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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: chronicle who wrote (1202930)2/22/2020 3:26:12 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1573857
 
Why so much hate?

Message 31672604




To: chronicle who wrote (1202930)2/22/2020 11:13:35 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573857
 
What is wrong with you people? No civilized country on earth would do this.

Are you a basket case deplorable Chrinicles?

Halifax woman's Walmart arrest should 'never have happened': lawyer

Santina Rao's court case delayed until May to wait for results from Serious Incident Response Team

Haley Ryan · CBC News · Posted: Feb 19, 2020 5:01 PM AT | Last Updated: February 19



Watch
Halifax woman's Walmart arrest should 'never have happened': lawyer3 days ago 0:54

Santina Rao appeared in court Wednesday after her controversial arrest in January at a Halifax Walmart. 0:54
A Halifax woman who says she was racially profiled and injured during a controversial arrest at a local Walmart has had her case delayed while Nova Scotia's police watchdog conducts their own investigation.

Santina Rao, 23, appeared in Halifax provincial court Wednesday with her arm in a cast to face charges of causing a disturbance, assaulting a peace officer, and resisting arrest.

"It's about Santina, and we want to make sure some good comes out of this at the end of the day because this is something that should never have happened," Gordon Allen, Rao's lawyer, told reporters outside the courtroom.

"A situation was created when we don't believe there should have been any situation whatsoever, and it was escalated rather than de-escalated."

Woman arrested in front of childrenRao was arrested Jan. 15 while shopping with her baby and toddler in the Halifax location on Mumford Road. She has said she was approached by police officers inside the store who believed she was concealing items.

Calling it racial profiling, Rao wrote on Facebook that she had attempted to show her receipts and told the officers they could search her stroller. Rao has said she paid for electronics in one section of the store and stopped in a toy aisle on her way to ring in some produce that couldn't be weighed at the checkout where she made her first purchase.

Rao said when she became upset, the officers cuffed her without explaining why she was being arrested.

Allen said his client was surrounded by the officers and other Walmart staff, asked for her identification and detained, although she had committed no crime.

Rao was questioned further about her address and she became upset, especially when a man prevented her young daughter from coming to her, Allen said, which increased the tension and led to the situation that brought them to court.

"Police have a difficult job in trying circumstances, and many do a very good job — but there are some exceptions, and we feel this was an exception and Ms. Rao paid the price," Allen said.

A video posted by the Halifax Examiner to YouTube shows part of the altercation, including Rao swearing at a police officer to get off of her before one officer physically brings her to the ground and they struggle. Two officers appear to restrain Rao with staff members in the background.

"We have a young mother who has suffered a broken arm, a concussion which appears to have been caused when she was punched in the face … and suffering various injuries and can't care for her children and facing various criminal charges. So there's a lot of moving parts to this," Allen said.

Rao said her infant son and young daughter have mostly been staying with her parents while her wrist heals, since she isn't able to pick up her baby or do other household tasks like cooking and cleaning.

She added that her emotions have been up and down, where one day she feels "OK" and the next is really hard, since she wishes her children didn't have to witness the whole situation.

"That's the hardest thing, it really, really dwells on me the hardest and the biggest," Rao said.

Chief Dan Kinsella has called the situation " disappointing" and referred the case to the Serious Incident Response Team (SIRT). The watchdog announced recently that Rao's arrest meets SIRT's mandate "based on medical records," and are looking to speak with any witnesses.

Large show of supportThe courtroom was packed with Rao supporters, and outside the courthouse more than 60 people calling on the Crown to drop the charges held signs saying "stop racial profiling" and "solidarity with Santina."

As Rao left the building, cheers erupted into the air. She smiled and waved back, stopping to hug various people.


A large group of supporters gathered outside Halifax provincial court on Wednesday calling for charges against Rao to be dropped. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)
In court Wednesday, Crown attorney Paul Carver asked for Rao's matter to be set over a few months until May 12, when SIRT will hopefully have finished their own investigation and reached some conclusions.

Allen said the SIRT report will not be the "be all, end all" but might provide more background to what happened.

When asked whether Rao will sue the Halifax police force, Allen said "everything is on the table," and while he believes there were violations of the Police Act nothing has been filed yet.

She added that ultimately she'd like to see the arresting officers "held accountable," as well as those involved from Walmart since they were the ones who called police in the first place.

A manager at the Mumford Road Walmart declined an interview in January and said he couldn't comment since it was a police investigation. He referred questions to the company's headquarters in Ontario. A statement from Felicia Feder, manager of Walmart Canada's corporate affairs, said all inquires would have to be directed to police.


Staff at Walmart have referred all questions to Halifax Regional Police. (Craig Paisley/CBC)
Rao said no one from Walmart has reached out to her personally.

Former Nova Scotia lieutenant-governor Mayann Francis has also weighed in, saying Rao's arrest left her shaken and even fearful of police for the first time.



To: chronicle who wrote (1202930)2/22/2020 2:14:20 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Winfastorlose

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573857
 
Trump should invade Canada and establish rule of law.

Conrad Black: Canada's government has abandoned its responsibility to lead

Conrad Black

February 21, 2020 1:11 PM EST

Because of my frequent criticism of the present federal government’s Indigenous and climate change policies, which along with posturing about matters relating to gender are the principal preoccupations of this regime, I have withheld comment about the ongoing rail blockades here and with my friend John Oakley on CFMJ (Toronto), an AM radio station. The problem has festered for two weeks as the federal government fumbles and obfuscates, passes the buck to the provinces and calls for “patience.” It is now the most absurd fiasco to afflict a Canadian government since John Diefenbaker announced in January 1963 that at the meeting of U.S. president John F. Kennedy and British prime minister Harold MacMillan in the Bahamas a week before (which Diefenbaker crashed), there had been “a change in the views of NATO” about nuclear weapons, and Canada would not honour its commitment to deploy atomic warheads in anti-aircraft missiles.

He had pledged to this deployment (with a dual firing authority — the government of Canada and the NATO command both had to approve use). This was a breach of faith with our principal allies and the alliance system that assured Canada’s security. It was a monstrous falsehood about what Kennedy and MacMillan agreed, was unutterable nonsense in straight military terms (without such warheads, the Bomarc missile would have had warheads of sand). The government fell, the Liberals under Lester B. Pearson came into office, and the warheads were deployed.

The problem has festered for two weeks as the federal government fumbles and obfuscates

The present impasse over the blockades in sympathy with some Indigenous opposition to the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline in northern British Columbia is comparably absurd, and although it does not directly involve Canada’s relations with other countries, it is now bringing us into widespread contempt and ridicule in the world. The federal government’s sanctimonious fumbling and posturing is despised by everyone: the First Nations, the majority of Canadians and international opinion, as the prime minister beseeches support for Canada’s elevation to two years on the United Nations Security Council. To refresh memories, the majority of the Wet’suwet’en natives, five of six elected native councils among 20 native councils along the 670-kilometre pipeline, support the project. These are the leaders in the specific reservations. Five Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, who govern larger territories, are opposed. In sympathy with the opposing Wet’suwet’en, but contrary to the majority of them and contrary to the other 15 native councils along the proposed route from Dawson Creek to Kitimat, protesters, a mix of Indigenous and non-Indigenous citizens, are blocking rail traffic for cargo and passengers at many points in B.C., Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, and scattered other places. Nearly one hundred thousand Via rail passengers have been terribly inconvenienced, as well as many thousands of motorists and local commuters who have been blocked or forced into lengthy detours, and thousands of freight trains involving billions of dollars of commerce have been cancelled or lengthily delayed.

It is bringing us into widespread contempt and ridicule in the world

These blockades have now adversely affected the entire country. This project is a matter of distinct national interest unequivocally supported by the NDP-Green government of British Columbia, and is being harassed by these blockades in defiance of more than a score of court orders across the country, and is illegally holding the entire country to ransom. Before discussing the issue, the hereditary Wet’suwet’en chiefs, representing a few thousand people, demand that the RCMP (under provincial control in B.C.) withdraw from what the blockaders claim to be native land. The implications of this stance are clearly that Canada has no authority on what they call their land, a definition about which there is a considerable difference between the leaders of the blockade and their sympathizers and the government of Canada. This is, in effect, secession from the authority of Canada while continuing to demand increased financial benefit from Canada. It is another step in the campaign I have often decried, of the more militant Indigenous leaders to claim not only that Canada has no authority on their present designated territory, but is an illegitimate invader and occupier of their territory.

This is, in effect, secession from the authority of Canada

Comment Nation: Trudeau might as well go to the beachThe prime minister isn't effective in dealing with the rail blockades. He should…

Faced with the refusal of the blockaders to pay any attention to court orders that they desist, the federal government has waffled about its right or obligation to use or encourage force to stop these illegal blockades. Justin Trudeau and his officials have uttered a good deal of unctuous claptrap about Ottawa having no standing to tell police forces, even the federal RCMP, how, or even whether, to enforce the law and defend the economic life of the country from these illegal actions by people who have no legitimate interest in the pipeline. The blockaders claim they are fighting a historic battle for withheld recognition, the beginning of the slippery slope toward the notion of an Anglo-French invasion of Canada displacing and enslaving the real Canadians.

In one sense, it is unjust to blame even these unrepresentative extremists for pushing on an open door. All Trudeau’s pious bunk about “nation-to-nation” transacting between the federal government and the native leaders invited them to consider that they had equal sovereignty with Canada. And if the principle that some of Canada could be considered independent and possessed of a sovereign right, logically, takes hold, all the natives are independent of Canada, and Canada belongs to them.



A Canadian flag hangs upside down at a railway blockade in Edmonton on Feb. 19, 2020, in support of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs who are opposed to British Columbia’s Coastal GasLink Pipeline. Codie McLachlan/Reuters

Governments have the whole responsibility and duty to make and enforce laws. Indigenous affairs are a federal priority jurisdiction, and inter-provincial transport, including railways and pipelines, are federal jurisdictions. The federal government has an unconditional duty to protect the rights of those whose interests are imperilled by illegal activity. There is no possible excuse for the federal government tolerating the development of this crisis as it has. There is no right to strike against the national interest, especially when every manifestation of this lawless blockade policy has been condemned by courts. Instead of the assertion of the eminent domain of the national interest and the rule of law, we have Public Safety Minister Bill Blair (on the heels of his shambles of marijuana legalization), saying that federal police is willing to withdraw from Wet’suwat’en territory. Transport Minister Marc Garneau tried handing his responsibility off to the provinces (all of whom want the blockades stopped) and the prime minister claims to have no standing to tell the police what to do.

Governments have the whole responsibility and duty to make and enforce laws

It is the complete collapse of the spurious and corrupt Indigenous policy of this government and the outright abdication of the government itself. If it is not the federal government’s purpose to uphold laws and defend the national interest against illegal sabotage of public policy, and so defined by many courts across the country, what is the purpose of the government? If it won’t govern, we should dispense with it — “Have done with this rubbish of a state,” in the words (admittedly in a radically different context and with questionable sincerity) of Stalin. Erin O’Toole, Conservative MP and leadership candidate, has rightly called for the use of whatever force is necessary (it would be minimal) to end the blockades, and of course he is correct.

I wrote here before the election last October that this government was in office but not in power; that condition has steadily worsened.

• Email: cmbletters@gmail.com