Germany to reject Canada-EU trade deal, newspaper reports


Germany is to reject a multibillion-dollar free trade deal between the European Union and Canada which is widely seen as a template for a bigger agreement with the United States, a leading German paper reported on Saturday.


Citing diplomats in Brussels, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported that Berlin objects to clauses outlining the legal protection offered to firms investing in the 28-member bloc. Critics say they could allow investors to stop or reverse laws.


The German government could not sign the agreement with Canada "as it has been negotiated now," the paper reported, quoting German diplomats in Brussels.



It also said that the clauses in the Canada deal were similar to those in the U.S. agreement, which is still under negotiation.


"The free trade treaty with Canada is a test for the agreement with the United States," said one senior official at the Commission in Brussels, according to the paper.


If the deal with Canada is rejected "then the one with the United States is also dead", added the official.


Asked about the report, a spokesman for Germany's Economy Ministry referred to correspondence which outlined Germany's concerns about investor protection in talks with both countries.



"The German government does not view as necessary stipulations on investor protection, including on arbitration cases between investors and the state with states that guarantee a resilient legal system and sufficient legal protection from independent national courts," Deputy Economy Minister Stefan Kapferer wrote in response to an inquiry from a Greens legislator.


In the letter, dated June 26, Kapferer took a similar position on investor protection in the still-to-be-agreed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) agreement with the United States.


Brussels argues that without these clauses companies from Canada will not invest in Europe.


The Sueddeutsche said that EU states will this week receive the treaty for officials to examine in detail before it is signed. All 28 members of the EU have to sign the agreement for it to take effect.


The deal with Canada could increase bilateral trade by a fifth to 26 billion euros a year and the more ambitious one with the United States, if agreed, could encompass a third of world trade and almost half the global economy.


Both accords seek to go far beyond tariff cuts and to reduce transatlantic barriers to business, but the talks are extremely complicated.



Annaleise Carr, Lake Ontario conqueror, ends Lake Erie swim


Annaleise Carr, 16, has ended her marathon fundraising swim across Lake Erie a little early, arriving at Long Point, Ont., instead of her planned destination of Port Dover.


Team spokesman Aaron Gautreau says Annaleise Carr ended her swim at 4 a.m. ET Saturday. She had been planning to stay in the water and finish the swim around 11:30 a.m., but the marathon ended after she consulted with her swim coach and other officials.


Gautreau said the swim was still a great success, with Carr raising around $130,000 for Camp Trillium, a childhood cancer support centre.


The native of Walsh, Ont., had been swimming six to eight hours a day to prepare for what she expected would be a gruelling 30-hour swim.


Two years ago, Carr swam across Lake Ontario at the age of 14, becoming the youngest person known to have ever accomplished the feat.


Carr's 2012 swim raised $115,000 for Camp Trillium.


Here's a YouTube video of Anna swimming her way through some rough water on Friday morning:


Mobile users can watch the video here



F-16 jets escort Sunwing flight back to Toronto for emergency landing


Sunwing Flight 772 took off for Panama City on Friday morning, but was only in the air for about 45 minutes before having to turn around and make an emergency landing at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.


Police on the Sunwing flight

A photo snapped by a passenger shows RCMP aboard the Sunwing jet. (Alain Alphonso)



Sunwing officials say an "unruly passenger" was making threats, some of which concerned the security of the plane. Pilots activated their emergency response plan and returned to Toronto.


Two U.S. F16 fighter jets from Toledo, Ohio, were dispatched to escort the plane back to Toronto, North American Aerospace Defence Command (Norad) confirmed. The F16s flew with the commercial plane out of U.S. airspace to Toronto as a "precaution."


The RCMP took the lead on the investigation once the plane landed at Pearson at 8:55 a.m.


When the plane landed, a passenger on the plane said five or six officers with guns drawn boarded the plane and removed the unruly passenger.


The passenger was arrested by Peel police and is currently in custody.


The plane was most likely over West Virginia when it turned around.


There were 181 people, two infants, two pilots and four flight attendants on board.


Sunwing said the airline would get the passengers to Panama City later Friday.



E-cigarette market on fire while scientists wage heated debate


Electronic cigarette use is skyrocketing, revenue has reached the billions of dollars, legislators are talking about — and enacting — regulations, and more and more research is published every month.


But the jury is still out on their safety, and whether they are a gateway to smoking.


Earlier this week, the New York Times highlighted a growing concern that the tobacco industry is taking over the business and targeting kids with flavours that sound like candy as well as advertisements featuring cartoon characters or celebrities.


Meanwhile, the less reliable Daily Mirror in Britain focussed on the danger of explosions when e-cigarettes are plugged into the wrong charger, citing half a dozen examples to back up its worries.


For those not up on this newest trend, an e-cigarette includes a battery, heating coil and a cartridge containing e-juice. That's the liquid that may or may not contain nicotine and which gets vaporized when the battery powers the coil to heat up the liquid.


The vapor gets drawn up by the wick when someone inhales, and there is no smoke, so it's called vaping.


The pros and cons of vaping are hotly debated by scientists, and there is a wide range of experience among those who have tried it.


Vaping may increase smoking


For some, like Anna Camara, it may even lead to increased smoking.


Pets-Secondhand Smoke

Some smokers have successfully turned to e-cigarettes to help them stop smoking, while others blame e-cigarettes for an increase in the amount they smoke. (Richard Vogel/Associated Press)



Last year, an acquaintance she would see at the off-leash area for dogs in a Toronto park persuaded Camara, an eight-cigarette-a-day smoker, to follow her example and abandon smoking for vaping.


Camara invested $80 in the technology and the e-juice, with nicotine, but felt that vaping wasn't delivering enough nicotine to satisfy her need. So she would also smoke a cigarette.


She calculated that vaping would be cheaper than smoking, but it didn't help her to quit, and it also irritated her throat. (She had tried to quit before by using a nicotine patch, but found it too strong.)


In the end, she blames the vaping experience for doubling the number of cigarettes she smokes to about 16 a day.


On the other hand


E-cigarette proponents claim that because the physical act of vaping more closely resembles smoking, and because the nicotine intake can be adjusted, it should be a better tool to help a smoker quit the habit.


That's what Winnipegger Matt Clinch found. He says e-cigarettes are "fantastic."


In 20 years of puffing, he was up to a pack a day. But then he tried e-cigarettes and hasn't had a smoke in seven weeks.


He says he feels better, he isn't out of breath as much as he was and food is starting to taste better.


"It's as close to smoking as you can get without lighting up and smelling like an ashtray."


He says the battery charge lasts him until dinner time and then he has to charge the unit for four hours, which he calls "a good thing, because it keeps me from over-using it."


Cheaper than cigarettes


Clinch also likes the fact that the juice comes in a variety of flavours and levels of nicotine, because "it makes cutting back your nicotine intake easier, without really realizing that you're cutting back."


e-cigarette

The e-juice in e-cigarettes comes in a variety of flavours and levels of nicotine. (CBC)



He estimates the start-up costs of vaping as equivalent to a carton of cigarettes. But now he's down from spending $17 a day on cigarettes to 75-80 per cent less buying e-juice.


Nick Cooke, a Canadian living in Nicaragua, is discovering the same thing.

He has been using a vaporizer for a little more than a year and says vaping is "way less worse for me than the 30 to 40 cigarettes I used to smoke each day.


"It's odourless and smokeless for the people around me, so it's no problem to have a puff in a restaurant or bar or airport boarding lounge."


Cooke also can have just one or two drags on the e-cigarette and then set it aside.


He says that even in Nicaragua, where cigarettes are cheap ($1.75 for a pack of 20), he's saving money by vaping.


"The only disadvantage is not always having a lighter in my pocket, which comes in handy during power outages."


Doubts about safety


In Canada, selling e-cigarettes with nicotine or those with a health claim is not authorized, though selling e-cigarettes or e-juice without nicotine is legal.


In an email to CBC News, Health Canada said, "To date there is not sufficient evidence that the potential benefits of e-cigarettes in helping Canadians quit smoking outweigh the potential risks."


e-cig-closeup280

Some manufacturers design their e-cigarettes to look like the real thing. (CBC)



In order to get a vaping product authorized, Health Canada requires a company "to provide evidence of safety, quality and effectiveness" - a regulatory hurdle that is "among the most restrictive in the world," according to an editorial last year in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. (It wants e-cigarettes to be regulated as pharmaceutical rather than tobacco products.)


Winnipeg-based Theravape Inc. is one of about a dozen established juice-makers in Canada.


It is just Eden Sorrell and two friends working there and they manufacture and sell wholesale at least 13 different flavours of e-juice.


Their best sellers include lychee, menthol and tobacco. Sorrel describes the tobacco flavor as "transitional."


E Cig Nation

E-juice containing nicotine gets poured into a vaping device at the Henley Vaporium in New York. (Frank Franklin II/Associated Press)



All their flavours can come with or without nicotine, and the nicotine can come in different strengths. Theravape e-juice sells for about $1 a millilitre.


Asked about Health Canada's policy, Sorrel explains that e-cigarettes with nicotine are "not authorized for sale but not prohibited. It's a grey market item."


He says his company doesn't get hassled by Health Canada "because it's actually marketed as a chemical consumer product, not as a health-care product."


Sorrel, who also works as a nurse, and is a non-smoker, explains that "it takes longer for nicotine to hit your bloodstream from a vape than it does from a cigarette, because it's being absorbed through the mucous membranes in the mouth, not within the lungs."


Tobacco industry dominates


One of the issues under debate among scientists is whether vaping could serve as a so-called gateway to smoking.


Sorrel says Theravape is "not here to start new habits" and he is unaware of any non-smokers trying their product.


Nevertheless a concern in the medical community is that e-cigarettes will be "a Trojan horse that will allow the tobacco industry to reverse decades of global progress in reducing smoking prevalence," says the CMAJ editorial.


"The tobacco industry sees a future where e-cigarettes accompany and perpetuate, rather than supplant tobacco use," the editorial adds.


The tobacco industry dominates the e-cigarette industry. In the U.S., a company called Blu eCigs accounts for almost half of all e-cigarettes sold, and it is in the process of being acquired by Imperial Tobacco.


E-cig

Tobacco industry-owned Blu eCigs accounts for almost half of all e-cigarettes sold in the U.S. (AFP/Getty Images)



The tobacco industry also dominates the e-cigarette industry in Europe, where vaping is more popular.


In the British documentary, "The Rise of the E-cigarette," Kingsley Wheaton, a director at British American Tobacco (which sells Vype e-cigarettes), says e-cigarettes "provide a substantially safer alternative to smoking a traditional cigarette."


Although that may sound like a good reason to stop smoking, there is intense debate among scientists around the world about whether vaping will lead to smoking cessation.


In May, 53 public health specialists wrote to the World Health Organization, arguing that e-cigarettes could provide what they called tobacco harm reduction because, in vaping, nicotine is consumed in a low-risk, non-combustible form and doesn't draw tar and toxic gases into the lungs the way smoking tobacco does.


That started a vigorous scientific exchange, starting with a rebuttal from 129 other public health and medical authorities, then a reply from the first group.



Reading those three letters gives an understanding of the debate, and its intensity.


The points in contention include the safety of the liquid, the safety of the second-hand vapor, and whether e-cigarettes are just another way of perpetuating smoking.


They don't debate the harms of the nicotine. By now that's pretty well understood.



Ukraine's prime minister resigns amid government turmoil


Ukraine Arseniy Yatsenyuk

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk announced his resignation on Thursday following turmoil in government. Yatsenyuk announced his resignnation after two parties said they would pull out of the governing coalition. (Geert Vanden Wijngaert/Associated Press)



Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has announced his resignation following turmoil in government.



Yatsenyuk made the announcement from the dais of the parliament after two parties said they would pull out of the governing coalition.


"I am announcing my resignation [in connection] with the collapse of the coalition," Yatsenyuk said.


He said the parliament could no longer do its work and pass necessary laws.


The nationalist Svoboda party and the Udar party led by former boxer Vitali Klitschko pulled out of the group of legislators that took over after former President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted by protesters seeking closer ties with the European Union.


Parliament speaker Oleksandr Turchynov said it was up to Udar and Svoboda to propose a candidate for temporary prime minister to lead the government until early parliamentary elections can be held.



Algerian passenger plane disappears from radar over North Africa


Breaking


Airliner has launched its emergency plan, Algerian news agency says


The Associated Press Posted: Jul 24, 2014 6:03 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 24, 2014 6:03 AM ET







An Air Algerie flight from Burkina Faso to Algiers carrying over 100 people has disappeared from radar on a flight from Burkina Faso to Algiers, the official Algerian news agency said Thursday.


Air navigation services lost track of the plane 50 minutes after takeoff early Thursday, last sited at 2 a.m. local time, the agency said.


"In keeping with procedures, Air Algerie has launched its emergency plan," the agency quoted the airline as saying.


The flight path of Flight AH5017 from Ouagadougou, the capital of the west African nation of Burkina Faso, to Algiers was not immediately clear. The flight typically takes around four hours.


Ougadougou is in a nearly straight line south of Algiers, passing over Mali where unrest continues in the north.



With files from Reuters




Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17: data recovered from cockpit voice recorder


Dutch Safety Board officials said Wednesday the black box recorders from Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 are damaged, but at least one of their recordings is intact.


The two flight recorders, which were recovered by pro-Russian separatists after the Boeing 777 was downed last Thursday in Eastern Ukraine, were given to Malaysian authorities on Monday. They were then sent to the Air Accidents Investigations Branch, a lab certified by the International Civil Aviation Organization in Farnborough, southern England, for analysis.



"The cockpit voice recorder was damaged, but the memory module was intact,” the Dutch Safety Board, which is now leading the investigation, said in a news release.


"No evidence or indications of manipulation of the cockpit voice recorder was found. Following the examination, the cockpit voice recorder data was successfully downloaded and contained valid data from the flight.”


The flight data recorder has yet to be examined, but will be checked on Thursday, the Dutch officials said. If it’s usable, the data from the two recorders will be combined.


It’s unclear what can be gleaned from the recordings, but investigators are hoping for some definitive clues as to what brought down the plane. Ukrainian and American officials have both strongly suggested Flight MH17 was brought down by a missile.


Dutch Safety Board officials said analyzing the data will take time.



Low-key Dutch seething with anger over MH17 disaster, aftermath


The tragedy that befell the Netherlands this week is still reverberating though the country and through capitals around the world.


At last count, there were 192 Dutch citizens among the 298 people who lost their lives when Malaysia Airlines Flight MH-17 was blown out of the sky over eastern Ukraine by a surface-to-air missile.



Shock and grief always accompany disasters like this one. However, the crash of MH-17 has come with its own unique set of tangled complications that have left the Dutch government and the Dutch people seething. The Dutch aren’t known as a hotheaded people, but the images and allegations emerging from eastern Ukraine have this country on a low boil.


Mourning the dead

A mourner pays her respects on Saturday at a makeshift shrine for Dutch passengers killed in the downing of MH-17. (Tracy Seeley/CBC)



Kees Van Dam, a journalist with the Dutch public broadcaster, thumbed patiently through some of the country’s newspapers, translating the headlines. The banner across De Telegraaf, the country’s largest daily, had just one word, “Moordenaars” (Murderers). The headline ran above photos of the Russian-backed rebels who control the region where the plane went down and who are widely suspected of being responsible for bringing down the airliner.


Dutch journalist

Kees Van Dam, a journalist with the Dutch public broadcaster, says people in the Netherlands may be slow to anger, but they're outraged at what's happened in Ukraine. (Tracy Seeley/CBC)



“I think at first they were shocked and just couldn’t believe it,” Van Dam said of his countrymen and their response to the disaster. “After a few days, there was anger.”


The fury and frustration has been fuelled by allegations the rebels have been moving or destroying evidence at the scene of the crash. Armed men have blocked investigators from accessing the site, and there have been grisly stories of bodies being moved haphazardly or left to rot in the sun.


The Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans, during a visit to Ukraine over the weekend, made no attempt to hide the revulsion he and his fellow citizens feel when they hear these stories.


“We are already in shock, but the news we got today of bodies being dragged around, of the site not being treated properly, has really created a shock in the Netherlands,” he said. “People are angry. They are furious.”


But if there is anger, there is also a sense of helplessness.


Prime Minister Mark Rutte has urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to use his considerable influence to rein in the rebels, allow investigators into the crash site and allow victims’ families to collect the remains of their loved ones.


However, there arefears it may already be too late to conduct a thorough inquiry.



'Normally, maybe we are reserved, but not in this case.'- Kees Van Dam, Dutch journalist



Hugh Dunleavy, the commercial director for Malaysia Airlines who travelled to Amsterdam from Kuala Lumpur this week to help provide assistance to victims’ families. has heard the reports and is worried.


“I do believe that with the number of people being into the site and various stories about, you know, bodies being removed, equipment, I’m pretty sure that the crash site has been compromised,” he told CBC News.


Dunleavy wouldn’t venture a guess at how long it might take to recover the bodies, because of the chaotic situation on the ground.


For those in mourning, this is torture, and in a such small country that pain is contagious. Not everyone in the Netherlands lost a friend or family member, but many know people who did. And they may be asking why these people – who had nothing to do with the conflict in Ukraine – had to die.


“Normally, maybe we are reserved,“ Van Dam said. “But not in this case.”


Whether it makes any difference is another matter.


Herman Sal took his daughter to a makeshift memorial at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport this weekend so she could lay flowers for her teacher, Helen Borgsteede, who was killed in the crash.


“I’m angry that this sort of things still happens nowadays,” Sal said, blaming the Russian-backed rebels whom he hopes will face justice.


“These people don’t give a shit about anything. They don’t care about other people’s feelings. They don’t care about shooting down a plane,” he said. “We’ll just see what happens.”



NASA celebrates 45th anniversary of first moon landing


Forty-five years ago today, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on another world. Armstrong's "one small step ... one giant leap" on the dusty lunar surface July 20, 1969, still stirs hearts.


On Monday, NASA will honour Armstrong, who died in 2012, with a renaming ceremony of the historic Operations and Checkout Building at Cape Canaveral, Fla., the launch site. Both Aldrin and Michael Collins, the Apollo 11 command module pilot who orbited the moon, will be there.



"For those who may ask what they can do to honour Neil, we have a simple request," the Armstrong family said in a statement after his death. "Honour his example of service, accomplishment and modesty, and the next time you walk outside on a clear night and see the moon smiling down at you, think of Neil Armstrong and give him a wink."


Some other easy ways to get swept up in moon fever:



  • Follow along on Twitter as the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum recreates, in 140 characters or less per tweet, the eight-day flight, which began with the Saturn V liftoff on July 16, 1969, and ended with a Pacific spashdown on July 24, 1969

  • Tune in to NASA TV via cable, satellite or computer late Sunday night. The space agency will broadcast restored footage of Armstrong and Aldrin's lunar footsteps, beginning at 10:39 p.m. EDT, the exact time Armstrong opened the Eagle's hatch 45 years ago. Take pleasure in knowing this is the first major Apollo 11 anniversary in which the events fall on the same day of the week as they did in 1969.

  • Check out your local science museum or planetarium for anniversary events. The Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum in New York City, for example, has a bevy of astronauts on tap as part of its space and science festival. Aldrin is the featured speaker Friday. The five-day festival runs through Sunday.


  • Slooh Observatory will broadcast high-definition images of the lunar surface Sunday night, along with a panel discussion, beginning at 8:30 P.M. EDT.




  • Pull out the popcorn and relive NASA's early glory days through documentaries and films. Some choices: "The Right Stuff" from 1983, "For All Mankind" documentary from 1989, "Apollo 13" from 1995, "From the Earth to the Moon" TV miniseries from 1998, and "The Dish" from 2000, certainly the funniest and sweetest as it chronicles Australia's key role in the moon landing.




Neil Armstrong

Neil Armstrong smiles at the camera during his trip to the moon in the summer of 1969. (Courtesy of NASA History Office, NASA JSC Media Services Center)



The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex will have an appearance today by former astronaut Bruce McCandless, who served as the Mission Control capsule communicator, or capcom, in Houston as Armstrong and Aldrin walked on the moon. It's his voice that the moonwalkers heard. McCandless later went on to his own fame as the free-flying, untethered spaceman who tested NASA's manned manoeuvring unit, or jetpack, during a shuttle flight in 1984.


The USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, Calif.,, also has nabbed Aldrin for its 45th anniversary festivities — Splashdown 45 — next Saturday, July 26. The aircraft carrier recovered the Apollo 11 crew and capsule, the Columbia, from the Pacific following splashdown. President Richard Nixon was on board to welcome Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins home.


Apollo45: http://ift.tt/1xITBcn



Prostitution bill: Tories agree to narrow ban on 'public communication'


The federal government has refined its proposed rewrite of Canada's prostitution laws in response to criticism that a blanket ban on all "public communication" by sex workers to narrow those restrictions to areas near schools, playgrounds or daycare centres.


The ban on public communication originally applied to all areas where those under the age of 18 could "reasonably" be present.


The government has also accepted an NDP proposal for a mandatory committee review of the legislation's impact after five years, although the NDP had pushed for a review after two years.



The move came as the House of Commons justice committee began the second and final phase of its study on the government's bid to rewrite Canada's prostitution laws.


Over the course of four days last week, during back-to-back sessions, MPs heard from more than 70 witnesses, including current and former sex workers, families of women victimized by the sex trade, law enforcement, legal experts, academics, researchers, frontline outreach workers and human rights activists.


Nearly all of the witnesses — including many of those who were, by and large, supportive of the bill — had urged the government to strip the bill of any provisions that could result in criminal charges against sex workers, particularly the now amended section on public communication, which some witnesses said would pose a risk to the safety of sex workers.


The government's amendment didn't go as far as most witnesses had recommended and may not be sufficient to allay those fears.


The NDP also put forward 11 amendments to the bill. So far, each of the four that have come up for debate has been defeated, as was a motion to define "prostitution" to include offering sexual services, which was proposed by Independent MP Maria Mourani.


A list of all proposed amendments was released Tuesday morning.


A spokesman for Liberal MP Sean Casey said his party hasn't proposed any changes, as they voted against the bill at second reading.



Green Party Leader Elizabeth May told CBC News the bill was "so bad" there was no way to amend it, although her party intends to put forward motions to delete provisions at report stage.


CANADA-PROSTITUTION/

Justice Minister Peter MacKay had suggested he was open to amendments, but his office has been tight-lipped over what, if any, proposed changes the government is prepared to support. (Reuters)



Ultimately, though, it is up to the government — and, specifically, Justice Minister Peter MacKay — to decide what changes should be made to the bill based on what the committee heard during last week's marathon session.


This spring, Minister for Democratic Reform Pierre Poilievre responded to widespread concern over his proposal to rejig Canada's election laws by bringing forward substantive amendments that addressed specific worries expressed by witnesses at committee, including issues related to voter identification and the investigative process.



Google's smart contact lens moves one step closer to your eye


Swiss drugmaker Novartis has struck an agreement with Google to develop "smart" contact lenses that would help diabetics track their blood glucose levels or restore the eye's ability to focus.


The device for diabetics would measure glucose in tear fluid and send the data wirelessly to a mobile device, Novartis said. The technology is potentially life-changing for many diabetics, who prick their fingers as many as 10 times daily to check their body's production of the sugar.


Success would allow Novartis to compete in a global blood-sugar tracking market that is expected to be worth over $12 billion by 2017, according to research firm GlobalData. Diabetes afflicts an estimated 382 million people worldwide.


The second approach is for presbyopia, in which aging eyes have trouble focusing on close objects. Novartis hopes the lens technology will help restore the eye's ability to focus, almost like the autofocus on a camera.


Non-invasive sensors, microchips and other miniaturized electronics would be embedded into the contact lenses.


Under the deal with Google, Novartis's Alcon eyecare unit will further develop and commercialize the lens technologies designed by Google's development team.


Financial details were not disclosed.


The alliance comes as drugmakers explore ways for technology to reshape healthcare, helping patients monitor their own health and lowering the costs of managing chronic diseases.


In turn, technology firms such as Apple Inc, Samsung Electronics Co and Google are trying to find health-related applications for wearable devices.



Novartis Chief Executive Joe Jimenez said he hoped a product could be on the market in about five years' time.


"This really brings high-technology and combines it with biology and that's a very exciting combination for us," Jimenez told Reuters.


"I think you're going to see more and more areas of unmet medical need where companies like Novartis are going to take a non-traditional approach to addressing those unmet needs."


Although the licensing deal is just for the eye, Jimenez said the drugmaker was also thinking about how technology could be applied in other areas, such as remote patient monitoring in heart failure.



Prostitution bill's fate unclear as committee begins final review


The House of Commons justice committee is moving on to the second phase of its study on the government's bid to rewrite Canada's prostitution laws.



Over the course of four days last week, during back-to-back sessions, MPs heard from more than 70 witnesses, including current and former sex workers, families of women victimized by the sex trade, law enforcement, legal experts, academics, researchers, frontline outreach workers and human rights activists.


Nearly all of the witnesses — including many of those who were, by and large, supportive of the bill — urged the government to strip the bill of any provisions that could result in criminal charges against sex workers, particularly the sections restricting their ability to offer their services in public, which some witnesses said would pose a risk to the safety of sex workers.


Later this morning, MPs on the committee will begin clause-by-clause review — a painstaking process that involves going through the full text of the bill, line by line, as well as debating and voting on any proposed amendments that were submitted to the committee over the weekend.


On Tuesday, The Globe and Mail reported the Conservatives are prepared to rejig the section of the bill that could criminalize sex workers by limiting the section's ban on "public communications" to cover only areas near a school, playground or daycare.


It's unlikely that would be seen as sufficient to allay the fears of those who called for the section to be scrapped entirely, which included many witnesses who were otherwise supportive of the bill.


Conservative MPs could also vote to delete particularly problematic sections entirely.


If past history is any guide, there's little chance the Opposition will have much luck persuading the Conservative contingent to back any effort to tweak the wording of the bill.


In this case, it's not even clear how many Opposition amendments will be on the table.


A spokesman for Liberal MP Sean Casey said his party hasn't proposed any changes, as they voted against the bill at second reading.



Meanwhile, Green Party Leader Elizabeth May told CBC News the bill was "so bad" there was no way to amend it, although her party intends to put forward motions to delete provisions at report stage.


CANADA-PROSTITUTION/

Justice Minister Peter MacKay had suggested he was open to amendments, but his office has been tight-lipped over what, if any, proposed changes the government is prepared to support. (Reuters)



As for the New Democrats, they weren't willing to go on the record, but have hinted they will be putting forward at least one amendment.


Ultimately, though, it will be up to the government — and, specifically, Justice Minister Peter MacKay — to decide what, if any, changes should be made to the bill based on what the committee heard during last week's marathon session.


Although rare, it isn't entirely unheard of for a minister to exercise his or her prerogative to tweak a bill before it goes back to the House for a final vote. MacKay said earlier this month he was open to amendments.


Just this spring, Minister for Democratic Reform Pierre Poilievre responded to widespread concern over his proposal to rejig Canada's election laws by bringing forward substantive amendments that addressed specific worries expressed by witnesses at committee, including issues related to voter identification and the investigative process.


Even as late as Monday afternoon, however, the minister's office wasn't willing to disclose what, if any, changes the government is expecting its members to propose.


"Committee is master of its own destiny," MacKay spokeswoman Mary Ann Dewey-Plante reminded CBC News.



10 dead, at least 100 injured after Moscow subway derails


A rush-hour subway train derailed in Moscow Tuesday, killing 106 people and injuring at least 106, emergency officials said.


Several cars left the track in the tunnel after a power surge triggered an alarm, which caused the train to stop abruptly.


City Hall officials gave the death toll as 10. At least 106 people were hospitalized, of whom 50 are in grave condition, Itar-TASS said, quoting Moscow's health department chief, Georgy Golukhov.


Yuri Akimov, a Moscow representative of the emergency services, said in a televised briefing outside the Park Pobedy station that about 200 people were evacuated from the train, which was stuck between two stations in west Moscow.


Golukhov told Russian television that one person is still trapped in a wrecked train car but he is alive.


Several people who were gravely injured were taken out of the station and airlifted from the scene.


Photos on social media showed passengers walking along the tracks inside the dimly lit tunnel.


A man with a bloody cut on his brow told Rossiya 24 television outside the Park Pobedy station that he felt a jolt and the train abruptly came to a halt.


"There was smoke and we were trapped inside," the man said. "It's a miracle we got out. I thought it was the end."


Park Pobedy is the deepest metro station in Moscow, 84 metres deep, which is making the rescue particularly hard.


While accidents are regular occurrences in the Moscow Metro, deadly incidents are rare.



Omar Khadr's war-crimes convictions stand despite legal questions


Omar Khadr

A secret memo on CIA involvement in drone killings raised questions about Omar Khadr's war crime convictions. (Janet Hamlin/Reuters)



Canada's Omar Khadr has lost his bid to have his war-crimes convictions tossed after the U.S. government argued a previously secret memo that raised questions about the legal underpinnings of his prosecution was irrelevant to his case.


The decision by the military commission appeals court — which has so far refused to hear arguments on the merits of Khadr's appeal — means the former Guantanamo Bay prisoner will have to wait even longer to make his case to a regular American court.


Also Monday, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia set aside two of three convictions against Ali Hamza al-Bahlul, who did media relations for terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden.


The court found the military commission did not have the authority to try him for conduct that wasn't considered a war crime before 2006.


Khadr's lawyers have made similar arguments and the military commission appeals court was waiting for the al-Bahlul decision before holding any hearings on the Canadian's appeal.


It was not immediately clear how the decision might now impact Khadr's case.


In prosecuting Khadr, the Pentagon maintained he had violated long-standing American "common law of war" by taking up hostilities against U.S. forces in Afghanistan.


Khadr's lawyers argued a detailed Department of Justice legal memo produced in July 2010 — but which only came to light last month — made no mention of any such body of law, suggesting it doesn't exist.


"Khadr's logical leap is unsupported," the government argued in its filings to the Court of Military Commission Review.


"(The memo) did not purport to address the issue Khadr seeks to litigate here."


The legal analysis concluded CIA agents would not be guilty of war crimes by using drones to kill people even though they are not part of the military and could be seen as "unprivileged" combatants.


In arguing the memo is irrelevant to Khadr's case, the U.S. government maintains CIA agents are "government actors" engaged in "lawfully authorized hostilities" while Khadr was a "non-governmental actor" engaged in hostilities not sanctioned by any state.


Khadr's Pentagon-appointed lawyer Sam Morison said the government's "artificial distinction" between state and non-state actors flies in the face of the plain language of the memo.


"The government's opposition therefore grasps at straws to avoid the inevitable conclusion that Khadr's conviction lacks any legal foundation," Morison said.


Khadr pleaded guilty in October 2010 before a military commission in Guantanamo Bay to five war crimes committed as a 15 year old in Afghanistan in July 2002. He was given a further eight years and transferred to Canada in September 2012 to serve out his sentence.


He has since said he only pleaded guilty to get out of Guantanamo.


Last week, the Alberta Court of Appeal ruled his eight-year sentence amounted to a youth sentence, and ordered he serve his time in a provincial jail. Ottawa is appealing to the Supreme Court.


Khadr, now 27, remains the only person ever prosecuted for the death of an American soldier in Afghanistan.



Ukraine says plane shot down by rocket from Russia


Breaking


Ukrainian defence minister says military transport plane may have had 20 people on board


The Associated Press Posted: Jul 14, 2014 5:43 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 14, 2014 10:18 AM ET







Ukraine's Defence Minister says a military plane has been shot down along the country's eastern border with Russia.


Rebels in conflict-wracked eastern Ukraine claimed responsibility for downing the Antonov-26, but Defence Minister Valeriy Heletey said the rocket may have been fired from Russia.



Heletey said the plane was flying at an altitude too high to be reached by the weapons used by the separatist pro-Russia rebels who are fighting government troops.


Authorities say plane may have been carrying around 20 people.


More to come







Sexual abusers in Catholic church are 'leprosy in our house,' says Pope Francis


About two per cent of Roman Catholic clerics are sexual abusers, an Italian newspaper on Sunday quoted Pope Francis as saying, adding that the pontiff considered the crime "a leprosy in our house".


But the Vatican issued a statement saying some parts of a long article in the left-leaning La Repubblica were not accurate, including one that quoted the Pope as saying that there were cardinals among the abusers.



The article was a reconstruction of an hour-long conversation between the pope and the newspaper's founder, Eugenio Scalfari, an atheist who has written about several past encounters with the Pope.


"Many of my collaborators who fight with me (against paedophilia) reassure me with reliable statistics that say that the level of paedophilia in the Church is at about two per cent," Francis was quoted as saying.


"This data should hearten me, but I have to tell you that it does not hearten me at all. In fact, I think that it is very grave," he was quoted as saying.


The pope was quoted as saying that, while most paedophilia took place in family situations, "even we have this leprosy in our house".


According to Church statistics for 2012, the latest available, there are about 414,000 Roman Catholic priests in the world.


The Vatican issued a statement noting Scalfari's tradition of having long conversations with public figures without taking notes or taping them, and then reconstructing them from memory. Scalfari, 90, is one of Italy's best known journalists.


While acknowledging that the conversation had taken place, Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi issued a statement saying that not all the phrases could be attributed "with certainty" to the Pope.


Lombardi said that, in particular, a quote attributed to the Pope saying cardinals were among the sex abusers was not accurate and accused the paper of trying to "manipulate naive readers".


Last week, the Argentine Pope held his first meeting with victims of sexual abuse by priests.


He told them the Church should "weep and make reparation" for crimes that he said had taken on the dimensions of a sacrilegious cult. He vowed zero tolerance for abusers and said bishops would be held accountable if they covered up crimes by priests in their diocese.



Russia warns Ukraine of 'irreversible consequences' after deadly shelling


New


Russia has previously claimed border hit by Ukrainian fire, but no deaths reported before


The Associated Press Posted: Jul 13, 2014 6:45 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 13, 2014 6:45 AM ET







Russia's foreign ministry claimed Sunday that a Ukrainian shell hit a town on the Russian border, killing one person and seriously injuring two others.


A ministry statement labelled the incident a "provocation," and warned of the possibility of "irreversible consequences, the responsibility for which lies on the Ukrainian side."



Russia says the shell hit the courtyard of a residential building in the Russian town of Donetsk early on Sunday. The town borders Ukraine's restless east, where a pro-Russian separatist insurgency has waged a three-month long battle with the Kyiv government.


Russia has made repeated claims that settlements along its porous border with Ukraine — which the West and Kyiv say is a key supply route for the rebels — have been hit by Ukrainian fire, but no deaths have been previously reported.


The claims come as Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose nation will host the 2018 World Cup, is attending Sunday's final to take part in a handover ceremony with Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and FIFA President Sepp Blatter.


Brazilian officials said Saturday that both Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart, Petro Poroshenko, would be attending the match, but Poroshenko announced Sunday that he wouldn't be going. Talks between Russia and Ukraine over a ceasefire between the rebels and Kyiv's troops have stalled in recent weeks, as Ukrainian troops have succeeded in pushing insurgents out of key towns in the east.







'Betrayal can be overcome': David Adams Richards on his dark new novel


There is no black and white truth in the novels of David Adams Richards. But there is a whole lot of grey. Grey in the sense of moral uncertainty.


His latest book, Crimes Against My Brother, is chockablock with gossip, betrayal, murder, adultery, corporate malfeasance and government corruption.


Still, according to Richards, the book is a tribute to the strength of the human spirit. The central characters in the book "struggle for the better angels of their nature, not against them."


Many of Richards’ novels, including The Friends of Meager Fortune, Incidents in the Life of Markus Paul and Mercy Among the Children, explore themes of human darkness, but Richards always looks for light.


He once said that, in spite of their dark content, his books are filled with joy.


“If I didn’t believe that, I wouldn’t be writing. Joy comes from tragedy, not in spite of it," said Richards, who is Laura Lynch’s guest this weekend on The Sunday Edition.


In Crimes Against My Brother, three cousins — all teenagers, all best childhood buddies — get trapped in a snowstorm on the side of Good Friday Mountain. When not one of the adults in their lives notices they’ve gone missing, they make a pact, sealed in blood, to trust only each other. But it is a pact that will haunt them.


Crimes Against My Brother

David Adams Richards' latest novel deals with three cousins who betray each other. (Doubleday Canada)



“I started out writing about three people who decide never to betray each other, and end up betraying each other desperately,” said Richards.


Richards has situated most of his work in fictional communities along the Miramichi River in northeast New Brunswick. The Miramichi is where he was born in 1950, one of six children, and it’s the source of his literary sustenance. He has written about life there since his first book, The Keeping of Gusties, was published when he was 20.


Now a member of the Order of Canada, Richards has been nominated for, and won, many awards, including the Governor General’s Award for Fiction, the Commonwealth Writer’s Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize.


One of his literary signatures is that his characters often don’t disappear as of the last page of a book.


“I introduce and re-introduce characters from one book to the other and explore how they’ve changed over the course of those books,” he said. For example, John Delano, a policeman who has appeared in several of Richards’ books, will star in his next novel, Principles to Live By.


For all the darkness, Richards is an optimist. Even in a novel that is rife with betrayal, he said this about Crimes Against My Brother: “I think that time does heal all and, as they say, this too will pass. So I think, take heart that betrayal can be overcome. I think it can be. I certainly hope it can.”



Full moon will be 'super' during close passage to Earth tonight


Pakistan Supermoon

A perigee moon, also known as a 'supermoon,' rises over a crescent of a minaret of grand Faisal mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan, Saturday. (Anjum Naveed/The Associated Press)



The full moon on Saturday will appear to be unusually big. In fact, it will be a "supermoon."


That's the nickname for full moons that happen when our celestial neighbour is relatively close to Earth. That distance varies because the moon follows an elliptical orbit. When it's close and full, it appears bigger and brighter than normal, although in fact the difference can be hard to detect.


If you see Saturday's moon close to the horizon it may seem huge, but that's just an illusion caused by its position in the sky.


Two other full moons this summer, on Aug. 10 and Sept. 9, are also supermoons.


It's not all that unusual to have a supermoon. There were three in a row last year.



Powerful 6.8-magnitude Japan earthquake triggers small tsunami


A strong earthquake hit Japan's northern coast near the nuclear power plant crippled in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. The earthquake early Saturday triggered a small tsunami and injured at least one person.


Japan's Meteorological Agency said the 6.8-magnitude quake struck 10 kilometresbelow the sea surface off the coast of Fukushima. The 4:22 a.m. quake shook buildings in Tokyo, about 250 kilometres northwest of the epicentre.


A 20-centimetre (8-inch) tsunami reached the coast of Ishinomaki Ayukawa and Ofunato, about 50 minutes after the quake. Smaller waves were observed at several other locations along the coast. Changes to the shoreline were not visible on television footages of NHK public broadcaster.


In Fukushima, a 68-year-old woman fell down the stairs and broke her leg, according to the prefectural police. No damage was reported.


Eight towns devastated by the tsunami three years ago, including Rikuzentakata, Higashi Matsushima and Otsuchi, issued evacuation advisories to thousands of households along the northern coast, along with schools and community centres.


hi-fukushima.japan.jpg

Japan's Meteorological Agency said the earthquake struck off the coast of Fukushima, where a nuclear power plant was damaged in a 2011 quake and tsunami. (Google)



All tsunami and evacuation advisories were lifted about two hours after the quake.


Fukushima Dai-ichi and two other nuclear power plants, along with other nuclear facilities along the coast, found no abnormalities, and their reactors and fuel storage pools are being cooled safely, according to the Nuclear Regulation Authority.


Tokyo Electric Power Co., which operates the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, has instructed plant workers on night duty along the coast to retreat to higher grounds.


The March 2011 disaster killed about 19,000 people. That disaster also triggered multiple meltdowns at the Fukushima plant. More than 100,000 people are still unable to go home due to fear of radiation contamination from the plant.



Powerful 6.8-magnitude Japan earthquake triggers tsunami advisory


Updated


Powerful quake struck off the coast of Fukushima early Saturday


The Associated Press Posted: Jul 11, 2014 3:50 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 11, 2014 4:18 PM ET







A 6.8-magnitude earthquake has hit Japan's northern coast near the nuclear power plant crippled in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.


Japan's Meteorological Agency says the quake struck early Saturday 10 kilometres below the sea surface off the coast of Fukushima, northeast of Tokyo.


The agency issued tsunami advisory along the Japanese northern coast.


Public broadcaster NHK says the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant is checking if there is any damage from the quake.


The 2011 disaster killed about 19,000 people. That disaster also triggered multiple meltdowns at the Fukushima plant. More than 100,000 people are still unable to go home due to fear of radiation contamination from the plant.







Vancouver tops list of most expensive cities in Canada again


Vancouver tops the list of most expensive Canadian cities to live in, surpassing Toronto for the second year in a row, according to an annual cost of living survey.


But life is still expensive in Toronto, as well as Montreal and Calgary, which round out the top four costly cities in the country, according to Mercer's 2014 Cost of Living Survey.


Overall, however, Canadian cities have dropped down the list significantly in this year's ranking compared with other places worldwide, because of the weakened Canadian dollar and slower pace of price increases compared with New York, the survey's base city.


96th overall


Vancouver fell thirty-two places since last year, for a new ranking at 96, while Toronto stood at 101, down thirty-three spots, Montreal fell twenty-eight spots to 123 and Calgary dropped to rank 125.


The annual survey ranks the most expensive cities for expatriates around the world, measuring the comparative cost of over 200 items in each location, including housing, transportation, food, clothing, household goods, and entertainment.


Luanda in Angola is the world's most expensive city for the second year in a row, followed by N'Djamena, Chad.


European and Asian cities also continue to dominate as the costliest cities with Hong Kong in third place, followed by Singapore. Zurich jumped three places to rank fifth, followed by Geneva in sixth. Tokyo dropped four spots to rank seventh.


"Rankings in many regions were affected by recent world events, including economic and political upheavals, which resulted in currency fluctuations, cost inflation for goods and services, and volatility in accommodation prices," said Ed Hannibal, a partner for Mercer's mobility practice.


"While Luanda and N'Djamena are relatively inexpensive cities, they are quite costly for expatriates since imported goods come at a premium. In addition, finding secure living accommodations that meet the standards of expatriates can be challenging and quite costly as well."


Europe dominates list


Other cities appearing in the top 10 of Mercer's costliest cities for expatriates are Bern, Moscow, and Shanghai.


Tel Aviv continues to be the most expensive city in the Middle East for expatriates, followed by Beirut, Dubai and Abu Dhabi.


Karachi is the world's least expensive city for expatriates.


In the United States, cities have climbed in the ranking in part because of the relative stability of the US dollar against other major currencies.


A rise in the rental accommodation market pushed New York up eight places to rank 16, the highest-ranked city in the region.


In South America, Sao Paolo ranked as the costliest city, followed by Rio de Janeiro.



Nathan O'Brien case: emotional vigil held for missing Calgarians


There was an outpouring of hope, tears and prayers Thursday evening at an emotional candlelight vigil for a missing five-year-old Calgary boy and his grandparents.


"We're very hopeful that they're out there. There's no doubt in our mind," said the boy's mother, Jennifer O'Brien, choking back tears as her husband, Rod, stood with his arm around her shoulders.


"We've just got to find them and the police are doing everything they can do. I'm hopeful in every way and we all are. I hope this turns out to be a happy story and I think it's going to."



Nathan O'Brien and his grandparents, Kathryn and Alvin Liknes, haven't been seen since June 29 after what police say was a violent incident in the Liknes home. The couple had been having an estate sale and were downsizing ahead of a move to a home in Edmonton and then on to Mexico. Nathan was at their house for a sleepover.


About 500 people turned out for a candlelight vigil at the Parkhill Community Centre, just around the corner from the Liknes home.


Green ribbons, recognized as a symbol to remember missing children, were handed out to those attending. A moment of silence was held followed by a lighting of the candles. Throughout the ceremony, tears streamed down faces and some people were sobbing.


Kathryn Liknes, Nathan O'Brien and Alvin Liknes

Nathan O'Brien, centre, and his grandparents, Kathy and Alvin Liknes, have not been seen since Nathan's mom left the home of the couple the night of June 29. (Calgary Police Service)



About a dozen friends and family members slowly made their way up to the microphone, sharing anecdotes and hoping for the best.


"I like to think of this whole thing as just a way to keep the flame going," said Jeff Liknes, Kathryn and Alvin's son.


"I don't want to think of this like a funeral because I know it's not one. I'd love to see them again."


Randy Prevost, Kathryn Liknes's brother, told reporters he wanted to help in the search but police asked the family to not get involved in the investigation. He remains hopeful but said it has been a tough two weeks.


"Never in my wildest dreams could I imagine anything like this," he said. "You've watched movies and seen things like this, but it's not real."


He repeated the family's mantra of holding onto hope.


"I just want to look into each one of their eyes and cry for a while because it's going to be a gracious moment when it does come around."



B.C First Nation set to evict CN Rail, logging and fishing companies


British Columbia First Nations are wasting no time in enforcing their claim on traditional lands in light of a landmark Supreme Court of Canada decision recognizing aboriginal land title.


The hereditary chiefs of the Gitxsan First Nations served notice Thursday to CN Rail, logging companies and sport fishermen to leave their territory along the Skeena River in a dispute with the federal and provincial governments over treaty talks.



And the Gitxaala First Nation, with territory on islands off the North Coast, announced plan to file a lawsuit in the Federal Court of Appeal on Friday challenging Ottawa's recent approval of the Northern Gateway pipeline from Alberta.


The Kwikwetlem First Nation also added its voice to the growing list, claiming title to all lands associated with now-closed Riverview Hospital in Metro Vancouver along with other areas of its traditional territory.


SCOC First Nations 20140626

In June 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favour of the Tsilhqot'in First Nation, granting it land title to 438,000-hectares of land. (The Canadian Press/Darryl Dyck)



They cite the recent high court ruling in Tsilhqot'in v. British Columbia.


"It's given us a bit of confidence that things are going to be going our way," said Clarence Innis, acting chief of the Gitxaala. "I think that is a very strong message to Canada ... not to ignore First Nations any more but to consult."


The court application argues that the federal Conservative cabinet did not consider the Gitxaala's aboriginal rights and title in approving the oil pipeline proposed by Calgary-based Enbridge (TSX:ENB). The Tsilhqot'in decision bolsters their case, said Rosanne Kyle, the band's lawyer.


"The Northern Gateway project is going to be the first case where the implications of Tsilhqot'in will crystallize," she said. "The court has provided a lot more clarity for everyone involved, including government, as to what needs to be done to achieve reconciliation."


Gitxsan set August eviction deadline


About 250 kilometres northeast of the Gitxaala, the Gitxsan have given companies operating on their land until Aug. 4 to leave the 33,000 square kilometres of their territory along the Skeena River.


Because the band was not consulted by government, the companies the governments licensed are trespassing, said Gwaans Bev Clifton Percival, chief negotiator for the Gitxsan.


Aboriginal Day Of Protest 20130116

Members of the Gitxsan First Nation gather around a fire as they take part in a blockade of a CN railroad track in Kitwanga, B.C., between Terrace and Smithers, on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013. The Gitxsan were supporting a nationwide day of Idle No Protests as well as local issues such as the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline. CN and Via Rail stopped traffic on the line during the blockade. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Robin Rowland (The Canadian Press)



"The Supreme Court has come down with yet another ruling that advances our right and title," she said. "They (government) have to abide by the laws. We're prepared to negotiate."


It was Gitxsan hereditary chief Delgamuukw whose 1997 legal victory recognized aboriginal title to unceded land in B.C.


The band has tried since then to negotiate with the Crown but hasn't made any progress, Clifton Percival said. A short-term forestry agreement with the province expired in 2011 and there's been none since, she said.


Then in 2012, lands awarded to the Gitxsan in an earlier court ruling were included in a treaty agreement-in-principle with the neighbouring Kitsumkalum and Kitselas nations, she said.


Tired of being ignored say natives


"B.C. has been silent yet they want to have all this activity on Gitxsan land, so we need to get their attention and this is the only way the chiefs saw forward," Clifton Percival said.


CN Rail did not return a call for comment, but issued a brief email statement.


hi-bc-120118-enbridge-protest

In January 2012, a deal between the Gitxsan and Enbridge over its proposed Northern Gateway pipeline collapsed.



"We have long standing, co-operative relationships with Gitxsan hereditary chiefs and we are currently in discussion with them about this matter," said Mark Hallman, director of communications.


B.C. Minister of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation John Rustad was travelling and unavailable for an interview. In an emailed statement, Rustad said the Liberal government takes the courts' direction on consultation very seriously.


In the Gitxsan case, the ministry has been working with the communities to try and resolve the territorial dispute, he said.


"We are continuing to work in partnership with Kitselas, Kitsumkalum and other B.C. First Nations to secure long-term treaties that provide economic benefit, security and certainty on the land for all British Columbians," Rustad said.


Kwikwetlem claiming Riverview lands


The Kwikwetlem First Nation issued its claim of aboriginal title interests in a news release.


"The Kwikwetlem First Nation have thousands of years of traditions tied to the Riverview Lands, including the use and occupation of the land itself."


SCOC First Nations Tsilhqot'in

Chief Bernie Mack, of the Esdilagh First Nation, wears hand made gloves while holding a drum during a news conference in Vancouver, B.C., after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favour of the Tsilhqot'in First Nation, granting it land title to 438,000-hectares of land on Thursday June 26, 2014. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)



The First Nation said it wishes to make it clear that it expects to become the owner of the Riverview Lands and lead the future development of these lands.


The high court decision is the first time aboriginal title has been recognized in Canada. The court recognized the Tsilhqot'in's title to over 1,700 square kilometres of land in the B.C. Interior.


A report released Thursday by the Fraser Institute warned that the ruling may encourage more lawsuits.


It's a decision that will be felt throughout Canada, said the analysis by the right-leaning think tank based in Vancouver.


In the short term, the ruling will impact treaty negotiations and development in the westernmost province, where there are few historic or modern treaties and where 200 plus aboriginal bands have overlapping claims accounting for every square metre of land and then some.


"Over the longer term, it will result in an environment of uncertainty for all current and future economic development projects that may end up being recognized as on aboriginal title lands," wrote analyst Ravina Bains.



Detroit boy found in basement was forced to complete extreme workouts: report


A 12-year-old Detroit boy found in his basement after a widely publicized 11-day search was abused by his father and stepmother and forced to rise before dawn for intense workouts of 100 pushups and even more situps, according to Michigan's child-welfare agency.



Detailed allegations of physical and mental abuse were filed this week as the state tries to terminate the parental rights of Charlie Bothuell IV. The state also wants to end the parental rights of Monique Dillard-Bothuell, the boy's stepmother and mother of two other children. No criminal charges have been filed.


The boy, Charlie Bothuell V, "has experienced physical abuse by his father ... for the entire two years he has resided in Mr. Bothuell's residence," the Department of Human Services said in a court filing. "The abuse included being physically disciplined with a PVC pipe on his butt, feet, chest, head, thighs, sides and arms. ... He was often too sore to sit or walk."


Charlie was found by police in the basement of his family's condominium on June 25, more than a week after he was reported missing. His father, a nurse, had made tearful pleas on TV for his son's return and later said he was "shocked" when the boy was found in the basement.


11-day confinement


But Charlie told caseworkers that his stepmother ordered him there on June 14 because she believed he had not completed one of his twice-a-day workouts: 100 pushups, 200 situps, 100 jumping jacks, 25 arm curls with a 25-pound weight and thousands of revolutions on an elliptical machine.



Charlie said his stepmom told him, "Shut up, stay quiet and don't say anything no matter what you hear!"


He said she told him at times, "I know where the sharp knives are. ... I can make you disappear."


A court hearing to end the couple's parental rights began Thursday and will resume July 17 after lawyers get more documents from the state. Charlie, meanwhile, is living with his mother; two step-siblings, ages 4 and 11 months, have been placed with relatives.


Dillard-Bothuell's attorney, Mark Magidson, said the claim that she ordered the boy to the basement is "ridiculous."


'There's no child abuse'


"There's no child abuse," Magidson told reporters. "Was there corporal punishment on some occasions? There may have been. Once all the evidence is out, you'll understand why."


As for the workouts, Magidson said Charlie was overweight when he moved in with his father, and diabetes runs in the Bothuell family.


Bothuell's attorney, Stephanie Carson, declined to comment when reached by phone.


Charlie told investigators that he heard police officers come to the home while he was in the basement. When the condo was quiet, he said he went upstairs for Gatorade, soda, protein shakes and dry cereal.



Texas shooter killed 4 kids and their parents execution-style: police


A man charged with killing four children and their parents forced his way into the family's suburban Houston home, tied them up and shot them in the back of the head when they refused to tell him where his ex-wife was, authorities said Thursday.



The lone survivor of the attack, the slain couple's 15-year-old daughter, suffered a fractured skull when a bullet grazed her head. She played dead and called 911 after Ronald Lee Haskell left the house, prosecutors revealed at a court hearing.


A day after the slayings, investigators slowly built a picture of Haskell, who was the couple's estranged brother-in-law.


The 33-year-old man is accused of killing his ex-wife's sister, Katie Stay, and her husband and the children, ranging in age from 4 to 14, after binding them and putting the family face-down on the floor of their home.


Victim helped sister escape Haskell's abuse


Haskell had a handful of previous run-ins with law enforcement in Utah, where he had lived with his wife. Neighbours said Haskell's marriage was so rocky that Stay went to Utah last fall to help her sister escape the relationship and start a new life in Texas.


Houston Suburban Shooting

Neighbours were shocked to discover six people had been shot dead in a suburban home in Spring, Texas on Wedneday night. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle/AP)



Stay "was very instrumental in helping her sister get here so she could have a fresh start. Katie's a spitfire. She has energy to stand up for what she believes is right and true," said Verena Beckstrand, a neighbor who choked back tears as she talked about the family.


Haskell had previously been jailed in 2008 in Logan, about 80 miles north of Salt Lake City, on charges of assault and domestic violence. His wife told police he dragged her by her hair and struck her in the head in front of their children.


Those charges were later dismissed as part of a plea deal, according to information released Thursday by Logan authorities.


Haskell was also served last year with a protective order from his ex-wife. It was dismissed in October after the couple filed for divorce, online court records show.


'They were a really, really good family'


By Thursday morning, a small memorial with three candles and a plant had been set up at the front door of the family's two-story white-brick and brown wood-trimmed home. A couple with a child left a framed photo of the family with the inscription "Faith, Hope, Love."


"I don't think any of us will ever be able to see that house the same again," said Viri Palacios, who lives across the street. "I just want the word to get out they were a really, really good family."


The father, Stephen Stay, was a real estate broker. The mother was a helpful presence around the neighborhood, planning Halloween and Christmas parties for children, Palacios said.


Ronald Lee Haskell, 33

Ronald Lee Haskell, 33. (Harris County)



A few blocks from the home at Lemm Elementary School, Principal Kathy Brown tied multi-colored ribbons around trees in front of the building and encouraged parents to do the same.


"It's to have positive bright thoughts about the family," Brown said, noting that two of the slain children had attended school there and a third had graduated from Lemm.


Documents from Thursday's preliminary court hearing show that the daughter who survived attempted to close the door after telling Haskell her parents were not home. But he kicked it in. The teen remained in critical condition in a Houston hospital.


In a statement, issued Thursday through the Harris County Sheriff's Office, Katie Stay's father, Roger Lyon, said his 15-year-old granddaughter "is expected to make a full recovery."


3-hour standoff


When the badly wounded daughter contacted authorities, she told them the gunman was planning to shoot other relatives, Hickman said. Police located Haskell's car, and took him into custody after a three-hour standoff.


"We are grateful for this miracle," Lyon said in his statement. "We are in awe of her bravery and courage in calling 911, an act that is likely to have saved all of our lives. She is our hero."


Haskell was wearing a FedEx shirt at the time of the attack, but authorities seemed uncertain whether it was a deliberate attempt to deceive.


Harris County Constable Ron Hickman initially said Haskell showed up at the Stay home "in the guise of a FedEx driver."


Houston Suburban Shooting

Faculty and parents gather outside Lemm Elementary School after placing ribbons on the trees in honour of those killed in a multiple shooting in Texas. Some of the victims were students at the school. (David J. Phillip/Associated Press)



But he and other officials later declined to say whether Haskell used the uniform to gain access to the home. Hickman said investigators were not sure whether the suspect would have needed a disguise to get in the house, or if the children knew him.


Haskell had once done work for FedEx but not since January, the company said in a statement.


2013 divorce


Online jail records did not list an attorney for Haskell, who was initially misidentified by authorities as the slain children's father. Police did not explain the mistake.


A divorce decree issued in February shows Haskell and Melanie Kaye Haskell were married in 2002 in Orange County, California. They separated in June 2013.


A judge granted joint custody of the couple's four children, ranging in age from 3 to 11, with Haskell's wife getting primary custody.


At the time of the divorce, Haskell was making $2,300 a month, although the records do not say what kind of work he did. He was ordered to pay $773 per month in child support. His wife was given the house, valued at $190,000, in the small town of Smithfield, Utah, just outside Logan.