They are waiting. As it stands commercial real estate just cracked the 20% vacancy rate which by this time next year will hit 35-40%. Converting commercial into residential is cheaper and quicker than building from scratch....Despite an all-out push by the Trudeau government to “build more homes, faster,” new estimates from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. show that home construction is actually poised to go down for the foreseeable future.
This — coupled with an immigration rate that remains at historic highs — means that skyrocketing rents and real estate prices are set to continue until at least the next federal election.
“Rents will rise and vacancy rates will fall,” reads the forecast. Meanwhile, the sale prices of homes will be pushed “beyond previous peak levels.”
The next bank crash is just months away...Canada's national downtown office vacancy rate hit a record high of 19.4 per cent to end 2023, according to data from commercial real estate and investment firm CBRE. For context, a “healthy” office vacancy rate would fall between 10 and 12 per cent.Jan 10, 2024
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Makes sense . Pull out your wallet .Six children of Canadian mother to be repatriated from Syrian detention camp
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Anja Karadeglija
Published Apr 09, 2024 • 1 minute read
OTTAWA — Six children, but not their Canadian mother, will be repatriated to Canada from a detention camp in Syria.
Lawyer Lawrence Greenspon, who represents the mother, says Global Affairs Canada is planning the return of the children, who are between the ages of five and 12.
He says the government is working with the Polarization Clinic in Montreal, which supports families affected by radicalization. The clinic will receive the children, who don’t have family in Montreal and will likely end up placed in foster care if the mother is not back in the country.
Greenspon says the mother is now out of the camp and wants to return to Canada to be with her children. “Presumably her intention is to find her way back,” he said.
The federal government has refused to repatriate the woman, whose identity is not public, because officials believe she poses a security risk, according to Greenspon.
He said the government has repatriated other Canadian women from Syrian detention camps and put in place measures to address that risk, such as placing them under terrorist peace bonds.
The family is among many foreign nationals in Syrian camps and prisons run by Kurdish forces that reclaimed the war-torn region from the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
Although the federal government decided not to facilitate the woman’s return, it offered repatriation assistance to her six children, leaving her to decide whether to send the children to Canada on their own or keep them with her in the squalid al-Roj camp.
Greenspon said “the mom was given an impossible choice.”
There is no timeline for when the children will arrive in Canada, but Greenspon said he is optimistic the government will “move expeditiously to bring the children home to safety.”
Six children of Canadian mother to be repatriated from Syrian detention camp
Six children, but not their Canadian mother, will be repatriated to Canada from a detention camp in Syria.torontosun.com
Half of that is what our veterans were asking for. But that was too much for turdOWE.Ottawa to provide $132 million to help people fleeing civil war in Sudan
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Dylan Robertson
Published Apr 12, 2024 • 2 minute read
OTTAWA — Canada will provide $132 million in aid for people fleeing Sudan’s yearlong civil war and facing “famine-like conditions,” International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen said Friday.
“The sheer scale of the needs, the displacement and the looming hunger really defines Sudan as the crisis of our time,” Hussen said at an announcement in Toronto.
“This cannot become the forgotten crisis, so we must continue to support the people of Sudan.”
The funding includes just over $100 million in humanitarian aid for Sudanese who have fled to neighbouring countries, as well as those stuck in Sudan amid widescale violence.
That aid includes housing, shelter and sanitation services for the more than 8.5 million people who have been displaced since duelling factions of Sudan’s military wings started fighting in the streets of Khartoum.
“We’re looking at looming famine-like conditions. Almost 25 million people, including 11 million children, are now in desperate need of humanitarian aid,” Hussen told reporters.
He said the rest of the funding will go toward development projects, with a focus on sexual and reproductive health for women in Sudan and South Sudan, and other projects in the Central African Republic, Chad and Ethiopia.
The Liberals insist they are deeply concerned about the crisis in Sudan, but have faced mounting criticism for not following peers in issuing sanctions on those supporting warlords.
The NDP has been calling on the Liberals for months to exert diplomatic pressure on those fueling the crisis. Green Deputy Leader Jonathan Pedneault said in a letter Thursday that global impunity during the Darfur genocide, which started in Sudan in 2003, is now being replicated as Sudanese starve.
The announcement comes ahead of a conference in Paris on Monday _ the one-year anniversary of the conflict — aimed at getting the world closer to meeting the humanitarian needs created by the crisis.
The United Nations says Sudan needs US$2.7 billion to deal with humanitarian needs but has received just six per cent of that target.
Hussen’s office says Canada plans to participate in the conference in Paris, but has not said who will attend the event, which occurs on the eve of the federal budget release.
Ottawa to provide $132 million to help people fleeing civil war in Sudan
"This cannot become the forgotten crisis, so we must continue to support the people of Sudan."torontosun.com
Should have immigrated to Russia. Or China.
No mention of what happened to the classmate that threatened him?North Carolina student, 16, suspended for 'alien' comment, mom says
Author of the articleostmedia News
Published Apr 18, 2024 • 1 minute read
A North Carolina mother says her 16-year-old son was suspended from school for referring to “aliens without green cards” during a vocabulary assignment.
Lexington mom Leah McGhee says her child received a three-day out-of-school suspension last week after asking for clarification from his teacher for the term “alien.”
“Like space aliens or aliens without green cards?” the student asked, according to McGee, reports U.S. broadcaster Sinclair Group’s Crisis in the Classroom.
The mother claimed that a classmate heard the comment and threatened her son.
According to Central Davidson High School assistant principal, the comment was “racially insensitive” and disrespectful to Hispanic students.
“I didn’t make a statement directed towards anyone; I asked a question,” the boy said, according to McGee. “I wasn’t speaking of Hispanics because everyone from other countries need(s) green cards, and the term ‘illegal alien’ is an actual term that I hear on the news and can find in the dictionary.”
The student is apparently worried that the suspension being on his school record would affect his chances at receiving a pole vaulting scholarship.
“If this was handled properly in the classroom, it could have easily been used as a teachable moment for everyone,” McGhee told The Pete Kaliner Show. “I feel that the negligence of the administration’s decision has fueled the injustice of suspension for a student who simply asked for clarification to a teacher’s instructions.”
McGee said she was able to appeal the suspension to the school board as it was less than 10 days.
“We love Central Davidson High School and we are thankful that our child has such a wonderful school to attend,” McGhee wrote. “However, we feel that this label of racism is extremely excessive.”
NC student, 16, suspended for referring to 'aliens without green cards,' mother says
'We feel that this label of racism is extremely excessive,' the mother said.wpde.comNorth Carolina student, 16, suspended for 'alien' comment, mom says
A North Carolina mom says her 16-year-old son was suspended from school for referring to "aliens without green cards" during an assignment.torontosun.com
Recent deaths do make it seem criminals have been 'made welcome in Canada'India’s foreign minister reacts to murder charges, claims Canada welcomes criminals
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Dylan Robertson
Published May 05, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read
OTTAWA — India’s Foreign Affairs Minister accused Canada of welcoming criminals from his country in response to the RCMP’s recent arrests in a homicide that has roiled tensions between the two countries.
Subrahmanyam Jaishankar also called Ottawa the No. 1 driver of what he described as a violent movement of Sikhs trying to carve their own country out of India.
“It’s not so much a problem in the U.S.; our biggest problem right now is in Canada,” Jaishankar said Saturday during remarks at a forum for intellectuals in India.
RCMP charged three Indian nationals last Friday in the death of Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, who was shot dead last June as he left a temple in Surrey, B.C.
Nijjar was a fervent activist for the creation of a Sikh homeland called Khalistan, and his death sparked a wave of protests and rallies against Indian diplomats in Canada.
Those protests reached particular intensity after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused New Delhi last September of playing a role in the homicide.
While speaking at the forum in the eastern city of Bhubaneswar, Jaishankar took questions on multiple topics.
One attendee asked about countries like the U.S. and Canada wanting to partner with India while allowing people to support a separatist movement there, which New Delhi deems unconstitutional. Another attendee inquired about last Friday’s arrests.
Jaishankar responded to both questions by saying the governing Liberals and other, unspecified political parties “pander” to Sikh separatists for votes, and “have given these kinds of extremism, separatism, advocates of violence a certain legitimacy in the name of free speech.”
Last year’s protests against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government included posters calling on people to “kill India” and offering cash rewards for the home addresses of Indian officials.
Jaishankar said he has asked Foreign Minister Melanie Joly about “attacks or threats” to India’s diplomatic missions and staff in Canada.
“I tell the foreign minister (Joly) saying, ’Suppose it happened to you. if it was your diplomat, your embassy, your flag, how would you react?’ So, we have to keep our position strong,” he said.
Jaishankar also reiterated his ministry’s insistence that Ottawa is allowing criminal elements to operate in Canada and affiliate with Sikh separatists, in response to last week’s arrests.
“Somebody may have been arrested; the police may have done some investigation. But the fact is (a) number of gangland people, (a) number of people with organized crime links from Punjab, have been made welcome in Canada,” he said, referencing the Indian region the Khalistan movement wants to take over.
“These are wanted criminals from India; you have given them visas … and yet you allow them to live there.”
New Delhi raised that same concern a week before Trudeau announced that India was suspected of involvement in Nijjar’s death last September. In its readout of Trudeau’s meeting with Modi, Jaishankar’s ministry had called out “the nexus of (Khalistan separatism) forces with organized crime, drug syndicates and human trafficking.”
But Ottawa has repeatedly insisted India has not proven that people it accuses of terrorism have actually done anything that meets the threshold under Canada’s criminal code.
In February, a senior Canadian foreign-service bureaucrat told MPs that Canadian officials have been offering their Indian counterparts “workshops” on the rule of law, because India’s definition of terrorism “does not always compute in our legal system.”
In his remarks Saturday, Jaishankar also said “there will be pushback” to calls for Khalistan separation, but he didn’t specify where that may come from.
“It’s no longer a world which runs as a one-way street,” he said. “There will be a reaction; others will take steps or counter it.”
India’s high commission in Ottawa did not immediately respond when asked whether Jaishankar referred to pushback from India or by non-state elements.
Joly’s office also did not immediately respond when asked for comment. Joly has previously said she wants to conduct diplomacy with India in private.
Human Rights Watch says Modi has overseen a deterioration of civil rights in India and promoted an “ultranationalist ideology” that has fuelled violent attacks on non-Hindu citizens.
The organization has called on India to look into possible involvement in Nijjar’s death, given “Indian authorities’ repeated failure to hold police and military personnel accountable for unlawful killings” within the country.
India has previously urged Canada to prosecute people for glorifying those linked to the 1985 Air India bombing, which followed an intense period of ethnic violence.
India’s foreign minister reacts to murder charges, claims Canada welcomes criminals
India's Foreign Affairs Minister says Canada is his country's "biggest problem" when it comes to Sikh separatism.torontosun.com