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The C.T.M.A. Voyageur 2 arrives at the port of Montreal on Thursday October 16, 2025.

OTTAWA — If the road to Canadian prosperity is to now be built on growing exports to markets other than the United States, as Prime Minister Mark Carney has vowed, a major new pothole may need attention.

There was already the existing challenge that diversifying exports is inherently difficult to do. Buyers in any region of the world already have existing suppliers for most of the goods they need, and those vendors have been chosen for good reasons: price, quality, transportation networks, trust, language, and, as in the case of Canada and the U.S., geographical proximity.

But a recent announcement from one of Canada’s most successful natural resources exporters, saying that future exports will soon be shipped to overseas markets from a port in the state of Washington instead of Canada’s west coast, has raised fresh questions about whether some key Canadian ports even have the capacity to handle any more of those diversified goods. Any bottlenecks or other inefficiencies would only be magnified if exporters are able to hit Carney’s recent target that Canada will double non-U.S. exports over the next decade.

Trade with the U.S., Canada’s only next-door neighbour, is done almost exclusively via road, rail and pipeline. Trade with everybody else is mostly through air and sea. Industry and government sources warn that some key Canadian ports are already at or close to maximum capacity, and emphasize that the timelines for port upgrades – like most infrastructure projects – are measured in years or decades, not months.

“The future is east-west,” said Julien Baudry, the chief of staff at the Port of Montreal.

Dennis Darby, the chief executive officer of Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters, Canada’s largest trade and industry association, said inefficiencies at ports and other transportation infrastructure are serious because they mean lost business and jobs. Some Canadian ports and their customers have also faced challenges because of labour disruptions and capacity problems with some connected infrastructure, such as single-track railway lines, that can cause slowdowns.

“There’s not a lot of slack,” Darby said. “We don’t have the capacity we thought we have.”

According to a Scotiabank report published in June, every 10 per cent increase in the share of overall Canadian trade headed anywhere other than the U.S. would increase pressure on ports by 4 per cent and air infrastructure by 2 per cent.

Daniel-Robert Gooch, chief executive officer of the Association of Canadian Port Authorities, said an increase of just 5 or 6 per cent in shipped exports would be a problem for a number of Canadian ports.

The association of port authorities said that redirecting trade flows away from the U.S. will require reshaping Canadian trade networks.

Half of all trade that is redirected from the U.S. to another foreign market, would leave Canada through its ports, the association’s analysis has found, while about 30 per cent would travel through airports.

In a recent needs assessment study, the ports association said that its 17 members will need up to $21.5 billion in infrastructure upgrades over the next 15 years, with nearly 75 per cent of that spending allocated to expansion.

“Canada’s economic future depends on trade diversification, which in turn requires modern, efficient, and well-funded port infrastructure,” the assessment said.

The study, which also concluded that Canadian ports would benefit from less red tape and a greater ability to borrow money, was released in February to minimal fanfare. But within weeks, as U.S. President Donald Trump increasingly wrapped his country in a protectionist blanket, Canadians were getting a better grasp on the Trump tariffs and what it would mean for exports, and the need for improved infrastructure.

The Carney plan

Canadian exporters, who last year sent 76 per cent of their goods to the lucrative U.S. market, could no longer rely on a trade-friendly border. What has historically been the Canadian economy’s strength, the integration of the North American economy, had almost overnight become its vulnerability. That led Carney and the Liberal government to try to move from “reliance to resilience,” with a detailed plan to diversify trade away from the U.S.

As government officials pursued a renewed deal with the Americans, Carney travelled to Europe, Asia and the Mideast searching for new or improved trade deals. Ottawa also started efforts to repair troubled relationships with India and China, the world’s two most populous countries.

“Our economic strategy needs to change dramatically,” Carney said during a pre-budget speech at the University of Ottawa. “Our relationship with the United States will never be the same as it was.”

The government also invested in sectors that are export successes, provided supports for those hit hardest by the Trump tariffs and laid out plans to invest heavily in infrastructure, including ports.

But then just a couple of weeks ago, Nutrien Ltd., the world’s leading producer of potash, said it planned to invest $1 billion in a new export terminal in Longview, Wash., about 430 kilometres south of Vancouver.

The decision moved through Canadian resources and government circles like a speeding cargo train, quickly becoming a flashpoint for concerns about the capacity and efficiency of Canadian ports — or at least the port of Vancouver and others on the west coast.

Nutrien met last week in Ottawa with federal officials as the government tried to find a way to keep the Saskatoon-based company using and supporting Canadian ports. A final decision may not be made until 2027.

Officials from the Vancouver port, the federal government and Nutrien would not comment on the meeting in Ottawa or the company’s export plans.

Tim Sargent, the head of domestic policy at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute think tank and a former deputy minister of international trade, said the government’s challenge is that Canadian ports on the west coast are often facing the most acute capacity challenges. There are also sometimes hurdles, depending on the export and the mode of transport, in dealing with labour, the environment and a lack of rail options.

Stuck in port

But it’s not like this issue has snuck up on anybody.

In 2016, Transport Canada published a major review of infrastructure, entitled Pathways: Connecting Canada’s Transportation System to the World, that called for the federal government to take a leadership role in prioritizing trade infrastructure and developing a plan that identifies gaps and where investments are most needed. The report, conducted by a panel led by former cabinet minister David Emerson, also raised the issue of whether ports should be given more latitude to raise money, particularly private capital, not just government funds.

That led to the National Trade Corridors Fund in the 2016 budget, a pool of $3.4 billion over five years for ports and other infrastructure. Requests for support were brisk, so another $2 billion was added in 2017.

But Canada has many ports, adjacent port facilities and other infrastructure needs. And the U.S., meanwhile, a clear competitor in the ports business, invested heavily in its facilities, particularly along the east coast.

Some Canadian ports have been losing business in recent years to their American counterparts, said one Ottawa source who has worked on transportation policy in and out of government for many years. As Americans invested and cut red tape, Canada focused mostly in recent years on ensuring that north-south trade was running smoothly, the source said, particularly after Joe Biden replaced Trump in the White House in 2021.

The lack of attention over the years has had an effect.

A 2023 World Bank report ranking placed four key Canadian ports — Victoria (335), Montreal (348), Vancouver (356) and Prince Rupert (399) — in the bottom 70 out of 405 ports around the world in assessing port performance based on how long vessels spent in port. From a Canadian competitiveness perspective, the silver lining in the report, The Container Port Performance Index 2023, was that key American ports — Seattle (360), Long Beach (373), Los Angeles (375), and Tacoma (401) — also fared poorly.

“It was addressed,” the source said of Ottawa’s interest in port infrastructure during the Biden years, “but we didn’t take it overly seriously.”

But Ottawa says it couldn’t be more aware of the new path’s challenges.

Carney has emphasized the need for upgrading infrastructure at ports and elsewhere, setting up a major projects office to speed up approvals. Last month’s budget included a $6 billion fund to support ports and other trade and transportation infrastructure over the next seven years.

Gooch, from the port association, said he has noticed a renewed interest in improving Canadian ports. “We’re seeing there’s movement on it.”

Despite numerous requests for an interview, Transport Canada officials would only offer prepared statements.

Port officials emphasize that each of Canada’s commercial ports, including the 17 core ports that are managed by port authorities, has its own needs and capacity story.

Baudry from the port of Montreal said that facility is at 72 per cent of container capacity, so there’s room for more traffic. But if just 6 per cent of Canadian exports that now go to the U.S. via mostly road and rail were redirected to overseas markets, he said, the Montreal port would be at full capacity.

The port’s Contrecœur expansion, a project that will cost at least $1.6 billion, is slated for completion by 2030. It is expected to increase the port’s capacity by about 60 per cent.

“Now that everybody wants to diversify, the project becomes urgent,” said Baudry.

The historic Port of Saint John is another facility with room to grow. The New Brunswick facility has two rail lines and has already expanded its capacity, by more than five times over the last decades.

Craig Bell Estabrooks, the chief executive at the port, said officials are optimistic that business will be heading in the right direction in the coming years.

But in the big picture, given Canada’s new goal for boosting exports, there’s little doubt that there’s plenty of work to be done at Canada’s ports.

And with the future of North American free trade very much in doubt, the need to diversify Canadian trade, and rely on export infrastructure, may well continue to rise.

As Carney and other government officials sprint around the globe in search of new, non-U.S. markets, analysts say, the question is whether Canadian ports and other key export infrastructure will be able to keep pace.

National Post

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Markham-Unionville MP Michael Ma speaks briefly at the Liberal Party caucus Christmas party hours after crossing the floor from the Conservatives to the Liberals, in Ottawa, on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025.

The surprise defection of former Conservative MP Michael Ma to the Liberals has prompted allegations of an overly close orientation to Chinese-government views, as well as protests outside his office and a petition urging him to resign.

A small group of demonstrators marched back and forth outside of Ma’s office in Markham, north of Toronto, on Sunday carrying signs that accused him of being a traitor to the voters who elected him and a “puppet” of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Questions raised about his approach to China include an endorsement of his candidacy in April’s federal election by a pro-Beijing community leader. Critics also raise his previous, senior position with the Hong Kong hospital authority, and his appearance in August at a dinner celebrating the Chinese Freemasons Society, a group accused of being a

proxy of sorts

for the Chinese government.

Two of the speakers at that event, including China’s vice-consul in Toronto, used the forum to promote the idea of what Beijing calls “reunification” of mainland China and Taiwan. Annexing Taiwan is a major goal of Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has not ruled out using military force to achieve it. The overwhelming majority of people reject the notion in Taiwan, a democratic, self-governed enclave that has never been part of communist China.

At the event, Ma simply brought greetings from Parliament and praised the Freemasons group, known as Hongmen in Chinese, but said nothing to indicate he supports unifying Taiwan and the mainland.

Still, Gloria Fung, a prominent critic of the Chinese government, said there was enough worrisome about Ma’s record regarding Beijing that she warned a Conservative organizer to carefully vet him as a candidate early this year.

“For him to be the CIO of the (Hong Kong) Hospital Authority, it really shows his alignment with the Chinese government policy toward Hong Kong,” charged Fung, president of the group Canada-Hong Kong Link. Ma became an executive after the Chinese communist government took control of Hong Kong institutions, and Fung argues that high-ranking officials were then expected to be loyal to the government.

Joe Tay, the former Conservative candidate who’s wanted by Hong Kong authorities for his criticism of communist rule, said Ma should at least resign if he’s unhappy with the Conservatives, and run again to let the riding’s voters decide if they want him as their Liberal MP.

Tay said he and his wife met with Ma and his wife before the federal election. Tay said Ma “casually mentioned” that he had done IT work for China’s Belt and Road Initiative, a major tool to extend the country’s global influence. The National Post could not confirm Tay’s account.

“When you connect all these dots together, people have these kinds of worries,” Tay said.

At a news conference for Chinese-language reporters in March, Ma was accompanied by Ben Leung, whose Canada Hong  Kong Alliance has often sided with the Chinese government, including by voicing support for Hong Kong’s national security law. The NSL has been widely condemned in the West as a means of suppressing freedom and dissent in the enclave.

But Cheuk Kwan, another stiff critic of the Chinese government, downplayed Ma’s interactions with pro-Beijing figures, saying he simply did what most politicians tend to do in ridings with a large percentage of immigrants from mainland China.

“I think him being in these dinners and perhaps even meeting with the (Chinese vice) consulate general is par for the course,” said the co-chair of the Toronto Association for Democracy in China

Neither Ma nor the Liberal party responded to requests for comment by deadline.

In a statement after he announced his decision to switch parties last week, the MP said he had listened carefully to constituents and decided that he should reject opposing the government and support what he called Prime Minister Mark Carney’s “steady, practical approach.”

Ma’s decision to cross the floor to the Liberals had has moved Carney’s government to within one seat of a majority in the House of Commons, which could have national implications.

But there seemed to be almost as much upheaval at the level of Ma’s suburban riding, where Chinese-Canadians make up

about 65 per cent

of the population, and where a drama around Tay and alleged China interference played out recently.

In the cramped corridor outside his constituency office in Markham on Sunday,

demonstrators marched

with signs that urged Ma to step down, said he had “betrayed the voters of Markham-Unionville,” and accused him of being a Beijing “puppet.” Some of the placards were left attached to his office door.

A

petition on Change.org targeted at voters in the riding

urged Ma to quit, and called for legislation that would require a byelection whenever an MP wants to change parties. It had gathered 37,000 signatures by Monday afternoon, although it was unclear how many of the signatories were residents of Ma’s Markham—Unionville constituency.

Ma was originally supposed to run in the Toronto riding of Don Valley North, but the Conservative party switched him to Markham—Unionville and replaced him in Don Valley North with Tay.

 Former Conservative Party candidate Joe Tay: “When you connect all these dots together, people have these kinds of worries.”

Tay, a Hong Kong native and Canadian citizen, faces national-security charges in Hong Kong and a $180,000 bounty over his internet channel, which was critical of the region’s administration by Beijing. The Liberal incumbent in Markham—Unionville withdrew in the early weeks of this year’s federal election under pressure after encouraging people to

turn Tay into the Chinese

consulate and collect the bounty. The Liberals’ second candidate, Peter Yuen, was then criticized for ties to groups aligned with Beijing, including attending events with the Chinese Freemasons.

Ma immigrated from Hong Kong himself at age 12, before tragedy struck and his father was killed by a motorist while crossing a street in Vancouver, leaving his mother to raise seven children, according to his former campaign website. He obtained computer-science and MBA degrees and held various computer-related executive roles at the Royal Bank and TD, Sun Life, Ontario’s Workplace Safety and Insurance Board and, most recently, LifeLabs.

He served in the early 2010s as CIO of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority, which he described as a “non-civil service” job.

Fung said the CCP by then had started to tighten its grip on the city’s administration and legal system. Lawyers, for instance, were required to sign a pledge of allegiance to the Communist Party in 2012.

A few months after being elected, Ma attended the Chinese Freemasons event in Toronto. An official with the group said it opposed foreign forces interfering in China’s internal affairs and “fully supports” the “unity of the country,” alluding to Taiwan, according to Chinese-language CCNews. Chinese vice-consul Cheng Hongbo in turn praised the Freemasons for their “unremitting efforts” in the cause of China-Taiwan “complete reunification.” The group has also sided with Beijing on other political issues, such as opposing the 2019 protests against a law that would allow extradition of people from Hong Kong to mainland China.

But Kwan said, unlike some other organizations that have more aggressively backed Beijing’s agenda in Canada, the Freemasons are a relatively “low-level” group. Hongmen once supported Sun Yat Sen in his fight to topple China’s last, Qing dynasty, then the Kuomintang who fought the Communists in the Chinese civil war. More recently, he charged, they have come under the sway of Beijing’s current rulers.

National Post

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The Law Courts building, which is home to the B.C. Court of Appeal, in Vancouver.

The B.C. Court of Appeal has granted interim release to a medical aesthetics spa owner convicted of seven counts of sexual assault, pending the hearing of his appeal.

Justice Susan Griffin heard the bail application from the convicted man requesting that he be released under 24-hour house arrest with electronic monitoring. In

her Nov. 28 decision

, she noted that Farshad Khojsteh Kashani complied with bail conditions prior to trial, as well as the Crown’s agreement that he does not pose a current safety risk to the public. Further, she was satisfied he would not flee, despite ties to Iran.

Kashani, 51, was born in Iran. He studied medicine in Iran and worked as a general practitioner there for about four years, according to the court decision. Then, around age 37, in 2011, he came to Canada with his wife and became a Canadian citizen in 2017.

He failed to meet the English language proficiency required to practice medicine in B.C., and instead trained in aesthetics procedures and opened a medical aesthetics spa, which he operated between 2017 and 2022.

However, in May 2019, one of his clients reported to the police that he had sexually assaulted her during a procedure. Two years later, another client made a similar report. Following a news release issued by the police and subsequent media coverage, five other complainants came forward with similar allegations. Kashani was subsequently charged with seven counts of sexual assault.

In April 2025, he was found guilty of all seven counts of sexual assault and

sentenced to 11 years

imprisonment.

“The offences were highly invasive,” wrote Justice Griffin in her decision. “In some cases, the offences involved: vaginal penetration using a medical instrument, which the appellant thrusted aggressively to varying degrees; digital penetration; touching of the vulva and/or clitoral area; and the infliction of physical pain.”

Further she wrote: “There were hallmarks of planning, as four of the complainants went to the clinic initially for other treatments and the appellant encouraged them towards this procedure.”

It should be noted that a publication ban has been imposed by the court restricting the publication of any evidence that would identify a complainant or witness.

Justice Griffin noted that the sentencing judge said Kashani had no prior criminal record, had generally led a productive life, and was at a low risk of reoffending. “However, given the gravity of the offences, the sentencing judge found that the objectives of denunciation and deterrence were paramount and necessitated a substantial penitentiary term.”

Turning to the bail application, Griffin focused on submissions from Kashani and his wife that “they are both prepared to surrender all passports, Canadian and Iranian, and expired passports. The appellant’s wife says that while one can apply online for an Iranian passport, an original birth certificate is necessary to complete the process. The appellant is also willing to surrender his birth certificate.”

Kashani also proposed bail terms aimed at mitigating concern that he might flee, including 24‑hour house arrest and submission to electronic monitoring. As further reassurance, Justice Griffin noted that Kashani’s wife submitted that she is willing to act as surety, provide a cash deposit of $150,000, and also provide the security of their condominium residence located in Coquitlam.

“Weighing all of this, I am satisfied that the risk of the appellant fleeing the jurisdiction can be mitigated by the additional measures proposed by the appellant. I am satisfied that he has established that he will surrender himself (for the appeal hearing) … I am not persuaded that detention is in the public interest.”

Finally, she ordered Kashani to surrender himself in mid-April or on the date when the appeal is finally set down to be heard.

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A couple killed in the Bondi Beach shooting tried to stop one of the alleged attackers by grabbing his gun, dramatic dashcam footage shows. (R) Boris Gurman, 69, and his wife (L) Sofia, 61, courageously stepped in to try and protect others before being shot themselves, their family said in a statement. Credit: Gurman family

A Jewish couple in their 60s tried to stop one of the alleged Bondi Beach attackers by grabbing his gun, dramatic dashcam footage shows.

Boris Gurman, 69, and his wife Sofia, 61, Bondi residents, were set to celebrate their 35th wedding anniversary in January, but on Sunday they were killed after they tried to stop one of the suspected gunmen, reports the

New York Times.

The Gurmans were on a road near Bondi Beach, when one of the suspects emerged from a car that had an Islamic State flag over the windshield, according to

The Sydney Morning Herald

and

News.com.au

. It was parked near a footbridge leading to the beach.

The couple confronted the suspect.

The video shows Boris wrestling with one of the gunmen and taking the weapon from him, before the two men fell onto a nearby road, reports the

BBC

. He then got up and hit the attacker with the gun. However, the attacker is then thought to have used another gun to kill Boris and Sofia.

The unidentified woman who provided the dashcam footage told

Reuters

that Boris Gurman “did not run away. Instead, he charged straight toward the danger, using all his strength trying to wrestle away the gun and fighting to the death.”

According to a fundraising page set up on

GoFundMe

for their son, Alex Gurman, almost $185,000 Australian dollars, or approximately C$170,000, had been raised as of midday Tuesday.

The Gurmans were the first two people killed in Sunday’s attack. At least 15 people have been confirmed dead from the mass shooting that unfolded during an event to mark the first day of Hanukkah.

Boris was a retired mechanic. Sofia worked at Australia Post. Both were loved by the community, reports the BBC.

Police have described the attack as a terrorist incident targeting the Jewish community. Many children and families from the Jewish community had gathered at Bondi Beach for

Chanukah by the Sea

, an event marking the first day of Hanukkah.

The other victims killed include a 10-year-old girl, a British-born rabbi, a retired police officer, and a Holocaust survivor, with ages ranging from 10 to 87. There are 22 other people in hospital, nine in critical condition.

On Monday, another bystander, Syrian-born Australian shopkeeper, Ahmed al Ahmed, was also hailed as a hero after he wrestled away a gun from one of the attackers. He was shot in the arm several times and is in hospital undergoing surgery to remove the bullets.

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.


Julie Dabrusin, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, at the National Press Theatre in Ottawa on Thursday, June 12, 2025.

OTTAWA — The federal government will implement stricter methane regulations on both the oil and gas and landfill sectors in an initial batch of more severe environmental policies to be implemented by the Carney government.
 

The stricter regulations will be phased in beginning in 2028 and will provide onshore oil and gas producers and transformers with two options to reduce methane emissions, according to a draft press release provided to National Post.

The first will be to prohibit the practice of burning off excess natural gas (called “venting”) and require companies to set an inspection schedule to find and repair leaks, a key source of methane emissions.
 

The second option offers much more latitude to industry by allowing operators to “design their own approaches to controlling methane” on the condition that facilities meet emission thresholds “that are on par with standards from leading international voluntary certification programs.”
But industry has argued in the past that these alternative approaches don’t yet exist.

Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin is expected to announce details of the changes in Vancouver late Tuesday afternoon.

The changes to existing methane regulations, first reported by CBC News, are the first stricter environmental measures implemented by Prime Minister Mark Carney since taking the reins of government in March.

His government has undone many such policies implemented by his predecessor Justin Trudeau, including eliminating the consumer carbon tax, largely neutering the industrial emissions cap and signing an agreement with the Alberta government that paves the way for new pipeline development.

The changes are likely to frustrate large oil and gas companies, which have argued that they agree with Canada’s commitment to reduce methane emissions by 75 per cent of 2012 levels but want to draw their own path to get there.

The government press release also says the new regulations aim to clamp down on methane released from landfills, which accounted for 17 per cent of such emissions in Canada in 2023.

Owners and operators of regulated landfills will be required to monitor the landfill surface, landfill gas recovery wells, and equipment used to control landfill methane emissions

,” reads the statement.

In its press release, the government says the new regulations will reduce methane emissions “significantly,” including as a byproduct of increasing oil and gas production.
 

The press release estimates the measures will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by a cumulative 304 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent by 2040.
 

But it also admits that it will slightly slow the projected growth of Canada’s oil and gas production in B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan, as well as the country’s GDP.
 

According to the government’s estimates, production will be roughly 0.2 per cent, or roughly 500 petajoules
,
lower over the next 10 years under the new regulations when compared to the current estimates. It will also impact GDP by 0.01 per cent by 2035.
 

“The Enhanced Methane Regulations will help ensure that our oil and gas sector remains competitive by preparing it for a future where markets are shifting toward lower-emission sources,” reads the draft press release.
 

The government says the measures are expected to cost the oil and gas industry $48 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent reduced, arguing that its “one of the lowest cost opportunities to drive significant progress on our climate goals.” It also argues that the costs will not be passed down to consumers.

But industry is likely to disagree with that figure, as Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) and the oil and gas sector are rarely on the same page when it comes to the cost of complying with environmental measures.

More to come

.

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

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Laith Marouf in 2010

The Liberal government concealed a deal with alleged “raging antisemite” Laith Marouf, two Conservative MPs say after they learned about it through a written inquiry.

Marouf received $122,661 as part of a Canadian Heritage program to deliver anti-racism lectures. According to Community Media Advocacy Centre (CMAC), where Marouf was a senior consultant who led seminars, three consultative events by the centre took place in Montreal, Vancouver and Halifax in 2022.

“While receiving this significant amount from taxpayers, Marouf published vile

antisemitic statements

, including calling Jewish people ‘loud-mouthed bags of human feces,’ and even fantasized about shooting Jewish people,” said Ontario MP Melissa Lantsman and Alberta MP Rachael Thomas in a joint statement. The alleged “vile antisemitic statements” were reportedly published on Marouf’s X account. Although his X account was private, the Canadian Press reported, screenshots of the posts were shared online in August 2022. They were not independently verified but showed Marouf’s name and photo.

At a February 2023

Heritage meeting

, Mala Khanna, who was then associate deputy minister at the Department of Canadian Heritage, acknowledged she had received an email with one of the “offensive” tweets.

Marouf allegedly referred to an

Indigenous person as a “house slave

” in a post on X in 2021, as

cited by MP Anthony Housefather at a Heritage meeting

in February 2023. Marouf also allegedly called French-speaking

people from Quebec “frogs”

on social media,

CBC reported

.

Marouf did not return National Post’s request for comment. Lawyer Stephen Ellis, who acted for Marouf in 2022,

told Canadian Press

in an email at the time that Marouf does not harbour “any animus toward the Jewish faith as a collective group.” Ellis also said that Marouf’s tweets should be quoted “verbatim.” He also said to distinguish between Marouf’s “clear reference to ‘Jewish white supremacists,’” and Jews or Jewish people in general, according to Canadian Press.

In January 2020, CMAC applied to Canadian Heritage for funding under the Anti-Racism Action Program. It was approved in the amount of roughly $133,000 in July 2021. However, support and funding was suspended after Heritage officials said they learned of allegations against Marouf in August 2022.

At the February 2023

Heritage meeting

, it was revealed that $122,661 of the $133,000 that was given to Marouf had not been repaid. Khanna faced criticism at the meeting over the department’s vetting process which had led to the hiring of Marouf.

“Granting Marouf this money was a massive failure by the Liberals, and recovering the funds was the very least they could do to address the harm done to the Jewish community from this blatant misuse of taxpayer dollars,” said the statement by Lantsman and Thomas.

“But now, through a written inquiry from Conservatives, we have learned that the Liberal government secretly struck a deal with Marouf and are refusing to make the details public. The Liberals failed to deliver on their promise and are trying to hide it from Canadians.”

Thomas submitted

a written inquiry about the Heritage grants on Oct. 22

. She asked how much of the amount received by Marouf had been repaid to the department and when.

The government

responded on Dec. 8

, saying that a “settlement agreement was reached in March 2025 with the Community Media Advocacy Center. The agreement contains a confidentiality clause that prevents disclosure of the details.”

The office of Prime Minister Mark Carney and Marc Miller, the Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture, did not respond to National Post’s request for comment.

“At a time when antisemitism is rising across Canada, the government’s secrecy only deepens the hurt felt by the Jewish community and further erodes public trust,” the joint statement by Lanstman and Thomas said. They called on the Liberals to “release the full details of this settlement and explain why they are protecting Laith Marouf.”

Marouf was briefly detained in Lebanon by its Military Intelligence Directorate in July due to “failing to present proper media credentials,” his colleagues said,

National Post reported

. After the October 7 attacks,

he created his own anti-Israel media outlet

, Free Palestine Television.

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Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference Aug. 12, 2025, in Tampa, Fla.

Florida’s governor Ron DeSantis has clapped back at remarks by Ontario Premier Doug Ford regarding a boycott of travel there by Canadians, suggesting it’s not hurting his state as much as the premier says it is.

Ford’s comments came Monday at a press conference after a reporter remarked on cross-border tourism having “dried up,” and asked the premier if he planned to go to Florida this year.

Ford said he would not. “It’s going to be the first time I’m not going to Florida.”

He added: “That’s my personal choice. Maybe some families have gone to Florida their whole lives? Go to Florida. You know, that’s great. But I encourage you to stay here and support local tourism.”

Ford noted that some people may be travelling to Florida or elsewhere in America to visit family, and said that was OK.

“But they’re hurting down there right now,” he continued. “They’re hurting on all fronts. They’re hurting on their economy … So it’s taking effect.”

He added: “We’ll keep fighting, and I’ll never apologize to that guy (Donald Trump) ever, ever. Keep giving it to him.” The answer drew a round of applause from those in attendance.

DeSantis’s response

on the X social media platform was to post a portion of an August press release from his office with the headline: “Florida Breaks Its Own Record Again: 34.4 Million Visitors in Second Quarter of 2025.”

The release

noted: “This all-time high for second-quarter visitation further cements Florida’s reputation as the nation’s premier travel destination. These results are proof of Florida’s enduring draw and the state’s commitment to delivering outstanding experiences for visitors from across the country and around the world.”

DeSantis topped his post with the comment: “Actually we continue to break tourism records (and win Stanley Cups).” Last March, DeSantis had suggested that Canadians were

still flocking to Florida

, “maybe … to get a glimpse of what a Stanley Cup winning hockey team actually looks like.”

The Florida Panthers won their first-ever Cup victory in 2024 against the Edmonton Oilers, a feat they duplicated this year.

Data from the tourism website

visitflorida.org

confirms that state tourism was up 0.5 per cent in the second quarter, but that was mostly driven by a surge in overseas visitors. Canada’s 640,000 visitors represented a drop of 20 per cent from the previous second quarter. Canadian visits also fell 16.9 per cent in the first quarter.

The bulk of Florida’s visitors — 69 million of the 75 million total for the half of the year — come from within the United States.

Meanwhile, a

new report this month

from the U.S. Senate Democrats’ Joint Economic Committee found that declining Canadian tourism is adversely affecting American businesses in every state along the U.S.-Canada border.

It noted a decline in passenger vehicles crossing to the U.S. from January to October 2025 of nearly 20 per cent compared to the same period in 2024. That coincides with American businesses in states along the border reporting fewer tourists, more hotel vacancies and lower sales.

Florida tourism numbers from the third quarter are not yet available on the visitflorida site. National Post has reached out for more information.

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The Bondi Beach shooters were identified as Sajid Akram, 50, and his 24-year-old son, Naveed Akram.

The massacre unfolded over roughly nine or 10 minutes.

It began as the sun was setting over a grassy park at the northern end of Australia’s iconic Bondi Beach, where hundreds had come together Sunday evening for the annual Chanukah by the Sea to mark the start of Hanukkah, the eight-day Festival of Lights. Families with children, young couples and elderly grandparents from Sydney’s Jewish community, all gathered for what was meant to be a night of peace and celebration.

The park has picnic shelters and a playground. There was a petting zoo for kids, face painting and a rock-climbing wall. It was warm, 29 C. As children petted rabbits and ate fried donuts, “music competed with the sound of crashing waves” from the Tasman Sea, the Associated Press reported.

At about 6:30 p.m., two men climbed out of a silver Hyundai Elantra hatchback near the footbridge leading over a car park to Archer Park, that grassy knoll. The two men, Australian residents identified as Sajid Akram, 50, and his 24-year-old son, Naveed Akram, had reportedly rented an Airbnb in a suburb in New South Wales, about a 20 km drive from Bondi Beach.

They told their family they’d gone fishing, Agence France Press reported.

Carrying three long arm rifles, the two men — the son dressed in black, the father in white pants and a long-sleeved black shirt — walked to the concrete footbridge overlooking the Jewish celebrations. Its chest-high walls sheltered the shooters from the east and west, AFR reported.

One rifle was set on the ground before the shooters aimed their guns and began firing at around 6:47 p.m. into the crowd from a distance of some 50 metres, the Guardian reported.

Amid the shattering of gunfire, panic took hold, the

New York Times reported

. One mother grabbed her 17-month-old and dove under a barbecue, pulling buckets of drinks on top of them. She prayed: “Please don’t let us die,” she

told the Associated Press

. “Please just keep my son safe.” A man a few centimetres away was suddenly hit by a bullet in the chest. “I’m dying,” he told the terrified young mother. “I can’t breathe.” As she tried to comfort him, her 65-year-old mother pressed cardboard against the man’s bleeding wound, AP reported.

He didn’t survive.

Other parents threw themselves over their children like human shields. Amid the pop-pop of gunfire, people began running for their lives. Some, fully dressed, ran into the sea while others scrambled to get out of the water. People fled the carnage, in every direction. “It just didn’t stop,” one woman told the Times. “We were so targeted in that little space. We were like sitting ducks.” The gunmen just kept reloading and firing, again and again, another survivor said. “They had a ridiculous amount of ammunition and multiple guns.”

Police arrived within minutes but witnesses said their handguns “seemed outmatched by the firearms carried out by the shooters,” the Times reported.

“Everybody as a whole was just kind of in a freakout. It didn’t feel real at the moment,” 18-year-old Finn Foster, of Brantford, Ont., told the Canadian Press. Foster and his girlfriend, who are backpacking in Australia, were heading to Bondi Beach when the heard gunfire. “Cars were pulling over,” he told CP. “(People) were hopping out and grabbing their kids.”

 Beach-goers flee Bondi Beach after two gunmen opened fire, in Sydney on Dec. 14, 2025.

Sometime after 6:47 p.m., the older shooter — allegedly Sajid — moved off the footbridge to the grass, to get closer to the celebrations and to his targets. He began firing at point-blank range into the crowds, the BBC reported.

Then, in an extraordinary and dramatic moment captured by video and spread on social media, the shooter was tackled from behind by Ahmed al Ahmed, a 43-year-old father of two girls who risked his life by pouncing on the shooter from behind parked cars, grabbing him around the neck and single-handedly wrestling the gun from his hands and briefly turning the weapon on him without firing. As the shooter stumbled backwards, al-Ahmed placed the gun against a tree, then held his arm up, motioning for help.

However, about a minute after he was disarmed, the shooter walked back to the footbridge and began firing again with the third weapon before he was shot and killed.

The other shooter — believed to be Naveed — continued firing for another 90 seconds before he, too, was shot, the BBC reported.

Police and witnesses ran onto the footbridge. Video shows one man kicking one of the alleged shooters.

The 24-year-old was in hospital Monday, reportedly in a coma. He is expected to face criminal charges, police said.

After the shootings, “rescuers frantically pumped the chest of unmoving bodies on the grass, near a picnic table, an abandoned stroller and the petting zoo,” AP reported.

At least 103 shots were fired, about 80 from the two attackers, according to an analysis by the Financial Review.

Australia’s worst mass killing in nearly three decades and the worst antisemitic attack in its history has left at least 15 people dead, including

10-year-old Matilda,

a sweet happy child “who never stopped smiling,” a Holocaust survivor, and 41-year-old Rabbi Eli Schlanger, a key organizer of Sunday’s gathering who had not a bad bone in his body and whose mission in life was “to bring the light of Judaism into the world,” extended family members in Toronto 

told CTV.

At least 42 people have been hospitalized.

Al-Ahmed, the hero who tackled one of the shooters, took two bullets, one each in the arm and hand. He remained in hospital Monday.

Australia has some of the strictest gun control measures in the world, enacting prohibitions against semi-automatic firearms and pump-action shotguns following a mass shooting in Tasmania in 1996.

 Nine of the 16 shooting victims: Top row, from left: Dan Elkayam, Alex Kleytman and Rabbi Yaakov Levitan. Middle row, from left: Peter Meagher, Reuven Morrison and Marika Pogany. Bottom row, from left: Rabbi Eli Schlanger, Tibor Weitzen and Matilda Bee Britvan.

The video of the massacre is blurry. However, from the size and shape of the guns the alleged terrorists fired, the weapons appear to be “the kinds of things people can buy legally in Australia,” said Canadian firearms writer Andrew Somerset.

They were fairly long and full-size, like a hunting rifle or shotgun, not compact and short, Somerset said. “My first impression is, you’re looking at an over/under shotgun, which is a double barrel shotgun, with the barrels configured vertically instead of horizontally.”

“If that is correct, a double barrel shotgun holds two rounds, and you have to reload it every time you fire two rounds,” said Somerset, author of Arms: The Culture and Credo of the Gun.

“As far as them being able to get off as many shots as they did, even if you’re using a bolt-action rifle or a break-action shotgun, you would still be able to get off a lot of shots.

“Because there is nobody shooting back at you.”

Authorities said there was no evidence the two gunmen were acting as part of a wider terror group. “There’s no evidence of collusion, no evidence that these people are part of a cell,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in an interview with the Australian broadcaster, ABC.

 Emergency workers transport a person on a stretcher after a reported shooting at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025.

Albanese also said his government will look at further strengthening gun control.

The shooters may have spent time at a shooting range, Somerset said. However, they weren’t moving tactically. “Nothing in the video suggests to me these people had any kind of para-military training,” he said.

“There is more than one path to prevent these incidents and simply saying ‘we’re not going to let people have guns’ is not going to solve the problem.

“You have to try to control these things by saying people can’t be antisemitic. You can start to go after the networks of people who publicly express support for groups like Hamas.”

National Post

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Penny Boudreau is led from court in Bridgewater, N.S., in June 2008, after her appearance in the murder of her 12-year-old daughter, Karissa Boudreau.

HALIFAX  — A Nova Scotia woman serving a life sentence for strangling her own daughter to death has been granted six months of day parole.

Penny Patricia Boudreau murdered her 12-year-old daughter Karissa on Jan. 27, 2008, later claiming it was to save her relationship with her boyfriend. The following year, Boudreau pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. A judge sentenced her to life in prison with no chance of parole for 20 years.

“The board believes that you are on a journey of observable and measurable positive personal changes which have evolved over time,” said the decision granting Boudreau day parole, which was released Monday.

“It is of the opinion of the board that you have gained insight (into) why you committed the crime as well as its consequences on the victim’s family and the community. While there continues to be challenges with anxiety, you have shown that you are willing to challenge yourself and you have gained confidence while facing these challenges. Your high assessed levels of accountability and motivation show that you are ready to continue to put in the work necessary to continue your progress. The board believes that you are realistic in accepting that this will continue to be a slow and gradual process.”

Boudreau, now in her early 50s, has completed numerous escorted temporary absences from prison since they were first approved in 2018.

She has “made the necessary progress and (has) acquired greater insight so as to benefit from a longer absence in the community, which made this a desirable step in the evolution of your case,” said the decision granting her day parole.

During her escorted absences from prison, Boudreau has “interacted with members of the public through a church and visited the home of a close personal support,” said the decision. “There were no security concerns.”

The body of Karissa Boudreau, 12, was found in the snow along a riverbank in Bridgewater, N.S., about two weeks after she was last seen in her mother’s car Jan. 27, 2008. Penny Boudreau went on television to make a tearful plea for her return.

“You strangled her and disposed of her body in the snow, as you hoped it would not be discovered for a while. You then reported the victim missing to the police,” said the decision.

A psychological risk assessment for Boudreau completed in October 2024 indicates her “overall risk within the community on (unescorted temporary absences) and/or day parole was noted as generally low, while (her) global risk for future recidivism, whether violent or general, was estimated in the very low range,” said the parole decision.

The decision doesn’t indicate where Boudreau is serving her sentence.

The parole board acknowledged “significant community concerns regarding (Boudreau’s) reintegration under conditional release.”

The board fielded an emailed “threat to (Boudreau’s) personal safety” in January 2025, said the decision. “The threat was investigated by police; however, they were unable to confirm the identity of the person responsible.”

The Correctional Service of Canada notes Boudreau has “exhibited deficits in being able to solve interpersonal problems and (has) demonstrated poor decision-making in the past. It is also noted that (she has) previously struggled with feelings of insecurity, fear of abandonment, poor self-esteem and feelings of inadequacy.”

Killing Karissa “demonstrated an anti-social response to these negative feelings,” said the decision. “The board considers your lack of self-control when you committed the crime as aggravating to your risk to reoffend.”

Boudreau’s “emotions management” and her “relationships with others will need to be scrutinized and monitored,” said the decision, dated Dec. 4. “This is necessary to ensure that you have not fallen back to harmful thinking patterns that are similar to when you committed the crime.”

 The body of 12-year-old Karissa Boudreau was found Feb. 9, 2008, near Bridgewater, Nova Scotia. Her mother Penny Boudreau eventually confessed to her murder.

The board had previously granted Boudreau a 60-day unescorted absence at a halfway house from September to November.

“You were described as respectful, with a positive but realistic outlook. You participated in both individual and group program interventions, including courses on self-esteem and healthy relationships. You participated in a cooking program and other activities organized by peer supports. You were accompanied by staff most of the time for the first 30 days, after which you were permitted to go on short walks around the neighbourhood by yourself, which you said was very beneficial.”

Boudreau also met biweekly with a psychologist, who the board says is “supportive of day parole.”

During that recent leave, Boudreau “encountered anxiety issues around some of the challenges of communal living, namely a lack of hygiene and safe food handling by others, as (she is) used to budgeting and cooking for” herself, said her decision.

“However, after talking it through, you were able to adapt to your environment in a healthy way.”

Boudreau will return to the same halfway house, which is farther from Bridgewater and where she had connected with a religious organization. Local police didn’t object, the board said.

“You intend to continue your education through online webinars to update yourself with the latest information on nutrition,” said the decision.

“You intend to attend spiritual activities, and you have connected with local spiritual leaders which shows that you have begun to create a positive community support system.”

Boudreau must “immediately report all sexual and non-sexual relationships and friendships with males and any changes to the status of the relationships” to her parole officer, said the decision.

“This includes disclosing whether those (partners) have parental responsibilities for children under the age of 16 years.”

Boudreau won’t have leave privileges during her six months of day parole, said the parole board. “You must first demonstrate your ability to handle the challenges of day parole while your emotional regulation is closely monitored by (halfway house) staff. In addition, you must continue to strengthen and maintain a positive support network within the community.”

Boudreau must avoid contacting family while on day parole. “The victims deserve to live in peace without having any contact from you,” said the decision. “Any contact would force them to relive the events that forever changed their lives.”

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Premier Danielle Smith speaks to the media at the Legislature in Edmonton, on Wednesday, December 10, 2025.

OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she’s keeping in mind that there’s more than one way to get Alberta oil to the Pacific Coast.

Smith said in a year-end interview with National Post that, while her “first preference” would be to build a new West Coast pipeline through northern British Columbia, she’s willing to look across the border if progress stalls.

One possible route to the Pacific Ocean could be through the northwestern U.S. states of Montana, Idaho and either Washington or Oregon.

“Anytime you can get to the West Coast, it opens up markets to get to Asia,” said Smith.

Smith has said that there’s enough demand for Alberta oil in the booming Indo-Pacific region to sustain a new

million-barrel-per-day pipeline.

Her comments come just weeks after Saskatchewan-based potash giant Nutrien announced plans to build a

$1-billion export terminal

at Washington State’s Port of Longview, spurning suitors in B.C.

The Nutrien announcement has been criticized by both B.C. Premier David Eby and federal Transport Minister Steve MacKinnon as a betrayal of the national interest.

Smith stressed, however, that moving heavy oil is different than moving fertilizer.

“Presumably, the potash is going to be transported by rail on existing infrastructure. Building brand new pipeline infrastructure is always complicated,” said Smith.

Smith said that her current focus was on advocating for pipelines to be built along “existing rights of way,” such as the

shelved Northern Gateway project

to northwestern B.C.

The Alberta premier signed a

memorandum of understanding

on energy issues with Prime Minister Mark Carney last month that opens the door to a new pipeline and a carve-out of the federal oil tanker ban off the B.C. coast.

Tim McMillan, a Calgary-based partner at Garrison Strategy, says that a hypothetical proponent wouldn’t be starting totally from scratch if they tried to build a pipeline to the Pacific via the U.S. northwest.

McMillan noted that a finished segment of the stalled Keystone XL pipeline

already runs through Montana

.

“We have a pipe in the ground already, to the border. Whether somebody’s interested in reviving the pre-existing U.S. route to the Gulf Coast or, potentially, taking it straight west out to the (Pacific) coast, that’s an open question,” said McMillan.

McMillan admitted that Washington State and Oregon have

historically had tough environmental laws

but added the U.S. Pacific Northwest may still be a better option than B.C.

“The U.S. seems to have a much easier time (than Canada) building infrastructure,” said McMillan.

Smith said that she’s staying optimistic for now about deepening Alberta’s energy partnership with B.C., noting that she recently won Eby’s backing for enhancements that would add roughly

360,000 barrels a day

to the existing Trans Mountain pipeline system.

“I would say I’m encouraged by expanding the Trans Mountain pipeline, which David Eby has expressed support for, so I’m grateful for that,” said Smith.

She’ll have plenty of work ahead of her in the new year to persuade the B.C. premier on the merits of reversing the federal oil tanker ban and green-lighting a new West Coast pipeline.

Smith has said that she’d like to

submit a pipeline proposal

to Canada’s new Major Projects Office by May 2026.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

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