Helmut Oberlander, 96, a former Nazi interpreter, had his admissibility hearing before the immigration division of the Immigration and Refugee Board cancelled on Monday after the Federal Court of Canada stayed the proceedings until next month.
Helmut Oberlander, 96, a former Nazi interpreter, had his admissibility hearing before the immigration division of the Immigration and Refugee Board cancelled on Monday after the Federal Court of Canada stayed the proceedings until next month.
RCMP say the woman left her neighbour’s house in Dawson Creek, B.C., where she had been drinking alcohol, early Sunday morning, when temperatures fell below -40 C.
An Ontario woman was secretly followed and videotaped by the organization that should have been helping her recover from a workplace injury. Instead, Ontario’s Workplace Safety and Insurance Board tried to use the videos to discredit her. Experts say all kinds of insurers use covert surveillance to intimidate claimants or discredit claims.
Despite already having vast energy resources, Quebec’s new wind power project will turn its hydroelectric dams into giant green batteries for when the wind isn’t blowing.
A 33-year-old man faces three charges, including arson, after he allegedly broke into the historic Connaught Building and set a small fire that was quickly extinguished.
The site of the largest COVID-19 outbreak in Canada is now facing a new spate of cases. Alberta Health Services confirmed there are 11 cases linked to the Cargill meat-processing plant near High River, Alta., as of Saturday. Of those, seven cases are active.
Iain Rankin will be the next premier of Nova Scotia. Rankin was elected following a vote by Nova Scotia Liberal Party delegates, with the results announced Saturday night during a virtual convention.
Protests continue in Pond Inlet, Nunavut, on Saturday, as a two-week environmental hearing on an expansion at the Mary River iron ore mine wraps up.
This week, the co-founder of the United Conservative Party had some disparaging words for Alberta’s premier, arguing the government’s combative approach was failing when it came to several important issues.
Lifelong fish farmers like Paul Pattison say after watching the decline of logging, mining and pulp mills in Campbell River, the closing of the Discovery Island fish farms feels like the final nail in the coffin.