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The children's entertainer known as Ms. Rachel has apologized for accidentally liking an antisemitic post on her Instagram. (Photo credit: Instagram reel screenshot)

The American children’s entertainer and YouTuber known as Ms. Rachel has issued an apology after admitting to accidentally liking an antisemitic comment on Instagram calling for the U.S. to be “free from the Jews.”

“So, I thought I deleted a comment and I accidentally hit ‘like and hide’,” she subsequently said in an Instagram video explaining her actions. “I would never agree with an antisemitic thing like the comment. We have Jewish family, a lot of my friends are Jewish,” she said. “I delete antisemitic comments.”

The social media star, whose real name is Rachel Griffin Accurso, issued the apology late Wednesday, reports the

New York Post

. The 43-year-old’s Instagram,

msrachelforlittles

, has 4.8 million followers. (Her

YouTube channe

l has 18.6 million followers.)

The incident was sparked when Acurso shared a statement from her notes app on her Instagram that read “Free Palestine, Free Sudan, Free Congo, Free Iran” with each country’s flag. Under the post, another user wrote: “Free America from the Jews.” The comment got four likes, including one from Ms. Rachel’s account.

A fan messaged her, she said, to point out what the fan was sure was an accident: “Hi rachel, just wanted to let you know there’s a comment under your latest post that says ‘free American from the Jews’ that says like by the author. I’m sure that’s an accident so wanted to let you know.”

She messaged back: “Deleted – how horrible – oh wait let me check – I did delete one like that. Ya I believe I deleted that earlier right when I saw it! I hate antisemitism,” Acurso messaged back.

However, the next day, the comment was still visible and continued to show as “liked by author,” reports the

Daily Wire

.

Acurso said she thought she had deleted the comment but accidentally hit like instead and so “the internet, I guess, has picked it up, believing that’s what happened … I feel like we can’t be human anymore online.”

She later insisted in an

Instagram reel

that she was “broken” over the incident. “And I’m so sorry for the confusion it caused. I’m so sorry if anyone thought that I would ever agree with something so horrible and antisemitic like that. I don’t.”

She went on to plead her age as a basis for the error: “I want to say that it’s OK to be human and it’s OK to make mistakes and I’m old, so I am not as good with touching things online, I guess. I have liked things by accident before.”

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Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney delivers a speech during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 20, 2026. The World Economic Forum takes place in Davos from January 19 to January 23, 2026.

QUEBEC CITY — Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to deliver remarks on Thursday “on the choices on which Canada was built and the shared values that make us Canada strong” before meeting with his cabinet in Quebec City, according to his itinerary.

His public comments are his first since

a widely praised speech he delivered at the World Economic Forum

in Davos on Tuesday where Carney declared the death of the old “rules-based international order” and exhorted countries to speak out against bullies and “hegemons”

Carney’s speech elicited

a chilly but brief response from U.S. President Donald Trump

who, during a 70-minute address in Davos on Wednesday, claimed that Canada — and its prime minister — should be “grateful” to its southern neighbour.

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

But Carney’s speech was met with a standing ovation in the room and drew direct praise from so-called “middle powers” including Mexican and Australian officials.

Mexican President

Claudia Sheinbaum called it a “very good speech”

that is “in tune with the current times,” while Australian Treasurer

Jim Chalmers said it was a “stunning speech”

that is being “widely shared and discussed” inside his government.

Now that he is back in the country, Carney is expected to hammer his message about his government’s priorities for the new year directly to Canadians. However, the prime minister will not be taking questions from reporters after his address, according to his office.

Notably, Carney will be making his remarks at the Citadelle of Quebec, a fortress which was built by the British army in the early 19th century to resist an American attack that ultimately never came. Today, it remains an operational military base for the Royal 22nd Regiment.

On Thursday and Friday, Carney and his ministers will be taking part in a cabinet retreat — which his government has renamed “Cabinet Planning Forum” — to prepare for the year ahead.

Thursday afternoon, Carney and his ministers will be hearing from Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand, Scotiabank’s Rebekah Young, as well as Kirsten Beardsley, CEO of Food Banks Canada, for a panel on affordability.

They will also be getting an economic and fiscal overview of the country by Frances Donald, chief economist at the Royal Bank of Canada, and Jean Boivin, head of BlackRock Investment Institute.

Parliament is set to resume its work on Monday after a seven-week winter break.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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FILE: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum after the draw for the 2026 soccer World Cup at the Kennedy Center in Washington, Friday, Dec. 5, 2025 (Winnipeg Sun)

Mexico’s president and a federal deputy are praising Mark Carney’s speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland from earlier this week.

President Claudia Sheinbaum spoke in support of the Canadian prime minister on Wednesday morning during a press conference.

“(It was a) very good speech by Carney, by Prime Minister Carney, I don’t know if you heard it,” she said, Mexico News Daily

reported

. “(It was) very much in tune with the current times.”

Full text and video: Mark Carney tells World Economic Forum ‘the old order is not coming back’

Both Canada and Mexico have been at odds with the United States since President Donald Trump started his second term. Carney said that countries like Canada have prospered “under what we called the rules-based international order.” It was accepted that “trade rules were enforced asymmetrically” and “international law applied with varying rigour depending on the identity of the accused or the victim.”

There were benefits to American hegemony, he said, but “this bargain no longer works.”

“We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition,” said Carney.

 Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks during the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

Juan Ignacio Zavala Gutiérrez

told CBC News

that he thought Carney’s speech was “very powerful, clear and intelligent.” He is a deputy and part of Mexico’s opposition Citizen’s Movement party.

“I think the important thing about his speech is not only the analytical aspect, but also what emerging forces are going to do to forge alliances against that power,” he said.

“What Carney is saying is that if we all negotiate bilaterally alone with the hegemonic powers, we will always lose precisely because of the size of those countries. But if we achieve these strategic alliances by issue, I believe we can build a much fairer and more equitable world order.”

Trump’s speech came a day after Carney’s and the U.S. president didn’t hold back.

 U.S. President Donald Trump gives a speech at the World Economic Forum (WEF) on January 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland.

Trump said he watched Carney’s address. “He wasn’t so grateful,” said Trump. “They should be grateful to us, Canada — but they’re not. Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.”

“Canada gets a lot of freebies from us, by the way,” Trump told the WEF audience, after mentioning the U.S. plan to build a missile defence system called the Golden Dome that would also protect Canada. “They should be grateful also, but they’re not.”

In another sign of allyship between Mexico and Canada, Governor General

Mary Simon met with Sheinbaum

this week. The Mexican president seemed pleased with the visit, which took place from Monday to Wednesday.

Sheinbaum called Simon a “fighter for the defense of Indigenous peoples and reconciliation” in a post on X and said they discussed “matters of common interest such as the environment and the good relationship between our nations.”

The comments from Mexican leaders come ahead of a

Canadian trade mission

to Mexico scheduled to begin in mid-February. It is part of Carney’s plan to deepen ties with the North American country.

Negotiations for the Canada-U.S.-Mexico free trade agreement (CUSMA)

are also set to take place this year.

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Ex-Vice music editor Yaraslav Pastukhov, better known by his pen name Slava Pastuk, left, and Ali Lalji, a former Vice Media employee, right, in an undated photo.

Prosecutors are asking a judge to dismiss the long-awaited appeal of Ali Lalji, a former Vice Media employee in Canada who was convicted of helping arrange cocaine smuggling into Australia, saying his arguments raise no issues requiring the court’s intervention.

Lalji, now 37, was arrested seven years ago this month and convicted in 2021 of conspiracy to import cocaine into Australia, but he still hasn’t started his prison term; he remains on bail waiting for his appeal.

His case formed part of a sensational case that revealed an abuse of the Toronto headquarters of trendy Vice Media to recruit interns, models, and entertainment figures to smuggle cartel cocaine from the United States.

Five recruited drug mules — four Canadians and one American — were caught by border guards at Sydney airport in Australia shortly before Christmas in 2015 carrying almost 40 kilos of cocaine hidden in their luggage. It was assessed a value of $22 million by Australian authorities.

The secrets of the cocaine plot were

revealed in an investigative feature

by National Post in February 2017, including the shocking role of Vice music editor Yaraslav Pastukhov, better known by his pen name Slava Pastuk, in recruiting the mules while an editor with the youth-oriented media empire.

Pastukhov and Lalji, who had also worked at Vice, were later arrested by the RCMP in January 2019 and charged with an international cocaine smuggling conspiracy.

Pastukhov pleaded guilty and was sentenced in December 2019 to nine years in prison. He served time and has been released on parole. The five mules also pleaded guilty and were sentenced to prison in Australia and have also served their time, been released and returned home.

Lalji, however,

took a different path

. He pleaded not guilty and leveraged his family’s wealth and significant legal representation to fight the charges, included making constitutional challenges.

His trial didn’t start until 2021 and it didn’t end until 2023, when he was also sentenced to nine years.

Lalji still didn’t go to prison, however. Instead, his lawyers appealed the conviction and his sentence and secured his immediate release on $1 million bail pending the outcome of an appeal.

He has been out on bail ever since.

His appeal application was finally completed and filed with the Court of Appeal for Ontario in the summer.

 An illustration of Ali Lalji during a virtual court appearance.

The Crown filed its response to Lalji’s appeal materials on Dec. 29, in which federal prosecutors Maria Gaspar and Sarah Malik ask the appeal court to dismiss the appeal of both Lalji’s conviction and sentence.

“Ali Lalji was a member of a conspiracy that imported nearly 40 kilograms of cocaine into Australia. He facilitated travel, provided direction and communicated with couriers tasked with transporting cocaine secreted in suitcases,” prosecutors wrote.

“The appellant was convicted based on the testimony of a co-conspirator, text messages, email communications, and audio recordings.

“On appeal, the appellant seeks to revisit admissibility rulings, challenge the trial judge’s treatment of evidence, and relitigate findings of fact. Respectfully, these claims should be dismissed. There was no error in the trial judge’s findings and the exercise of discretion by the trial judge in other matters is entitled to deference.

“This appeal should be dismissed.”

 

In Lalji’s appeal, his lawyer, Ravin Pillay, complained that secret audio recordings of the cocaine plot being explained to a new recruit (found by police on the phone of one of the drug mules) should not have been admitted as evidence at trial because there was no “proper authentication” of them.

Pillay also claimed the trial judge erred in handling Pastukhov’s testimony which is crucial because “the entirety of the Crown case was circumstantial.” Pillay said the judge wrongly allowed hearsay evidence, misapplied the legal doctrine of wilful blindness, and assessed a conspiracy that was not for the same conspiracy Lalji was charged for.

Prosecutors disputed those contentions in their filing.

“Many of the appellant’s arguments on this appeal amount to an invitation to reassess the merits of factual disputes litigated at trial,” prosecutors wrote.

“This Court does not retry a case and substitute its opinion for the assessments made by the trial judge. Appellate deference is owed to all factual findings, including the inferences drawn from primary facts and to global assessments of the evidence.

“The trial judge considered the evidence before him and his own common sense when he rejected Pastukhov’s incredible claims, including that he did not know cocaine was being imported into Australia.”

“The primary position of the respondent is that the trial judge found that the appellant actually knew he was a party to a scheme to import cocaine into Australia.”

Prosecutors also dispute Pillay’s contention the prison sentence “is unduly harsh.”

“Given the multi-kilo quantity of cocaine imported, and that the appellant’s role in the conspiracy was greater than that of a mere courier,” prosecutors wrote, “the sentence imposed is fit and should be afforded substantial deference on appeal.”

The trial judge described Lalji as Pastukhov’s “deputy” in the cocaine plot.

The appeal court will hear Lalji’s appeal this month.

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | Twitter:

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A Federal Court judge has given a former head constable with Pakistan's Punjab Police Service (PPS) who was ordered deported from Canada for making 'a voluntary, significant and knowing contribution to the crimes against humanity' committed by the notorious force another chance to stay in Canada.

A Federal Court judge has given a former head constable with Pakistan’s Punjab Police Service (PPS), who was ordered deported from Canada for making ‘a voluntary, significant and knowing contribution to the crimes against humanity’ committed by the notorious force, another chance to stay in Canada.

Munir Ahmad Malhi and his wife arrived in Canada in January 2020 and soon sought refugee protection.

Malhi, a citizen of Pakistan, had worked for the PPS for 37 years, from 1979 until his retirement in 2016.

Canada’s Refugee Protection Division (RPD) found Malhi and his wife “to be convention refugees and, that as adherents to the Ahmadiyya faith, they faced a serious risk of persecution in Pakistan.”

Canada’s immigration minister at the time appealed that decision, arguing Malhi “is excluded from refugee protection because he served with the PPS which has committed crimes against humanity.”

The Refugee Appeal Division allowed the appeal, and the matter was referred back to the RPD.

In April 2022, a Canada Border Services Agency officer interviewed Malhi “due to concerns regarding his inadmissibility to Canada.”

Malhi’s case was then referred to Canada’s Immigration Division (ID) for an admissibility hearing, and his refugee claim was suspended.

After a five-day hearing in 2024, the ID found “that the PPS has committed crimes against humanity and that (Malhi) was complicit in those crimes.”

Malhi “did not dispute the minister’s generalized evidence about the PPS and acknowledged that the PPS’s propensity for violence is common knowledge in Pakistan. The ID relied on extensive objective evidence filed by the minister to find that the PPS engaged in systemic human rights abuses, including torture, rape, enforced disappearances, and extrajudicial killings. It concluded that these offences constitute crimes against humanity.”

The immigration minister at the time didn’t allege Malhi “was personally involved in committing crimes against humanity. Rather, the issue before the ID was whether (he) contributed to the PPS’s crimes against humanity in a manner that made him complicit in those crimes.”

The ID found that Malhi “attempted to portray himself as a low-level mail carrier with minimal involvement in policing activities,” noting “that this account was inconsistent with written statements” in his service records.

The ID focused on Malhi’s “long tenure with the PPS, his promotion from constable to head constable, and the receipt of service awards throughout his career and concluded that there were reasonable grounds to believe that he knowingly, voluntarily, and significantly contributed to the PPS’s abuses.”

In August 2024, it found Malhi inadmissible to Canada and ordered his deportation.

Malhi applied to Canada’s Federal Court for a review of that decision.

Malhi “contends that he was not involved in any crimes against humanity, nor did he endorse or contribute to them. He says he was aware of the crimes against humanity and the use of torture by the PPS, but did not leave the force because he had to earn a living to support his family. He contends that his role in the PPS was restricted and, as an Ahmadiyya Muslim, his authority and influence was limited. He says he did not conduct interrogations, and his duties consisted mainly of mail delivery.”

Under its assessment of the PPS’s crimes against humanity, the ID noted “the PPS is not an organization of limited brutal purpose. It is a state-wide police force responsible for maintaining public order.”

But its reasons for ordering Malhi’s deportation “do not demonstrate that the heterogeneous nature of the PPS was factored into the ID’s analysis” of Malhi’s complicity, Justice Meaghan M. Conroy wrote in a recent decision out of Toronto.

“As explained by the Supreme Court, the nature of the organization helps determine the likelihood that the person would have known and participated in crimes or the criminal purpose.”

Where the organization “performs both legitimate and criminal acts,” such as the PPS, “the link between the contribution and the criminal purpose will be more tenuous,” said the judge.

Canada’s Immigration Division “also failed to consider (Malhi’s) rank,” Conroy said.

“According to the objective evidence filed by the minister, constable (the rank held by Malhi for most of his tenure), is the lowest rank in the PPS. This omission is a serious error.”

According to the judge, unless “an individual has control or responsibility over the individuals committing international crimes, he or she cannot be complicit by simply remaining in his or her position without protest.”

The decision to deport Malhi was “silent on his rank, or relative position in the hierarchy of the PPS, and how his rank relates to his alleged complicity in the PPS’s crimes against humanity,” Conroy said in her decision dated Jan. 6.

The judge concluded that the “decision lacks the hallmarks of reasonableness

justification, transparency and intelligibility

and is therefore set aside.”

She granted Malhi’s application for judicial review and sent his case “back for redetermination by a different decision-maker.”

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The RCMP described the gate latch in place of a door handle as “a level of creativity rarely seen.”

A vehicle police said was “held together with duct tape and wishful thinking” was pulled from the road in B.C. earlier this month after its driver was stopped for speeding on a highway southeast of Kelowna, near the U.S. border.

B.C. RCMP highway patrol said they clocked the car, driven by a 22-year-old man, doing 130 km/h in an 80 km/h zone near Christina Lake on the afternoon of Jan. 9.

“It’s amazing that this particular car could go that fast without disintegrating,” Corporal Michael McLaughlin stated in a news release. 

He said despite the owner’s efforts, “his car was not roadworthy.”

“It looked like it had been chewed up by Robosaurus,” he said, referring to the transforming dinosaur robot
created by inventor Doug Malewicki in 1989.

 Police allege the driver of this car was travelling 50 km/h over the posted speed limit.

On top of hammered-out and spray-painted dents, the rear window had been replaced with rebar and duct tape. The door, meanwhile, was held closed by a latch welded on in what the RCMP described as “a level of creativity rarely seen.”

They awarded the Kelowna man 10 points for the creativity of his mods, but zero for their legality. 

Instead, he was assessed a $368 fine for excessive speed, plus the cost of the tow truck and a seven-day impoundment at his expense. Under B.C. law, he’ll also face high-risk driver premiums and increasing insurance costs for at least three years.

The car was ordered off the road until all the defects are repaired and it passes a motor vehicle inspection.

“Any time you modify an essential component of your vehicle, including door locks, windows, steering, brakes, or suspension, you need to get that vehicle inspected,” McLaughlin said. 

“And if you’re driving in a vehicle that’s obviously not roadworthy, you probably shouldn’t speed. Police can’t ignore that.”

Unlike some provinces, such as Ontario and New Brunswick, B.C.’s ministry of transport and transit does not require regular or mandatory safety inspection for personal-use cars, SUVs, or light trucks.

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Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney shakes hands with Premier of China Li Qiang as he arrives to take part in an official welcoming at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026.

OTTAWA — Billed as a mere informal chat on the sidelines of a broader international gathering, Prime Minister Mark Carney met last Halloween with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Gyeongju, South Korea for about 40 minutes.
 

The discussion, which focused on thawing the frosty relations between their two countries and resetting trade, concluded with an agreed path to try to move forward and an invitation for Carney to visit Beijing.
 

But that visit, which concluded earlier this week with a potentially important trade deal between the two countries, was not officially at the invitation of Xi. 
 

The four-day visit, the first by a Canadian prime minister to China since 2017, was, according to Carney’s social media posts, officially at the invitation of Premier Li Qiang, the country’s inconspicuous, number two political figure and widely seen as the principal manager of China’s massive, fast-growing economy.
 

It was also Li, not Xi, whom Carney spoke to on the phone on June 5 as the Canadian leader attempted to begin the process of improving relations between the two countries. According to reports, the two men talked about the importance of moving on from the acrimony, global challenges, potential trade and investment opportunities, and where they might have the pieces for a potential deal: Canada wanted easier access to the Chinese market for its energy, agriculture and seafood, while China wanted to sell electric vehicles (EVs) in Canada and an end to what they viewed as holier-than-thou preaching on human rights and other matters.
 

But before any of that might be possible, the two sides had to re-establish a level of trust after almost a decade of hostility. 
 

They agreed to stay in touch.
 

On September 23, Li and Carney met in person in New York City at a United Nations General Assembly session. They further discussed the bilateral relationship and their key issues, which led to a meeting five weeks later in South Korea between Carney and Xi.
 

When Carney finally arrived in Beijing last week, he also met with Li, before the final touches on the trade deal were resolved.
 

Xi is China’s unquestioned top political boss, widely seen as the country’s most powerful leader since Chairman Mao Zedong, who ruled the People’s Republic of China from its inception in 1949 until his death in 1976. And Li, like all successful second-in-commands, is well aware of the org chart and Xi’s dominance of his government and country. But it was Li and his officials within the Ministry of Commerce of the People’s Republic of China (MOFCOM), which is responsible for international trade and foreign investment, who did much of the heavy lifting from the Chinese side on the recent work to normalize relations with Canada and, ultimately, to land the trade deal with Canada.
 

Xi likely would have signalled that he supported the notion of a deal with Canada and approved the broad strokes, analysts say, but it was Li and his team who would have executed the plan and worked with Ottawa to hammer out the details.
 

“He doesn’t make policy,” said Jeremy 
Paltiel, a China specialist and political science professor 
from Carleton University in Ottawa, of Li. “He carries it out.”
 

The deal carried out between the two countries is expected to expand trade, but perhaps just as importantly, signals that Canada-China relations are indeed on the upswing and perhaps back to something resembling normal. 
 

The agreement was essentially a swap of much lower tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles (EVs) being allowed into Canada for lowering tariffs on Canadian agricultural and seafood products headed to China. The deal also represented a key shift in Canada’s relationship with a key trade partner and the first major concrete step in the Carney government’s efforts to diversify trade away from the United States since U.S. President Donald Trump imposed hefty tariffs on some important Canadian industries.
 

Speaking to reporters in Beijing, Carney called the visit “historic and productive” and said that Canada must continue to be ambitious and pragmatic in diversifying trade.

While the talks between Carney and Li clearly played a major role in greasing the wheels that led to the trade deal, China specialists say Li will go to great lengths to avoid taking too much credit for it. He appeared in some photos to mark the visit with Canada, but tends to stay out of his boss’s limelight.
 

As the country’s top manager of the economy, Li, 66, focuses largely on trade and investment issues. Not surprisingly, Li, head of China’s executive branch and the second-ranked member of the Chinese Communist Party’s Politburo Standing Committee, is seen as more pro-business and supportive of free markets than his boss, while Xi focusses more on political, military and security matters.
 

Like many number twos, Li walks a tightrope balancing the interests of his own power base while dutifully serving the boss’s agenda. 
 

While the power gap between Li and Xi is considered a significant gulf, the premier appears to have stabilized his role at the top of the Chinese government. Known as a behind-the-scenes manager, Li is not seen as charismatic or one who tries to get on the public radar. 

So who is he? And how does he go about his business?   
 

Li succeeded Li Keqiang, who had been China’s premier for the previous decade before dying from a heart attack at the age of 68, just seven months after retiring. Unlike his predecessor, Li rarely uses flowery rhetoric or slogans that might be seen as trying to build a personal brand, nor does he tend to espouse his personal policy views.

Instead, he’s more of a stealthy policy wonk or a chief operating officer who relies on economic data and meetings with business leaders and foreign diplomats to quietly forge a path forward and support his president.

This has not always been the way with Chinese premiers. The country’s first premier, Zhou Enlai, who held the post from 1949 to 1976, was very visible both domestically and internationally, sometimes as much as Mao. Other premiers, such as Wen Jiabao, 2003-13, who billed himself as the “people’s premier,” were much more visible.

That’s not Li’s style. 

Since his ascension less than three years ago, Li – similar to Carney – has been trying to enhance trade to refuel a slowing economy. 
 

After a few decades as the fastest-growing major economy in modern history, China’s pace has slowed over the last few years to what would still be incredible growth for most countries.
 

The economic hot streak kicked off with Deng Xiaoping’s decision in the late 1970s to open an economy that had previously shut out most foreign investment and trade. With a population that now sits at about 1.4 billion, China was filled with untapped potential as a producer and eventually consumer. The new market-oriented economy soon began posting an incredible run of many years of double-digit economic growth as exports and foreign investment soared.
 

The initial phase of reforms led to broad industrialization that began in the 1990s as the Chinese economy became known as “the world’s factory” before moving up the innovation food chain: from an economy producing mostly cheaper commodity items at a lower cost than elsewhere, to more innovative and technical goods. 
 

Over the last decade or so, growth has slowed to an average of more than 6 per cent, marred like other economies by the pandemic years. By comparison, most advanced, western economies, which are considered more mature and therefore not able to sustain soaring long-term growth, have grown during this period by about 2-3 per cent a year.
 

According to a new report, both China and Canada will endure more sluggish growth in the coming years. Export Development Canada, Canada’s export credit agency, forecasts that growth in China won’t exceed 4.3 per cent over the next four years, and will remain below 2.5 per cent in Canada during that same period.
 

As Canada tried to pivot and diversify in the wake of the Trump tariffs, China — the world’s second-most populous country and Canada’s number two trading partner after the U.S. — was an obvious target.
 

“Canada needs a functional relationship with that country,” said Pascale Massot, a political economy professor and China specialist at the University of Ottawa.  
 

But relations between Canada and China were very poor.
 

After a relatively positive relationship for many decades that had belied the two countries’ political and cultural differences, Canada and China have been mostly at odds for about the last 20 years.    
 

China didn’t appreciate former prime minister Stephen Harper’s criticisms of its human rights record, his comment that Canada won’t “sell out its values for the almighty dollar,” nor his visits with the Dalai Lama, which were viewed as interference in its domestic affairs.
 

Beijing also didn’t appreciate the emphasis of Harper’s successor, Justin Trudeau, on advancing equality, human rights and other non-economic issues abroad, efforts that were sometimes seen as attempts to shame or lecture.  
 

Canada, meanwhile, didn’t appreciate that China was doing those things, nor its efforts, according to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), to influence Canadian elections in 2019 and 2021.
 

The relationship took a sharp turn for the worse in December, 2018 when Meng Wanzhou was arrested in Vancouver by Canadian authorities at the request of the U.S. The Americans wanted Meng, chief financial officer of Chinese telecom giant Huawei, extradited so that she could be charged with misleading financial institutions about her company’s dealings with Iran, which may have violated U.S. sanctions. 
 

Days later, China arbitrarily detained Canadian citizens Michael Kovrig, a geopolitical advisor and former diplomat, and businessman Michael Spavor and accused them of espionage. The “two Michaels” were held for more than 1,000 days before being released the same day that Meng was freed from house arrest in Canada.
 

But the friction didn’t stop there. 
 

In 2024, Canada followed the lead of the U.S. and some other western countries in slapping 100 per cent tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles (EVs), an important strategic sector for Beijing. Those EVs, well regarded and considerably less expensive than those made in the west, were considered a threat to the domestic auto industry and Canada’s relations with the U.S.
 

Beijing responded by slapping 100 per cent tariffs on key Canadian exports canola oil, canola meal, rapeseed oil, peas, and 25 per cent tariffs on pork, fish and seafood products.
 

The new deal between the two countries eliminates or winds down many of those tariffs, while satisfying the economic and political needs of each country. Canada needs to diversify its exports, analysts say, while China gains a greater foothold in North America for its EV industry, while finding a degree of rapprochement with their primary rival’s neighbour and ally.
 

So how did Li get to where he is? 
 

Born in the smallish city of Rui’an (population: 1,125,000), in the eastern, coastal province of Zhejiang, Li joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1983 and rose the ranks over the ensuring decades. In the mid-2000s, Li developed a relationship with Xi when both worked in Zhejiang province. 
 

In 2017, Li was named a member of the CCP Politburo, and five years later became party secretary of Shanghai, where he cemented his pro-business reputation. 
He has since publicly called on the international community to fight against protectionism and earlier this month visited Guangdong where he called for “extraordinary” measures to increase economic growth. The thawing of relations and the trade deal with Canada are consistent with his world view and policy priorities — perhaps more so than Xi.
 

The same is true of Carney, who has made diversified trade a top priority since taking office. The deal may come with additional risk for Canada, however, as it must remain conscious at all times of upsetting the mercurial and unpredictable Trump, just months before an 
upcoming review of the governance of North American trade. There may be no more sensitive subject in Washington than the advances of the ambitious and fast-rising China.
 

From the perspective of Canadian trade, there’s no comparison between the two as trade partners. Accor
ding to 2024 data, 75.9 per cent of Canadian merchandise exports go to the U.S., and about 4.1 per cent bound for China.
 

Carney – and Premier Li – hope to narrow that gap.
 

National Post

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Canada's Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman speaks to reporters during a cabinet retreat at Chateau Montebello in Montebello, Que., on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — As the first woman to serve as Canada’s ambassador to the United States, Kirsten Hillman has been described as a
powerhouse of a diplomat
by business, political, and diplomatic leaders from both sides of the aisle. 

Before being appointed acting ambassador in 2019 and getting the top job in 2020, Hillman served as deputy ambassador from 2017 to 2019, contributing to the 2018 talks about replacing NAFTA with CUSMA. Hillman has been ambassador since U.S. President Donald Trump’s first term, helping navigate relations between the two neighbouring countries amid fraught — sometimes incendiary — tensions. Perhaps most notably, she worked to secure the release of the two Michaels, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, who were detained by China in 2018, and she pushed to ensure supply chain continuity amid complicated COVID border disruptions. 

Having announced her plan to step down last month after more than eight years in Washington, Hillman will soon head home, where she plans to end her 30 years of public service. She told Prime Minister Mark Carney of her intentions last spring, and she is excited to help with the transition to help her successor, Mark Wiseman, who takes the reins next month.

In the meantime, the National Post spoke with Hillman about her greatest achievements and to get her words of wisdom on U.S.-Canada relations and advice for her successor for the years ahead. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Q: As the first woman in this role and in an era of tariff threats, annexation rhetoric, and the two Michaels crisis, did you ever feel like your gender made U.S. counterparts underestimate you at first — and how did proving them wrong change key moments in tense negotiations?

A: Wow … I’ve never been asked that before, well done. I would say this: I have spent almost all of my career as a lawyer and negotiator and, in many of those instances where I was either representing Canada internationally in a court or leading a delegation, I would be the only woman lead in my cohort of either co-counsel or other negotiators.

It is not new to me to be the only woman or one of the only women in a leadership role because my field has been very male-dominated for my entire career. And I do think that sometimes people can underestimate you, and I do think that that can be an advantage, but what I’ve noticed most of all is that as soon as you demonstrate that you are very capable, very competent, and that you’re in charge — of your team, of the decisions that are being made, whether it’s in the litigation or the negotiation — that sort of goes away fairly quickly. 

So, possibly there had been some underestimations. I don’t think I’m honestly specifically aware of any that stood out to me — I don’t know what’s going on in other people’s heads. But I do feel that, because I am very much an expert in my field, that has always been a core strength of mine in this role here as ambassador. Being an economic expert for our country and being very technically expert. The other thing I would say is that being an ambassador of a G7 country in the United States, being the ambassador of the country that is economically the most tied to this country and geographically has the longest border with this country, brings a certain weight and authority in and of itself. So I’ve benefited from that. 

Q: Reflecting on your tenure, what was the toughest file you managed, and what key lesson from it would you pass to your successor? 

A: Golly, there’s more than one. I’m going to say there’s definitely more than one challenging file. I think right now it is challenging to be faced with a situation where some of the fundamentals of the benefits of Canada-U.S. economic integration — supply chain integration and the mutual benefits that we and our companies, in particular, have developed over years and years of working together — are more up for debate than ever. That is very challenging.

And it’s very challenging because it feels like we’ve had to learn how to articulate something that just seemed like a no-brainer to us for a very long time. So that’s been very challenging. And the volatility that has been part of this shift has been very challenging at a very personal level.

The work that we did with the U.S. government and the Chinese government to secure the release of the Michaels was extremely important to me, and it took a long time. It took much longer than any of us would ever have hoped, and it required putting an awful lot of effort into building trust and relationships between our three countries. So from a diplomatic perspective, that was a mountain to climb, and it was very, very important, very emotional, very challenging.

Ultimately, obviously, I’m proud of what we were able to do. I wish we could have done it much, much faster, but I’m proud of what we were able to do. 

Q: Canada often frames the U.S. as its closest partner, yet you’ve spoken recently about Canadians feeling under economic attack. How did you balance voicing that frustration with keeping the relationship between the U.S. and Canada stable?

A: I have always found that no matter who one is dealing with — here in the United States or any other partner with whom you may have disagreements, even very strong disagreements — it’s very important to stick to the facts. It’s very important to just express the facts and not express judgment. Americans elected President Trump. He, his policies remain popular with some Americans. Some of them more than others, but they remain popular. That is a democratic choice of this country, and it is not for me to be second-guessing the choices of Americans.

But what I can and do say is, here are the implications of some policies or some decisions. Here is what American companies or American lawmakers in a particular region have said is happening in their communities. Here are some of the implications of going down this road, and here are the ways in which Canada makes the United States stronger and more resilient. And if we change some of these policies, here are the ways in which that resilience and strength could be diminished. 

So, facts, facts, facts! 

I find it’s very important … to express your position clearly and unwaveringly, but primarily through an evidence-based presentation. 

Q: You’re leaving just before the CUSMA/USMCA review formally begins. Having helped steer the transition from NAFTA to CUSMA, what do you see as the two or three biggest risks for Canada going into this review? For your successor here in Washington, are there any red lines Canada simply can not cross, and where is there genuine room for trade concessions?

A: I think it’s important to recognize that the review that’s coming out for the CUSMA isn’t, so far — I mean, I suppose anything can happen — but it’s not going to look like what we did in 2018. This isn’t an opening up of the entire treaty, going chapter by chapter, changing language, changing rules. It’s not a comprehensive renegotiation. It is a review, and as a review, each three countries have consulted with their stakeholders publicly and have received a lot of feedback on what folks feel was working well and where they think some changes or adjustments might be warranted. 

Sometimes you create rules, and you say they’re going to operate in a certain way, and in fact, they don’t quite achieve the goals that you are hoping for. So they’re going to be talking about that. The other thing that I think is very important is that in all three countries, including here in the U.S., these consultations led to overwhelming support for that treaty, and for good reason. For example, here in the U.S., merchandise exports to Canada have grown 20 per cent since 2020, when CUSMA came into force. So this, this growth is obviously important to the United States and important to all of us. 

So, I think that the risk here would be not listening to those constituencies for whom we have created this treaty. We have crafted this treaty, all three countries, in order to bring prosperity, economic benefit, stability, and reliability.

To our three countries, and in order to make our trading block more competitive vis-à-vis other regions in the world, it’s vital that — this goes back to being data-driven — we know why we need this agreement, what and who we did it for, why, and what they value in it.

First and foremost, we need to do no harm to that. Then, where we can, we need to improve upon areas where, as I say, perhaps it just needs to be brought up to date. The world is changing fast … so it makes sense to make sure that it remains fit for purpose.

As for my successor, Ambassador (Mark) Wiseman, he will come in as ambassador, and as ambassador, he will need ot build these relationships. That is the core of the role. The ambassador’s role is to build strong relationships in the administration, but also on the Hill and across the country.

There are a lot of people across (the U.S.) who have a lot of influence over how our two countries interact and so building those relationships out — the business community too and civil society. But my number one piece of advise is build, build, build those relationships and make sure you don’t stay just in DC. Get out across the country and build these partnerships and relationships and lines of communication across the country.

Q: What do you see as the single most important file your successor needs to get right in their first year?

A: There’s a lot going on — there’s no one file. But I think that the number one task, the value-add of this organization, not just the embassy and all the people working here, but our consulates across the country — why we’re here is to bring Canadians and the government information that is firsthand. I’ve had a conversation with so-and-so from the administration, Senator so and so from the Hill, governor such and such, and I have learned this. Either here’s a challenge or a difficulty we want to try and resolve, or here’s some advice that they’ve given us, or here’s a priority that we could help advance.

That is the bread and butter of what this entire network does, and to be able to do that effectively strengthens the number of ties that we have across this country, the number of people who understand in a very practical and real-world way why having an effective and strong relationship with Canada is important for them. Ultimately, the depth of that understanding always pays dividends.

This always has a positive impact on the larger macro policies. It doesn’t always solve them. It doesn’t always make them perfectly smooth. But the more voices that we have speaking up for the value of an effective and strong relationship with Canada, the better always.

So the embassy and the network and the ambassador at the lead of all of that is a very, very important daily function for everyone to be pursuing. 

Q: Looking ahead, what emerging security file — Arctic, critical minerals, defence industrial base, cyber, something else — do you think is most likely to surprise politicians on both sides and why?

A: Wow, that’s interesting. I think that the drive of technology and the impact of AI, and these very fast-evolving technologies that are in every aspect of our lives — I think it’s very hard for us to fully understand where and how that is going to impact every aspect of public policy.

I think there are things that we see coming, but where it’s hard for us to see things coming is probably in these areas of technology that are just advancing so fast that maybe nobody fully understands what’s coming next. 

Q: Please share your thoughts on Greenland and the challenges that President Donald Trump’s threats of tariffs pose, and what the threats against Greenland and Denmark could mean for Ottawa in terms of sovereignty and security.

A: I think that Canada, on this topic of territorial sovereignty and security — for ourselves, for Greenland, for Ukraine — we are completely consistent. Our prime minister is completely consistent. The people of Canada are completely consistent. Our policy and our position is that territorial sovereignty and integrity is the domain of the citizens of Greenland, in this instance. But the same is true for Ukraine and that we will always stand by the citizens of Greenland and the country of Denmark to support their ability to make decisions about their own sovereignty and integrity. I think that Canada, Canadians, the prime minister, our government have been very, very clear about that, and I don’t expect that to change. 

Obviously, with respect to Greenland, our position won’t change. And with respect to Canada and our own territorial integrity, that’s not on the table. We couldn’t have been more clear in that regard since day one. So there, there’s no wavering here. 

Q: Throughout your tenure, U.S. annexation rhetoric spiked twice — first under Trump 1.0, then again last year. How did you counter it privately with counterparts while publicly downplaying it to avoid escalation?

A: Privately, you can always be a little more straightforward, and as I’ve said, Canadians and the Canadian government and the prime minister are not interested in engaging in this discussion. We’re not interested, and we don’t appreciate this being brought up. Canadian policy and the Canadian position, and how we communicate it have been clear and consistent. In public, we say that perhaps more softly, but clearly nonetheless. Very clearly. And in private, especially with our allies, in particular, our Republican allies, we just say, look, we have so many incredibly positive things to be working on. We have so much that we can contribute to our objectives for Canadians and your objectives for Americans. Let’s focus on that. Let’s focus on all this good work at hand and move on. 

Q: Is there anything else you would like to mention or anything about your tenure you hope people remember?

A: I would say I’m a very big believer in teams, and I have had the great privilege of leading a team here in the United States. The embassy team, the network of Consulates General, and the people that they work with across our country. I am often the spokesperson and often the person who tries to consolidate and lead what we are doing across the country. But every single one of those people is committed every day to doing their best for Canada by making this relationship — let’s be honest, sometimes it has been quite complicated — the best that it can be. There was COVID and trade disputes, but we’ve gone through all sorts of issues between our two countries, and this team has and continues to just perform remarkably. So, I am deeply proud of that, but also deeply honoured to have had the privilege to lead such a remarkable group of people.

National Post

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U.S. President Donald Trump, right, meets with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte during a meeting on the sidelines of the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday,

U.S. President Donald Trump delivered a speech

heavily aimed at a domestic audience and focused on America’s economy, but which also made crucial reference to the many geopolitical storms that involve America today, from Greenland and Gaza to Venezuela and Ukraine. He said America is owed legal title to Greenland, though said he would not take it by force. He referred to the Russian president as “Vladimir,” the French president as “Emmanuel,” the former president of the Swiss Confederation as “a woman,” and the NATO secretary-general as “Mark,” and fondly remembered the time Mark Rutte called him “Daddy.” He called Greenland “Iceland” a few times. It all stood in contrast to the speech on Tuesday

by Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney

— whom Trump also called “Mark,” but in a less conciliatory manner — which quoted both the Ancient Greek historian Thucydides (“the strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must”) and the modern corporate aphorism that “if you are not at the table, you are on the menu,” and was over in about 15 minutes with a standing ovation. Trump’s was well over an hour. The National Post annotates some of the key portions of Trump’s speech.

TRUMP: Today, after 12 months back in the White House, our economy is booming, growth is exploding, productivity is surging, investment is soaring, incomes are rising, inflation has been defeated, our previously open and dangerous border is closed and virtually impenetrable, and the United States is in the midst of the fastest and most dramatic economic turnaround in our country’s history…. People are doing very well. They’re very happy with me.

This is familiar Trumpian hyperbole, a theme that continued through the rest of his speech. Everything is the best ever, the biggest ever, more than anyone ever expected.

Public opinion polling

indicates Trump’s approval rating is at negative 19 points, down two points since last week, with 37 per cent approving, 56 per cent disapproving and five per cent not sure.

TRUMP: Just over one year ago, under the radical-left Democrats, we were a dead country. Now we are the hottest country anywhere in the world…. And this is all great news, and it’s great for all nations. The USA is the economic engine on the planet. And when America booms, the entire world booms. It’s been the history. When it goes bad, it goes bad. And I hope we all — y’all follow us down and you follow us up.

Trump does not usually use the folksy contraction of “y’all,” but he did here, with a muted chuckle.

TRUMP: I want to discuss how we have achieved this economic miracle, how we intend to raise living standards for our citizens to levels never seen before, and perhaps how you, too, and the places where you come from could do much better by following what we’re doing because certain places in Europe are not even recognizable, frankly, anymore. They’re not recognizable. And we can argue about it, but there’s no argument. Friends come back from different places — I don’t want to insult anybody — and say, ‘I don’t recognize it.’ And that’s not in a positive way. That’s in a very negative way. And I love Europe, and I want to see Europe go good. But it’s not heading in the right direction…. The United States cares greatly about the people of Europe. We really do. I mean, look, I am derived from Europe. Scotland and Germany, 100 per cent Scotland, my mother, 100 per cent German, my father. And we believe deeply in the bonds we share with Europe as a civilization.

Trump’s mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, was born in 1912 in Tong, a town on Scottish Hebridean Isle of Lewis near the main port Stornoway, and immigrated to America in 1930. His father, Fred Trump, was born in New York to German immigrant parents.

TRUMP: U.S. oil production is up by 730,000 barrels a day. And last week, we picked up 50 million barrels from Venezuela alone. Venezuela has been an amazing place for so many years, but then they went bad with their policies. Twenty years ago, it was a great country, and now it’s got problems. But we’re helping them. And those 50 million barrels, we’re going to be splitting up with them, and they’ll be making more money than they’ve made in a long time. Venezuela is going to do fantastically well. We appreciate all of the cooperation we’ve been giving. We’ve been giving great cooperation. Once the attack ended, the attack ended, and they said, “Let’s make a deal.” More people should do that.

On Jan. 3, in a military strike called

Operation Absolute Resolve

, American forces bombed Venezuelan air defences and sent a team into the capital, Caracas, to capture the autocratic leader Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores and transport them to New York for prosecution for narcoterrorism. The only U.S. oil company now operating in Venezuela is Chevron, whose executives have indicated a reluctance to invest further. Other oil companies have also resisted Trump’s urging, a week after Maduro’s ouster, to pledge immediate investment.

TRUMP: There are windmills all over the place. And they are losers. One thing I’ve noticed is that the more windmills a country has, the more money that country loses and the worse that country is doing. China makes almost all of the windmills, and yet I haven’t been able to find any wind farms in China. Did you ever think of that? It’s a good way of looking. You know, they’re smart. China is very smart. They make them. They sell them for a fortune. They sell them to the stupid people that buy them, but they don’t use them themselves. They put up a couple of big wind farms, but they don’t use them. They just put them up to show people what they could look like. They don’t spin.

China’s state-run media outlet China Daily

reported last October

that the country had 520 gigawatts of installed wind power capacity in 2024, and is on track to add 120 gigawatts of new wind power generation annually for a capacity of 1.3 terawatts within five years. For comparison, Canada has about 18 gigawatts of installed wind power capacity.

TRUMP:
Would you like me to say a few words of Greenland? I was going to leave it out of the speech, but I thought — I think I would have been reviewed very negatively. I have tremendous respect for both the people of Greenland and the people of Denmark. Tremendous respect. But every NATO ally has an obligation to be able to defend their own territory. And the fact is, no nation or group of nations is in any position to be able to secure Greenland other than the United States. We’re a great power, much greater than people even understand. I think they found that out two weeks ago in Venezuela. We saw this in World War II, when Denmark fell to Germany after just six hours of fighting and was totally unable to defend either itself or Greenland. So the United States was then compelled — we did it, we felt an obligation to do it — to defend our own forces, to hold the Greenland territory. And hold it, we did, at great cost and expense. They didn’t have a chance of getting on it, and they tried. Denmark knows that. We literally set up bases on Greenland for Denmark. We fought for Denmark. We weren’t fighting for anyone else. We were fighting to save it. For Denmark, big, beautiful piece of ice — it’s hard to call it land, it’s a big piece of ice — but we saved Greenland and successfully prevented our enemies from gaining a foothold in our hemisphere. So we did it for ourselves also.

Nazi Germany invaded Denmark in the spring of 1940, prompting the U.S. to scramble a defence of its security and strategic interests in the Danish territory of Greenland, including mining. The U.S. entered the war a year and a half later, after
 being attacked by Japan.
 Greenland is land, and is generally regarded as the largest island in the world, and is mostly covered by ice.

TRUMP:
And that’s the reason I’m seeking immediate negotiations to once again discuss the acquisition of Greenland by the United States, just as we have acquired many other territories throughout our history, as many of the European nations have…. This would not be a threat to NATO. This would greatly enhance the security of the entire alliance, the NATO alliance. The United States is treated very unfairly by NATO, I want to tell you that. When you think about it, nobody can dispute it. We give so much and we get so little in return.

More than 150 Canadians died in the war in Afghanistan, which began in defence of the United States in 2001 with the first ever declaration of NATO’s mutual defence rule.

TRUMP: Canada gets a lot of freebies from us, by the way. They should be grateful also. But they’re not. I watched your prime minister yesterday. He wasn’t so grateful. They should be grateful to us. Canada. Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.

This is a reference to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s speech on Tuesday, which did not name any specific country or leader, but described a “rupture” in geopolitics to which middle powers should respond by coordinating mutual support resistance and resistance to economic sabotage.

TRUMP: Our stock market took the first dip yesterday because of Iceland. So Iceland’s already cost us a lot of money. But that dip is peanuts compared to what it’s gone up. And we have an unbelievable future in that stock. That stock market is going to be doubled. We’re going to hit 50,000, and that stock market’s going to double in a relatively short period of time because of everything that’s happening.

Trump appears to mean Greenland, but said “Iceland.”

TRUMP: Until the last few days when I told them about Iceland, they loved me. They called me “Daddy.” The last time, a very smart man said, “He’s our daddy. He’s running it.” I was like running it. I went from running it to being a terrible human being. But now what I’m asking for is a piece of ice, cold and poorly located, that can play a vital role in world peace and world protection. It’s a very small ask compared to what we have given them for many, many decades.

This is reference to NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. In June, amid the conflict between Israel and Iran, Trump criticized them both for breaking a ceasefire, saying they had been fighting for so long they “don’t know what the f–k they’re doing.” Afterwards, at a NATO summit, he compared the two countries to children fighting. Rutte took the analogy further and said

“Daddy has to sometimes use strong language.”

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.


Freed Israeli hostage Eli Sharabi appeared at a Toronto-area speaking event on Jan. 21, 2026, which was organized by the Chabad on Bayview synagogue.

After seeing phone messages and videos that kibbutzim were being ravaged on October 7, Eli Sharabi thought surrendering himself to Hamas terrorists would save his British-born wife and two daughters. Instead, he spent 491 days as a hostage in Gaza and, upon his release in February 2025, learned they had been murdered minutes after he was dragged from their Kibbutz Be’eri home.

In Hostage, the first full-length memoir by a released hostage from that day’s massacre, the Yemenite-Moroccan Israeli recounts starvation, beatings and underground captivity in Hamas’s tunnels, alongside improvised quiet acts of defiance to keep other prisoners alive in spirit.

“I didn’t choose to be famous, you know, and unfortunately, it’s become like that. I would prefer not to be,” Sharabi told the Post on Tuesday, prior to a Toronto-area speaking event, which was organized by the Chabad on Bayview synagogue.

“But then it was very important for me to speak for the remaining hostages when I was released, and after that to write my testimony, the book, so nobody can in the future change the facts in the history. I think that was the best way to cherish my loved one’s memories for me.”

For him, the “hardest part” came when he heard of the death of his wife, Lianne, and his daughters, Noyia and Yahel, “and the part where I’m going to the graveyard to apologize, and to promise them that nobody will forget them,” he told the Post.

At the Chateau Le Jardin Event Venue, in Woodbridge, Ont., Sharabi told the audience that in writing the book, it was not difficult to recall every aspect of being a hostage. That will “be with me all of my life. It’s not something you forget,” he said.

 Eli Sharabi, who had been held hostage by Hamas in Gaza since October 7, 2023, is escorted by Hamas fighters before being handed over to the Red Cross in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, Saturday Feb. 8, 2025.

Though conceding he was “not religious,” he began to say Jewish prayers while being held in the terrorists’ car, and continued to say prayers each day he was captive, including special Sabbath prayers and rituals.

“All these ceremonies just remind us how we are Jewish, which gave us lots of strength as a group,” he told the audience. “I found God again 50 metres underground. I felt someone protecting me,” he said, adding that there were at least ten examples of where he believed he was near death but “felt something keeping me alive. I’m really grateful for that.”

Sharabi, because of his fluency in Arabic, played translator between other hostages and the terrorists.

“It’s a very delicate relationship. They can change their minds in a second,” he said. “You have to start to learn how they react to everything.” He described “psychological terror” used against the hostages, including when they were told the government abandoned them, and that Israel had been destroyed. “You have to be very, very strong, day after day, to not pay attention to things like that.”

While in the tunnel, he saw “dozens of boxes of humanitarian aid” that he believes were stolen. His captors ate four to five times a day, though he only had one meal a day – consisting of a pita and a half, or a bowl of pasta, or a bowl of rice. On the day of his capture, he weighed 70 kilograms; at the day of his release, 44 kg.

After returning to Israel, during his first hot shower in 16 months, he “used probably all the shampoo bottles, and all the soap, and it was amazing. I will never forget this shower.”

In the days since his release, he said he gained a greater perspective about life.

 Eli Sharabi, an Israeli writer and former hostage who was held hostage by Hamas for 491 days before being freed in February 2025, poses for a photograph in the Israeli city of Herzliya, on Oct. 20, 2025.

“Appreciate everything, all the basic things in your life. Fifty metres underground, you understand what is really, really important in life. And it’s never material things. It’s never if you have a big house or a small house. If you have a flashy car or just a simple car. You don’t miss your bank account. You don’t care if you have a thousand dollars or a million dollars. You just want another five minutes with your family, with your friends. And you’re willing to pay anything for that,” he told the audience.

“Freedom is priceless,” he said, “to be able to wake up in the morning and not to ask any permission to go to a toilet, or have a shower, or open a fridge, or speak. You never forget after you lose that. When I’m in Israel, I try to open my day in the morning with a walk on the beach for an hour, and just look at that blue water. It’s just amazing for me.”

The lessons Sharabi carried out of the tunnels are not only about gratitude, but balancing hope for the Jewish people, against the rising tide of hatred.

“I know it’s not looking good for us now around the world, this rise in antisemitism. Sometimes it feels like 1940, not 2026,” he said.

After meeting members of Parliament, prime ministers and foreign ministers in various parts of the world, his message to them is: “They need to speak up with a stronger voice against antisemitism and every hate crime that happens against Jews around the world. It is their responsibility. I’m trying to wake them up.”