immigrantscanada.com

Independent topical source of current affairs, opinion and issues, featuring stories making news in Canada from immigrants, newcomers, minorities & ethnic communities' point of view and interests.

monaco-based billionaire: The longtime friend of Brian Mulroney also donated 4 million to the soon-to-open Brian Mulroney Institute of Government at St, according to Metro News. Francis Xavier University, where he received an honorary degree in 2015 and was announced as a Canadian citizen. Said, a Syrian-born, Monaco-based billionaire, was the broker of the 1985 Al-Yamamah arms deal to sell British warplanes to Saudi Arabia, in which 6 billion in corrupt commissions were allegedly paid to members of the Saudi royal family. But how did this Saudi-Syrian businessman pick up a third passport It's not clear exactly when, but at some point in the 1990s, Said received Canadian citizenship. I am a Canadian citizen and am proud to be one, wrote Said in an email to the Star and CBC/Radio-Canada. To fulfil the three-year residency requirement, public records show that instead of living in a luxury building, as he did in London, U.K., Said rented a basement apartment in Montreal. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mulroney: The longtime friend of Brian Mulroney also donated 4 million to the soon-to-open Brian Mulroney Institute of Government at St, according to Toronto Star. Francis Xavier University, where he received an honorary degree in 2015 and was announced as a Canadian citizen. Said, a Syrian-born, Monaco-based billionaire, was the broker of the 1985 Al-Yamamah arms deal to sell British warplanes to Saudi Arabia, in which 6 billion in corrupt commissions were allegedly paid to members of the Saudi royal family. Read more Honorary degrees for Brian Mulroney's billionaire friends who funded his St. To fulfil the three-year residency requirement, public records show that instead of living in a luxury building, as he did in London, U.K., Said rented a basement apartment in Montreal. F.X. legacy project Article Continued Below But how did this Saudi-Syrian businessman pick up a third passport It's not clear exactly when, but at some point in the 1990s, Said received Canadian citizenship. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

pew researchers: All three used a mid-2016 estimate of 25.8 million as a baseline, but assumed different future migration rates, according to CTV. Under the zero migration scenario, an estimated 30 million Muslims would make up 7.4 per cent of Europe's population by 2050 compared to the 4.9 per cent they comprised last year, the report projected. The Pew Research Center report modeled three scenarios for estimating the number of Muslims who would be living in Europe by 2050. The researchers said that is mostly because Muslims are on average 13 years younger than other Europeans and also have a higher birthrate, the Pew researchers said. In the high migration scenario, the study projects that the record flow of migrants who came to Europe between 2015 and 2016 would continue indefinitely, resulting in 75 million Muslims in Europe, a 14 per cent increase, by the middle of the century. The study estimates 58.8 million Muslims would account for 11.2 per cent of the population in a medium migration scenario that has migration maintaining a regular speed -- defined by the Pew researchers as migration motivated by economic, educational and family reasons -- but not for seeking asylum as a refugee. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

reactions: People who don't all have doctorates, according to Rabble. Very ordinary people. This fits with other recent statements by Labeaume, such as that there is a big danger in being disconnected from the population and to not see that the extreme-right discourse is an ideological refuge for a lot of people. People who are disgusted. Doubly so due to the fact that the far right also mustered in large numbers in Quebec in March and in August -- as well as recently in other cities such as London, Ont., Toronto, Calgary and, most infamously, Charlottesville, North Carolina -- and that these gatherings are often met with very muted reactions from politicians.I'm in solid company on November 28, hate-crimes expert Barbara Perry told CBC Radio's The Current host Anna Maria Tremonti she is concerned about the lack of condemnation by politicians of the far right's increasing muscle-flexing. As an eyewitness to the November 25 events, I'm aghast at the mayor's blatant defence of the right-wing and of the violence against the people protesting them. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

william skipper: Edward III ruled from 1327 until 1377, according to CTV. Royal experts have said that the 36-year-old Markle will not formally be known as Princess Meghan because she is not of royal birth. A researcher at the Boston-based New England Historic Genealogical Society, one of the world's premier genealogical organizations, said Thursday that Markle is a direct descendant of England's King Edward III, and she and Harry are 17th cousins. Genealogist Gary Boyd Roberts says Markle's royal lineage comes through an early immigrant to Boston, the Rev. He's an ancestor of Markle's father. William Skipper, who arrived in New England in 1639. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

oakville north-burlington: The petition, an initiative of Mariam Manaa, a former summer intern in the office of Oakville North-Burlington Liberal MP Pam Damoff, is supported by Stephen Paquette, a member of the Anishinaabe from Wikwemikong First Nation on Manitoulin Island, according to NOW Magazine. Paquette is chair of the Halton Indigenous Education Advisory Council. A petition calling on the federal government to redesign the current Canadian Citizenship study guide and exam to acknowledge Indigenous history has received the 500 signatures required to be formally tabled in the House. The changes proposed in the petition, he says, would uphold the commitment made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in his mandate letter to the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada to educate new Canadians on the intergenerational effects of residential schools and Canada's legacy of colonialism. It contains only one paragraph on residential schools. The current Discover Canada study guide and citizenship exam does not include any requirement to learn about the Indigenous nations of Canada. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

police: Furthermore, during community consultations, people from several marginalized groups frequently spoke up about not wanting police at Vancouver's Pride Parade.article continues below Trending Stories City identifies another site for homeless housing in Vancouver City seeks court injunction to get Marpole homeless housing built Cheeky umbrellas capitalize on a Vancouver constant Kerfuffle at Kitsilano Community Centrerelated Black Lives Matter criticizes Vancouver Pride Society performative tweaks'No cop cars, fewer uniformed police in Vancouver Pride Parade We engaged in a fairly extensive community consultation after our 2016 season, and police participation was one of the topics that came up often... we heard from queer people of colour, the trans community... and Indigenous people, who felt the same kinds of things Black Lives Matter was talking about in the media, so we took that information in and talked to many people on all sides of the issue, she said, according to Vancouver Courier. However, despite this latest decision, the consultations that Arnot refers to did not initially result in the Vancouver Pride Society banning uniformed police officers and they were permitted to march in the 2017 Pride Parade. Reached by phone on Wednesday evening, Arnot said that non-uniformed officers will still be permitted, and credited Black Lives Matter chapters for initiating the conversations that led to the decision. As a result, some community groups boycotted it. The LGBTQ refugee support organization Rainbow Refugee joined Black Lives Matter in its boycott against the 2017 Pride Parade. Black Lives Matter Vancouver refused to attend, saying their membership did not feel comfortable with uniformed police officers marching in the parade due to Canada's current and historic police brutality against queer, trans, Black, and Indigenous people, as well as people of colour. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

travertine walls: Bus travel was a central mode of transportation Toronto did not even have an airport yet, according to NOW Magazine. Designed by architect Charles Dolphin, whose list of Toronto projects includes the Bloor-Yonge subway station and Postal Delivery Building now the Air Canada Centre the Coach Terminal remains a fine example of uncomplicated yet handsome art deco style. With soaring ceilings, decorative travertine walls and art deco chandeliers, the Coach Terminal was a sophisticated space for arrivals and departures. But as car and air travel became easier and bus transportation lost its appeal, the terminal began its slow decline. The internal walls were demolished in the early 1980s leaving only the facade of the original building to accommodate renovations of the bus bays. The structure has undergone some odd renovations. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

assistant director: That trend is most obvious in Toronto, where half the work force in 2016 was made up of immigrants the highest proportion in Canada, according to Metro News. In response to a series of social and economic changes, the labour force itself is changing, said Vincent Dale, assistant director of the labour statistics division at Statistics Canada. And immigrants are making up more and more of the workers, accounting for nearly one-quarter of Canada's labour force in 2016, helping offset the impact of an aging population. The latest census data released Wednesday reveals that between 2005 and 2015, there's been a shift from full-time, year-round employment to part-time or part-year work. More people are working part-year rather than part-time, Dale said of the change. Statistics Canada cites several factors for the change, including the 2008 recession, automation as well as personal preference for more flexible work schedules. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

authority: The moral authority of the pope stands, Burke asserted Wednesday, according to CTV. You can criticize what's said, what's not said, but the pope is not going to lose moral authority on this question here. Spokesman Greg Burke said Francis took seriously the advice given to him by the local Catholic Church, which urged him to toe a cautious line and not even refer to the Rohingya by name during his trip to Myanmar and Bangladesh, since the majority of people in Myanmar reject the term because the ethnic group is not a recognized minority in the country. Burke spoke as Francis neared the midpoint of his weeklong trip, which was in the works well before the Myanmar military launched what it called clearance operations in Rakhine state in response to attacks by a group of Rohingya militants against security positions in August. Rohingya in the camps have reported entire villages in Myanmar being burned and looted and women and girls raped. The campaign, denounced by the U.N. and the U.S. as ethnic cleansing, has forced more than 620,000 Rohingya to flee to neighbouring Bangladesh in the worst Asian refugee crisis in decades. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

barley flour: Dinku Tadesse and his wife Eline Baye have been running the downtown eatery for almost three years, arriving from Ethiopia via Winnipeg and launching with a relative and family friend before going solo, according to Toronto Star. Their four-page menu covers most of the same ground as Ethiopian spots everywhere, though curried goat with green spicy sauce is unusual and the roast beef wrap is surely a nod to local tastes. And maybe the fresh air and 24-hour sunlight altered my perceptions, but the food at Zehabesha Traditional Ethiopian Restaurant was the most richly flavourful I've had and I've had a lot. My vegan combo platter yetsom beyayantu had an impressive nine vegetable and lentil dishes for 18.95, and the delicious injera was homemade with teff and barley flour.A few other Yellowknife food thoughts. You could choose espresso and a grilled halloumi and avocado sandwich or birch syrup granola with yogurt and warm fruit compote. Article Continued Below I regret not having enough meals in the day for Korea House, although I popped my head in and pondered gamjatang pork bone soup or kimchi stew.I chilled out big time on a couch at the downtown Fat Fox Caf listening to music, drinking tea and eating scones with clotted cream and jam. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

court documents: Winnipeg man charged with illegally acting as immigration consultant Arrojado was charged on Nov. 24 with three offences related to charging immigration consulting fees without a licence, according to CBC. The 66-year-old is the past president of the Philippine Association of Manitoba, a former commissioner with the Manitoba Human Rights Commission and also ran for the provincial Progressive Conservatives in The Maples in 1995. The documents allege that payments were made through 114 Western Union money transfers to Alfredo Fred Arrojado. Regulations stipulate that to provide immigration advice for a fee while not registered with the government-appointed regulatory body is an offence, the court documents read. The investigation began in January 2015 and a search warrant was executed at Arrojado's home, which is also his office, on April 15, 2016. The file alleges that Arrojado was providing advice and actively soliciting foreign nationals to enlist his services for providing assistance and the completion of documents with immigrating to Canada though the Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program for a fee. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

crimes: Hate crimes reports seem to ebb and flow in Waterloo Region for unexplained reasons, according to CTV. The region was dubbed Canada's hate crime capital in 2011, when 62 such crimes were reported by police. Statistics Canada says there were 19 hate crimes reported within the region last year, as compared to 51 one year earlier. The number of reports fell steadily over the next few years, bottoming out at 14 in 2013, before again starting to increase. Brantford Police received five hate crime reports in 2016, or 3.6 per 100,000 people. Nineteen hate crime reports represents 3.5 reports per 100,000 people. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

immigrant applicants: The program aimed to bring up to 2,000 additional primary immigrant applicants and their families in 2017, with increased numbers in following years if the program performs well, according to The Chronicle Herald. Earlier this month it was announced the program would continue and double to an allocation of 4,000 by 2020. The pilot project was announced in July 2016 as part of the Atlantic Growth Strategy and officially launched in March. To participate in the pilot project, employers must apply to receive a designation from their provincial government. The province must then approve those endorsements, and it is up to the individual immigrant to apply for either permanent residency or a work visa. Once designated, employers can apply for specific positions called endorsements. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

immigration consultant: Pembina Trails School Division used Winnipeg immigration consultant charged with fraud Korean workers in some Winnipeg sushi restaurants coerced into handing over part of pay to employers Yoon was warned years before his arrest that he needed to be a registered immigration consultant in order to charge a fee for his services, but persisted until he was caught red-handed by the government, Crown attorney Michael Foote told Judge Alain Huberdeau, according to CBC. A lengthy investigation by the Canada Border Services Agency revealed Yoon, over the course of six years, had provided immigration services to over 380 foreign nationals, primarily from Korea, and 57 businesses, earning a total of 347,000. Hae Suk Yoon, 68, pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of providing paid immigration consulting services without a licence. Immigrants are among the most vulnerable people in Canada, Foote said. That is the least they can expect. They have to know an immigration consultant is going to be trustworthy, licensed, and subject to regulation in Canada. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

jim crow: It comes after Disney's Moana a computer-animated movie featuring a girl from a Polynesian village garnered mostly positive reaction from Polynesian audiences in 2016, according to Metro News. Both Coco and Moana used consultants to make sure the films were culturally sensitive. The Disney-Pixar animated production hauled in an estimated 72.9 million over the five-day weekend and features an almost entirely Latino cast. Disney productions haven't always received praise for their portrayal of ethnic minorities. Here's a look how ethnic minorities have been portrayed in previous Disney Disney's 1941 film Dumbo, the leader of a pack of crows is named Jim Crow. In fact, some popular films have been attacked for reinforcing stereotypes or for simply being racist. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

labour force: That trend is most obvious in Toronto, where half the work force in 2016 was immigrants, the highest proportion in Canada, according to Toronto Star. Read more Share of Torontonians taking public transit is on the rise, while reliance on cars declines Article Continued Below More Canadians getting an education and it's paying off, census data reveals In response to a series of social and economic changes, the labour force itself is changing, said Vincent Dale, assistant director of the labour statistics division at Statistics Canada. react-empty 181 The latest census data released Wednesday reveals that between 2005 and 2015, there's been a shift from full-time, year-round employment to part-time or part-year work. And immigrants are making up more and more of the workers, accounting for nearly one-quarter of Canada's labour force in 2016, helping offset the impact of an aging population. Statistics Canada cites several factors for the change, including the 2008 recession, automation as well as personal preference for more flexible work schedules. In 2015, 56.2 per cent of working age men 25 to 54 worked full-time year-round, down from 63.3 per cent a decade earlier and the lowest rate since 1980 when such data was collected for the first time. More people are working part-year rather than part-time, Dale said of the change. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mexican: A politician who claims distant Native American ancestry is Pocahontas, according to Metro News. Mexican immigrants are bringing drugs and bringing crime. Black people have no jobs. His words offend members of the groups he is talking about. When it comes to Muslims, his intentions have always been clear. But there is some degree of plausible deniability an argument, if not a very convincing one, that Trump does not have bigoted intentions. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mind parting: The story that is actually emerging from this investigation is of climate where government is encouraging prospective immigrants that Prince Edward Island is a fast track to citizenship if you don't mind parting with a large chunk of money along the way, said PC leader James Aylward during question period Tuesday, according to CBC. Cash grab Opposition asks More than half of nominees that were supposed to open a business never even attempted to meet this requirement, said PC MLA Brad Trivers. Chinese business leaders call for more support for PNPbusinessesP.E.I. withholds 18M in PNP deposits from immigrant investors Earlier this month, CBC reported the P.E.I. government brought in 18 million in revenue last year by withholding deposits paid by immigrant investors through the PNP because many did not open a business they were supposed to. Of course, when nominess don't meet these goals, they forfeit 150,000 straight in the government coffers ... Is the PNP set up this way simply so it can be a cash grab for your government No, responded Minister of Economic Development Heath Mac Donald. MacDonald pointed to the PNP as the driver of P.E.I. impressive population growth, leading the country at 1.7 per cent for the 12-month period ending July 1, 2017. I'd be the first one to say that we do not like keeping any of those allocations through those immigrants when they come here. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

film: As we showed in an earlier article, this a film featuring major Islamophobic and Far-right advocates from Europe in an attempt to develop the Far-right Ottawa, on November 25, 2017, the film had been scheduled to be shown at the Ottawa Public Library, according to Rabble. A strong community response was organized by Ottawa Against Fascism, the Council of Canadians, Solidarity Ottawa, Sancturay Ottawa and the Ottawa CUPE District Labour Council among others, and local residents outraged by the event and the rental by the Library.EVENT CANCELLED BY THE OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARYThe Board of Ottawa's Public Library cancelled the event. This film is a major propaganda tool used by the Far-right and its allies to promote hate against Muslims and immigrants. After seeing the 3-minute trailer of the so-called documentary and receiving a very large number of messages from residents and activists, the decision was made. Tim Tierney, who is chairman of the library's board of directors, said in an email. As Stated, in the Ottawa Citizen, November 24, 2017, by Councillor Tim Tierney, chairman of the library's board of directors, I am letting you know that I have been working with the city solicitor about concerns brought forward by the Ottawa district labour council, unions, residents, board members and friends, Coun. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

rakhine state: Francis has said his aim in coming to Burma is to minister to its Catholic community, which numbers around 660,000, or just over 1 per cent of the population of about 52 million, according to Toronto Star. Read more Pope Francis avoids saying Rohingya' in speech after meeting Burmese leader Article Continued Below The one word Burma's generals don't want the pope to say on his visit Rohingya'Pope Francis immediately dives into Rohingya crisis upon arrival in Burma His trip has been overshadowed, though, by Burma's military operations targeting the Rohingya Muslim minority in Rakhine state. Local authorities estimated that about 150,000 people turned out at Yangon's Kyaikkasan Ground park for the Mass, but the crowd seemed far larger and included faithful bearing flags from Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, among other places. The crackdown, which has been described by the U.N. as a campaign of textbook ethnic cleansing, has drawn international condemnation. react-empty 164 In his first public comments on Tuesday, Francis told Burma leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other government authorities that the country's future lay in respecting the rights of all its people none excluded but he refrained from mentioning the Rohingya by name. Pope Francis insisted on Tuesday that Burma's future depends on respecting the rights of each ethnic group in a speech where he indirectly showed support for the Rohingya Muslims who have been subject to decades of discrimination. The violence, including the looting and burning of Rohingya villages in Rakhine, has resulted in more than 620,000 people fleeing to neighbouring Bangladesh in Asia's worst refugee crisis in decades. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

state security: He was being held in solitary confinement as an alleged threat to state security -- without charge, without bail, and without being provided any tangible reasons why, according to Rabble. As Kafka began his famous dystopian novel The Trial Someone must have been telling lies about Joseph K., for without having done anything wrong he was arrested one fine morning. It was on December 10, 2002, when Sophie Harkat received a call at work that her husband, Mohamed Moe had been arrested on a secret hearing security certificate. That was certainly the case for Moe Harkat, an Algerian refugee who was indefinitely detained based on the word of a secret informant who failed a lie detector test, and who was never subjected to examination either in an open court or a closed session. The onus in a security certificate case is on the named individual to prove that they are not the state security threat CSIS makes them out to be. Another secret informant in the case had a particularly lustful motivation to keep coming up with allegations, because he had been carrying on an affair with an agent of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service CSIS the scandal-plagued agency that cooks up the unsubstantiated allegations in secret trial cases. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

wednesday show: When it comes to educational laurels, women appear to be closing the gap with men they accounted for half of all master's degrees in 2016, and nearly half of all earned doctorates among younger Canadians aged 25 to 34, according to CTV. The wage gap, however, persists. The data released Wednesday show more than half of Canada's core working population -- those aged 25 to 64 -- have earned degrees or diplomas from a college or university, the highest rate among comparable OECD countries, a group that includes the United States. In Saskatchewan, for instance, a male with an apprenticeship certificate enjoyed a median income of 86,059, roughly 13,000 more than a female with a university degree. Their workforce participation rate isn't greater. Even though women are more highly educated, they don't earn more. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

dahlia katz: See listing, according to NOW Magazine. Rating NNNNBroken Social Scene band leader Kevin Drew's debut as an actor and playwright is a hilarious, insightful and moving look inside the music industry and the anxious psyche of a mid-career rocker who begins to doubt his hit-making skills. Photo by Dahlia Katz A&R ANGELS by Kevin Drew Crow's Theatre . At Streetcar Crowsnest 345 Carlaw . Runs to December 9. 20- 50. crowstheatre.ca. Clearly drawing on his own experiences and creative anxieties, Drew conjures an intriguing fantastical conceit to explore these personal and professional worries where writing a hit song is quite literally a matter of life and death. No pressure, right The problem is that the duo seems to have lost their touch, and with suicides piling up, they fall under scrutiny from their heavenly overseer, a gregarious A&R artists and repertoire executive Maurice Dean Wint who, along with his underling Graham Cuthbertson attempt an intervention. In the story, Drew and Billy Talent lead singer Ben Kowalewicz play a duo of songwriter angels who magically appear in the final moments of suicide attempts with one chance to perform an original song that convinces the person to live. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

artists i: Recently, though, for the first time, my knees buckled on seeing a work of art, according to Vancouver Courier. We were in Florence, and visiting the Accademia is among the many Things To Do. I appreciate great art, but I've never really obsessed on it. We found an English-language tour with a tremendous tour guide and went on an adventure among original paintings by artists I'd only heard or read about.article continues below Trending Stories Welcome to Meat Loaf's Vancouver neighbourhood Vancouver developers fear 'alarming' land prices hinder profit Visiting the old Vancouver post office's ghost world Greater Vancouver home prices to drop 21 per cent by 2019 analysis The tour eventually took us into a hall filled with Michelangelo's unfinished sculptures the finished works, apparently, had been looted by Napoleon's soldiers. That's when my knees gave, just a little. At the far end of the corridor, in an atrium reserved solely for that work, lit by natural light, stood David. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

cent: For instance, loneliness rates are lower than expected, in part because the new survey questions differentiated between being alone and feeling lonely, according to Vancouver Courier. While 14 per cent of respondents said they feel lonely often or almost always, 34 per cent say they never feel lonely. Those challenges still exist today but the 2017 survey also offers some positive insights that speak to how people are forging connections between each other and their city.article continues below Trending Stories Greater Vancouver home prices to drop 21 per cent by 2019 analysisSFU students design social media plan to help isolated Marpole seniors Court ruling mixed blessing for polyamorists Central Park Mansion memoriesrelated Survey says Vancouver a lonely place to be There is more hope, says Kevin McCort, the foundation's president and CEO, of the findings outlined in Connect & Engage A Survey of Metro Vancouver 2017. Nine in 10 said they have someone they can depend on in times of need. Before drawing too many black-and-white conclusions, it's important to note that the survey questions in 2017 were not the same as they were in 2012. And 18 per cent of respondents are quite okay with their alone times, thank you very much. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.