Author: MAK Gojar

The Metropolitan Police in London is investigating an apparent arson attack on four ambulances belonging to the Jewish Community Ambulance service. ​The Metropolitan Police in London is investigating an apparent arson attack on four ambulances belonging to the Jewish Community Ambulance service.  International The Metropolitan Police in London is investigating an apparent arson attack on four ambulances belonging to the Jewish Community Ambulance service. 

Read More

“Reacher” star Alan Ritchson might’ve thought he was still shooting an episode of his popular show Sunday, because we have video of him allegedly beating the hell out of a neighbor in Tennessee. Watch the clip … you can see what appears to be… ​”Reacher” star Alan Ritchson might’ve thought he was still shooting an episode of his popular show Sunday, because we have video of him allegedly beating the hell out of a neighbor in Tennessee. Watch the clip … you can see what appears to be…   “Reacher” star Alan Ritchson might’ve thought he was still shooting an episode of…

Read More

TikTok star Benjamin Gleason was arrested Friday and charged with rape, TMZ has learned. Columbia County Jail in New York tells TMZ … Gleason was booked the evening of March 20, and he’s got a long list of serious charges. He’s been charged with… ​TikTok star Benjamin Gleason was arrested Friday and charged with rape, TMZ has learned. Columbia County Jail in New York tells TMZ … Gleason was booked the evening of March 20, and he’s got a long list of serious charges. He’s been charged with…   TikTok star Benjamin Gleason was arrested Friday and charged with rape, TMZ has…

Read More

Cat Cavelli — whose daughter Ada Law was allegedly brought to tears by a security guard after an encounter with Chappell Roan — is firing back at CR’s claims that the security guard wasn’t a part of her team. In a video posted Sunday, Cat –… ​Cat Cavelli — whose daughter Ada Law was allegedly brought to tears by a security guard after an encounter with Chappell Roan — is firing back at CR’s claims that the security guard wasn’t a part of her team. In a video posted Sunday, Cat –…   Cat Cavelli — whose daughter Ada Law was allegedly…

Read More

This one was not close. Read MoreClaude Giroux had a goal and a game-high seven shots, Jordan Spence and Tyler Kleven each had two assists, and Linus Ullmark made 12 saves for the Senators in a 5-2 defeat of the Toronto Maple Leafs.  Ottawa Senators, Hockey, NHL, Sports, Brady Tkachuk, Ottawa Sun, Toronto Maple Leafs This one was not close. Read More 

Read More

While the federal government has gradually released more information about its budget cuts, public sector unions have sounded the alarm over the impact those reductions could have on social programs. Read MoreHere’s a breakdown of what could be slashed at four federal departments.  Public Service, Budget Cuts, Explainer, Ottawa Sun, Prime Minister Mark Carney While the federal government has gradually released more information about its budget cuts, public sector unions have sounded the alarm over the impact those reductions could have on social programs. Read More 

Read More

Re: CHARLEBOIS: The inconvenient truth about the carbon tax and food prices, online, March 15 Read MoreSunday, March 22: Here are today’s Ottawa Sun letters to the editor.  Letters, Opinion, letters, opinion, Ottawa Sun Re: CHARLEBOIS: The inconvenient truth about the carbon tax and food prices, online, March 15 Read More 

Read More

OTTAWA — Canadians living abroad are calling for increased turnout among overseas voters and arguing that barriers to casting a ballot could be affecting election results. Timothy Veale, the director of Grits Abroad — an organization aimed at connecting Canadian Liberal voters living worldwide — said nearly five million Canadians live outside the country and roughly 3.5 million of them are eligible to vote. Veale said the share of non-resident Canadians voting in federal elections is mired in the low single digits. He said the causes include mail-only voting, compressed timelines, uncertainty about ballot arrival and delivery and a lack…

Read More

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.…

Read More

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…

Read More

Ontario’s legislature is set to resume sitting Monday after a 14-week break that ended in a veritable deluge of news, partial proposals and headline-grabbing musings from Premier Doug Ford and his government. It is a flood-the-zone strategy, opposition parties say, in an attempt to drown out criticism over a government plan to keep records of cabinet ministers and the premier — including his cellphone records — secret. The government announced on March 13 that it would table a bill during the spring session to exempt those records, as well as those of their staff and parliamentary assistants, from freedom-of-information laws. …

Read More

A woman has been seriously injured following a two-vehicle crash in Mississauga. Police in Peel Region were called to the intersection of Erin Mills Parkway and Dundas Street West just after 4 a.m. Sunday. Paramedics tell CityNews one person was treated at the scene for minor injuries, and a 31-year-old woman was taken to the hospital with serious but non-life threatening injuries. No further details about the crash have been released. A woman has been seriously injured following a two-vehicle crash in Mississauga. Police in Peel Region were called to the intersection of Erin Mills Parkway and Dundas Street West…

Read More

Environment Canada says light snow is expected in the capital through the day Sunday, March 22, although freezing rain is no longer in the forecast. Read MoreEnvironment Canada says “freezing drizzle with light ice build-up making surfaces icy and slippery” was expected through the day  News, Freezing drizzle, OttawaSun, Realtime, weather Environment Canada says light snow is expected in the capital through the day Sunday, March 22, although freezing rain is no longer in the forecast. Read More 

Read More

For Brad Wishak, Friday started like any normal day, but quickly turned tragic when their beloved French bulldog Newman was brutally attacked and killed by a coyote. Wishak tells CityNews they let Newman out to play in the backyard, but when he failed to return after calling him, they found the six-year-old pup’s lifeless body covered in blood. “He had an amazing heart and personality, and that’s what makes it so hard,” said Wishak. “Not an aggressive bone in his body, and he didn’t deserve to be eaten alive.” “It was really horrible,” added Kelly Wishak. “You expect your backyard…

Read More

An iconic Toronto music store will be closing its doors for the final time on Sunday as part of a broader restructuring effort. After six decades in business, Steve’s Music Store is closing its stores across Quebec and Ontario, leaving only its flagship location in downtown Montreal. The music equipment retailer founded by the late Steve Kirman says the closures are necessary to reposition the business to better compete with online retailers. “Over the past several years, we have operated in an environment marked by significant disruption across the sector,” read a statement posted on the retailer’s website. “Despite various…

Read More

HAVANA (AP) — Cuba began restoring its energy system on Sunday, a day after a nationwide collapse of the entire grid left millions of people in the dark for the third time this month. Some 72,000 customers in the capital, among them five hospitals, had electricity again early Sunday, according to a report from the state-run Electric Union and the Ministry of Energy and Mines, but it’s only a fraction of Havana’s total population of approximately 2 million. In Havana and provinces such as western Matanzas and eastern Holguin, local power microsystems were set up to supply the most vital…

Read More

An Alberta rink with an explosion rendering their arena inoperable – and a British Columbia community dealing with an unimaginable tragedy are finalists for 2026 Kraft’s Hockeyville voting. Read MoreWinner takes $250,000 in rink upgrades, plus chance to host NHL pre-season game  News, Canada, Hockey, Local News, Sports, Alberta, British Columbia, Hockeyville, Kraft, NHL, Taber An Alberta rink with an explosion rendering their arena inoperable – and a British Columbia community dealing with an unimaginable tragedy are finalists for 2026 Kraft’s Hockeyville voting. Read More 

Read More

Allergy season can be miserable for tens of millions of people when trees, grass, and other pollens cause runny noses, itchy eyes, coughing and sneezing. Where you live, what you’re allergic to, and your lifestyle can make a big difference when it comes to the severity of your allergies. Experts say climate change is leading to longer and more intense allergy seasons, but also point out that treatments for seasonal allergies have become more effective over the last decade. Here are some tips from experts to keep allergy symptoms at bay — maybe even enough to allow you to enjoy the outdoors. Pollen helps plants…

Read More

OTTAWA — A federal public servant says she’s “scared” to take up the government’s early retirement offer after being told that she owes the government about $10,500 because of a mistake in her pay file. Jennifer MacDougall got the letter from the pay centre in February but said the situation itself stems back to between 2014 and 2018. MacDougall was working in a role that was reclassified, meaning she wasn’t getting paid as much as she should have been. In 2019, she eventually received retroactive pay but is now being told that information was incorrectly inputted into the Phoenix system…

Read More