The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on the National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack and Action against Islamophobia:
Only one bullet hole remains in the wall of the Centre culturel islamique de Québec, eight years after a gunman stormed into the mosque and killed six Muslim men who had come to pray.
PRIME Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday issued the following statement on the National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack and Action against Islamophobia: “On January 29, 2017, a gunman opened fire at the Centre culturel islamique de Québec in Sainte-Foy.
Wednesday marked the 8th anniversary of the Quebec City mosque massacre and events were held leading up to and on the date, but they were not well attended.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has met with the families of six men who were killed at a Quebec City mosque, days before the anniversary of the 2017 attack. Eight years ago, on Jan.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should have acted quicker to protect Canadian elections from outside meddling, a government commission said, shaking trust in democratic institutions.
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QUEBEC - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has met with the families of six men who were killed at a Quebec City mosque, days before the anniversary of the 2017 attack. Eight years ago, on Jan. 29 ...
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with the families of the victims of the Quebec City mosque attack at the Islamic Cultural Centre in Quebec City, Saturday, January 25, 2025. On Jan. 29 ...
FREDERICTON - Jenica Atwin is leaving federal politics for the "time being" in part because of the online hate she receives, saying the level of
The U.S. is threatening a two-stage tariff plan in which Canada and Mexico could get hit with initial trade penalties within days then face broader penalties this spring.
In an effort to pressure the U.S. to reverse course on country-of-origin labelling on beef and pork, Canada sought approval from the World Trade Organization to impose more than $1 billion in punitive measures on U.S. goods, including meat, wine, chocolate and frozen orange juice. The U.S. ended up repealing the so-called COOL law in 2015.