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Prime Minister Mark Carney, left, meets with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith in Calgary, Alta., Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — With the

government’s new energy deal with Alberta

, including plans for an oil pipeline to the West Coast, Prime Minister Mark Carney is determined to forge a new export route to gain leverage in trade talks with Washington.

But two questions remain: will the plan have any impact on U.S. President Donald Trump and, perhaps more importantly, will the pipeline ever actually get built?

Some analysts says that boosting oil exports to Asia could give the federal government more sway in future trade talks with the White House, even if it’s tough to quantify.

“If I were the United States, I’d have a little bit of fear of missing out and that would incentivize me to negotiate,” said Heather Exner-Pirot, senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. “But how they calculate things in the White House these days seems to be beyond my understanding.”

Still, on economic terms alone, it would give Canada options, which means “buyers in the United States will have to (compete) with buyers in Asia, so we will get a top dollar for our oil,” she added.

Martha Hall Findlay, director of the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary agreed, saying more energy export options should strengthen Canada-U.S. trade relations.

It’s not just Canadians who think the plan could work, either.

Andrew Hale, a senior policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington-based think tank, thinks a pipeline to the West Coast could be a game-changer for Canada-U.S. relations.

“I think that would be massive … Canada can then say to the Trump administration, ‘look, if you’re going to tariff all of our stuff, and in the same breath say that you want us to impose the same tariffs in China, that the United States has, well, I’m sorry, but that’s unreasonable.”

Hale noted that his conversations with Canadians this year have given him the impression that many feel that they’ve been willing to do certain things the U.S. is asking for, while getting little in return.

Getting a pipeline built, “if they can do it quickly, I think it would have a huge impression on Washington,” he added.

Praising economic pragmatism

Pipeline proponents see the West Coast route as additive to U.S. exports, not a replacement — unlocking Asia demand proven by Trans Mountain (TMX) while boosting GDP and doubling non-U.S. exports by 2035.

With global political and economic influence shifting its focus from the Atlantic and traditional Western markets toward the Pacific region and Asia, Exner-Pirot believes this is an opportunity for Canada to develop new relationships, “providing food and especially energy to those allies in India, Japan, Korea and Southeast Asia.”

“Going south, doing a Keystone XL is more ‘energy colony,’ and going west to the Pacific is more ‘energy superpower,’” she said, noting how Canadian oil and gas is outperforming its peer indices and even the broader S&P 500. She and her colleagues expect U.S. shale to soon peak, making this the perfect time for Canada to rise as a safe, reliable supplier.

Gary Mar, president and CEO of the Canada West Foundation, a Calgary-based think tank, said Alberta’s current production of four million barrels a day could double in 20 years, reducing reliance on the U.S. while generating revenues similar to the $1.7 billion from TMX expansion this year.

Proponents also pushed back against the idea that the pipeline would undermine Carney’s climate bona fides. The MOU refers to both emissions and the Pathways carbon capture project, committing to the transport of low-emission Alberta Bitumen and a $16.5-billion carbon capture, utilization and storage network.

Given that the International Energy Agency has

acknowledged

that oil demand is not peaking, Hall Findlay said the plan to responsibly produce oil could even put Canada in a position to displace dirtier — in terms of both emissions and politics — oil from Russia and Iran.

“There are customers around the world who, let’s be honest, would rather not be dependent on Russia. So the opportunity for us, I think, is huge, especially when you add in the geopolitics,” Hall Findlay said.

Room for skepticism

But opposition to the deal with Alberta, from environmentalists and First Nations, could still frustrate Carney’s plan to make Canada an “energy superpower” and gain leverage with Washington.

David Tindall, a sociology professor at the University of British Columbia, saw Carney present at COP21 in Paris in 2015, and noted that the prime minister “talked quite passionately about the need to deal with climate change.” The MOU was a bit surprising to Tindall, but he has done his own polling this year, showing majority support for new pipelines.

Climate concerns aside, placing bets on the success of this project remains risky, the experts and academics say, citing everything from climate activism and First Nation opposition to simple trust issues.

Tindall, for example, said that while polling may support a new pipeline, Carney seems to have underestimated how strongly people in British Columbia feel about these issues. In B.C., he said, “there’s a lot of talk about the risk of oil spills, in particular,” and strong support for the tanker ban. He also pointed to First Nations concerns.

Notably, the Assembly of First Nations chiefs voted unanimously on Tuesday to demand the withdrawal of the new pipeline deal, throwing their full support behind First Nation opposition to the pipeline in B.C.

Hall Findlay, who is optimistic about the possibility of a pipeline, said there’s a classic “chicken and egg” problem with it.

“The producers aren’t going to enhance production if they don’t know they have egress, and the pipeliners aren’t going to build a pipeline unless they know the producers are going to increase production.”

But time could be on Carney’s side. Exner-Pirot noted how Enbridge just announced its mainline expansion to over 400,000 barrels, and TMX is planning its expansion.

“I feel like we have time to get this right,” she said, pointing to the extension announcements and how the sector is already seeing the emissions cap being cancelled, giving it the opportunity to grow.

“We’re in a good situation,” she added, expressing hope for completion of a pipeline by 2031.

National Post

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Teresa Piruzza, director of external affairs and public policy at Stellantis Canada (formerly FCA Canada), prepares to appear before the House of Commons government operations committee, in Ottawa, on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025.

OTTAWA — After more than a month and a half of fighting, a Commons committee finally received an unredacted copy of a controversial funding agreement worth hundreds of millions of dollars from Ottawa to auto giant Stellantis Thursday.

On the same day, Industry Minister Mélanie Joly told another Commons committee that the government is serving Stellantis with a notice of default due to its announced shift in production of a Jeep model from Brampton, Ont., to the U.S.

The company furloughed thousands of employees in the process as it announced an “operational pause” of the Ontario assembly plant in October.

Sending a notice of default suggests the federal government is preparing to file a lawsuit against Stellantis, which it accuses of breaching

the contract signed in 2022 promising up

to $529 million in public funds to “support” the company’s plants in Windsor and Brampton, Ont.

A copy of the unredacted contract was provided to MPs on the government operations committee by the Industry department (ISED) on Thursday. It was not made available to the public or media.

The handover put an end to a brewing Parliamentary Privilege debate and a battle between ISED, the company and the committee since it requested the full contract on Oct. 20.

Up until Thursday, ISED had only expected to hand over a redacted copy of the 2022 agreement with Stellantis, arguing it was necessary to protect the company’s “commercially sensitive” information.

The agreement and the company have come under fire by both government and opposition parties after Stellantis announced the pause of its Brampton plant, the move of its Jeep Compass production line to the U.S. and a $13-billion investment in its U.S. operations.

Since then, the Liberals have accused the company of breaching its commitments in the contract and launched a dispute resolution process on Nov. 3 in the hopes of recovering some of the hundreds of millions given to the auto giant.

Speaking to the government operations committee Thursday, Stellantis executive Teresa Piruzza was repeatedly asked by Liberal and opposition MPs why the company appeared to be reneging on its Canadian commitment.

Liberal MP Vince Gasparo even questioned if the company’s recent announcement it was investing $13 billion in the U.S. was “blowing Canadian taxpayer dollars.”

“Does Stellantis have a values problem, that they say one thing at one time to get whatever capital they need, and then change their messaging when the environment is convenient for them,” he asked Piruzza.

Piruzza responded that the company’s commitment to Canada is “fairly clear, given the billions that have been invested over the last number of years and the advancements that we’ve made.”

She added that the company is working to find a “solution” for its Brampton plant and repeatedly denied that the plant was closed by insisting it was only on an “operational pause.”

“We will honour our agreement,” she said.

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

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From the left, former Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and Katy Perry pose for a photo in front of a Christmas tree with Yuko and Fumio Kishida, the former Japanese prime minister.

Former prime minister Justin Trudeau and pop star Katy Perry shared a meal with former Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida and his wife, Yuko, in Tokyo this week.

In

an Instagram post

Thursday night, Kishida shared a photo of the foursome smiling widely as they stood together in front of a Christmas tree.

“Former Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau came to Japan with his partner Katy Perry and had lunch with us,” Kishida wrote.

“During my time as Prime Minister, I met Prime Ministers many times, and during my visit to Canada, we worked together to strengthen our bilateral relations, including formulating the ‘Nikka Action Plan.’”

Also known as the

Canada-Japan Action Plan

, the 2022 initiative outlined how the countries would work together on issues such as security, trade, energy, and humanitarian response in the Indo-Pacific region.

He went on to mention Trudeau’s visit to the Atomic Bomb Archives during the G7 Hiroshima Summit and wrote that Canada remains “an extremely important partner to Japan in all areas of politics, security, economics, culture,” and more.

 Justin Trudeau and Fumio Kishida.

 

When it was over, Trudeau posted a message expressing gratitude to Kishida for the lunch meeting.

“Thank you, Fumio, for your friendship and your continued commitment to both the international rules-based order and to a better future for everyone,” he wrote on X.

It’s not immediately clear if the get-together was a planned one, but Perry was already in Tokyo this week to perform the last of the shows on her world tour.

As reported by

Page Six

and other celebrity news outlets earlier this week, she and Trudeau were seen strolling through the Asakusa district, a popular tourist area in the Japanese capital, on Monday night.

They were later photographed holding hands as they left the Sumo Stable Annex, where they were treated to a live wrestling match as they dined on traditional Japanese cuisine, as reported by

The Daily Mail

.

The lunch with the Japanese dignitaries preceded the second of back-to-back shows Perry performed at the Saitama Super Arena this week.

The 91-show tour ends Sunday in Abu Dhabi, U.A.E.

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.


Air Transat aircraft sit on the tarmac at Toronto Pearson International Airport. Without a deal or an extension to negotiations this weekend, Air Transat pilots could be on strike as early as Wednesday.

A resounding majority of Air Transat pilots said Wednesday they are ready to go on strike next week, just ahead of the holiday travel season, should airline management fail to table a “modern contract.”

The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), which represents about 700 Air Transat pilots — 98 per cent of whom cast a ballot — said 99 per cent have voted in favour of labour action.

While not a formal strike notice,

the union said

the “pilots are prepared for any outcome.”

“Nobody wants to strike,” Capt. Bradley Small, Air Transat Master Executive Council union chair, told National Post.

“The company doesn’t want that. The pilots don’t want that. But we also want a fair agreement.”

Small said that pilots want an agreement in line with what their peers at Air Canada and WestJet have signed in recent years, and reflective of the realities of 2025.

Such a deal, he said, would address working conditions around scheduling, improved insurance coverage, better retirement security, and compensation. They’re also hoping to bolster job security by limiting the number of outsourced pilots Air Transat can use as it expands operations.

Negotiations to replace the decade-old agreement began in January and continued past the April expiration date through the summer, during which time Small alleges the company was only present about one-fifth of the time, prompting the union to ask Ottawa to provide conciliators.

After roughly two months of talks proved fruitless, a 21-day cooling-off period was initiated and conciliation turned to ongoing mediation, Small explained. That ends at midnight on Sunday, after which Air Transat can force a lockout or the union can file the required 72-hour strike notice to hit the picket lines as early as Dec. 10, this coming Wednesday.

“Right now, between what the company is offering and where we say we have to be to be at industry standards, there’s quite a big spread,” Small said Thursday morning.

“They’re going to have to work pretty hard to get to a point where we would push that to a further date or come up with an agreement.”

 An Air Transat Airbus A321 jet rolls down the runway on takeoff from Montreal’s Trudeau Airport.

In a statement sent to National Post, Air Transat vice president of operations Dave Bourdages said significant progress has been made with the help of the conciliators to reach a tentative agreement and avoid a work stoppage.

“The goal remains to negotiate a collective agreement that satisfies both parties, reflects market realities and those of the company, and recognizes the contribution of our pilots,” he stated.

John Gradek, an aviation management lecturer at McGill and a former Air Canada executive, said the pilots are justified in their desire for a modernized contract.

“All the major clauses in the agreement have remained static over 10 years,” he said, “and working conditions established both by regulation as well as by competitors have changed significantly in that period of time.”

Airline bracing for holiday travel disruptions

In

a notice to passengers

, the airline said those fearing a strike will interfere with upcoming travel plans can cancel or modify their existing reservation “according to the terms and conditions of their fare class.”

If a strike notice is filed, the airline said “certain flights” will be cancelled and it would “do everything possible to assist customers in returning to their point of origin.”

“This would include the offer of a new ticket on a next available flight if such an option exists within 48 hours of the original departure time, or the refund of any unused portion of the trip.”

Small said the union was understanding of passenger concerns at this time of year, but blamed the company for dragging its heels.

He remains hopeful that a deal can be reached so their plans won’t be delayed or cancelled.

Gradek, however, doesn’t think passengers have to worry about a strike as there are elements “playing in favour of a settlement.”

Firstly, he said, Air Transat pilots have never had a work stoppage, and he contends that they have little appetite to have one now.

The other factor is the airline’s current financial situation.

This summer, Air Transat reached a deal to

restructure the debt it incurred during the pandemic

, thereby forgiving hundreds of millions it owed. Gradek added that the airline simply can’t afford to lose Christmas revenues that account for 15 to 20 per cent of annual profit.

“It’s going to be cheaper for Air Transat to settle with its pilots than for them to suffer, a two- or three- or four-day work stoppage by the pilots,” he said.

National Post contacted WestJet, Porter and Air Canada to ask if they have plans to modify operations to accommodate Air Transat passengers impacted by a strike.

“We are aware of the contract talks and are monitoring the situation, while getting ready for the always busy holiday season, when our planes are usually quite full,” the latter noted in an email to National Post.

The potential strike is the latest of recent labour actions within Canada’s airline industry.

Last summer, WestJet’s Canada Day long weekend flights were disrupted when mechanics went on strike. The airline’s flight attendants, meanwhile, have a contract set to expire on Dec. 31, with negotiations underway,

according to CUPE 8125

.

This summer, Air Canada flight attendants were on strike for three days — during which time they ignored a federal return-to-work order — before resuming negotiations and reaching a deal.

Small was dubious Ottawa would step in this time, but said they’ll be ready to deal with it should it occur.

Gradek is even more sure that Minister of Transport Steve MacKinnon or Minister of Jobs Patt Hajdu won’t act.

“I don’t think they want to be pushed to a corner and have to go through the same embarrassment that happened with the Air Canada flight attendants,” he said.

“I think that they’re hoping against hope that negotiations will in fact reach an agreement prior to Dec. 10.”

That seemed to be the message from Hajdu on Wednesday when reporters asked if Ottawa would intervene.

“These are all hypothetical questions. What I know is, the best deals are the ones that the parties arrive at together,” she said, according to

The Canadian Press.

“Let’s hope that they continue to have those conversations in earnest, and protect their industry, their employees and, of course, the many passengers that are relying on them.”

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Bloc Quebecois leader Yves-Francois Blanchet answers question during press conference on Tuesday April 29, 2025.

OTTAWA

— The 

Bloc Québécois says the Liberals cancelled a scheduled meeting of the

parliamentary justice committee on Thursday, where they were expected to discuss an amendment to remove the religious defence for Canada’s hate speech laws, out of fear of “backlash” for supporting the move. 

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves Francois-Blanchet appeared before reporters Thursday morning, alongside


Rhéal Fortin, the party’s MP on the committee currently studying Bill C-9, the Liberals’ bill aimed at tackling hate. 

Fortin has been set to bring forward an amendment to the bill, which proposes scrubbing from the Criminal Code religious defences which are available for certain hate speech charges which, as National Post reported this week, the Liberals had struck a deal to support in exchange for the Quebec party helping pass the bill. 

However, that meeting, which was set for Thursday afternoon, was cancelled.

“We fear that because representatives, or would be representatives, of some groups, came to the committee and sat there, that the Liberals fear backlash against them within some communities, and that because of that, they have cancelled today’s meeting,” Blanchet told reporters.

He added that the party worries the Liberals could do the same for the two meetings scheduled for next week, putting the study of the bill off until 2026.

Losing potential Bloc support for the bill could jeopardize its passing, with the Opposition Conservatives stating they oppose it.

During Tuesday’s meeting, when the bill was last discussed, the Canadian Council of Imams came to watch, where they circulated a statement that they opposed the removal of the religious defences.

That meeting ultimately ended shortly after its scheduled time at the request of the Liberals, with support from the Bloc, despite an expectation that MPs were willing to stay late to complete the clause-by-clause study of the bill.

At the time, Liberal MPs on the committee explained that they had brought things to a close because they felt the meeting had been productive.

However, Fortin told reporters on Thursday he was told that it had to do with “pressure” that they received.

Blanchet said he had earlier informed Steven Guilbeault, the Liberal MP who had served as Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Quebec lieutenant before he resigned from cabinet last week, that the Quebec party’s support for the government bill depended on amendments, with the main one being to remove the religious exemptions.

Afterwards, Blanchet said Justice Minister Sean Fraser told his MP on the committee that “we will do it.”

Blanchet is now calling on the Liberals to let the justice committee sit to deal with the bill and the amendment at hand.

“We invite them to go on with it next week. If not, there’s a huge political tag attached to this issue.”

The Opposition Conservatives have been vocally opposed to the removal of the religious defences from the Criminal Code, saying that doing so amounts to an attack on “religious freedom.”

Conservative MPs on social media on Thursday accused the Liberals of stalling the government’s justice agenda, following the Liberals’ accusation that the Opposition party had prevented debate on the bill.

With files from Christopher Nardi

National Post

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A demonstrator waves a Palestinian flag inside a pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Toronto campus in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on May 2, 2024.

An anti-Israel protest outside a debate on

“the two-state solution”

featuring prominent Israelis turned ugly on Wednesday, with two activists arrested and two others removed from Toronto’s Meridian Hall.

The event was part of the Munk Debates, a series of debates led by the “brightest thinkers” about “big issues of the day,” and featured prominent Israelis — former Israeli ambassador the U.S. Michael Oren and former Israeli minister of interior Ayelet Shaked, who were against a two-state solution. It also featured former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and Israel’s former justice and foreign minister and former chief peace negotiator Tzipi Livni, who were in support of a two-state solution.

Despite the protest and some interruptions, chair and moderator of the Munk Debates Rudyard Griffiths said the event unfolded safely. “I felt that last night was a victory for sanity in this city, that we can have difficult conversations on difficult issues, where people disagree. But we can do that with with civility and substance, right? And we can move forward with events like this, despite the intimidation and threats directed towards our organization,” he told National Post.

The debate drew a crowd of masked protesters carrying Palestinian flags and holding up signs. One of the many signs said, “The world hates Israel,” as shown in videos posted on social media. Another

said

, “Honk 4 Gaza.”

One protester carried a megaphone and a Palestinian flag. As seen in the video, he shouted at people walking down the street: “Devil-worshipping Zionists! Go to hell. Go back to the slums of Europe!”

During the protest, one man was arrested for assaulting a peace officer, attempting to disarm an officer, criminal harassment and uttering death threats just after 9:40 p.m. at Yonge and Front streets, police said.

A woman was arrested for criminal harassment.

Two people who made it inside the venue were removed from the event itself for causing a disturbance, Toronto police spokesperson Stephanie Sayer told National Post. A trespass charge was laid against one of them.

“We support the protesters’ right to free speech and to exercise whatever they want to say, as long as it’s done lawfully. It’s a shame that clearly, for some people, they decided that their behaviour would not be within the law last night,” said Griffiths.

“There were a couple disturbances in the hall during the event, but they were professionally and effectively and quickly dealt with by the Meridian Hall staff, with assistance from the Toronto Police Services.”

A

video

posted on social media by lawyer and independent journalist Caryma Sa’d showed a scuffle between Toronto police officers and protesters. Another

video

, also by Sa’d,  showed a protester chanting “War criminals!” while others yelled back, “Arrest them!” in reference to the participants of the debate.

Those opposing the Munk debate were upset over allowing prominent Israelis to take part in it, referring to them as “war criminals.” Anti-Israel group Toronto4Palestine

posted on social media

with other groups, calling for an emergency rally at Meridian Hall on Wednesday. They also called for the event to be cancelled.

“For many Israelis a two-state solution is the only viable path to a lasting peace, stability in the region and renewed legitimacy for the Jewish state internationally,” the webpage for the

event says online

. “Others assert the attack of October 7 and two years of regional war have made Israel’s national security, now and into the future, irreconcilable with Palestinian statehood.”

On Thursday, Shaked

said

in a post on X that the debate was held “under heavy security.”

“Outside, demonstrations took place. Inside the hall, some useful idiots shouted, but overall, people listened and wanted to learn,” she said.

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Tse Chi Lop at the Melbourne airport on Dec. 22, 2022, after he was extradited from the Netherlands on drug charges.

A Canadian man accused of heading a multi-billion-dollar global drug syndicate has been sentenced to 16 years in prison in Australia after three years of secret, closed court hearings.

Tse Chi Lop, formerly of Toronto, was accused of being one of world’s biggest drug kingpins and called “Asia’s El Chapo” when a deluge of meth was flowing across the Asia-Pacific region.

A global manhunt for the Chinese-born Canadian citizen ended when he was arrested at an airport in Amsterdam in 2021 as he tried to fly back to Canada. His extradition to face trial in Australia required a guarantee that he not face more than 25 years in prison. He arrived in Australia in December 2022.

On Thursday in court in Melbourne, when the doors were finally opened to the public and media, it seems the Dutch government did not need to worry about harsh Australian sentencing.

The world learned that last month he had pleaded guilty to conspiring to traffic commercial quantities of border-controlled drugs.

Australian media reports say the 62-year-old showed little emotion in court where he sat with a Cantonese interpreter under police guard.

The judge, Peter Rozen, described his business as “pure evil.”

Tse became one of the world’s most-wanted organized crime figures before he was caught. His vast wealth and power kept his name out of the headlines for years, allowing him to live a jet-set life filled with private planes, high-rolling casinos, real estate and travel.

Authorities said Tse forged an alliance of five triad crime groups in Asia into an organization members called “The Company.” For police in many countries, the syndicate was called Sam Gor, Cantonese for “Brother Number Three,” one of Tse’s nicknames.

“It’s about time. But as the judge mentioned, he got off lightly, he’s lucky,” said Jeremy Douglas, deputy director of operations with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, known as UNODC. Douglas first

dubbed Tse “the Asian El Chapo,“ in reference to El Chapo Guzman, the notorious Mexican drug kingoin. 

“At 16 years, pardonable after ten years, minus time served and time in Amsterdam before his extradition, means he could be out in a few years and deported, on a plane back to Toronto,” said Douglas, himself a Canadian.

Tse immigrated to Canada with his fiancé in 1988, at the age of 25 and settled in Toronto. There he laid the foundation for his aspirations. They married in Canada a year later and had two children, a daughter and a son; his son had health issues since birth, he once told court in a plea for leniency. Both his parents and his in-laws followed him to Canada and they all lived together, according to court records.

Tse first hit police radar in Canada in the early 1990s when he was caught in an RCMP drug probe of Italian mafiosi living in the Toronto area who were dealing with Chinese-based crime groups.

Tse shuttled back and forth between Canada and Asia but in recent years primarily lived abroad.

Despite the vast empire alleged by officials around the world, the Melbourne trial focussed on the period 2012-2013 of plotting within Australia. Prosecutors had strong evidence of his involvement in a drug plot that led to a series of police raids and seizures.

At its peak, Australia Federal Police (AFP) said, the Sam Gor syndicate was the biggest trafficker of methamphetamine to Australia.

He will be eligible for parole after serving 10 years.

Krissy Barrett, commissioner of the AFP, said the sentencing ended one of the federal force’s most high-profile investigations, called Operation Volante.

“This result showcases what the AFP does best — identifying and targeting criminal syndicates that cause significant harm to our communities,’’ she said.

“Operation Volante is a culmination of 14 years of hard work and perseverance from our investigators and international network. This investigation highlights that the long arm of the AFP can reach criminals across the world.”

Douglas said the modest sentence from not prosecuting Tse on much larger allegations is “unfortunate, especially given I know what international partners and the AFP have on him. The estimates of the different Sam Gor shipments that were going out of the Golden Triangle towards Australia and around the region were in the tens of tons, not a tiny amount.”

Tse will be deported when released, likely back to Canada.

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Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa at the Carondelet Palace on Dec. 2, 2025, on the Ecuadorian capital's founding anniversary.

An encrypted chat allegedly between Balkan drug traffickers shows them bragging about having exclusive rights to smuggle cocaine alongside bananas in shipping containers exported by the Ecuadorian president’s family firm.

A confidential Croatian prosecution document shows two people, using the encrypted messenger platform Sky ECC and identified only by anonymous PIN numbers, boasting in a February 2021 chat that “no one but them” was allowed to load cocaine in containers shipped by the Noboa Trading Co TCN S.A.

Noboa Trading is part of Noboa Corporation, a sprawling business empire that produces bananas under the Bonita brand and is run by the family of Ecuador President Daniel Noboa. Noboa Trading Co. did not respond to questions from reporters, and the office of President Noboa declined to comment.

In a months-long investigation, reporters from Serbian outlet KRIK, global investigative reporting group the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and the

Investigative Journalism Bureau

were able to match specific drug shipments mentioned in chats between the alleged traffickers to real-life banana shipments made by Noboa Trading.

Crucially, reporters were also able to decipher just who, in the criminal underworld, was alleged to receive the shipments involved.

While the Croatian documents showed only anonymous PINs, a Serbian indictment exclusively obtained by KRIK let them identify one of the alleged interlocutors as Nikola Đorđević, who Serbian prosecutors say is an organized crime figure currently wanted in Serbia in an unrelated cocaine smuggling case. Đorđević remains at large and Serbian prosecutors ordered an international warrant for his arrest in May 2023.

Earlier this year Ecuador’s Ombudsman claimed that as much as 70 per cent of the drugs consumed in Europe are now exported from Ecuador, according to an interview with Deutsche Welle.

The new disclosure comes at an awkward time for President Noboa, who has pitched himself as an anti-drug crusader, and who has called on U.S. and European armies to join his “war” against what he called “narco-terrorists.”

“The revelations expose a massive conflict of interest for a president who has based his entire political career on a narrative of combating violence and curbing the corrosive influence of drug cartels,” said Jake Johnston, director of international research at the Centre for Economic Policy Research.

In March of this year, Colombian magazine Raya reported that police seized nearly 700 kilos of cocaine from three Noboa Trading banana containers at the Ecuadorian port of Guayaquil between 2020 and 2022.

During a presidential debate earlier this year, opposition candidate Luisa González repeatedly questioned President Noboa, who was then seeking re-election, over Raya’s allegations.

“Investigate Noboa Trading, where drugs are exported in banana boxes from Mr. Daniel Noboa’s company to Croatia and Italy,” González said of the president’s family firm.

President Noboa rebuffed the accusations, saying the company had cooperated in each case and Noboa Trading officials had been exonerated “from any illicit activity.”

He also denied having any personal involvement with the company.

“I am not the owner, but members of my family are in that company,” he said.

Bananas and cocaine

Although the allegations and chat logs are unclear exactly how Nikola Đorđević and his associates would have accessed the containers of a major fruit exporter like Noboa Trading, there is evidence that the claim made on the encrypted chat wasn’t just an empty boast.

The chats, which prosecutors say involve the alleged traffickers, refer to three specific shipments of cocaine that were expected by date, ship name and container number. Reporters matched the details shared in the discussions to real Noboa Trading banana shipments using shipping records and export data.

For example, they mentioned a massive 430-kilogram load of cocaine hidden in container MEDU9747725, which they said left Ecuador on January 25. By consulting shipping logs and export data, reporters confirmed that Noboa Trading had indeed shipped that exact container, on that exact date.

 The encrypted Sky ECC chat between messengers identifying themselves by anonymous PIN numbers, bragging that “no one but them” is allowed to load cocaine in containers shipped by Noboa Trading Co TCN S.A. CREDIT: OCCRP/KRIK

All three of the banana shipments, which were examined in detail by reporters from KRIK, OCCRP and the IJB, were sent from Guayaquil, Ecuador aboard the Liberian-flagged container ship MSC Mirella in late 2020 and early 2021, before being transferred to other ships.

In total, police say they contained 535 kilos of cocaine with a street value of at least 26 million euros. The last of the shipments, allegedly containing 60 kilos of cocaine, was seized by Croatian authorities in early March, after being offloaded in Ploče, a port on the Adriatic Sea, according to the Croatian prosecution document.

While Đorđević’s group allegedly dealt with loading the cocaine at the source, Croatian prosecution files say that a different Balkan drug gang took responsibility for offloading the drugs from the Noboa Trading containers once they arrived in Croatia.

That group was allegedly led by Petar Ćosić, who is currently on trial in Croatia for organizing and leading a criminal organization, aggravated murder, and smuggling hundreds of kilograms of cocaine from Ecuador, including some inside Noboa banana containers. (Ćosić did not respond to a request for comment sent to his lawyer.)

Shipping records show Firma Leon Van Parys N.V., a fruit company registered in Antwerp, which is the largest banana purchaser for the Croatian market, was a consignee in one shipment and the notified party in the other two. The company did not respond to a request for comment.

Shipping firm MSC said it remains firmly opposed to the cocaine trade and continues to intensify its security efforts.

“In recent years, the liner shipping industry has dramatically improved its ability to detect shipments of illegal drugs like those referenced in the report thanks to advances in technology and effective partnerships with customs authorities,” MSC said in an emailed response to questions. “The picture today is very different.”

Tainted supply chains

The new allegations could provide rare and intimate details of the growing collaboration between criminal groups trafficking cocaine to Europe, and demonstrates how easily supply chains for everyday goods can be compromised.

The cooperation appears to be part of a wider trend towards modular criminal supply chains, according to Anna Sergi, an organized crime expert and professor of sociology at the University of Bologna.

In this case, one set of alleged Balkan smugglers arranged loading the drugs into containers in Ecuador, while another was responsible for offloading them in Croatia, according to the allegations in various legal documents.

“Groups specialize in origin stuffing, maritime logistics, and local distribution and then sell or barter those capabilities,” Sergi told OCCRP.

And the alleged criminal hierarchy of the group that police say took responsibility for the cocaine in Croatia may not end with Ćosić.

By cross-referencing Croatian court papers with additional documents from a case in Serbia, OCCRP reporters found indications in court documents and chat logs that Ćosić was taking orders via Sky ECC from a much bigger criminal figure: convicted Montenegrin drug lord Darko Šarić.

Šarić, already a convicted cocaine smuggler, is currently on trial in Serbia for money laundering and jointly organizing four assassinations, among other allegations.

 Darko Šarić (centre), on trial in Belgrade in 2014. Šarić is alleged to be the mastermind behind a cocaine trafficking network with links across Europe and South America.

Serbian prosecutors have accused Šarić of continuing to manage a criminal organization from behind bars using Sky ECC.

Šarić denies these allegations. His lawyer, Dalibor Katančević said that Šarić’s cell has been searched countless times and no evidence had been found of prohibited means of communication.

“I am certain that in all of the prosecution and court files you referred to, you could not have found any undisputed evidence that Darko Šarić is connected to any of the individuals mentioned, nor to any of the alleged shipments,” Katančević said.

While there is no evidence that Noboa Trading was aware of contraband allegedly hidden in its banana containers, Sergi said the findings suggest systemic vulnerabilities at Ecuador’s main port: weak controls, opaque contracting of third-party packers, and informal gate practices that create opportunities for capture by criminals.

“[The decrypted chat] does not by itself prove company management’s involvement,” she said. “But it does strongly indicate that someone with control over the physical container-stuffing and departure process is complicit or has been captured by criminals.”

President Noboa and the Noboa Trading Co.

During the presidential debate earlier this year, President Noboa said he was not personally involved with the banana company sharing his name, but company records and the presidency’s own website show historical ties with him, and ongoing links to his family.

President Noboa’s father Alvaro Noboa, who unsuccessfully ran for the Ecuadorian presidency five times, leads both Noboa Corporation and Noboa Group, the umbrella companies for a vast business conglomerate that includes Noboa Trading, according to the websites of both Alvaro Noboa and the company.

Before becoming president, Daniel Noboa worked at Noboa Corporation, becoming the youngest shipping director in the company’s history, according to the website of the presidency.

Roberto Jorge Ponce Noboa, cousin of Alvaro Noboa, was CEO of Noboa Trading at the time the three shipments identified by OCCRP and KRIK arrived in Croatia, according to company documents and local media.

Noboa Trading is owned by two other companies: majority shareholder Lanfranco Holding S.A., registered in Panama, and Ecuadorian firm Inmobilaria Zeus S.A.

Because Panama allows companies to keep their shareholders anonymous, it is not possible to determine who currently owns Lanfranco Holding, but a 2015 document in the Pandora Papers leak shows that in 2015, Alvaro Noboa transferred ownership of the firm to two of his sons, Daniel and Juan Sebastian.

As of 2021, Inmobiliaria Zeus was owned by other companies registered in the Bahamas and Panama.

While its majority owner is hidden, among Inmobiliaria Zeus’s shareholders in 2021 were four companies and 12 individuals, including President Noboa’s aunt, Isabel Noboa Pontón, and several cousins.

Both Lanfranco Holding and Inmobiliaria Zeus also own other firms linked to the Noboa family. Inmobiliaria Zeus , for example, is a shareholder of Noboapallets S.A., while Lanfranco Holding is a shareholder of 45 other agricultural, shipping, packing and fertilizer companies connected to the Noboa family.

Though a Noboa Trading contractor responsible for conducting anti-narcotics inspections has been subject to judicial proceedings at least four times, the person has never been prosecuted.

“If the company cooperates, and alerts the National Police if it has some kind of contamination, that means it is cooperating,” President Noboa previously said.

As the world’s largest banana exporter, shipments of the yellow fruit through Ecuador’s busy ports like Guayaquil are an attractive target for cocaine traffickers.

Though Belgium, the Netherlands, and Spain, remain the major entry points for cocaine into Europe, improved interdiction has prompted traffickers to increasingly use secondary smaller ports.

Just as Balkan gangs have gained a growing foothold in the trade, so has Croatia, with its six commercial ports, become a more popular destination.

As Ecuador’s fourth-largest exporter of bananas, chat logs indicate Noboa Trading has found its containers at the centre of this phenomenon.

Between 2014 and 2024, the firm and its associated brand name exported $190 million of the fruit to Croatia, one of its key markets.

“The more you send to that region, the greater likelihood that the containers are going to be contaminated,” said Bruce Goldberg, a former U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent who worked in Ecuador for half a dozen years.

“And Ecuador sends bananas everywhere. Like everywhere.”

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

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The interior of a Court of King's Bench courtroom in Alberta. Quang Sac Hoang a two-year conditional sentence, with the first eight months to be served on house arrest, for his role in a fraud scheme.

A traditional Chinese medicine expert who helped trick a retired Calgary couple into investing $77,400 into a “sham” company has been sentenced to house arrest.

Quang Sac Hoang, who immigrated to Canada as a young man in 1990, was convicted of theft, possession of proceeds of crime and money laundering in Alberta’s Court of King’s Bench.

The court heard Hoang was acting as an intermediary within a larger fraud scheme.

“On receipt of this money, he immediately transferred it overseas to Singapore and the money was never recovered,” Justice Michele Hollins wrote in her recent sentencing decision.

The impact of Hoang’s actions on Susan and David Andersen “is significant,” said the judge.

“One can only imagine having worked and saved diligently into one’s 70s, only to have that financial comfort taken away. The other arguably aggravating factor — often present in fraud — is that Mr. Hoang made a free and conscious choice motivated by greed. He had a job, had clients and a stable life and yet chose to risk all of that, and become a convicted criminal, for $3,000,” the fee he received for his role in the scam.

But in her decision dated Nov. 27, Hollins noted “mitigating circumstances as well” in this case.

“Mr. Hoang has made a significant effort to repay a good portion of the loss and is facing a restitution order compelling payment of the rest, notwithstanding that he himself did not benefit to that extent. He has a modest but stable lifestyle and is genuinely remorseful,” said the judge.

She handed Hoang a two-year conditional sentence, with the first eight months to be served on house arrest.

“A conditional sentence may be as onerous as, or perhaps even more onerous than, a jail term, particularly in circumstances where the offender is forced to take responsibility for his or her actions and make reparations to both the victim and the community, all the while living in the community under tight controls,” Hollins said, quoting a case that went all the way to the country’s top court.

“While Mr. Hoang’s sentence must address the sentencing objectives of deterrence and denunciation, it must also comport with the principle of restraint (that the punishment be the least severe possible to achieve general sentencing objectives) and the goal of rehabilitation,” she said, noting Hoang has already paid the Andersens back to the tune of $20,000.

“In my view, given his gainful employment, his maturity, his remorse and the meaningful steps already taken to provide restitution to the Andersens, Mr. Hoang is a very good candidate for rehabilitation and a (conditional sentence order) is a legislatively provided tool for precisely these circumstances.”

While Hoang’s lawyer lobbied the court for house arrest, the Crown argued unsuccessfully that Hoang spend between 18 months and two years behind bars.

“After much due diligence,” the Andersens invested $77,400 “with a company they believed was Chiefswood Investment Management headquartered in Toronto,” Hollins said.

“In reality, that company’s name was being used by fraudsters to trick people like the Andersens into transferring money to bank accounts not related to any legitimate business. Instead, the Andersens’ money was received by Mr. Hoang and immediately transferred (although it took two attempts) to a bank account in Singapore. After trial, I found that Mr. Hoang’s company had been created for this purpose and not for any legitimate business purpose.”

Hoang was not the mastermind behind “the brand-spoofing using the Chiefswood name,” said the judge.

“His role in the overall fraud was therefore arguably minimal but still integral to the outcome. Without his agreement to lease business premises and open a corporate bank account to create the false perception of legitimacy, careful investors like the Andersens would not have been fooled.”

Losing their “hard-earned and carefully managed retirement savings has left (the Andersens) financially vulnerable and personally mistrustful,” Hollins said.

While “not formally trained,” Hoang “has worked in traditional Chinese medicine for most of his adult life and continues to do so, earning approximately $50,000 (gross) per year,” said the judge.

“At the time of sentencing, Mr. Hoang presented a payment of $20,000 towards restitution of the Andersens’ losses. He also made a (translated) statement to the court communicating his shame and regret, as well as his promise to try his best to make restitution of the rest of the money lost.”

Hollins gave Hoang three years to pay back the balance of the $77,445, he took from the Andersens.

She also fined him the same amount, promising that if Hoang defaults, he’ll be incarcerated for 18 months.

“Any amounts paid by Mr. Hoang pursuant to the aforementioned restitution order will reduce the fine by a corresponding amount,” said the judge.

A note on the Chiefswood website indicates the private investment outfit “has no interest” in seeking clients and “no intention” of growing the company. “Anyone soliciting clientele under the guise of Chiefswood Investment Management Inc. should be considered fraudulent and investors are strongly advised to terminate correspondence immediately.”

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Minister of Government Transformation, Public Works and Procurement Joel Lightbound speaks during a press conference at the National Press Theatre in Ottawa, on Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025.

OTTAWA — In 2017, Quebec politicians of all stripes marched in unison in Lévis

to demonstrate their support to Davie shipyard workers

and blast Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government for failing to provide enough contracts to avoid hundreds of more job losses.

One federal government representative showed up to the march: Joël Lightbound.

Frédérick Boisvert, who was then vice president of public affairs for Davie, said he was stunned to see an MP from the Liberal Party of Canada at the march given that it was to protest their government’s refusal to give more contracts to the sole Quebec shipyard.

“When Joël appeared in the picture, I’ll admit that a few people felt their jaw drop,” said Boisvert, who is now head of the Quebec City Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Lightbound, who was then a first-term MP in Louis-Hébert, quickly let the protesters know that he understood their concerns, and that he would help them revive the shipbuilding industry in Quebec. He quickly won the respect of unions and workers, Boisvert said.

Jean-Yves Duclos, who was then minister of families, remembers this moment well.

As the only other Liberal MP from Quebec City, Duclos was just as frustrated that Davie was not part of the National Shipbuilding Strategy (NSS). But he could not publicly voice that frustration, as a member of cabinet who was bound by government decisions.

“I encouraged him to (go to the march), being unable to do it myself,” he said.

In the end, it was Lightbound’s decision to join the workers and politicians protesting his own government — a “bold” move, by Duclos’ admission, and a sign of “courage,” according to Boisvert, that will serve him well in his new role as Quebec lieutenant.

“Joël fought ferociously inside government — he was one of the great advocates for the Davie shipyard,” said Boisvert.

Duclos said it was rather a group effort to rally the rest of the Quebec caucus and pressure the Trudeau government into opening the NSS and giving the shipyard its fair share of federal contracts to renew the Canadian Coast Guard and Royal Canadian Navy fleets.

About 18 months after that march, the Trudeau government launched the process to select a third Canadian shipyard, in addition to Irving and Seaspan, under the NSS.

Davie officially became the third shipyard to enter the federal strategy in 2023, ensuring that it would benefit from billions in federal contracts for years to come.

At 37 years old, Lightbound became Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new Quebec lieutenant this week, a role he will assume on top of his responsibilities as minister of government transformation, public works and procurement.

But his ascension to cabinet — and in becoming the face of Carney’s government in Quebec — has been anything but smooth.

Lightbound decided to quit a cushy job in a prominent law firm in Montreal in 2013 to move back to Quebec City, where he grew up, to seek the nomination as Liberal candidate for Trudeau’s team at a time when the party was in third place in the polls.

It was a gamble that paid off, as the twenty-something year old won the nomination and won his seat. Trudeau would eventually form a majority government in 2015.

His only other Liberal colleague in the region — Duclos — was part of cabinet during the Trudeau years, which meant that Lightbound would not make the cut, but the young MP would go on to play a variety of roles as parliamentary secretary from 2017 to 2021.

 Prime Minister Mark Carney shakes hands with Procurement Minister Joel Lightbound at a cabinet swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Dec. 1, 2025.

Lightbound’s notoriety would take an unexpected turn when, in the midst of the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa,

the MP criticized his own government for politicizing the COVID-19 pandemic

during the 2021 election and for failing to provide a clear plan to lift restrictions.

“Not everyone can earn a living on a MacBook at a cottage,” he famously said.

As a result, Lightbound resigned as chair of the Quebec Liberal caucus and was criticized by colleagues for scoring in his team’s own net at a time when hundreds of protesters were occupying the streets of Ottawa demanding that the Trudeau government step down.

The next few years were spent focusing on his role as chair of the House of Commons industry and technology committee, with the occasional criticism of the Quebec government’s shifting plans to build a “third link” between Quebec City and Lévis.

Days after Chrystia Freeland resigned as finance minister,

Lightbound openly called for Trudeau to step down as leader

. He criticized many of his decisions and said that Trudeau had not been listening to his caucus in recent months.

Lightbound would go on to support Carney in the Liberal leadership race, after Trudeau had announced he would step down, and finally made it to cabinet after the spring election. Duclos, like many other Trudeau-era ministers, was dropped from Carney’s cabinet.

As Procurement Minister, Lightbound managed to drop the bombshell that Canada Post would have to end door-to-door delivery — explaining that the Crown corporation was losing $10 million per day. His announcement received some blowback but it was fairly minimal.

And this week,

Lightbound inherited the role of Quebec lieutenant

from Steven Guilbeault after he resigned from cabinet because of Ottawa’s deal with Alberta for a new oil pipeline.

“The role of Quebec lieutenant is to communicate well with Quebecers, but most importantly, to get the interests of Quebec relayed properly in Ottawa,” said Lightbound shortly after his nomination. “I’m looking forward to playing that role.”

A source with knowledge of Carney’s thinking said Lightbound is an MP with “excellent” political flair who can defend the government against Conservatives, as well as the Bloc Québécois.

The source also said he is part of a new generation of politicians in Quebec who can bring a new and different vision of the future of the province. In addition, he is not from Montreal.

Lightbound said he is looking forward to developing jobs in Quebec in the defence sector and critical minerals, as well as focusing on cost-of-living issues. He also said he is hoping to make the Liberal Party of Canada more visible outside of Quebec’s urban centres.

Of course, he is also taking on the role of Quebec lieutenant at a time when the separatist Parti Québécois is on the rise and could very well form a majority government next year, with its leader promising to hold a third referendum during his first mandate.

If and when that time comes, Duclos thinks Lightbound will be asked to step up in his role as Quebec lieutenant.

“Canada needs Quebec,” he said. “One of his responsibilities… will be to demonstrate not only to Quebecers why Canada is so good for its development, in all respects, but also to demonstrate to the rest of the country how Quebec can reinforce Canada.”

Boisvert said Lightbound is not the type of guy who backs down when things get tough.

“He doesn’t hate getting into a good fight but also doesn’t seek that” he said.

If his advocacy for the Davie shipyard to join the NSS years after the deal was cast in stone is any indication, Lightbound might get called to a new fight — to save Canada.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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