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Advocacy groups call for inquest after plasma donor deaths

By Malak Abas 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026

WINNIPEG — The provincial government is being urged to call an inquest into the deaths of two people who had donated plasma at for-profit collection centres in Winnipeg.

Health Canada has promised to investigate the deaths, which occurred in October and January at two Grifols Plasma Donation Centres in Winnipeg.

However, the Manitoba Health Coalition said Health Canada licenses Grifols and it has a conflict of interest.

“We want as independent and (thorough) an investigation as possible for the loved ones of these Manitobans who died, to get real answers and so that harm like this doesn’t happen in the future,” coalition executive director Noah Schulz said at a news conference Friday.

Neepawa Titans head coach and general manager Ken Pearson coached his 1,500th game in the Canadian Junior Hockey League in a 4-2 win over the Dauphin Kings at Credit Union Place on Sunday night. The victory also gave the hometown product his 750th career regular season win. (Submitted)

Neepawa Titans head coach and general manager Ken Pearson coached his 1,500th game in the Canadian Junior Hockey League in a 4-2 win over the Dauphin Kings at Credit Union Place on Sunday night. The victory also gave the hometown product his 750th career regular season win. (Submitted)

Pearson relishing time behind bench

By Massimo De Luca-Taronno 8 minute read Preview

Pearson relishing time behind bench

By Massimo De Luca-Taronno 8 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026

If you asked Ken Pearson when he began his career behind the bench 30 years ago how long he’d last in the business, he wouldn’t have had a clue.

Now, it’s safe to say it’s become more than anything he would have ever expected.

The head coach and general manager of the Neepawa Titans checked off two big milestones on Sunday night after coaching his 1,500th game in the Canadian Junior Hockey League following a 4-2 win over the Dauphin Kings at Credit Union Place. The victory was the Titans 18th of the season and was also the 750th of Pearson’s career in the regular season.

It’s hard to put into words what significance just a pair of numbers means to a person, but for Pearson, it’s rather simple.

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Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026

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Pilot and copilot killed in collision between jet and fire truck at New York’s LaGuardia Airport

Jake Offenhartz And Jennifer Peltz The Associated Press 5 minute read 8:18 AM CDT

NEW YORK (AP) — Two people were killed and several others badly hurt when an Air Canada regional jet struck a fire truck on a runway while landing at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, officials said.

The pilot and copilot were killed in the late Sunday night collision, which crushed the nose of the aircraft, while around 40 passengers and crew members were taken to area hospitals, some with serious injuries. Most have since been released from treatment, authorities said Monday.

Two Port Authority employees who were traveling in the fire truck also suffered injuries that were not believed to be life-threatening, aid Kathryn Garcia, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport.

The airport was shut down and air traffic was diverted, and on Monday morning operations also were halted at Newark Liberty International Airport in neighboring New Jersey. Air traffic controllers evacuated the tower because of a burning smell from an elevator, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

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The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa is shown last week. The court is hearing the case of Quebec’s secularism law, effectively putting the notwithstanding clause on trial. (The Canadian Press)

The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa is shown last week. The court is hearing the case of Quebec’s secularism law, effectively putting the notwithstanding clause on trial. (The Canadian Press)

Supreme court may deliver legal ‘earthquake’

By Pierre Saint-Arnaud 6 minute read Preview

Supreme court may deliver legal ‘earthquake’

By Pierre Saint-Arnaud 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

MONTREAL — A legal challenge to Quebec’s secularism law, known as Bill 21, will be heard at the Supreme Court of Canada beginning today, and legal experts say whatever the eventual ruling, it will have a profound effect on constitutional law in Canada.

The highly anticipated high court challenge to Bill 21 has been years in the making, but legal debate is likely to focus primarily on Section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the provision known as the “notwithstanding clause,” which shields legislation from most court challenges over violations of fundamental rights.

François Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec government pre-emptively invoked the provision into the law passed in June 2019.

The Quebec law sets out the principles of secularism in the province. Among its most controversial measures is the prohibition of civil servants who are considered in positions of power — such as police officers, teachers and judges — from wearing religious symbols at work.

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2:00 AM CDT

Protesters gather outside the South Texas Family Residential Center detention facility where Liam Ramos and his father were being detained in Dilley, Texas, in January 2026. Conditions at the immigration jail, in particular for children, continue to be a concern. (The Associated Press)

Protesters gather outside the South Texas Family Residential Center detention facility where Liam Ramos and his father were being detained in Dilley, Texas, in January 2026. Conditions at the immigration jail, in particular for children, continue to be a concern. (The Associated Press)

3 minute read Preview

3 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Nearly 600 immigrant children were held in a Texas family detention centre in recent months without enough food, medical care or mental health services, as their time inside stretched beyond court-mandated limits, according to court documents filed Friday.

Children and families held in the Dilley detention facility where five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father were sent earlier this year also faced virus outbreaks and lasting lockdowns in December and January, although the total number of children held at Dilley has fallen in recent weeks, according to the attorney’s reports and site visits.

The case of Ramos, a preschooler who was wearing a blue bunny hat when he was picked up in Minnesota by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, stirred protest over the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, including among detainees who gathered and held up signs in the yard inside Dilley’s chain-link fences.

Last week about 85 children remained detained at Dilley, but concerning conditions continued, said Mishan Wroe, directing attorney at the National Center for Youth Law, who visited in mid-March. In early February, a legal advocate for the children observed about 280 children.

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2:00 AM CDT

Conductor Harry Christopher (centre) with tenor Matthew McKinney (left) soprano Elizabeth Watts, (second from left) and The Sixteen present Angels Unawares byJames MacMillan in the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican on Sunday. The Vatican’s Sistine Chapel hosted a concert, debuting a composition focused on interactions with angels found throughout the Bible. (The Associated Press)

Conductor Harry Christopher (centre) with tenor Matthew McKinney (left) soprano Elizabeth Watts, (second from left) and The Sixteen present Angels Unawares byJames MacMillan in the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican on Sunday. The Vatican’s Sistine Chapel hosted a concert, debuting a composition focused on interactions with angels found throughout the Bible. (The Associated Press)

1 minute read Preview

1 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Conductor Harry Christopher (centre) with tenor Matthew McKinney (left) soprano Elizabeth Watts, (second from left) and The Sixteen present Angels Unawares byJames MacMillan in the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican on Sunday. The Vatican’s Sistine Chapel hosted a concert, debuting a composition focused on interactions with angels found throughout the Bible. (The Associated Press)

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2:00 AM CDT

Hungary shared EU Council details with Russia

By Fakiha Baig 2 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Poland’s prime minister Sunday said Poland “had our suspicions” in response to a Washington Post report that Hungary’s government has for years provided Russia with detailed information from EU Council meetings.

The Post, citing several current and former European security officials, found that the Hungarian government under Viktor Orbán has long offered Moscow access to sensitive discussions within the European Union.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó regularly calls during breaks in EU council meetings to provide his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, with “direct reports on what was discussed” and possible solutions, according to the Post report.

“The news that Orbán’s people inform Moscow about EU Council meetings in every detail shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone,” Poland Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on X. “We’ve had our suspicions about that for a long time. That’s one reason why I take the floor only when strictly necessary and say just as much as necessary.”

TUCSON, Ariz. — Savannah Guthrie is renewing pleas to neighbours, friends and residents of Tucson, Arizona, to jog their memories in the hopes of sparking new leads in the disappearance of her mother Nancy.

The “Today Show” co-host posted a new family statement on her Instagram account Sunday morning, hours after the show’s Instagram account shared it.

After expressing gratitude to the community, the family said in its statement that it believes someone in Tucson or in southern Arizona may “hold the key to finding the resolution in this case.”

“Someone knows something. It’s possible a member of this community has information that they do not even realize is significant.”

6 hurt in floor collapse at wedding venue

2 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Six people were taken to area hospitals with non-life-threatening injuries after a floor collapsed at a wedding venue in Tamworth, New Hampshire, around 4:30 p.m. Saturday, a spokesperson for the New Hampshire State Fire Marshal’s Office said.

The collapse happened while a wedding party of about 140 people were present, according to a joint release from the Tamworth Fire/Rescue Department and the State Fire Marshal’s Office. The office confirmed there were no fatalities and said late Saturday that four of the people treated at the hospital had already been released.

A phone call to the venue, the Preserve at Chocorua, was not answered. Tamworth, a town of about 2,800 people, is around 185 kilometres north of Concord, New Hampshire, near the western border of Maine. Phone calls to the MaineHealth Memorial Hospital went unanswered Saturday night.

The Fire Marshal’s Office said while more than 100 people gathered in a building called the Sap House at the venue, the floor buckled, creating a 20-foot by 20-foot opening and sending about 70 people into the basement. Several people were trapped by the fallen beams and by farm equipment that had been stored on the lower floor.

Bruins strike first in U18 boys final

2 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

The two finals have begun in under-18 AAA hockey in Manitoba.

BOYS

BRANDON (3) vs. WPG BRUINS (1)

The Manitoba U18 AAA Hockey League features the No. 1 and No. 3 seeds, an the top seed struck first.

Street vendors chat during a blackout in Havana, Cuba on March 16. (The Associated Press)

Street vendors chat during a blackout in Havana, Cuba on March 16. (The Associated Press)

Canadian women on mission to help Cubans

By Fakiha Baig 4 minute read Preview

Canadian women on mission to help Cubans

By Fakiha Baig 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Two Canadians on a humanitarian mission in Cuba say it’s easier for locals to count the number of hours the lights are on than off.

And when electricity is flowing, Leanne Isaak says Cubans can be seen scrambling to get as many tasks done as they can, such as cooking, charging phones, showering and filling buckets with water.

“People say, ‘I may not get power again for three days so I’m going to do everything that I need to do in this one or two-hour time-frame to prepare for the next chunk of time when I’m just going to try to keep going,” said Isaak, the founder and a co-director of a non-profit called One Shared Future Un Futuro Compartido.

“In Spanish they say, ‘We don’t have blackouts, we have lights-on,’ because (they’re) more often in the dark than they have electricity,” added Elise Hjalmarson, also a co-director of the non-profit.

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2:00 AM CDT

Andrea Davis (left) the executive director of the Black Loyalist Heritage Centre, and Sheila Hartley-Scott, president of the Black Loyalist Heritage Society’s volunteer board are shown at the Nova Scotia Archives in Halifax on Saturday. (The Canadian Press)

Andrea Davis (left) the executive director of the Black Loyalist Heritage Centre, and Sheila Hartley-Scott, president of the Black Loyalist Heritage Society’s volunteer board are shown at the Nova Scotia Archives in Halifax on Saturday. (The Canadian Press)

Black Loyalists archive earns UNESCO recognition

By Lyndsay Armstrong 4 minute read Preview

Black Loyalists archive earns UNESCO recognition

By Lyndsay Armstrong 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

HALIFAX — Detailed ledgers, business receipts and church records from Black Loyalists in the 1780s and onward are more than just rich historical texts to Andrea Davis.

“This is a part of my history… it means so much to us as a community,” she said in an interview Saturday.

Davis is an eighth generation descendant of Black people who left the United States for Nova Scotia at the end of the American Revolution, siding with the British. The Black Loyalists were offered land, protection and freedom, but they were not given the rations, assistance or fertile land they were promised.

“My ancestors, they are a group of people that were not meant to survive, but they did. And so to be here to represent the Black Loyalists and my ancestors is extremely rewarding,” she said.

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2:00 AM CDT

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