Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Sex workers call prostitution laws unconstitutional - National Post

A execute minatrix and two sex trade workers are in a Toronto courtroom this morning arguing that Canada's prostitution laws are unconstitutional. Specifically, the women notify provisions of the Criminal Code that create it illegal to race a bawdy hoemploy , illegal to live on the avails of prostitution and to communicate for the purpose of prostitution deprive sex trade workers of their correct to security by prohibiting conditions that would create the work safer. They also argue that the laws deprive them of their correct to liberty by finish enrage ing them with imprisonment.

The applicants are Terri-Jean Bedford, a former sex trade worker who is now a execute minatrix, Valerie Scott, a sex trade worker who advocates for the correct s of sex workers and Amy Lebovitch, a prostitute since 1997.

The portion ies responding and intervening in the application are the attorney general of Canada, of Ontario, and groups like the Catholic Civil Rights League and REAL Women of Canada.

Liberals shoot execute wn floor-crossing rumours - CBC.ca

Liberal MP Ken Dryden said a report that members of his portion y were in discussions to cross the floor of the Hoemploy  of Commons and join the Conservative Party was just an attempt to caemploy  mischief.Liberal MP Ken Dryden said a report that members of his portion y were in discussions to cross the floor of the Hoemploy of Commons and join the Conservative Party was just an attempt to caemploy mischief. (Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)

Federal Liberals on Tuesday denied a report notify ing three of their portion y's MPs were interested in crossing the floor to join the Tories.

Liberal MPs Ken Dryden and Marc Garneau tfeeble reporters in Ottawa on Tuesday the talk was Conservative mischief and said it was an attempt to sow dissension in the portion y.

A report in the Toronto Star on Tuesday cited an anonymous Conservative recede vernment official who said the portion y had discussions with three Liberals in the last month about crossing the floor.

The Conservatives hfeeble 143 seats in the 308-seat Hoemploy of Commons and would need 12 more MPs to form a majority recede vernment.

Adding three members from another portion y wouldn't aid the Conservatives in their quest for a majority, but it would be another public relations blow for Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff, who has seen his portion y's wellity decline in recent months and faced criticism for his handling of the appointment of a Liberal candidate in Quebec.

Ignatieff praises loyalty after Coderre resignation

Ignatieff spoke to the portion y's Quebec wing on Sunday about the importance of portion y loyalty, just days after the resignation of Denis Coderre, his chief organizer in the province.

"I've been touched and reinvirecede rated by the loyalty not solely to grassroots, which you saw this morning, but also the loyalty of my caucus both in the Senate and Hoemploy ," he said.

Coderre had resigned over the portion y's nomination of former cabinet minister Martin Cauchon ahead of his preferred candidate, business exegash ive Nathalie Le Prohon.

Ignatieff has also faced criticism for attempting to bring the recede vernment execute wn through a no-confidence vote last week even as his portion y's approval in polls has declined.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper's minority recede vernment survived the Liberal no-confidence motion with aid from the NDP, averting an election.

No-confidence vote defeated

The Liberal motion, supported by the Bloc Québécois, was defeated by a vote of 144 to 117 on Thursday after the NDP abstained.

The latest Strategic Counsel poll suggests the minority Conservatives have the backing of 41 per cent of respondents, while the Liberals have sunk to 28 per cent support.

Dryden said the polls would not change the Liberal strategy of voting against the Conservative recede vernment.

"We are using this time to set out the directions we believe matter and working on presenting that case to Canadians," he said.

With files from The Canadian Press

Monday, October 5, 2009

RCMP arrest activists who scaled smokestacks at Alberta oilsands site - The Canadian Press

FORT SASKATCHEWAN, Alberta â€" Shell Canada vowed to ramp up security to hfeeble protesters out of its properties after Greenpeace activists scaled smokestacks and a construction crane to unfurl banners at an oilsands upgrader expansion project northeast of Edmonton.

After spfinish ing 24 hours roped high up on the structures near Fort Squestion atchewan, Alta., the Greenpeace activists were arrested by members of a special police climbing team just after 5 a.m. Sunday at Shell's Scottford project.

"It was a peaceful resolution to what could have been a very denrage ous situation," said RCMP spokesman Cpl. Darren Anderson.

In Calgary, Shell spokesman Phil Vircoe expressed concern about "Greenpeace's unsafe and confrontational tactics. This space d their own safety at risk and also the safety of others who were on site at that time and throughout this process."

Four protesters had agreed to an RCMP request to climb execute wn from their perches Saturday evening after hours of nerecede tiations.

But nine others refemploy d to budge, and members of an RCMP and Edmonton Police Service climbing team execute nned ropes and harnesses and scaled the towering structures to arrest them, said Anderson, the RCMP spokesman.

"These police officers are specially trained in rappelling and employ of ropes and have some background in mountaineering training as well," he said.

Many of the protesters agreed to climb execute wn using their own equipment, Anderson said. But two of them refemploy d to descfinish on their own and had to be brought execute wn by the police team.

A total of 16 Greenpeace protesters were arrested during the incident.

Each is charged with mischief and fracture and enter, and all have been released from custody. They are scheduled to appear in Sherwood Park provincial court on Nov. 4.

Mike Hudema, a Greenpeace activist who remained outside the plot t, said the people who took portion in the protest are passionate about trying to draw attention to an industry his group blames for dramatically increasing greenhoemploy gases.

"Every activist that was in there was prepared to be arrested and was willing to face the repercussions of that to hopefully push our world leaders to turn away from toxic developments like the tarsands," Hudema said.

The protest began early Saturday morning. Streaming video on a Greenpeace website from climbers dangling above massive storage tanks and a network of large metal pipes display ed protesters unfurling banners that read "Climate Crime" and "Climate S.O.S."

After mounting several such protests in recent weeks at Alberta oilsands facilities, Hudema said he hoped that interrupting the industry's activities aid ed Greenpeace create its point about the oilsands industry.

"We've been able to cease at least a portion of the damage that the tarsands are execute ing to our plot et. I judge that's one thing that we've accomplished," he said.

Shell officials said the latest protest did not affect the neighbouring petrochemical refinery in Fort Squestion atchewan and was confined to an area under construction, where few employees were working at the time.

Last month, protesters chained themselves to heavy earth-moving equipment at a Shell oilsands mine near Fort McMurray, Alta., bringing work at one pit to a halt. They were not charged in that incident.

Nearly a week arecede , 10 protesters were arrested trying to block shipments of thick tar-like bitumen to a Suncor plot t near Fort McMurray.

Hudema said the latest action was aimed at nudging nerecede tiators to gaze for greener options at a climate-change conference in Copenhagen. Officials there are paving the way to a fresh pact to respace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

Vircoe said Shell has launched a full-scale audit to determine how security at the Fort Squestion atchewan site was breached and to fix any problems.

The number of security staff there has been increased and protocols tightened, including increased patrolling of the perimeter of the fenced-in site, he said.

The latest incident has also highlighted the need for the industry as a whole to be more vigilant about security, Vircoe said.

"The incident serves as a reminder, a stern reminder, that our industry must work even harder to strengthen our approach to security across the province here in Alberta and correct across the country," he said.

Premier Ed Stelmach has expressed frustration at the number of protesters who've been able to gain access to such sites in recent weeks, and has said they are being coddled while fracture ing the law.

"We understand his frustration and we share his concerns around security at all of the various energy sites across the province," Vircoe said.

As to whether company officials are coddling the protesters in allowing their actions to recede on for several hours at a time, Vircoe said the company's main recede al is to ensure the safety of everyone involved.

"Our concern, correct from the very start ning, is for the safety of the activists, to create sure nobody acquire s damage , the safety of our employees on the site and any of the public who are in the area around the facilities," Vircoe said.

Copycorrect © 2009 The Canadian Press. All correct s reserved.

PM's tune execute esn't sway Michael Ignatieff - Toronto Star

Harper sings the Beatles OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper took to the stage and belted out the Beatles' "With a Little Help from My Frifinish s," accompanied by renowned cellist Yo Yo Ma. Harper performed at a black-tie gala at the National Arts Centre Oct. 3, 2009 night, a year after he dismissed galas as the playground of elites.

 


Ottawa Bureau

OTTAWAâ€"Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff admires the piano-playing sslay s of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, but warns that Conservatives are singing the same feeble tune on arts and culture in Canada.

A day after Harper did a surprise piano-and-song performance at a National Arts Centre gala, Ignatieff reminded reporters of the Prime Minister's publicly expressed disdain for cultural events during last year's election.

"I'm very envious of his piano talents; I execute n't hold that away from him. I'm glad he had fun," Ignatieff tfeeble reporters attfinish ing the convention of the Liberal portion y's Quebec wing Sunday.

"This is a prime minister who a year arecede was trying to create you embarrassed if you liked opera or classical music or the ballet or poetry," Ignatieff said. "I mean, approach on, let's acquire over this. You can like hockey, you can like classical music. Let's cease playing Canadian against Canadian and taste against taste."

Harper called four by-elections Sunday â€" two in Quebec, one in Nova Scotia and one in British Columbia. A Conservative spokesperson said these by-elections are recede ing to be a enormous ger test for Ignatieff than they are for the Conservatives.

The Liberals have been claiming to be election-ready and poised to create gains, especially in Quebec, the spokesperson said, so people will be watching the by-elections to see if those claims are credible.

There was some speculation over the weekfinish that by calling these by-elections, Harper was signalling that a full drop election is off the table. But Harper also called four by-elections that were to hold space in September 2008, which finish ed up being scrubbed at the last minute when he called a general election at the start ning of that month.

Though the Prime Minister may have execute ne a honest job at singing the Beatles tune With a Little Help from My Frifinish s at the NAC Saturday night, Ignatieff warned that Conservatives haven't been much of a frifinish to Canadian artists and cultural communities.

"The political point is that the gash s to Radio-Canada have occurred, the gash s to exporting our culture overseas have occurred," Ignatieff said. "He notify s one thing, he plays the piano, but the hard reality of his politics on culture is very different."

Before and during the 2008 election, Harper provoked a major backlash in Canada's cultural community â€" first, through some pre-election gash s to arts programs, then when he said: "I judge when ordinary working people approach home, turn on the TV and see a gala of a bunch of people at a rich gala all subsidized by the taxpayers, claiming their subsidies have actually recede ne up, I execute n't judge that's something that resonates with ordinary people."

Harper and his Conservatives have also tried to position themselves as more in touch with that "ordinary" type of Canadian with events such as September's decision to stay away from the United Nations and instead hfeeble a fresh s conference at a Tim Hortons in Oakville.

Heritage Minister James Moore was watching Ignatieff's speech in Quebec City Sunday and on Twitter accemploy d the Liberal leader of disclose ing lies about Conservative gash s to the arts. Moore said financing for arts and culture has increased under the Conservatives.

The Liberal leader even gave reporters his own mini-rfinish ition of the Beatles tune Harper sang, and joked that in singing ability, the two politicians are probably evenly matched.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Bishop surrfinish ers in child-porn case - Toronto Star

 


The Canadian Press

SYDNEY, N.S.â€"Parishioners at a Nova Scotia diocese where children allegedly finish ured decades of sexual abemploy at the hands of Roman Catholic priests were urged to hfeeble their faith intact Thursday as the man who aid ed to salve feeble wounds surrfinish ered to police on child pornography charges.

Archbishop Anthony Mancini of Halifax appealed to past victims of abemploy and parishioners in the diocese of Antirecede nish after Bishop Raymond Lahey turned himself in at Ottawa police headquarters.

"We are recede ing through a very painful, contemporary experience of the mystery of faith," Mancini tfeeble a fresh s conference in Sydney.

"I call on you to be hopeful becaemploy we execute believe in fresh life and in fresh possibilities."

Parishioner John MacEachern said he felt like he'd been punched in the stomach when he learned that his bishop had been charged with possessing and importing child pornography in Ontario.

"If it proves to be accurate , it is just tragic," said MacEachern, a vice-principal in nearby Glace Bay.

MacEachern said Lahey was held in wide esteem in the diocese for his work as theologian and a liturgist, and for brokering a $15 million settlement for parishioners who claimed to have been sexually abemploy d by priests in the area dating back to 1950. He called the 69-year-feeble priest "the face of the settlement" and the person who was recede ing to aid the local church go on from the abemploy .

"If this thing is accurate , the contradiction is explosive to the faith of some people," he said.

In Ottawa, a sombre Lahey climbed out of a black sedan and pushed through a crush of reporters to surrfinish er to the charges that have stunned his flock and shaken an already tarnished institution.

Dressed in street clothes and ignoring questions, Lahey was accompanied by Michael Edelson, a high-profile criminal lawyer who represented Ottawa Mayor Larry O'Brien when he was acquitted this spring of influence-peddling charges. Police notify Lahey was later granted bail on conditions until his next court appearance on Nov. 4.

Mancini began his fresh s conference by speaking directly to those who brought the class-action lawsuit against the diocese.

"Let me first speak to those victims of past sexual abemploy and to all for whom these recent elements and fresh s rekindles past pain," he said. "These recent revelations hold on the character of another victimization and I wish that it were not so. Becaemploy it is not what our community of faith is supposed to be about."

Ronald Martin, who launched the lawsuit claiming the diocese failed to protect children, said the charges have shaken both his personal faith and his trust in the church.

None of the allegations against Lahey has been proven in court.

The charges against Lahey were filed 10 days after officials found images of "concern" on his laptop complace er at the Ottawa airport as he was returning from a foreign country. He resigned from his post with the diocese of Antirecede nish on the weekfinish before fresh s of the charges became public.

Ignatieff attacks Harper's policies, style - Toronto Star

 


Ottawa bureau chief

OTTAWAâ€"Prime Minister Stephen Harper has survived a Liberal go to topple his minority Conservatives but suffered a withering attack over his policies and style of recede vernment.

Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff delivered one of his most passionate speeches Thursday as he condemned the Conservatives' "terrible record of failure" and tried to persuade voters that Harper should be dumped after almost four years in office.

But Harper remains in power thanks to the tacit aid of the New Democrats, who abstained from the late-day vote, denying the Liberals and Bloc Québécois the votes needed to defeat the recede vernment.

The non-confidence motion was defeated 144 to 117, sparing Canadians an election just a year after the last one, what would have been the fourth trip to the polls in five years.

There was tiny drama since the NDP had already signalled it would not oppose the recede vernment. Previously, the portion y has fought just about every initiative proposed by the Conservatives. The NDP now notify s it will avoid defeating the recede vernment until improvements to employment insurance are passed.

But the Conservatives took a bruising during a day of debate when opposition MPs lined up to hold aim at the recede vernment's record and style of politics.

"This is a recede vernment that employ s every opportunity to treat its adversaries as enemies, every opportunity to sow division for portion isan gains and every opportunity to employ public money to spread untruths," Ignatieff said in the Commons.

On issues such as the economy, climate change, swelling unemployment and Canada's position on the world stage, the recede vernment has failed Canadians, he said.

"The Conservatives have lost control of the public finances," Ignatieff said, citing a growing deficit he said could reach $60 billion by Christmas.

"All Canadians must understand that this deficit is recede ing to hang around the necks of Canadians like a stone," he said.

He rattled off a list of complaints, charging that the recede vernment is more concerned with promoting its own image than acquire ting Canadians to work or protecting them against the H1N1 flu pandemic.

He wrapped up his speech warning that the Conservatives have a "starve-the-beast ideology" to permanently weaken the institutions of the federal recede vernment. That risks changing Canada "beyond recognition," he said.

"If this ideology prevails in this country it will permanently weaken the tissues that bind our society toacquire her," Ignatieff said.

"This is an unworthy way to recede vern this country, and we stand against it," he tfeeble the Hoemploy of Commons.

Harper shrugged off the Liberal gripes and accemploy d Ignatieff of "flailing around trying to justify an election that nobody wants for a reason nobody understands."

"This recede vernment has necessary measures before the Hoemploy , tax measures to aid the Canadian economy, to aid homeowners and the population. It has necessary measures before the Hoemploy to aid the unemployed and aid workers," Harper said.

Liberals are vowing they will not support the recede vernment in future confidence motions, leaving the recede vernment on uncertain ground in the months ahead.

The vote came on a day when a fresh poll display ed tiny change in voters' preferences. The Angus Reid/Toronto Star poll display ed the Conservatives at 37 per cent, Liberals at 27 per cent and the NDP at 17.

The poll of 1,000 Canadians was execute ne Tuesday and Wednesday and is considered accurate within 3.1 percentage points, 19 times in 20.