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Sunday, July 13, 2025

Victoria Police search for suspects who toppled statue of Captain James Cook

The Victoria Police Department (VicPD) is seeking two suspects believed to be involved in toppling the statue of famous explorer Captain James Cook.

Activists in downtown Victoria, BC pulled the statue down at around 8:30pm on Canada Day.  A large group formed around the statue before it was forcibly removed from its pedestal and thrown into the Salish Sea. 

Eventually the monument was replaced with red wooden dresses, a symbol of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women human rights issue.

“Safe, peaceful and lawful protests are permitted under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Property damage is not,” VicPD said in a statement on the incident. 

VicPD have released two photographs of the suspects involved. Both of the suspects are pictured wearing masks. One of them can be seen wearing a grey hoodie and hat while the other donned a backwards-facing baseball cap, sunglasses and an orange t-shirt. 

The Captain James Cook statue is the latest casualty in an ongoing campaign to eradicate symbols and figures believed to be associated with Canada’s allegedly racist past. 

Since the announcement by the Cowessess First Nation and Tk̓emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation of two burial sites at former residential schools in Saskatchewan and British Columbia, respectively, dozens of statues and churches have been targeted by vandals across Canada. 

In the last few weeks, at least nine churches have been razed to the ground under suspicious circumstances while dozens more have been targeted with vandalism. 

Captain James Cook, an accomplished 18th century British navigator, was primarily responsible for mapping the coast of Newfoundland and was the first to explore the Pacific coast of North America. Captain Cook did not play a role in Canada’s residential school system, which was first established nearly a century after he died.

The activists don’t just hate statues. They hate Canada.

Canada Day protesters in Winnipeg knocked over statues of Queen Victoria and Canada’s reigning monarch, Queen Elizabeth II. The only person charged so far is a counter-protester who police say was upset about the statue tear-downs. NDP Member of Parliament Niki Ashton celebrated the vandalism as an act of “decolonization,” despite her four oaths to the Queen as a member of parliament.

True North’s Andrew Lawton says the activist mob is not simply opposed to statues, but the entire existence of Canada as a country.

Failed China vaccine contract included undisclosed “non-refundable” cash payment

The Trudeau government secretly gave a Chinese vaccine company a cash advance for shots that were never delivered to Canada. 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has refused to acknowledge the deal calling it “disinformation” despite the agreement being disclosed by Conservative MP Tom Kmiec through an Access to Information request, according to Blacklock’s Reporter. 

While the documents on the deal with CanSino Biologics Inc. disclosed by the National Research Council were partially censored, terms surrounding a “Collaborative Research Agreement” revealed that an undisclosed “non-refundable” cash advance was paid to the Chinese biotech company. 

Additionally, the contract featured clauses forbidding anyone from releasing “any press or other public announcement concerning any aspect and any results of this agreement” without the Chinese company’s approval. 

Trudeau and other Liberals have tried to bury the details of the contract after Conservative MPs criticized the federal government for agreeing to the shoddy deal. 

“Why when China is holding our citizens hostage and stealing our intellectual property did the Prime Minister choose a CanSino partnership?” asked Conservative Party leader Erin O’Toole on May 12, 2020. 

“That is simply not true. We signed seven vaccine contracts with vaccine makers from around the world and not one of them was from China,” claimed Trudeau. 

In reality, the Trudeau government signed the CanSino deal on May 6, 2020 and it only collapsed a few weeks later on May 19. 

However, as of June 11, 2020, Liberal MP Sonia Sidhu continued to maintain that “there’s never been a contract between CanSino and the Government of Canada.” 

Denials by the federal government also extended into the public service where former Research Council President Iain Stewart also refused to answer questions surrounding the deal.

Stewart was eventually promoted to be the president of the Public Health Agency of Canada. On June 21, Stewart was censured before the House of Commons after he refused to obey parliamentary orders and disclose records involving the firing of two federal scientists found to have collaborated with China.

Toronto police officer killed in City Hall parking garage

The Toronto Police Service is investigating the death of an officer who was run over on Friday morning as a homicide.

Constable Jeffrey Northrup was hit by a vehicle in the parking garage of Toronto City Hall Friday morning while responding to a reported stabbing and robbery. Const. Northrup and his partner were first to arrive on scene.

According to Toronto Police Chief James Ramer, few details are known at this time, but it is believed that the suspect got into his vehicle and purposely drove into the officers. 

Ramer says one man is in custody and the investigation has been taken over by the homicide unit.

“It goes without saying that it will be most devastating to the family, colleagues and friends of Constable Northrup. We are doing everything we can to support them at this time,” he said in a statement.

“I wish to thank the community for its support. The strength, character, and resilience of our members, and the entire policing family, will be needed and I have every confidence this will be the case as we navigate our way through this senseless and devastating tragedy together.”

Northrup’s partner was also hit and taken to hospital with minor injuries.

According to Ramer, Const. Northrup was a 31-year veteran of the force and has been a member of Toronto Police Service 52 Division since 2008. Northrup is survived by a wife and three children.

Ramer, Toronto Mayor John Tory, and Toronto Police Association Jon Reid held a joint press conference Friday morning to share their condolences and thank Northrup for this service.

“On behalf of the three million people who our police officers serve [and] the men and the women of the police service, I begin by extending to the family of officer Northrup our deepest condolences,” Tory said. 

Reid condemned the killing of Northrup as a “senseless act of violence” and said the event shows that officers risk their lives every day in the name of law and order.

11 Calgary churches hit by vandalism, hate crimes unit investigating

Calgary Police’s hate crimes unit is investigating after at least 11 churches were vandalized in the lead up to Canada Day. 

Between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, churches across Calgary were vandalized with paint. In one instance, the church was broken into so paint could be thrown inside.

The vandals used paint to write various statements referencing the apparent discovery of unmarked graves found at former residential schools such as “215.” The vandals also targeted the church, painting phrases such as “charge the priests.”

At another church, a statue of Jesus was defaced with red paint.

The vandalized churches are:

Saint Bonaventure Catholic Church at 1600 Acadia Dr. S.E.
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Catholic Church at 819 13th Ave. S.W.
Saint Mary’s Cathedral at 219 18th Ave. S.W.
Sacred Heart Church and Columbarium at 1307 14th St. S.W.
Grace Presbyterian Church at 1009 15th Ave. S.W.
Saint Luke’s Parish at 1566 Northmount Dr. N.W.
Holy Trinity Church at 1525 45th St. S.E.
Saint Anthony’s Catholic Parish at 5340 4th St. S.W.
All Nations Full Gospel Church at 1403 8th Ave. S.E.
Saint Joseph Catholic Church at 640 19th Ave. N.W.
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Ukrainian Catholic Church at 704 6th St N.E.

In a statement, Calgary Police Services (CPS) went to great lengths to explain how they sympathize with the vandals, but added that attacking churches is not an acceptable response.

“We also all need to join together as a community to come to terms with our past and find a path forward to reconciliation,” the statement reads.

“Vandalism like this is not just illegal; it serves to create further division, fear and destruction in our city. We need to find the people responsible, both to hold them accountable and to prevent further divisive incidents.”

Over the past two weeks, churches across Canada have either been torched or vandalized as presumed-retribution for the Catholic Church’s involvement in the residential school system.

Earlier in the week, three churches in Alberta were victims of suspected arson, two of which were on First Nations land.

On Wednesday, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney strongly condemned the church attacks, calling them a hate-motivated attack on Christians.

CPS’ hate crimes unit is investigating. Anyone with information on the vandalism is asked to call CPS at 403-266-1234 or contact Crime Stoppers.

Aaron Gunn announces exploratory committee for BC Liberals leadership race

Prominent political commentator Aaron Gunn announced that he will be rolling out an exploratory committee to look into whether or not he will run to become the next leader of the British Columbia Liberal Party. 

According to Gunn, his final decision will be released soon and that it will be one that people will be excited about. 

Gunn has been a vocal opponent of cancel culture, particularly in recent weeks as calls to cancel Canada Day and to topple statues have grown louder.

During his announcement, Gunn said that calls to cancel Canada Day are wrong. He claimed he witnessed people starting to feel ashamed to be Canadian when a statue of former prime minister Sir John A. Macdonald was torn down in Victoria three years ago. 

“Without whom, this country wouldn’t even exist,” he said. “Think about that for a second. A world without Canada.” 

Gunn said Canadians should be proud of the contributions Canada made in World War I and II, the Korean War, and the Afghanistan War. About 100,000 Canadian soldiers sacrificed their lives to fight for freedom in these wars. 

He said some people in Canada have forgotten about these stories, which has motivated him to go into politics. 

Gunn called out his detractors, who he said will question whether he has the commitment or resolve to become the next leader of the British Columbia Liberal Party. 

“I will stop those who seek to undermine the foundation and identity of this country, whatever it takes,” he said. “I promise you this, no matter what: I will not cower, I will not capitulate, and I will never let you down.” 

Other candidates in the leadership race include former BC Liberal candidate Gavin Dew, former British Columbia deputy premier Kevin Falcon, Vancouver-Langara MLA Michael Lee, Skeena MLA Ellis Ross, and British Columbia Chamber of Commerce CEO Val Litwin. 

A new leader will be elected on Feb. 5. 

Kenney condemns Alberta church arsons, promises funding for security

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney has strongly condemned the burning of multiple churches in the province and has promised funding for security.

Over the past few days, a number of churches in Alberta have been torched. On Wednesday, Saint-Jean-Baptiste in Morinville was burned to the ground. Earlier in the week, both the Catholic and Anglican church on Siksika First Nation land were burned.

In a statement on Wednesday, Kenney said that Alberta and Canada cannot tolerate attacks on places of Christian worship.

“The Government of Alberta unequivocally condemns recent arson attacks that have targeted Christian churches across Canada and Alberta,” Kenney said.

“Today in Morinville, l’église de Saint-Jean-Baptiste was destroyed in what appears to have been a criminal act of arson. This historic church was in the heart of Morinville and a key part of the spiritual life of Alberta’s Francophone community.”

In the past week, Catholic churches across Canada have been set on fire in what is believed to be retaliation for the church’s involvement in the residential school system.

Over recent weeks, hundreds of graves have allegedly been found at former residential schools run by the Catholic church. A report from the company doing the investigation at the first residential school in Kamloops was supposed to be released in June. 

Prior to the Morinville burning, all of the churches had been on First Nations’ land.

“This is unacceptable in Alberta. It is unacceptable in Canada. These attacks targeting Christian churches are attempts to destroy the spiritual sites that are important to people of faith across Alberta, including many Indigenous people,” Kenney said.

“The Canada we know is not one where hate-motivated arson attacks targeting religious communities are common place or allowed to continue.”

To help protect churches and other sites, Kenney said the province is doubling funding for the Alberta Security Infrastructure Program from $1 million per year to $2 million. The program pays for security measures at places at risk of hate crimes.

Kenney has also instructed Justice Minister Kaycee Madu to work with law enforcement to increase monitoring of potential targets for arson attacks.

Communist China applauds Canadian senators who voted against genocide motion

Source: Senate of Canada

Canadian senators who voted against a motion labelling China’s treatment of Uyghurs as genocide received praised from China’s foreign ministry.

Spokesperson for the Chinese foreign ministry Wang Wenbin said those who voted against the motion were “people of vision.”

“We urge some Canadian politicians to respect facts, stop the clumsy trick of attacking China for their selfish political gains, and stop interfering in China’s internal affairs under the pretext of human rights,” said Wang.

“The rejection of the wrong motion on Xinjiang by the Canadian Senate once again shows that the despicable schemes of a few anti-China forces have been seen through by more and more people of vision.”

On Wednesday, senators voted on Motion 79, which called on the Senate to recognize that China’s government is perpetrating a genocide against Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims.

33 senators voted against, 29 in favour and 13 abstained. The motion was defeated.

Independent Senators Group Leader Senator Yuen Pau Woo was one of the senators who voted against the motion. During debate on the motion, Woo urged senators to vote against the motion, echoed Communist Party of China’s talking points and lectured Canadians on residential schools.

“The fact that China does not share our view of individual freedoms or, indeed, our interpretation of freedoms based on the Charter is not a basis on which to lecture the Chinese on how they should govern themselves,” said Woo. 

In February, a similar motion was passed in the House of Commons. Conservative MPs Michael Chong and Garnett Genuis introduced the motion following reports of torture and mass sexual abuse being perpetrated in the Xinjiang region.

The motion received 266 votes in favour and 0 votes against. 

While the motion received support from members of all parties, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal cabinet abstained from participating in the vote. 

Happy Dominion Day!

Unlike so many politicians and so-called journalists in this country, we’re proud to be Canadian and proud of our heritage.

Check out a special video from our fellows, in which they discuss why Canada is worth defending and celebrating.

From all of us here at True North, Happy Dominion Day! Happy Canada Day!

Boris Johnson pledges to “more intensely” fight climate change in Canada Day video

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is calling on Canada and Britain to ramp up their efforts in the fight against climate change, green development, and promoting human rights around the world.

In a Canada Day video posted to Twitter, Johnson lauded Canada’s and the United Kingdom’s close ties before turning to global challenges he sees the two countries as being well suited to tackle together.

“We cherish the same freedoms, we stand for the same ideals, and by and large we believe in the same causes,” Johnson said. So let’s work together even more intensely to build back better after COVID, protect our planet from climate change, promote clean and green development around the world, achieve a fantastic new free trade agreement as swiftly as possible, make sure that we do that deal on cheese, and stand up for freedom, democracy and human rights wherever they’re threatened.”

Johnson said Canada is the only country in the world that sits alongside the United Kingdom in the G7, G20, NATO, Commonwealth, and the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, adding that “family” is a more appropriate descriptor than “friend” or “ally.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has, himself, often used the “build back better” line, a United Nations mantra which has become a common refrain from global leaders in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

At the June G7 meeting in Cornwall, hosted by the United Kingdom, leaders committed to a global infrastructure plan they called Build Back Better World.

Johnson’s Canada Day greeting comes four months before his government is set to host a massive climate change conference, COP26, in Glasgow.

Trudeau and Johnson had a bilateral meeting at the G7 conference in which they “discussed taking bold action on climate change in the lead-up to COP26, including the international transition away from coal,” according to a readout from Trudeau’s office.

COP26 will bring tens of thousands of delegates from governments and non-governmental organizations to Scotland in November to finalize the rules of the Paris Agreement and “accelerate action to tackle the climate crisis.”

While Canada has not announced its plans for COP26, which starts November 1, the country is expected to send a large contingent given the Trudeau government’s previous commitment to fulfilling the Paris agreement.

Last week, Canada’s Senate passed Bill C-12, a bill requiring the federal government to set national greenhouse gas emission reduction targets in five year intervals to keep the country on track to its broader goal of having “net zero emissions” by 2050.

Because the bill sets statutory targets rather than a specific plan to meet them, it has been criticized for its potential to unleash an untold economic toll.

“We don’t know the decarbonization plan. We don’t know the cost of various decarbonization options, nor the technologies required to achieve them,” Macdonald-Laurier Institute senior fellow Jack Mintz wrote last year. “If other countries fail to achieve the same objective despite their ‘commitments,’ we could incur considerable economic loss with little benefit in reducing climate change threats.”

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