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Transit employee stabbed customer first at Dundas Station last week: Toronto police
A man and a woman have been charged following a stabbing at Dundas Station last week, Toronto police say. Source link
Canada has legal duty to provide safe water, housing to remote First Nations, federal judge rules
A federal judge has sided with two First Nations in Manitoba and one in Ontario that sued the Canadian government over its duty to provide them with safe housing and clean drinking water, in separate rulings delivered Friday. Source link
Lost for 5 months in the Northern Rockies, this cat is heading home to Oklahoma for Christmas
After five months lost in northeastern B.C, a beloved family cat is heading home for the holidays. Since July, Shadow the cat has been surviving in the wilderness of the Northern Rockies. Source link
Indigenous cultural belongings return to Canada from Vatican
A delegation from the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation and four First Nations youth are accompanying 62 items on a flight from Frankfurt, Germany to Montreal. Source link
Why Danielle Smith's government is not withstanding many court challenges
From transgender policies to referendums to “conservative” party names, the Alberta UCP has stepped in where others have feared to tread. Source link
Some Halifax Explosion artifacts pulled from the harbour will have a new home
Almost a year and a half after pieces of the Mont-Blanc were discovered during dredging in Halifax harbour, plans are starting to take shape for what to do with some of the wreckage from the famed ship involved in the Halifax Explosion. Source link
U.S. businesses love CUSMA. Why is Donald Trump threatening to pull out?
Over three days in Washington, nearly 150 American industry leaders representing every major sector of the economy depicted the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement as essential to their success. Yet the Trump administration has floated letting the agreement expire or withdrawing from it altogether. Source link
Accused woman blames Children's Aid Society and eating disorder for child's death, court hears
In a note written six months after a child died in her care, Becky Hamber said she was not to blame for his death, a Milton, Ont., court heard Friday. Source link
Montreal to honour 14 victims of Polytechnique massacre at ceremony
A total of 14 women were murdered in the mass shooting on Dec. 6, 1989. Thirteen others were injured in the attack. Source link