mid-range jump shot that both legends deployed with lethal efficiency throughout their careers.

He said the six-foot-six guard has been working on that shot for years, and it comes naturally to him. However, most NBA coaches preach against the generally low-percentage shot attempt despite it being a go-to for elite offensive players.

Washington said Gilgeous-Alexander has been told not to shoot it “most of his career,” but he’s continued to perfect it anyway.

“I know he’s been working on it, so it’s great to see it in real time,“ Washington said. “I’ll be honest with you, if he’d listen to other people telling him what not to do, he wouldn’t be there.”

Nash also offered a Jordan and Bryant comparison in an interview with the

Toronto Star

last month, saying Gilgeous-Alexander “does the same thing they do.”

“If you look at the numbers and you break it down, there’s a lot of things he does that are greater than everyone that’s even close to those type of players. So he’s ascending towards that category.”

He’ll look to continue that ascension when the NBA Finals resume tonight. Game time is 8:30 p.m. ET.

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Former justice minister Arif Virani argued that the shortage of judges was partly because the Liberals had created over 100 new judicial positions across the country.

CALGARY — The Federal Court overstepped its authority when it ordered the government to fill an “unacceptably high” number of judicial vacancies within a “reasonable time,” the Federal Court of Appeal ruled Wednesday.

In a

forceful rebuttal of the trial court ruling

published Wednesday, the appeal court issued a sharp reminder to both judges and government: stay in your lane.

“No one disputes the utmost importance of filling judicial vacancies to ensure a healthy judiciary, and relatedly, a healthy democracy,” wrote Justice Richard Boivin on behalf of the panel of three appeal judges.

“But it remains that the judicial branch of government, like the other two branches of government — the executive and the legislative — fortify themselves by acting properly within their legitimate spheres of competence,” he continued.

Boivin said the Federal Court “overstepped its jurisdictional bounds” when it ruled that the court could order the government to fill a high number of empty judge positions within a certain amount of time.

In his 2024 ruling lambasting the Liberal government, Federal Court Justice Henry S. Brown issued an unprecedented declaration that the prime minister and minister of justice must fill current and future vacancies within a “reasonable time.”

The lawsuit was filed by Ottawa-based human rights lawyers Yavar Hameed and Nicholas Pope who argued that the lingering judicial vacancies were impacting Canadians’ access to justice.

At the time, there were 75 judge positions waiting to be filled, an unusually high number. Brown said that the long delay was “failing” Canadians.

His ruling noted that nine months after the chief justice of Canada wrote the Liberal government denouncing the situation, nothing had changed.

“The situation as outlined by the Chief Justice of Canada and Canadian Judicial Council is clearly critical and untenable and thus most serious, and therefore in the Court’s view may not simply be ignored,” the judge wrote.

“Very unfortunately, the Court has no reason to expect the situation will change without judicial intervention,” he added, while declaring the government needed to reduce the vacancy rate to “mid-40s.”

But the Federal Court of Appeal ruled that Brown made multiple serious or “concerning” mistakes in coming to its conclusion, including accepting to hear the case at all.

Boivin also found that Brown misinterpreted many jurisprudential decisions in order to support his conclusion, going so far as saying cases the Federal Court relied upon were “inapplicable or uninstructive.”

The FCA further ruled that Brown disregarded binding precedent from the Supreme Court of Canada on the limits of the Federal Court’s jurisdiction.

Finally, the appeal court criticized Brown for determining that constitutional conventions (unwritten rules that are binding but not enforceable by the courts) were reviewable by the courts. In this case, the convention was that the governor general appoints judges on the recommendation of the prime minister and cabinet.

“Although courts can recognize constitutional conventions, they cannot enforce them,” Boivin wrote.

“In the present matter, the Federal Court nonetheless considered constitutional conventions in relation to judicial appointments as federal laws and further characterized them as ‘judge-made rules’,” he continued. “This is misconceived and contrary to the non-legal nature of constitutional conventions.”

The appeal court also noted its concern that Brown had created a new constitutional convention compelling the government to henceforth fill judicial vacancies “within a reasonable time.”

It concluded that Brown had bypassed test adopted by the Supreme Court in 1959 that set the conditions for establishing a new constitutional convention.

“The Federal Court could not sidestep the normative requirements… in declaring a new constitutional convention that judicial vacancies must be filled within a reasonable time,” he wrote.

Brown’s decision may have already had the desired effect despite being overturned Wednesday.

After his decision, the Liberals under Justin Trudeau significantly boosted their pace of appointments,

dropping vacancies from over 90 to 22

as of June 1.

Former justice minister Arif Virani frequently argued that the high number of vacancies was partly because the Liberals had created over 100 new judicial positions across the country since 2015.

“Appointing judges at an unprecedented rate is one of our accomplishments that I’m proudest of, & we will keep filling vacancies with high calibre, experienced jurists. Access to justice will always be a top priority,” Virani said on social media in February.

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

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An RCMP officer takes a photo of a Blackhawk helicopter taking off at the London International Airport on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025.

OTTAWA — Canada’s helicopter industry is charging the federal government with a “serious breach” in allowing the RCMP to patrol the Canada-U.S. border with antiquated military helicopters that don’t meet the government’s own safety regulations, National Post has learned.

The second-hand helicopters, purchased on the open market by private Canadian operators who were then hired by the RCMP, were granted highly unusual special exemptions by Transport Canada. But documents show that the industry is accusing the federal government of breaking its own rules by allowing used choppers that don’t meet Canadian safety standards and aren’t supposed to carry passengers or even fly over developed areas.

“It’s not even something that should be considered,” said Trevor Mitchell, chief executive of the Helicopter Association of Canada (HAC), about the government’s decision to provide the special exemptions. “Why do some have to follow the rules and some don’t?”

For at least the last three years, the RCMP has been relying on a small number of private contractors to help patrol the border in search of illegal migrants, drug smugglers and other illicit activities. Those contractors, including two based in Ontario, have been using up to four Black Hawk helicopters that were purchased on the second-hand market after the U.S. military decided to update much of its own fleet.

According to the government’s Canadian Civil Aircraft Register, the second-hand Sikorsky Black Hawk UH 60As are each at least 40 years old and were imported between 2022 and last year.

The special exemptions from Transport Canada, the industry says in a series of letters to senior government officials, allowed them to do non-military jobs in Canadian air space.

HAC also says that the twin-engine Black Hawks didn’t come with “type certificates,” which act like recipe books for new owners in that they provide details about the aircraft’s parts and how it should be maintained.

But in a March 20 letter to Transport Minister Chrystia Freeland, Mitchell said even the conditions attached to the exemptions — such as not being allowed to carry passengers or fly over developed areas — have not been followed. “We urge you to direct your department to ensure the safety restrictions attached to these aircraft are strictly enforced for the balance of the RCMP’s contract and that the Force be urged to select a certified aircraft before the contract expires.”

The contracts, worth an estimated $16 million so far, expire June 30, documents show.

The Canadian helicopter industry, which relies heavily on conforming to streams of rules and regulations as its safety pillars, is angry and confused over Transport’s decision, Mitchell said. “It’s the hottest topic in the industry.”

HAC has been trying to find out why these helicopters got the green light but the association said that it hasn’t been given a full explanation from Transport Canada, which granted the exemptions, or the RCMP, who hired the contractors, even though the federal police force has its own helicopters.

None of the government players involved in the Black Hawk contracts agreed to an interview to address the industry’s concerns, despite repeated requests.

A RCMP communications officer wouldn’t say over a period of almost a week when the federal police would be available to comment.

Two Transport Canada executives involved in the granting of the special exemptions referred National Post to communications staff.

A communications official then said that the transport department is “unable to accommodate your request and facilitate a direct conversation.”

But in an email, the official confirmed that four Black Hawks have been registered in Canada, placed on the Civil Aircraft Register and issued “special certificates of airworthiness.”

The aircraft, the email said, are being operated by legally-approved air operators.

Freeland also could not be reached for comment.

Denis Pilon, chief operating officer of Helicopter Transport Services, a Carp, Ont. company that bought two of the four Black Hawks and then leased the helicopters and crew to the RCMP, did not respond to voice mail messages. The government’s civil aircraft registry says a third chopper was imported by Expedition Helicopters Inc. of Cochrane, Ont. The industry association says the fourth was contracted by the Alberta government.

Despite its reluctance to discuss the matter, the federal government is well aware of the situation involving the Black Hawks and the industry’s concerns.

In the spring of 2024, following interactions with HAC, former Transport Minister Pablo Rodriguez directed his officials to pause the issuing of special exemptions for the Black Hawks. But in September of that year, Rodriguez resigned from the federal cabinet to run for leader of the Quebec Liberal party.

He was replaced at transport for about seven months by Anita Anand, now the foreign affairs minister. She was then replaced in the new year by Chrystia Freeland, after Mark Carney became prime minister. Neither Anand nor Freeland has clarified the government’s view of the situation or publicly commented on the special exemptions for the Black Hawks.

Although the Black Hawk contracts pre-date the re-election earlier this year of U.S. President Donald Trump, Canada’s enhanced border patrol is in sync with the White House’s escalation of concern about illegal migrants and illegal drugs entering the U.S. from Canada, Mexico and elsewhere.

But it’s not like there aren’t other — even domestic — options beyond Black Hawks.

Mitchell says Canada has about 200 companies that offer helicopter services and pilots to fly them. Their collective fleets comprise about 1,700 choppers, many of which might be better suited than Black Hawks for patrol duties because they’re smaller and equipped with infra-red cameras that allow them to work in the dark.

Governments in Canada, mostly large municipalities, also own about a dozen helicopters. The military and the RCMP also have their own fleets.

If the RCMP’s own helicopters weren’t enough, Mitchell said, it would have no problem finding private contractors to help them patrol.

John Arquilla, a long-time defence analyst based in Monterey, Calif., said Black Hawks are mostly used to transport soldiers and other personnel but are considered “utility” aircraft because of their flexibility. But Black Hawks aren’t ideal for patrolling borders, he said, because they’re expensive to operate, have limited range and can easily be heard as they approach.

Arquilla said the broader problem with using Black Hawks to patrol a massive area such as the Canada-U.S. border is that they would have little effect, particularly compared to a cheaper, more effective technology such as drones.

“I view the whole idea of patrolling borders with helicopters skeptically.”

Despite being unwilling to agree to an interview, the RCMP seems to acknowledge that critics of the Black Hawk contracts have valid points. In a Feb. 27 letter to HAC, Commissioner Mike Duheme wrote: “I acknowledge your concerns with respect to the Blackhawk helicopters and would like to inform you that the RCMP is working with Transport Canada to review the current restrictions from a law enforcement context.”

 An RCMP Black Hawk helicopter.

In that same letter, Duheme confirmed that the “Black Hawks in question became operational in mid-January and are conducting surveillance patrols along the border.” He also explains that the Black Hawks are being used to complement the RCMP’s existing fleet of nine helicopters, six of which provide border surveillance and support with cameras capable of thermal imaging, while one is capable of any necessary hoisting.

While the RCMP wouldn’t agree in recent days to an interview, the force was keen just a few months ago to publicize its new access to the Black Hawks and the enhanced capabilities that were to come with them.

In an interview conducted with a television network next to one of the Black Hawks, an RCMP official confirmed that the helicopters were leased with a crew and that the choppers were designed to boost capacity. “It’s really about the ability to move people quickly,” Mathieu Bertrand, the RCMP’s Director General of Federal Policing and Border Integrity, told the reporter. “Things happen quickly on the border.”

The issue of certifying the privately-owned Black Hawks has also been a topic of interest at Transport Canada for many months.

According to a June, 2024 internal departmental bulletin obtained by National Post, transport was to stop considering applications for “special certificates of airworthiness” that month. The document warns of increased interest among Canadian operators in using aircraft with the special certificates and that “this may represent a significant change in the risk environment.”

Transport Canada is responsible for the country’s transportation policies and programs. The department, known for its emphasis on safety of Canada’s road, rail, marine and aviation networks, says it promotes safe, secure, efficient and environmentally responsible transportation.

While the Black Hawk was designed for war more than border patrol, the one advantage it may have over other choppers in this regard, is that it’s large, well-known and American. Those could be important attributes, HAC’s Mitchell says, if Canada’s primary goal in the mission is to ensure that the United States saw its neighbour trying to step up its border patrolling efforts in a very visible way.

In a June 1 letter to the RCMP, Mitchell writes that the Black Hawks “offer no technological advantage to the mission profile, only an appearance.”

Helicopters are valued for their versatility and mobility. In Canada, they’re mostly used in search and rescue, fighting forest fires, helping combat floods, and commercial applications in remote areas such as mining and electrical lines.

But five-seat helicopters are typically used for patrol because they’re more nimble and cheaper to operate than a larger, 14-seater such as Sikorsky’s Black Hawk.

According to a February 10 letter by HAC to RCMP Commissioner Duheme, the choppers have not been approved by Canadian or American authorities for civilian purposes.

The RCMP’s Black Hawk contracts overlap with Carney’s vow to increase Canada’s military spending so that it reaches the NATO target of 2 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). Carney has also vowed to do more to support Canadian business and to rely less on the U.S.

Industry sources say the older Black Hawks were selling in recent months for about $1 million each, as the market became flooded with supply. The market for used helicopters has grown in recent years as the U.S. military has modernized its fleet, including the purchase of a newer model of Black Hawks, called the UH-60M.

That has punted a number of older, but still functional Black Hawks to the second-hand market.

 An RCMP Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter lands at the Canada Border Services Agency port of entry in Lansdowne, Ont., on Feb. 12, 2025.

Prices of new and used aircraft vary widely, depending on a range of factors. But a new five-seat helicopter, including those made in Canada, sells for about $6.5 million, while a new 14-seater, similar in size to the Black Hawks, goes for about $12 million.

But the helicopter association says the special exemptions from the usual rules are not fair to Canadian helicopter makers, nor to those Canadian companies that offer helicopter services using certified choppers.

Bell Textron, a subsidiary of Fort Worth, Tex.-based Textron, makes commercial helicopters at its Mirabel, Que. facilities.  Its lineup of models includes the Bell 412, which could be used for border patrol.

Airbus Helicopters Canada, formerly MBB Helicopter Canada, has a 300-employee site at Fort Erie, Ont. That location focuses largely on sales, repair, engineering and composite manufacturing.

The Black Hawk, made by Sikorsky Aircraft, is a four-blade, twin-engine, medium-lift chopper in the “military utility” product niche. Stratford, Conn.-based Sikorsky was founded by the

Russian-American

aviation pioneer

Igor Sikorsky

in 1923 and was among the first companies to manufacture

helicopters

for civilian and military use. The Black Hawk was first conceived in 1972 when its design was submitted for a U.S. Army competition.

Carney, meanwhile, issued a statement earlier this month saying that Canada plans to boost its defence spending by $9.3 billion to $54.3 billion. The money will be used on a range of items, including submarines, ships, armoured vehicles and aircraft, as well as new drones and sensors for monitoring the Arctic and seafloor.

In the government’s latest signal that it intends to create some distance from the U.S. since Trump imposed a wide range of debilitating tariffs on Canadian exports, Carney said Canada wants to reduce how much of its defence budget goes to purchases of American equipment. The prime minister has said that about 75 per cent of Canada’s capital spending on defence heads to the U.S.

In March, Carney ordered a review of the plan to order 88 fifth-generation F-35 fighter jets to determine whether those aircraft represent the best investment. While Canada is legally obliged to purchase the first 16 of those jets, Auditor General Karen Hogan said this week in a report that it’s unlikely that the order will be delivered on time or on budget.

National Post

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Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall at Council of the Federation meetings in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont., on Friday.

OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe agree that Moe’s predecessor Brad Wall is the right man to repair Canada-India relations, amidst news that Canada will soon be sending a new high commissioner to New Delhi.

“I’d be supportive of that,” said Smith when asked on Wednesday about the prospect of Wall becoming Canada’s next high commissioner to India.

“I think that Saskatchewan has done incredibly impressive work on expanding its footprint internationally through its trade offices, in particular India,” she added.

Moe was quick to echo Smith’s sentiments, hinting that Wall could possibly aim even higher than being Canada’s envoy to the emerging Asian superpower.

“I would also be a proponent for (Wall) to be not only high commissioner to India but essentially the face and the voice for many of Canada’s foreign relations,” said Moe.

“We’ll see what his answer is to that,” Moe joked.

The two Prairie premiers were speaking at a press conference in Lloydminister, Sask., after a joint caucus meeting.

Moe praised Wall for building inroads to India and other emerging markets during his tenure as Saskatchewan’s premier, between 2007 and 2018.

“Why I would be a proponent of (Wall’s) to be high commissioner to India is because of the effort and focus that he provided … to those province to nation relations, and province to industry relations in not just India but in many countries around the world,” said Moe.

Moe also commended Prime Minister Mark Carney for taking steps to mend Canada’s strained bilateral relationship with India.

Wall became the province’s

first premier to visit India

in 2011 and led

a second trade mission

in 2014.

Saskatchewan’s exports to India were

valued at $1.3 billion

in 2023, a 52 per cent jump from the midpoint of Wall’s tenure in 2013.

The province now produces more than a quarter of Canada’s total exports to India, while being home to just three per cent of the country’s population.

It is the top supplier globally of lentils and potash to India.

Carney and Indian counterpart Narendra Modi jointly announced at

this week’s G7 summit

in Kananaskis, Alta., that they’d be designating new high commissioners for the first time since 2023, when the

murder of Canadian Sikh leader

Hardeep Singh Nijjar caused a rupture in bilateral relations.

India’s current Ambassador to Spain Dinesh K. Patnaik has already been tapped as the next high commissioner to Canada,

according to local reporting

.

Reports from India indicate that Carney

could reveal his pick

for high commissioner to India as soon as next month.

Wall, 59, was critical of Carney predecessor Justin Trudeau’s approach to managing Canada-India relations, notably panning Trudeau’s

controversial 2018 India trip

.

“Here’s hoping that the federal mission does no further harm,” Wall said in a tongue-in-cheek

2018 social media post

, which included screenshots of scathing international headlines documenting the visit.

Wall didn’t respond on Wednesday evening when asked about his interest in the high commissioner post.

He would join a number of ex-premiers who made the jump to key diplomatic posts, including ex-U.S. ambassador Gary Doer (Manitoba) and former high commissioner to the U.K. Gordon Campbell (British Columbia).

National Post

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