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Trio of suicides puts military culture under scrutiny - The Globe and Mail

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 30 November 2013 | 16.14

Warrant Officer Michael McNeil completed two tours of duty in Afghanistan after serving with the Canadian Forces in other places such as Bosnia. But the 39-year-old veteran of dangerous overseas missions died by his own hand on a military base here in Canada.

Warrant Officer McNeil was one of three members of the Canadian Forces to die by suicide in the past week. All spent time in Afghanistan.

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The trio of deaths could simply be tragic coincidence. But soldiers' advocates, health researchers, and the families of the victims say many of the military men and women returning from that war are grappling with serious psychological disorders, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and some say Canada is not doing enough to help them.

Certainly, the family of Warrant Officer McNeil, who spent 19 years in the army, feels that way. His body was found Wednesday at Canadian Forces Base Petawawa, north of Ottawa.

"Basically, he didn't get the help he needed or he would still be here. So something's gone through the floorboards somewhere. Somebody is not looking after the guys at home," his uncle, Frank McNeil, said in a telephone interview on Friday.

"Michael did commit suicide. He hung himself. But the thing is, where did that come from? From being overseas, from seeing what he'd seen," Mr. McNeil said. "He's not going to be recognized because he committed suicide but, as far as I am concerned, he's a hero. He's done his thing."

The death of Warrant Officer McNeil followed those on Monday of Master Corporal William Elliott of the Princess Patricia's Light Infantry near Shilo, Man., and Master Bombardier Travis Halmrast of the 20th Independent Field Battery in Lethbridge, Alta.

Colonel Rakesh Jetly, a senior psychiatrist and mental health adviser to the Canadian Forces Surgeon-General, told reporters on Friday that the military is committed to ensuring its members receive the highest standard of care available – and that the suicide rate for soldiers is lower than that of people of comparable age in the general population.

But Col. Jetly also said the military recognizes a "significant minority" of its personnel will be psychologically affected by combat operations. Mental issues resulting from the Afghan conflict have steadily increased, he said, and that "number isn't going to stop just because the combat has stopped, for years to come."

A study this summer found that 13.5 per cent of soldiers who served in Afghanistan have mental issues related to their deployment, and those who were in Kandahar, where the Canadian Forces were based for five years, were six times more likely to suffer a mental disorder than those deployed to the United Arab Emirates or the Arabian Gulf.

Jamie Robertson, a spokesman for the Canadian Forces Ombudsman who spent 20 years in the Canadian Forces, said his office has consistently flagged the problems associated with PTSD in the military.

The military has improved how it deals with the issue since 2002, Mr. Robertson said.

But the Department of National Defence is not meeting its own targets for hiring mental-health workers, he said, a problem he attributed to bureaucratic impediments rather than a lack of funds or a dearth of trained personnel.

In addition, Mr. Robertson said, soldiers, sailors and airmen who are battling mental demons are often hesitant to get help because of the stigma and the self-stigma.

"In a warrior culture, to step forward to say you have a problem that's an injury of the mind is a problem for soldiers."

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$50-million Lotto Max jackpot unclaimed for a second straight draw - Vancouver Sun

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Ex-teacher who admitted child luring wants his case thrown out - Timmins Press

Tony Spears, Multimedia Journalist Ottawa Sun

By Tony Spears, Ottawa Sun

Ottawa courthouse. (QMI Agency)

Ottawa courthouse. (QMI Agency)

A former teacher who faces charges of child luring asked for his case to be thrown out even though he has pleaded guilty.

"I am calling for prosecutorial misconduct," Leon Beaulieu, 60, told Judge Jacqueline Loignon.

"I ask for the case to be thrown out and for an acquittal."

But Beaulieu had admitted his guilt in an earlier plea.

Police said he sent a photo of his private parts to someone he thought was a 14-year-old boy, along with raunchy messages.


Ottawa Sun

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North Korea confirms US war veteran held, publishes 'confession' - ABC Online

Updated November 30, 2013 19:51:37

North Korea has confirmed an American retiree and Korean War veteran has been detained for "hostile acts" against the communist country and released a written apology for his alleged crimes.

Merrill Newman, an 85-year-old veteran of the Korean War from California, was held in October after entering the North "under the guise of a tourist", the country's official KCNA news agency said.

It is the first time the reclusive state has officially admitted holding Newman, whose family said he was detained on October 26 shortly before take-off from Pyongyang following a 10-day tour.

The KCNA report said Newman had been accused of committing crimes both as a tourist and during his participation in the Korean War.

He has been accused of infringing upon the "dignity and sovereignty" of the communist country and "slandering its socialist system, quite contrary to the purpose of the tour", it said.

Newman, who worked as an advisor at a US military intelligence unit in 1953, had also "masterminded espionage and subversive activities" during the 1950-53 Korean War and was involved in the killing of North Korean soldiers and "innocent" civilians, KCNA added.

But Mr Newman's son has said the arrest is a misunderstanding as his father had always wanted to go back to visit the country after fighting in the Korean War more than 60 years ago.

After the last day of his tour, Mr Newman had a meeting with his tour guide at which the Korean War was discussed.

Mr Newman's son believes there must have been some misunderstanding arising from that meeting that later resulted in his father's detention.

In a separate report, KCNA published what it said was an "apology" written by Newman admitting his crimes.

"During the Korean War, I have been guilty of a long list of indelible crimes against DPRK government and Korean people," he said in a letter of apology released by KCNA that contained bad English.

He asked for forgiveness, saying: "I realise that I cannot be forgiven for my offensives but I beg for pardon on my knees by apologising for my offensives sincerely toward the DPRK government and the Korean people and I want not punish me."

ABC/AFP

Topics: foreign-affairs, world-politics, army, defence-forces, korea-republic-of, united-states

First posted November 30, 2013 16:58:41


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Glasgow helicopter crash: number confirmed dead and people still trapped - Telegraph.co.uk

"My initial reaction for him from my experience was to try not to move him because he had been in a crush situation.

"But as we were lying there other people were literally being pulled out of the pub and more or less thrown on top of us."

Passers by formed a human chain in an attempt to rescue those trapped inside.

Among the wreckage the tail of the dark blue helicopter with the word "Police" written on the tail could be seen on the roof of the pub and rotor blade sticking out of a hole to the left.

Rose Fitzpatrick, deputy chief constable, said: "There were three people on board the helicopter, two police officers and a civilian pilot, and on a busy Friday night, there were a number of customers in the bar.

"We are working hard to recover people still inside the building and we will make further details available when we have them.

"A full investigation is now under way however at this early stage it is too early to provide details on why the helicopter came down."

Alex Salmond, first minister for Scotland, posted a message on Twitter saying we should "prepare ourselves for the likelihood of fatalities" following the crash at the Clutha Vaults pub, on the bank of the River Clyde.

Jim Murphy, former shadow defence secretary and MP for East Renfrewshire, had been nearby when the crash happened and described seeing people covered in dust being pulled out of the building.

"I got out of my car and just tried to help people," he told the BBC.

"I saw a pile of people clammering out of the pub in the dust. No smoke, no fire, just a huge amount of dust.

"There were people with injuries. Bad gashes to the head. Some were unconscious. I don't know how many.

"The helicopter was inside the pub. It's a mess. I could only get a yard or two inside. I helped carry people out."

It was claimed the helicopter crashed into the flat roof of the pub at around 10pm. More than 120 people were believed to be inside at the time watching Glasgow-based Ska band Esperanza.

Mr Murphy described the site as a "horrible horrible scene" but said the public and emergency services had worked quickly to try and help people.

He said part of the helicopter was sticking out of the building, but most of it appeared to be embedded inside .

He said he saw "a lot of dust, a lot of blood, a lot of people trying to help, people who were unconscious."

At least 15 fire engines, ambulances and police vehicles were at the scene on Friday night.

Police confirmed two police officers and one civilian pilot had been on board the helicopter.

The Police Roll of Honour Trust, a charity dedicated to honouring officers who have died in their duty, posted on Twitter: "Our thoughts are with the crew of @policescotland SP99 helicopter that has crashed in Glasgow - hoping everyone is alright."

Grace MacLean was inside the bar at the time of the crash, and said there was no big bang or explosion at first, and just some smoke.

She said: "The band were laughing and we were all joking that the band had made the roof come down.

"They carried on playing and then it started to come down more and someone started screaming and then the whole pub just filled with dust. You couldn't see anything, you couldn't breathe.

"It was a real testament to the people of Glasgow, everyone in that pub was shouting 'here's the door', they were helping each other out."

Wesley Shearer said he was pulling people out of the pub in Stockwell Street after the crash.

He posted on Twitter: "This is unbelievable. Just spent 20 minutes pulling people out the bar.

"Apparently a helicopter crashed on the roof."

It was not confirmed how many people had been in the pub, which had been hosting a live band night featuring nine-piece Glasgow ska band Esperanza at the time of the alleged crash.

The band later posted on its Facebook page that its members were safe.

Police said they could not confirm details of any injuries.

Witnesses were moved to a nearby hotel as the emergency services tried to rescue everyone from the pub on Friday evening.

Alex Salmond, First Minister of Scotland, said his thoughts were with everyone involved in the crash.

Nicola Sturgeon, Deputy First Minister of Scotland, added:"Absolutely awful news about a helicopter crashing into the Clutha. All my thoughts are with everyone involved and the emergency services".

Police helicopters in Glasgow use a small heliport further down the Clyde in Finnieston, close to the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre, around a mile west of the scene of the crash.

One witness who lives in the Gorbals area of the city, on the opposite bank, said he had heard a helicopter flying low for some time before the crash.


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PQ gives up on balanced budget, projecting $2.5-billion deficit - The Globe and Mail

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 29 November 2013 | 16.14

Quebec is abandoning its goal of a balanced budget this year, saying wary consumers and softening economic growth in North America have sent its revenues spiralling downward.

In contrast to pledges just a few months ago of an imminent end to deficits, the Quebec government is now projecting a shortfall of $2.5-billion for the current fiscal year, having rejected any deep spending cuts or tax hikes that would have closed that gap.

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The Parti Québécois government cited some issues particular to Quebec, including a surprise drop in sales-tax revenues after a rate hike at the start of the year. But many of the factors in Quebec's grim financial assessment – which comes amid growing concerns over the state of provincial finances in Canada – could ripple through to other parts of the country: a flat housing market in the wake of changes by the federal government; the drag on revenues from low inflation; soft consumer spending; and weakening commodity prices.

The minority government now says that the province won't return to balance until the end of the 2015-16 fiscal year. The opposition Liberals and the Coalition Avenir Québec called the economic update devastating and vowed to vote against the next budget and defeat Premier Pauline Marois's minority government, which would trigger an election in the spring.

The announcement made by Finance Minister Nicolas Marceau on Thursday had been widely expected in recent months, as a slowing economy and falling fiscal revenues made the province's fiscal challenge even more daunting. Ms. Marois raised the possibility of a deficit as early as last spring, after only small cutbacks to the province's social-insurance program punctured the government's popularity.

"I'm not happy about this. Sure I'm disappointed," Mr. Marceau said, adding that sticking to the promised balanced-budget target would have plunged Quebec into recession. "The decision to reach a balanced budget is always possible. But there are costs and there are benefits, and the costs are way larger than the benefits."

But that decision was criticized as a failure to realize that Canada's second most-populous province appears to have hit a fiscal wall. "More than ever, Quebec is living beyond its fiscal means," Yves-Thomas Dorval, president of the Quebec Employers Council, said in a statement.

Quebec is expected to underperform the rest of Canada in terms of economic expansion, growing just 0.9 per cent this year, lower than the previously projected 1.3 per cent. Revenues are similarly stalled and are expected to grow 2.6 per cent in the current fiscal year, compared with the 5.2-per-cent growth the government forecast in March.

Quebec is already carrying the biggest debt load in the country. As a percentage of gross domestic product, Quebec's net debt stood at 49 per cent for the 2012-13 fiscal year. Ontario was second highest at 37.4 per cent, followed closely by Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.

Mr. Marceau has promised that the province's debt load would be reduced to a more manageable level over the next decade. But opposition politicians have expressed healthy skepticism that Mr. Marceau can get the job done.

Don Drummond, the former TD Bank chief economist who wrote a major report last year for the Ontario government on how to address that province's fiscal situation, says Quebec also has a "competitive issue" with wages. since they haven't compressed as in the U.S. "There's something particular going on in Quebec," said Mr. Drummond. "Quebec productivity has always been very weak and as the world economy starts to get more competitive that shows up more and more."

While spending has been modest, Mr. Drummond noted that Quebec's fiscal management has "never been consistent with the economics and demographics" of the province. Instead, successive governments have all but ignored issues such as an aging population and low birth rate. "These are not conditions under which you want to carry high debt," he said.

In its annual report on Canadian finances, the International Monetary Fund praised Ottawa's approach to balancing the books by 2015 and noted that it could even ease up on its plans if the economy slows. Provinces, however, were warned that they may have to raise taxes, something Quebec says is not an option. "At the provincial level, consolidation plans are facing increasing challenges on the backdrop of disappointing economic growth, and some provinces may need to consider additional measures, especially on the revenue side, to return to a balanced budget," the IMF report stated in its Nov. 26 report.

With reports from Bill Curry and Sean Silcoff in Ottawa

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Lavishly-paid bureaucrat quits Arts Council - CTV News

MONTREAL - Charles Lapointe, the bureaucrat fingered by the Quebec Auditor General's report for his high salary during his past stint as Montreal tourism boss, has acceded to pressure and stepped down as president of the Montreal Arts Council.

Lapointe, who was previously CEO of Tourism Montreal, had been leading the Montreal Arts Council, a volunteer position, since January 2013.

Mayor Denis Coderre had called for his resignation earlier in the day and stated in no uncertain terms that he felt that Lapointe's high salary and benefits in his previous job were inappropriate.

"People are pissed off and rightfully, and you know, you never defend the indefensible, so let's put it this way, I'm swearing a lot on the inside right now," said Coderre when asked about Lapointe.

Quebec Auditor General Michel Samson noted in his annual report released Wednesday that Lapointe earned an exorbitant $398,000 per year and then was handed more than $650,000 as a retirement package. Lapointe also received automobile expenses for $72,000, travel expenses for $10,000.

He charged the agency nearly $40,000 in meals and $4,100 in alcohol bills between 2011 and 2013 while at the helm of the publicly-funded agency.

Lapointe was the highest-paid bureaucrat in Quebec.

On Thursday the Quebec National Assembly agreed to convene with leaders from Tourism Montreal to discuss their management decisions.

Tourism Montreal has defended the payments as standard for such positions.


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Hope still for 'dead' Comet Ison - BBC News

29 November 2013 Last updated at 02:13 ET By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News

Comet Ison, or some part of it, may have survived its encounter with the Sun, say scientists.

The giant ball of ice and dust was initially declared dead when it failed to re-emerge from behind the star with the expected brightness.

All that could be seen was a dull smudge in space telescope images - its nucleus and tail assumed destroyed.

But recent pictures have indicated a brightening of what may be a small fragment of the comet.

Astronomers admit to being surprised and delighted, but now caution that anything could happen in the coming hours and days.

This remnant of Ison could continue to brighten, or it could simply fizzle out altogether.

"We've been following this comet for a year now and all the way it has been surprising us and confusing us," said astrophysicist Karl Battams, who operates the US space agency-funded Sungrazing Comets Project.

"It's just typical that right at the end, when we said, 'yes, it has faded out, it's died, we've lost it in the Sun', that a couple of hours later it should pop right back up again," he told BBC News.

The European Space Agency (Esa), too, which had been among the first organisations to call the death of Ison, has had to re-assess the situation. A small part of the nucleus may be intact, its experts say.

How much of the once 2km-wide hunk of dirty ice could have survived is impossible to say.

Passing just 1.2 million km above the surface of the Sun would have severely disrupted Ison. Its ices would have vaporized rapidly in temperatures over 2,000C. And the immense gravity of the star would also have pulled and squeezed on the object as it tumbled end over end.

Karl Battams said: "We would like people to give us a couple of days, just to look at more images as they come from the spacecraft, and that will allow us to assess the brightness of the object that we're seeing now, and how that brightness changes.

"That will give us an idea of maybe what the object is composed of and what it might do in the coming days and weeks."

Whatever happens next, comets are going to be a big feature in the news over the next year.

In 11 months' time, Comet Siding Spring will breeze past Mars at a distance of little more than 100,000km. And then in November 2014, Esa's Rosetta mission will attempt to place a probe on the nucleus of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.


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Anti-government protesters break into Thai army compound - Toronto Sun

BANGKOK - 

About 1,500 anti-government protesters forced their way into the compound of Thailand's army headquarters on Friday, the latest escalation in a city-wide demonstration seeking to topple Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

"We want to know which side the army stands on," shouted one protester, as others scrambled over the compound's red iron gates in Bangkok's historic quarter. In another district, about 1,000 gathered outside Yingluck's ruling party headquarters, shouting "Get out, get out".

The invasion of the headquarters deepens a conflict broadly pitting the urban middle class against the mostly rural supporters of Yingluck and her brother Thaksin Shinawatra, a former prime minister who was ousted in a 2006 military coup and who remains central to Thailand's eight years of on-off turmoil.

The protesters accuse Yingluck of abusing her party's parliamentary majority to push through laws that strengthen the behind-the-scenes power of her self-exiled, billionaire brother. They have rejected her repeated calls for dialogue.

Although the army moved its main command centre to a military camp in Bangkok's northern suburbs three days ago, the siege of its grounds by protesters is deeply symbolic and highlights the military's pivotal role in a country that has seen 18 successful or attempted coups in the past 80 years.

After forcing open the compound's wrought-iron front gates, protesters swarmed inside, demanding that Thailand's generals choose sides. About 100 soldiers stood guard. Hundreds watched from the balconies of the 19th-century cream-coloured building.

"We want the head of Thailand's armed forces to choose whether they stand by the government or with the people," Uthai Yodmanee, a protest leader, said from the back of a truck.

Yingluck has publicly courted Thailand's powerful military, which has remained neutral in this bout of protests.

"The army wishes all sides to solve the problem with the country's best interests in mind," said deputy army spokesman Colonel Winthai Suvaree.

Compare that to 2008, when Thailand was convulsed by protests that helped topple two Thaksin-allied governments.

In October 2008, after bloody clashes between police and demonstrators rallying against then-Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, Thaksin's brother-in-law, the military took sides. Then army chief Anupong Paochinda urged Somchai to step down to take responsibility for the violence.

Memories of that help explain why Yingluck appears to have studiously avoided a confrontation during six days of protests against her government. Police have remained restrained, separated by gates and razor wire from protesters who at times pelt them with water bottles and shout insults.

"ABOVE THE LAW"

The protest leader, Suthep Thaugsuban, a deputy prime minister in the previous government, told thousands of supporters occupying a state office complex late on Thursday that "the end game will happen in the next day or two".

Democrat leader Abhisit Vejjajiva, former prime minister of a military-backed government that Yingluck routed in a 2011 election, joined the protests on Friday along with other Democrats including former finance minister Korn Chatikavanij.

"When the government acts above the law, the people no longer need to respect the government," Korn told a crowd of thousands in Bangkok's Asoke commercial district.

Korn and other protesters marched to the U.S. embassy and delivered a letter which he said "explained our political situation" and emphasised Thailand "has a government that is acting above court laws".

Yingluck has ruled out resigning or dissolving parliament, and appears intent on riding out the storm. As tension mounts, her government has urged supporters and police to avoid confronting demonstrators, who it says are running out of steam.

"The government will not instigate a violent situation because that is exactly what Suthep wants," said Udomdet Rattanasatein, a lawmaker from Yingluck's Puea Thai party.

"We will not be provoked."

Yingluck had governed for two years without a major challenge until last month, when her party tried to ram through an amnesty bill that would have expunged Thaksin's 2008 graft conviction and cleared the way for his political comeback.

The Senate rejected it, and Yingluck then shelved it, but the protests escalated, switching from a campaign against the amnesty to a bid to bring down the government.

Yingluck's Puea Thai Party received a blow last week when Thailand's Constitutional Court rejected its proposals to make the Senate fully elected. That could have strengthened her government given her widespread support among voters in the heavily populated north and northeast.

Some party lawmakers say they will not accept the court's ruling adding that the judiciary had no right to intervene in the legislative branch. The courts have played a decisive role in Thailand's recent history and annulled an election won by Thaksin in 2006, a decision that eventually led to a coup that same year.

The ruling party's stance has infuriated anti-government protesters and opposition party lawmakers who accuse Yingluck of disobeying the court.

Thaksin's working-class support has ensured parties led by him, his brother-in-law and now his sister have won a decade of elections. But Thaksin's opponents attempted to overthrow all of those governments, saying he politicised and bought-off the poor with cheap credit and healthcare and wasteful subsidies.

Among the key protagonists in Thailand's dysfunctional democracy are those who revile Thaksin's authoritarianism - conservative generals, aristocrats, big businessmen and royal advisers - whose accusations of graft and disloyalty to the monarchy have mobilised Bangkok's middle class.

Thaksin, who now lives mainly in Dubai, has refuted those accusations.

The demonstrators have a presence at five locations in Bangkok, three in its historic heart, one in the city's northern fringe and another at the Finance Ministry, which they have occupied since Monday.

(Additional reporting by Pairat Temphairojana. Writing by Jason Szep. Editing by Robert Birsel)


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Harper Stands By Other Tories Involved In Duffy Affair - Huffington Post Canada

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 28 November 2013 | 16.14

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is defending Conservatives involved in Sen. Mike Duffy's expense-repayment deal — Tories who have held on to their jobs inside the government and the party throughout the controversy.

Harper's former chief of staff, Nigel Wright, has borne the full blame of his ex-boss for the controversial scheme to reimburse the disgraced senator's $90,000 worth of disallowed expenses. Wright resigned in May.

But other senior staff in the Prime Minister's Office, including director of issues management Chris Woodcock and manager of parliamentary affairs Patrick Rogers, were also active in the discussions about how to get Duffy to repay his expenses.

Both are still with the government: Woodcock works for Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver, Rogers for Heritage Minister Shelly Glover.

The deal originally involved the party reimbursing Duffy for repaying his expenses, while curtailing an audit into his claims. Conservative Fund chairman Irving Gerstein was also aware of the talks, and he solicited information from a contact at auditing firm Deloitte about the status of their report.

"The question is, why he hasn't fired all these other people in his office who were part of this coverup?" NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair demanded Tuesday during question period.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau continued in a similar vein: "Will the prime minister please explain to Canadians why Sen. Irving Gerstein continues to enjoy his complete confidence?"

Harper has steadfastly maintained that only two people are responsible for possible wrongdoing: Wright and Duffy. The RCMP has alleged they committed fraud, breach of trust and bribery in striking the deal that involved the exchange of money.

No one has been charged.

"The RCMP has said that there are two people under investigation," Harper said.

"When the leader of the Opposition starts tarnishing the names of people who face no allegations whatsoever, I am reminded, once again, of the old saying, 'When you throw mud, you lose ground."'

Gerstein's involvement is likely to come up on Thursday when the Senate internal economy committee recalls auditors from Deloitte.

A March 21 email exchange inside the PMO suggests staff were privy to details about the audit a full month before the committee's three-member steering group received an interim briefing from Deloitte on the process.

Police also heard that at different junctures, the two Conservatives on that steering group tried to halt the audit.

Liberal Sen. George Furey, the third member of that original steering group, said he's going to ask the chairman of the internal economy committee to make Thursday's meeting with Deloitte accessible to the public.

"There were certain allegations set out in (the RCMP documents) that raise a number of questions we'd like to ask the auditors," Furey said.

Also on HuffPost:


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New Snowden docs show US spied during G20 in Toronto - CBC.ca

Top secret documents retrieved by U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden show that Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government allowed the largest American spy agency to conduct widespread surveillance in Canada during the 2010 G8 and G20 summits.

The documents are being reported exclusively by CBC News.

The briefing notes, stamped "Top Secret," show the U.S. turned its Ottawa embassy into a security command post during a six-day spying operation by the National Security Agency while U.S. President Barack Obama and 25 other foreign heads of state were on Canadian soil in June of 2010.

The covert U.S. operation was no secret to Canadian authorities.

An NSA briefing note describes the American agency's operational plans at the Toronto summit meeting and notes they were "closely co-ordinated with the Canadian partner."

The NSA and its Canadian "partner," the Communications Security Establishment Canada, gather foreign intelligence for their respective governments by covertly intercepting phone calls and hacking into computer systems around the world.

The secret documents do not reveal the precise targets of so much espionage by the NSA — and possibly its Canadian partner — during the Toronto summit.

But both the U.S. and Canadian intelligence agencies have been implicated with their British counterpart in hacking the phone calls and emails of foreign politicians and diplomats attending the G20 summit in London in 2009 — a scant few months before the Toronto gathering of the same world leaders.

hi-snowden-blog

Secret documents released by U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden have provided new insight about the level of U.S. and Canadian spying on allies and foreign diplomats. (The Guardian/Associated Press)

Notably, the secret NSA briefing document describes part of the U.S. eavesdropping agency's mandate at the Toronto summit as "providing support to policymakers."

Documents previously released by Snowden, a former NSA contractor who has sought and received asylum in Russia, suggested that support at other international gatherings included spying on the foreign delegations to get an unfair advantage in any negotiations or policy debates at the summit.

It was those documents that first exposed the spying on world leaders at the London summit.

More recently, Snowden's trove of classified information revealed Canada's eavesdropping agency had hacked into phones and computers in the Brazilian government's department of mines, a story that touched off a political firestorm both in that country and in Ottawa.

The documents have rocked political capitals around the world. NSA spies on everyone from leaders of U.S. allies to millions of Americans. Personal information has been scooped up by the agency's penetration of major internet and phone companies.

Economic and political espionage

The spying at the Toronto summit in 2010 fits a pattern of economic and political espionage by the powerful U.S. intelligence agency and its partners such as Canada.

That espionage was conducted to secure meeting sites and protect leaders against terrorist threats posed by al-Qaeda but also to forward the policy goals of the United States and Canada.

The G20 summit in Toronto had a lot on its agenda that would have been of acute interest to the NSA and Canada.

The world was still struggling to climb out of the great recession of 2008. Leaders were debating a wide array of possible measures including a global tax on banks, an idea strongly opposed by both the U.S. and Canadian governments. That notion was eventually scotched.

The secret NSA documents list all the main agenda items for the G20 in Toronto — international development, banking reform, countering trade protectionism, and so on — with the U.S. snooping agency promising to support "U.S. policy goals."

Whatever the intelligence goals of the NSA during the Toronto summit, international security experts question whether the NSA spying operation at the G20 in Toronto was even legal.

"If CSEC tasked NSA to conduct spying activities on Canadians within Canada that CSEC itself was not authorized to take, then I am comfortable saying that would be an unlawful undertaking by CSEC," says Craig Forcese, an expert in national security at University of Ottawa's faculty of law.

By law, CSEC cannot target anyone in Canada without a warrant, including world leaders and foreign diplomats at a G20 summit.

But, the Canadian eavesdropping agency is also prohibited by international agreement from getting the NSA to do the spying or anything that would be illegal for CSEC.

Canada's 'Five Eyes' partners

The NSA isn't Canada's only partner in the covert surveillance business.

They are part of a multinational partnership that includes sister organizations in the U.K., Australia and New Zealand — the so-called "Five Eyes."

CSEC has roughly 2,000 employees and an annual budget of about $450 million. It will soon move into a new Ottawa headquarters costing taxpayers more than $1.2 billion, the most expensive federal government building ever constructed.

By comparison, the NSA is the largest intelligence agency in the U.S., with a budget of over $40 billion and employing about 40,000 people. It is currently building what is believed to be one of the largest and most powerful computers in the world.

CSEC is comparatively much smaller but has become a formidable and sophisticated surveillance outlet. Canadian eavesdroppers are also integral to the Five Eyes partnership around the world.

The documents obtained by the CBC do not indicate what, if any, role CSEC played in spying at the G20 in Toronto.

But the briefing notes make it clear that the agency's co-operation would be absolutely vital to ensuring access to the telecommunications systems that would have been used by espionage targets during the summits.

G20 Report

A protester jumps on a burnt-out car as a police car burns in the background during an anti-G20 demonstration June 26, 2010 in Toronto. Top secret NSA briefing notes predicted vandalism by "issue-based extremists" was a more likely threat than al-Qaeda-type terrorists during the event. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

Much of the secret G20 document is devoted to security details at the summit, although it notes: "The intelligence community assesses there is no specific, credible information that al-Qa'ida or other Islamic extremists are targeting" the event.

No matter. The NSA warns the more likely security threat would come from "issue-based extremists" conducting acts of vandalism.

They got that right.

Protest marches by about 10,000 turned the Toronto G20 into an historic melee of arrests by more than 20,000 police in what would become one of the largest and most expensive security operations in Canadian history.

By the time the tear gas had cleared and the investigations were complete, law enforcement agencies stood accused of mass-violations of civil rights.

Add to that dubious legacy illegal spying by an American intelligence agency with the blessing of the Canadian government.

CBC contacted the Canadian and U.S. governments for comment, and answers to specific questions.

U.S. State Department officials would not comment directly on the spying issue. Instead they pointed to the fact President Obama has ordered a review of all NSA operations in the wake of the Snowden revelations.

In Canada, officials at CSEC offered no comment .


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Military to investigate suicides of 2 soldiers with ties to CFB Shilo - CTV News

CTVNews.ca Staff
Published Wednesday, November 27, 2013 10:05PM EST
Last Updated Wednesday, November 27, 2013 11:30PM EST

The deaths of two soldiers who apparently died of suicide, and who were linked to the same Manitoba base, have sparked an investigation and raised questions about the treatment of Canadian veterans.

Friends say Master Cpl. William Elliott died this week at his home, just outside the Canadian Forces Base Shilo.

Elliott suffered back injuries in 2006 while in Afghanistan and feared that the military would force him out, his friend Cpl. Glen Kirkland told CTV News.

"It's quite a tragic loss that I was told should have been, could have been prevented," said Kirkland, who has publicly fought National Defence over discharging soldiers against their will, before they qualified for a pension. 

"(Elliott) didn't know how he was going to be financially looked after for his injuries," Kirkland said.

"He came to me a few times, saying he was having issues. I can't speak on his behalf, but I do know he was carrying some baggage."

Another soldier who was previously based at CFB Shilo, Travis Halmrast, died on Monday in Lethbridge, Alta., after attempting suicide in jail three days earlier. He was being held on allegations of domestic assault.

A family friend suggested Halmrast lived with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Defence Minister Rob Nicholson said Wednesday that the military is investigating the circumstances of both soldiers' deaths.

There is no evidence that the deaths are linked, but veterans' advocates say they raise red flags about how the government handles wounded soldiers and those with mental health issues.

"When (soldiers) do come and seek assistance, if it's not there for them, it's like tripping them," Barry Westholm of the Canadian Veterans Advocacy told CTV News.

"They fall flat on their face and that worsens the whole PTSD experience."

In 2007, Elliott received a special citation for bravery and valor against Taliban forces during his military service.

Three years later, he was court-martialed for shooting his weapon at a colleague. He spent 10 days in jail and paid a $500 fine.

Just three weeks ago, Kirkland said Elliott told him he was concerned about being discharged from the force.

Kirkland said the way the system is set up, coming forward with PTSD is "one step closer to being unemployed with the military."

The military has confirmed that neither soldier was a member of the Joint Personnel Support Unit, which is supposed to prepare wounded soldiers to either return to their front-line units or be discharged from the military.

The defence minister has previously insisted that no soldiers are being summarily dismissed and that members of the force are "prepared" for transition to civilian life.

With a report from CTV's Richard Madan, CTV Winnipeg's Josh Crabb and files from The Canadian Press


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Chair of Royal Canadian Mint should be fired over tax-haven allegations ... - National Post

The official Opposition is demanding that Jim Love, chair of the Royal Canadian Mint, be removed from his position following a media report that he orchestrated an elaborate tax-shelter scheme for the wealthy descendants of a former prime minister.

"Why did the government give a plum job to someone who was to act as a tax adviser on policy for the Conservatives when they knew — or ought to have known — that he was organizing stratagems so that rich Conservative families would not pay their taxes?" Tom Mulcair demanded in the House of Commons Wednesday.

"Why hasn't he been fired yet?"

Prime Minister Stephen Harper described a lawsuit against Love over his handling of former prime minister Arthur Meighen's fortune, reported by the CBC, as a "dispute between two private parties before the court."

"I'm obviously not going to comment on that," Harper said.

Harper's remarks come a day after documents obtained by the CBC appeared to show how Love, a Toronto tax lawyer, chair of the Mint and long-time friend of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, helped transfer more than $8 million of the Meighen fortune to offshore accounts so the family would save on taxes.

Love was taken to court in 2008 by two of Meighen's great-grandaughters who alleged he was acting negligently. Among their grievances was that Love, in moving some of the Meighen trust's money to offshore tax havens, exposed the family to "taxes, interest and penalties." The lawsuit was quietly settled in 2011 with Love, his lawyers, his trust company and Canada Trust ponying up $8.9 million, according to the CBC. No one admitted any fault.

Though Love – who was appointed to the Mint's board in 2006 and made chair in 2009 – has not been charged with any wrongdoing, opposition leaders questioned whether someone engaged in such actions should have been appointed to head an important national institution.

"Taking someone like that in that situation, that's the message they want to send? It's an ethical and moral question, giving him a plum job like that," Mulcair told reporters.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, who did not call for Love's employment to be terminated, nonetheless told reporters the revelations illustrate how the government "has regularly failed in it's appointments process."

Murray Rankin, critic for national revenue, called on government to launch an independent investigation into Love's activities and challenged Flaherty in Question Period to "stand up to his well-connected friend."

The Mint referred questions about Love to the Department of Finance and said Love would not be granting interviews. Flaherty's office declined comment and referred questions to the media relations office for the department, which also declined comment.


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Thai protesters force evacuation of top crime agency - BBC News

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 27 November 2013 | 16.14

27 November 2013 Last updated at 03:01 ET

Anti-government protesters have forced the evacuation of Thailand's top crime-fighting agency, on the fourth day of street demonstrations.

The group, who want the government to step down, marched to a complex of government offices outside the city.

The protest leader said they wanted to shut down government ministries in a bid to cause disruption.

They accuse the government of being controlled by the prime minister's brother, Thaksin Shinawatra.

The protests are being led by former opposition Democrat Party lawmaker Suthep Thaugsuban, for whom police have issued an arrest warrant.

They began on Sunday and so far have targeted the finance, foreign and interior ministries, among others.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

Thailand seems stuck on a merry-go-round of political conflict, replaying chaotic episodes that were scarcely believable the first time round. Why?

Ask the protesters and the answer is simple. One name. Thaksin Shinawatra.

They are a mix of middle-class city-dwellers and provincial folk from the south, the stronghold of the opposition Democrat party, and they all repeat the same mantras we heard during the last round of "yellow" protests in 2008.

That the former prime minister elevated corruption, always a pernicious problem here, to new heights; that he tried to control everything, and is still doing so from self-imposed exile, through his sister Yingluck, the current prime minister.

"Let the people go to every ministry that remains to make civil servants stop serving the Thaksin regime,'' the Associated Press news agency quoted him as saying.

"Once you take over, civil servants can no longer serve the Thaksin regime. Brothers and sisters, go seize the city hall."

Despite the arrest warrant, police made no attempt to detain him as he led protesters to government offices.

On Wednesday afternoon, hundreds of protesters surrounded the Department of Special Investigations (DSI), which is Thailand's equivalent of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The DSI is a particular target for the demonstrators - they accuse its chief of conducting partisan investigations against opponents of the government, says the BBC's Jonathan Head in Bangkok.

The DSI chief ordered his staff to leave as protesters surrounded the building, Reuters news agency said.

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra - who on Monday invoked special powers allowing officials to impose curfews - said that the government would not use force against protesters.

"This is not the 'Thaksin regime', this is a democratically elected government," she told media outside parliament.

'People's Council'

The demonstrations are the biggest to hit Thailand since the violence in early 2010, when supporters of Mr Thaksin paralysed key parts of Bangkok.

Continue reading the main story

Thailand's troubles

  • Sept 2006: Army overthrows government of Thaksin Shinawatra, rewrites constitution
  • Dec 2007: Pro-Thaksin People Power Party wins most votes in election
  • Aug 2008: Mr Thaksin flees into self-imposed exile before end of corruption trial
  • Dec 2008: Mass yellow-shirt protests paralyse Bangkok; Constitutional Court bans People Power Party; Abhisit Vejjajiva comes to power
  • Mar-May 2010: Thousands of pro-Thaksin red shirts occupy parts of Bangkok; eventually cleared by army; dozens killed
  • July 2011: Yingluck Shinawatra leads Pheu Thai party to general election win
  • Nov 2013: Anti-government protesters begin street demonstrations

More than 90 people, mostly civilian protesters, died over the course of the two-month action.

In the wake of those events, a government led by Ms Yingluck and the Pheu Thai party was elected, mostly by rural voters who benefited from Mr Thaksin's policies.

But many urban and middle class voters are bitterly opposed to him.

They say he controls the current government from self-imposed overseas exile.

They have been angered by now-shelved political amnesty legislation that they say could have allowed his return without serving a jail sentence for corruption.

Until now, the government and the police have chosen not to confront the protesters, in the hope that the movement will run out of steam, our correspondent adds.

That is not happening yet, and protest leaders insist they will not stop until the government is forced from office and replaced by what they call a People's Council.

But a more likely scenario would be a fresh general election - and the governing party, which has won the last five, would probably win again, our correspondent adds.

Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

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Bourassa byelection results 2013: Emmanuel Dubourg reclaims Montreal riding ... - National Post

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Why China air zone raises risk - BBC News

26 November 2013 Last updated at 00:17 ET

China's demarcation of an air defence zone that overlaps areas claimed by Japan is a strong statement, writes Alexander Neill of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), and one that raises the risk of possible miscalculation and escalation in the region.

China's unilateral establishment of an air defence identification zone (ADIZ) demonstrates President Xi Jinping's resolve to defend China's territorial integrity.

It is the most striking act of military escalation since he became China's top leader and top military chief one year ago.

Nevertheless, Chinese leaders will repudiate any criticism, pointing out the imposition of Japan's existing ADIZ in the region extending over China's claimed territory.

In the absence of transparency in Chinese defence spending, analysts commonly resort to the study of strategic signalling by the People's Liberation Army (PLA) - and the creation of the ADIZ amounts to a very strong signal from the military leadership.

The imposition of the ADIZ is resonant of the PLA's missile blockade of Taiwan in 1996, when former Chinese President Jiang Zemin ordered the unilateral establishment of air and maritime exclusion zones during a series of missile tests to the north and south of Taiwan.

The ADIZ declaration confirms that the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands are a "core concern" for China; it places the archipelago in the same category as the South China Sea and Taiwan.

China's defence white paper released in April holds some obvious clues to recent PLA actions. Japan is described as "making trouble" over the island dispute, while the US military pivot to Asia has created regional tension, according to the document.

Over the last decade, populist nationalism in China has been fuelled by an official narrative of humiliation at the hands of the West. Such sentiment has been tempered by adherence to Deng Xiaoping's "hide and bide" policy of strategic restraint.

Recently, however, demonstrations of Chinese military power would suggest that Xi Jinping may be prepared to overlook this policy.

Continue reading the main story

Air defence identification zones

  • Zones do not necessarily overlap with airspace, sovereign territory or territorial claims
  • States define zones, and stipulate rules that aircraft must obey; legal basis is unclear
  • During WW2, US established an air perimeter and now maintains four separate zones - Guam, Hawaii, Alaska, and a contiguous mainland zone
  • UK, Norway, Japan and Canada also maintain zones

Source: aviationdevelopment.org

China's new regional identity as an economic powerhouse with an increasingly potent military has made the humiliation narrative less relevant; a sense of national pride is now pervasive. Chinese sabre-rattling is often a reflection of domestic sentiment and a form of public appeasement.

This latest gesture comes in the wake of significant military tension in the region.

In January 2013, Japan's Ministry of Defence accused the PLA Navy of directing fire control radar onto a Japanese naval vessel not far from the disputed islands. China vehemently denies that such hostility took place.

China's best option to maintain escalation dominance in the absence of a permanent military presence in the Senkaku region is the establishment of the ADIZ.

The greatest red line for China would be the establishment of manned positions on the islands by Japan, an action which could prompt a swift escalation in hostility.

Both countries have avoided such actions thus far; however, recently China has flown drone sorties close to the disputed region, prompting fighter scrambles by Japan.

US surveillance

Another recent development was the roll-out of China's first stealth drone, which came soon after the maiden flight of the J-31 stealth fighter earlier this year.

Continue reading the main story

China-Japan disputed islands

  • The archipelago consists of five uninhabited islands and three reefs
  • Japan, China and Taiwan claim them; they are controlled by Japan and form part of Okinawa prefecture
  • Japanese businessman Kunioki Kurihara owned three of the islands but sold them to the Japanese state in September 2012
  • The islands were also the focus of a major diplomatic row between Japan and China in 2010

All of these weapons systems are still in the developmental phase but they emphasise the success of Chinese military modernisation over the last decade.

And while China is far away from becoming a global military power, US defence experts have noted that China has been able to concentrate formidable military capabilities in its own backyard. Some analysts suggest that in certain areas, the PLA may be able to rival US capabilities in the region.

Most significantly, the ADIZ is symbolic of China's persistent anger at the regular surveillance and intelligence gathering sorties mounted by the US military at sea and in the air along China's borders.

One particularly sensitive episode was the loss of a Chinese fighter pilot killed in a collision with a US surveillance aircraft on an intelligence gathering mission over the South China Sea in 2001.

Chinese leaders will argue that the establishment of the zone is designed to avoid such incidents, but given the extremely fast reaction times required for air interdiction and the relative inexperience of both the Chinese and Japanese air forces, the potential for swift escalation and possible miscalculation will increase.

The proximity of the US 7th Fleet in Japan and the regular operations mounted by the US military in the ADIZ area mean that the Pentagon will be extremely resistant to comply with air identification protocols demanded on China's own terms, as will the Japanese military.

The creation of an air identification zone also belies Chinese confidence in its own command and control networks and its ability to mount air surveillance over a large expanse of the East China Sea.

The US response may be to up the tempo of its own military drills planned for the area, forcing the PLA into a defensive response, testing both Xi Jinping's resolve and his chain of command.

Alexander Neill is the Singapore-based Shangri-La Dialogue Senior Fellow for Asia-Pacific Security at the International Institute for Strategic Studies


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Judge rejects OJ Simpson's bid for retrial - BBC News

27 November 2013 Last updated at 03:22 ET

US ex-sports star OJ Simpson has lost his bid for a retrial over his armed robbery and kidnapping conviction.

Simpson, who was jailed for up to 33 years for the September 2007 incident, argued for a new trial on the grounds his lawyer had botched his defence.

However, a judge ruled that "all grounds in the petition lack merit and, consequently, are denied".

Simpson's lawyers said the 66-year-old was disappointed but would appeal against the verdict.

Yale Galanter

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Ex-OJ Simpson lawyer: "He knew he had screwed up, he knew there were guns in the room"

Simpson was jailed for between nine and 33 years for his attempts to take back photos and footballs he believed had been stolen from him.

He was accompanied by five other men when he seized the goods from memorabilia dealers at the Palace Station Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.

Simpson says he should be given a new trial because his lawyer Yale Galanter had given him bad legal advice and failed to represent him effectively.

Mr Galanter rejected the claims. He denied approving Simpson's decision to retrieve the memorabilia, and told a court that Simpson knew his associates had guns when they went to the Nevada hotel.

He also denied failing to tell the former star NFL running back-turned-actor about plea-bargain offers.

Mr Galanter said he felt vindicated by the ruling.

"As OJ's lawyer and confidante, it was gut-wrenching for me to have to be in a position to defend my strategy and efforts on his behalf as his lawyer and testify against my client,'' Mr Galanter told The Associated Press news agency.

Simpson is facing at least another four years in prison.

His lawyer Patricia Palm told AP: "We're confident that when we get to the right court we'll get relief because he deserves relief, because he didn't get a fair trial.''

Simpson was famously acquitted of the murder of his former wife and her friend in Los Angeles in 1995.


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Seat count unchanged in the end, but Trudeau emerges big byelection winner - Winnipeg Free Press

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 26 November 2013 | 16.14

The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION

By: Joan Bryden, The Canadian Press

Posted: 11/25/2013 3:11 AM | Comments: | Last Modified: 11/26/2013 1:56 AM

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, left, raises the arm of Emmanuel Dubourg in Montreal, Monday, November 25, 2013 following Dubourg's win in federal byelection for the riding of Bourassa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

Enlarge Image

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, left, raises the arm of Emmanuel Dubourg in Montreal, Monday, November 25, 2013 following Dubourg's win in federal byelection for the riding of Bourassa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

OTTAWA - Justin Trudeau emerged the big winner from Monday's four federal byelections.

At first glance, the results simply preserved the status quo: the Conservatives held on to two longtime Tory bastions in Manitoba, while the Liberals retained two traditional Grit strongholds in Toronto and Montreal.

Beneath the surface, however, the byelections have roiled Canada's political waters, suggesting the Senate expenses scandal has badly hurt the Tory government and that Trudeau's Liberals are the ones who stand to benefit.

The Liberals increased their share of the vote in all four ridings — dramatically so in two Manitoba ridings where they were all but invisible in the 2011 election, coming within a whisker of an upset victory in Brandon-Souris.

In Toronto Centre and Montreal's Bourassa riding, the Liberals emerged victorious in a battle with the NDP over which opposition party is the real government-in-waiting. Despite an aggressive challenge by the NDP, the Liberal vote share increased slightly in both ridings.

Trudeau said the byelection results show Canadians are fed up with Prime Minister Stephen Harper's scandal-plagued Conservative government and are looking to the Liberals, not the NDP, to replace it.

"Canadians grow weary of the deceit, the mistrust and the cover-ups of the Conservatives," he told ecstatic Liberals at the campaign headquarters of Bourassa victor Emmanuel Dubourg.

They're also discovering that Tom Mulcair is no Jack Layton, whose sunny optimism led the NDP to a stunning electoral breakthrough in 2011, Trudeau asserted.

"Make no mistake, the NDP is no longer the hopeful, optimistic party of Jack Layton. It is the negative, divisive party of Thomas Mulcair."

Stealing a line from the late Layton's famous death-bed letter to Canadians, Trudeau added: "It is the Liberal party tonight that proved hope is stronger than fear."

By contrast to the Liberals' momentum, Conservative support nosedived in all four ridings — likely the result of the Senate scandal that has engulfed Harper's government for almost a year.

Even in Provencher, which Conservative Ted Falk won with a comfortable 58 per cent of the vote, the Tory share was down about 12 percentage points from 2011. The Liberal share, at 30 per cent, was up 23 points.

In Brandon-Souris, a riding that has voted Conservative in all but one election over the last 60 years, Tory Larry Maguire barely eked out a victory over Liberal Rolf Dinsdale. He captured about 44 per cent of the vote — a 20-point drop from 2011.

Dinsdale, who was only two points behind Maguire to increase the Liberal vote share by a stunning 38 points, said the fact the Liberals came so close to victory was a warning to the Conservative government.

"This didn't turn out the way we wanted, but it turned out better than anyone thought it would, not least of all, Mr. Harper," Dinsdale told a subdued room.

"(It's) a shot across the bow, we'll get you next time."

Maguire said the Senate scandal "certainly played a role in this campaign."

The Tory vote almost disappeared entirely in Bourassa, where the party captured less than five per cent of the vote, and in Toronto Centre, where it scored less than 10 per cent.

For Mulcair, the results were disappointing. Despite widespread praise for his prosecutorial grilling of Harper over the Senate scandal, his party increased its share of the vote only in Toronto Centre and not by enough to steal the riding from the Liberals.

Author and journalist Linda McQuaig took about 36 per cent of the vote for the NDP, up six points from 2011 but still 13 points behind Trudeau's hand-picked star, Chrystia Freeland.

"We always knew that this was a Liberal stronghold and that it would be an uphill battle and it was," said McQuaig.

Still, she argued it's significant that the NDP did better in Toronto Centre this time than it did in 2011 when Layton's so-called "orange crush" vaulted the NDP into official Opposition status for the first time in history.

Freeland had a different take.

"My message for Stephen Harper is: watch out, we're on the rise, our party's united," she said. "Canadians want an alternative to the Conservatives and they have found that alternative in the Liberal party."

The NDP share of the vote declined slightly in Bourassa, despite an aggressive campaign by a star candidate, lawyer and one-time pop singer Stephane Moraille. She wound up with about 32 per cent of the vote, compared to Dubourg's 48 per cent.

In the two Manitoba ridings, the NDP vote share plunged to less than 10 per cent. The party went from a respectable second in 2011 in both ridings to a distant third.

The byelections are the first concrete measure of the Senate expenses scandal's impact on Stephen Harper's government, the depth of Trudeau's popular appeal and the durability of the NDP's 2011 electoral breakthrough.


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Superintendent indicted in Steubenville rape case - Toronto Sun

STEUBENVILLE - A grand jury has indicted the Steubenville schools superintendent on charges that he obstructed an investigation into the rape of a drunk teen girl at a party last year, Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said on Monday.

The grand jury also has indicted an elementary school principal, a wrestling coach and a volunteer assistant coach for the Steubenville football team, DeWine said, adding that the grand jury's work was now done barring new evidence.


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Oakland police say shootings near park leave 2 in critical condition, 5 with minor ... - Fox News

OAKLAND, Calif. –  Police say two shootings near a park in Oakland have left seven people wounded.

Oakland police spokeswoman Johnna Watson says officers responded to a report of a shooting about a block away from the Verdese Carter Park and community garden at about 6:08 p.m. When they arrived, they learned of a second shooting scene nearby.

The Oakland Tribune (http://bit.ly/1hfacPo ) reports that the victims were all men between the ages of 23 and 31. Two were said to be in critical condition while the other five received minor injuries.

There were no immediate reports of any suspects or arrests.

Councilman Larry Reid, who represents the neighborhood, says the number of shootings has risen over the last six months in the area.


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Newtown gunman Adam Lanza had 'obsession' with Columbine - BBC News

25 November 2013 Last updated at 20:14 ET

The gunman who killed 26 people at a Connecticut school last year had "an obsession" with the 1999 Columbine massacre, an official report has found.

Police said there was evidence Adam Lanza, 20, had planned the shooting, which took fewer than 11 minutes.

But they could not establish why he opened fire at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown on 14 December 2012, before turning the gun on himself.

Lanza acted alone and the case is now closed, state police said.

The report said of Lanza: "He had a familiarity with and access to firearms and ammunition and an obsession with mass murders, in particular the April 1999 shootings at Columbine High School in Colorado."

Twelve students and a teacher were killed when two teenagers opened fire in a planned attack at Columbine.

Gunman's 'dry humour'

Before gunning down 20 children and six adults with a semi-automatic rifle at Sandy Hook, the attacker shot dead his own mother at the family home. She had bought him the weapons used in the rampage.

Continue reading the main story

We don't know if anything will ever make sense again"

End Quote Donna Soto Victim's mother

"The obvious question that remains is: 'Why did the shooter murder twenty-seven people, including twenty children?' Unfortunately, that question may never be answered conclusively," Monday's 44-page report said.

It noted Lanza's "significant mental health issues", but said "what contribution this made to the shootings, if any, is unknown".

Stephen Sedensky, the prosecutor who drafted the findings, also noted that Lanza had previously "displayed no aggressive or threatening tendencies".

Some people who knew the gunman said he had a dry sense of humour and an appreciation for nature, according to the investigation.

Mr Sedensky noted: "Some recalled that the shooter had been bullied; but others - including many teachers - saw nothing of the sort."

Mass murders spreadsheet

Lanza, who would not allow anyone to enter his bedroom, kept a spreadsheet of mass murders listing information about each shooting, according to the report.

He also had two videos showing suicide by gunshot and photocopied newspaper articles, dating back as far as 1891, relating to the shooting of schoolchildren.

Other findings include:

  • Nancy Lanza was concerned that her son would only communicate with her by email, even though they lived in the same house
  • While he was in primary school, Adam Lanza wrote a story in which a character kills his mother; it also featured violence towards children
  • On the day of the attack, a Texas woman contacted Connecticut police to say her son had interacted the day before while playing a videogame with someone who had said there would be a school shooting

The investigation also outlined the timeline of events that morning.

The attack began shortly after 09:30 when Lanza forced his way into the locked school by shooting through a window near the front doors.

The first call to emergency services came at 09:35 and the last shot, believed to be Lanza firing a handgun at himself, came at 09:40. Most of the deceased were killed in two classrooms.

"In fewer than 11 minutes twenty first-grade pupils and six adults had lost their lives," the report said.

Francine Wheeler

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A mother of a victim of the Sandy Hook shooting pleads for new gun control laws in April

Donna Soto, the mother of Victoria Soto, one of the teachers killed by Lanza, said in a statement that it was still not clear why her daughter and the others died.

"We don't know if we will ever be whole again," she said, "we don't know if we will go a day without pain, we don't know if anything will ever make sense again."

The Newtown shooting prompted a renewed US campaign for stricter firearms controls.

While no legislation was passed at a national level, some states - including Connecticut and Colorado - imposed tougher gun laws; other states loosened such restrictions.


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Finance Minister Jim Flaherty asks opposition MP's for 'low-cost' budget ideas to ... - National Post

Written By Unknown on Senin, 25 November 2013 | 16.14

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is asking opposition MPs for "low- to no-cost ideas to grow the economy" that he'll consider for the 2014 federal budget as the Conservatives try to squeeze more economic growth out of tighter purse strings.

Flaherty has sent his annual pre-budget consultation letter to opposition members of Parliament, with the usual warning that he'll reject proposals for costly new spending initiatives or new taxes — including increased business taxes or carbon levies.

"I will not entertain the traditional 'laundry list' of new spending or subsidy programs typically sent from the opposition – lists sent with no regard to their actual costs to taxpayers or their impact on the long-term state of Canada's finances," Flaherty says in his letter asking for Budget 2014 ideas.

I will not entertain the traditional 'laundry list' of new spending

The 2014 fiscal blueprint will continue to focus on creating jobs and economic growth, he says, while keeping taxes low and returning to a balanced budget in 2015 as promised.

The Harper government still expects to balance the books in 2015-16 with a $3.7-billion surplus, according to the recent fall economic update, which includes a $3-billion downward revenue adjustment for risk, meaning the surplus could be larger that year if the risks don't materialize.

The finance minister says in the letter he welcomes "low- to no-cost ideas to grow the economy," along with suggestions to eliminate ineffective spending.

"I hope that the opposition will forgo their traditional approach and refrain from demanding costly, new spending initiatives that would increase the size of government, jeopardizing our return to balanced budgets in 2015 and beyond," he adds in the letter.

"Instead, I urge you to be mindful of our current fiscal situation, the global economic challenges, and the need to be prudent with taxpayers' dollars."

The Harper government, however, has already found ways to save billions of dollars.

The government's fall economic update, along with a recent report from the Parliamentary Budget Officer, showed that federal departments and agencies have been under-spending their budgets by billions of dollars a year.

The PBO report noted that approximately $10 billion of authorized budgetary expenditures have gone unspent each of the past three years, in what is referred to as "lapsed" spending.

Flaherty's fall economic update projected that federal departments and agencies will spend $7 billion less than authorized in the current 2013-14 fiscal year.

As well, billions more in savings are projected over the next few years, meaning the Conservative government could eliminate the deficit sooner than expected.

Opposition parties have assailed the government for the way it is reaching its fiscal targets, noting deep budget cuts that have been compounded by departments under-spending their budgets by billions of dollars.

If the fiscal projections hold true, the Conservative government will have added more than $160 billion to the federal debt by the time it posts a surplus in 2015-16.


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Grey Cup: Roughrider domination complete in rout of Ticats: Cox - Toronto Star

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REGINA—A wonderful story trumped by a more powerful one.

No one would quibble, of course, with the notion that the Hamilton Tiger-Cats wove a terrific tale this season, a team without a permanent stadium or practice field, a team that overcame a 1-4 start, a team that finally delivered on owner Bob Young's promise to his dying brother to save the franchise and put a Grey Cup-quality product on the field.

But my goodness, there was also this extraordinary prairie story, a story of a devoted fan base in Saskatchewan that has waited and waited and now can thoroughly enjoy what is truly a golden era in three-down Canadian football.

When those two narratives collided on Sunday in Grey Cup 101, one from the east and one from the west in the true tradition of this championship contest, the one from western Canada proved to be the irresistible, unstoppable force that would not be denied.

It also meant that the biggest game of the CFL season disintegrated into a rather unfortunate blowout, with the Riders crushing the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in a record-setting 45-23 triumph.

"Now that we've won, I'm sure we'll have a lot of sex," chuckled victorious Saskatchewan head coach Corey Chamblin, forced to explain earlier in the week his decision to establish a team curfew that curtailed various extracurricular activities.

On a day when Toronto bubbled with news of a Jon Bon Jovi/Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment collaboration to bring the NFL to the city, it was abundantly clear before the sun had fully dipped below the horizon that even the designated representatives from southern Ontario sent westward for Sunday's title match weren't up to the task of supporting the best interests of the CFL by creating a tight title game.

It was 17-3 early, 31-6 at halftime and the rest was pretty much accounting. The Tiger-Cats couldn't notch a converted touchdown for the opening 42 minutes of play, and 38-year-old quarterback Henry Burris, hated in these parts as a Rider who left town, was inconsistent and missed receivers at important times.

"For me, how many more of these do I have?" said Burris. "It's very disappointing to finish off the season like this."

The Riders' 31 first-half points were a Grey Cup record, and by early in the fourth quarter Saskatchewan running back Kory Sheets had smashed a 57-year-old record held by the great Johnny Bright and cemented MVP honours.

"It feels good to get that rushing record, sure," said Sheets, who romped for 197 yards. "But if feels better to win that Grey Cup. I haven't won a championship since high school."

This victory, the Riders' second in seven years on four tries, is as much about a province's passion for the sport as it is for the team itself.

The Riders and their fans have suffered through 15 Grey Cup defeats over the past century, going back to 1923 when the Regina Rugby Club journeyed east to contest the Grey Cup and lost 54-0 to Queen's University.

Rider Nation surely loved the CFL game, but so often, even when men like Ronnie Lancaster and George Reed were stars, that love seemed unrequited.

These days, the Riders have taken over from the Montreal Alouettes as the leading franchise in the league, both in terms of their on-field success and profitability, something those who organized this community-owned team once couldn't have imagined.

"It's great for their team, for the province and for the league," said Hamilton coach Kent Austin, who quarterbacked and coached the Riders to previous Grey Cup wins.

"Saskatchewan is certainly a shining light in that regard."

When Regina first hosted the Grey Cup in 1995, the profits allowed the team to barely stay afloat, and not without a Save-the-Riders telethon. In 2003, the monies generated by hosting again allowed the franchise to record a $27,000 profit, its first in two decades.

Now? It's a Green Machine out here, making millions and building a new $278 million stadium due to open in 2017.

Folks in these parts are just wild about their CFL team, and on Sunday, the crowd of 44,710 was a noisy, intimidating green-clad mob against the backdrop of an unforgiving winter moving in.

"I looked around during warmups and thought, 'I wouldn't want to be in their shoes," said Chamblin.

The importance of the new gridiron power out west, of course, may become even more pivotal depending on what happens to Toronto's troubled team, a franchise that will soon have no home and no owner.

CFL commissioner Mark Cohon is clearly hoping MLSE will get interested and turn into a sugar daddy for the Argonauts, and so far, the conglomerate that owns the Leafs, Raptors and Toronto FC hasn't said no.

But the news that MLSE may be the money backing Bon Jovi's dream of buying the Buffalo Bills, and possibly moving that team to Toronto, at the very least indicates the ownership trio of Larry Tanenbaum, Bell and Rogers has its eye on bigger fish.

It's a story, clearly, to be watched.

On Sunday, the Cats might have recognized the storyline was irrevocably slanted in favour of the Riders on the second offensive series when Simoni Lawrence belted quarterback Darian Durant, popping the football loose and high into the air.

Sheets then didn't just alertly pick it out of the air, he took it downfield for a 42-yard gain.

"I've been on the other side of the green thing when that stuff happens," said Chamblin, who previously coached in Calgary and Hamilton. "This time, the stars aligned."

Twice in the first half, the Cats couldn't even negotiate a solid snap from Marwan Hage to Burris in the shotgun formation, creating a sense the Hamiltonians were simply overwhelmed by the situation.

"It's a long journey," said Hage, choosing his words carefully. "It's a lot of work, a lot of stress on the family. It's hard.

"But the road is justified when you win. When you don't. . . ."

Well, you do what they've done for decades in Regina. You keep hoping, keep supporting, keep trying.

And maybe something special not only happens.


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Report due on Sandy Hook shooting investigation - KTVB

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Investigators are planning to release a long-awaited report on the Newtown school shooting, nearly a year after the massacre of 20 children and six women inside Sandy Hook Elementary School.

The summary report by the lead investigator, State's Attorney Stephen Sedensky III, could provide some of the first official answers to questions about the history of the gunman and the police response to one of the worst school shootings in American history.

The Dec. 14 shooting plunged the small New England community into mourning, elevated gun safety to the top of the agenda for President Barack Obama and led states across the country to re-evaluate laws on issues including school safety.

The report expected Monday afternoon will not include the full evidence file of Connecticut State Police, which is believed to total thousands of pages. The decision to continue withholding the bulk of the evidence is stirring new criticism of the secrecy surrounding the investigation.

Dan Klau, a Hartford attorney who specializes in First Amendment law, said the decision to release a summary report before the full evidence file is a reversal of standard practice and one of the most unusual elements of the investigation.

"What I found troubling about the approach of the state's attorney is that from my perspective, he seems to have forgotten his job is to represent the state of Connecticut," Klau said. "His conduct in many instances has seemed more akin to an attorney in private practice representing Sandy Hook families."

Sedensky said he could not comment.

Twenty-year-old Adam Lanza killed his mother inside their Newtown home before driving to his former elementary school, where he fired off 154 shots with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle within five minutes. He killed himself with a handgun as police arrived.

Warrants released in March detailed an arsenal of weapons found inside the Lanza home. But authorities have not provided details on the police response to the shooting, any mental health records for Lanza and whether investigators found any clues to a possible motive for the rampage.

Sedensky has gone to court to fight release of the 911 tapes from the school and resisted calls from Connecticut's governor to divulge more information sooner.

The withholding of 911 recordings, which are routinely released in other cases, has been the subject of a legal battle between The Associated Press and Sedensky before the state's Freedom of Information Commission, which ruled in favor of the AP, and now Connecticut's court system. A hearing is scheduled Monday in New Britain Superior Court on whether the judge can hear the recordings as he considers an appeal.

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Thai Capital Hit by Biggest Protests Since Deadly 2010 Unrest - Voice of America

BANGKOK — About 1,000 anti-government protesters forced their way into Thailand's Finance Ministry on Monday as thousands of demonstrators marched to 12 other buildings in Bangkok, seeking to overthrow Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.   
 
Reports indicate that protesters cut power to the building during the takeover.
 
More than 30,000 protesters chanted "Get Out!" as they spread across the city on Monday to government offices, military and naval bases and state television channels. 

About 100,000 anti-government protesters gathered in Thailand's capital on Sunday, as simmering tensions between Bangkok's middle classes and the mostly rural supporters of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra threatened to boil over.
    
The protests led by the opposition Democrat Party mark the biggest demonstrations since deadly political unrest in April-May 2010, when Thaksin's red-shirted supporters paralyzed Bangkok to try to remove a Democrat-led government.
   
Thaksin's sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, is now in power after winning a 2011 election that was seen as a victory for the working poor and a defeat for the traditional Bangkok elite that includes top generals, royal advisers, middle-class bureaucrats, business leaders and old-money families.
    
After a delicate calm for the past two years, fissures between those two rival political forces are opening once again.
    
The rally was their biggest turnout yet. About 15 km (9 miles) away, in a stadium at the opposite end of the city, about 40,000 pro-government "red shirts" rallied in a show of support of the prime minister. Many came by bus from rural provinces in the north and northeast.
    

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A red-shirted supporter holds up a pictures of Thailand's Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra and her brother Thaksin Shinawatra, during a rally at Rajamangala national stadium in Bangkok, Nov. 19, 2013.
Yingluck has been pilloried by her critics as a puppet for her brother, who was ousted in a 2006 military coup and convicted two years later of graft, which he has denied. He has lived in self-imposed exile since 2008, but exerts enormous influence on the policies of his sister's government.
    
"We have stood by silently while her brother calls the shots and she runs the country into the ground with loss-making policies," said Suwang Ruangchai, 54, who drove over nine hours from Surat Thani in the south to attend the rally.
    
Few people in modern Thai history have been as polarizing as Thaksin, a billionaire former telecommunications tycoon revered by the poor and reviled by the elite.
    
In 2001, he became the first leader in Thai history to win a parliamentary majority on its own, and formed the first elected government to serve a full term, after which it was re-elected. The 2006 coup that ousted him plunged Thailand into four years of sometimes violent political turbulence.
    
The relative calm Thailand has enjoyed since Yingluck became prime minister has faded during weeks of Democrat-led opposition rallies triggered by a government-backed amnesty bill that could have led to Thaksin's return to Thailand.
    
The political tensions come as Thailand's economy, Southeast Asia' second biggest, is suffering from weak export growth, soft consumer spending and rising household debt.
    
'Not yet crisis point'
    
Demonstrations which began more than three weeks ago have spread even after Thailand's senate rejected the amnesty bill on Nov. 11.
    
Suthep Thaugsuban, a former deputy prime minister under the previous Democrat-led government and now leader of the biggest anti-government rally, has called for all-out regime change.
    
His group plans to march along 12 routes in Bangkok on Monday to urge civil servants to join the protests.
    
"If even one of you still serves Thaksin, you will have us to reckon with," Suthep told whistle-blowing crowds on Sunday.
    
Observers say Suthep could be holding out for military or judicial intervention. Thai courts brought down two Thaksin-aligned governments in 2008.
    
"We have not yet reached crisis point like in 2006 so the military would be unwise to intervene at this juncture and Suthep should know this, but he might be waiting for some form of judicial intervention," said Siripan Nogsuan Sawasdee, a political analyst at Chulalongkorn University.
    
Yingluck's ruling Puea Thai Party received a blow last week when the Constitutional Court rejected its proposals to make the Senate fully elected. That could have strengthened her government given her widespread support among voters in the heavily populated north and northeast.
    
Her supporters say the verdict is the latest attempt by the elite and anti-Thaksin forces to thwart the legislative process.
    
The mounting protests are reviving memories of 2010 when thousands of Thaksin's red-shirted supporters stayed in the streets until a military crackdown in which 91 people, mostly red shirts, were killed.
    
Suthep and former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva have been charged with murder and accused of allowing troops to open fire with live rounds on protesters.
    
Many red shirts loyal to Yingluck say they are prepared to defend the government against political meddling by Bangkok's powerful elite and opposition forces.
    
"This is the Thai political cycle. Thais from outside of Bangkok vote in a government and the elite in Bangkok kick them out," said Kerk Angchuan, a red shirt protester who joined the pro-government rally in Bangkok on Sunday.
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