
TORONTO – This hot summer, with travels more similar to “odysseys” than holidays continues: long lines, canceled flights, delays and lost baggage are now on the agenda at Toronto Pearson Airport and in major Canadian airports. →
Welcome to the Canadian National Multilingual News Group (CNMNG). This is a project made possible through funding by Canadian Heritage. CNMNG aims to gather news researched and written by a corps of Canadian-based journalists/writers from the country’s multilingual community groups. The overall goal is to inform, analyze and critique the issues of the day in a professional manner and to provide that to publishers and editors active in the ethnocultural-multilingual press and media whose experience provides them with a perspective that is sensitive to news relevant to their own language group.

TORONTO – This hot summer, with travels more similar to “odysseys” than holidays continues: long lines, canceled flights, delays and lost baggage are now on the agenda at Toronto Pearson Airport and in major Canadian airports. →

TORONTO – With the permission of the author, we publish an article by Charles Lugosi, Attorney and Counsellor to the Supreme Court of the United States, published on LifeSiteNews.

Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed a petition filed by the federal government for seeking contempt proceedings against PTI Chairman and former Prime Minister Imran Khan for “violating” the apex court’s orders with regard to the party’s Azadi March.
article by Joe Volpe
TORONTO – The Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) would seem to have laid down the ground rules for any discussion on the legitimacy of Catholic schools in Ontario’s “public education systems”. A unanimous decision, rendered May 21, 2021, essentially reaffirms that secular courts have no business in the affairs of religious organizations.
The Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) would seem to have laid down the ground rules for any discussion on the legitimacy of Catholic schools in Ontario’s “public education systems”. In a unanimous decision, rendered May 21, 2021, it essentially said secular courts have no business in the affairs of religious organizations. →