Articles

  • 1 week ago | ca.news.yahoo.com | Leyland Cecco

    On a cloudy but calm morning early in April, a helicopter touched down on a string of remote islands off British Columbia’s Pacific coast. One person alighted; two others climbed onboard and the aircraft rose into the sky. The lone man made his way towards Triple Island lighthouse, an octagonal concrete tower erupting from the trio of islets.

  • 1 week ago | theguardian.com | Leyland Cecco

    On a cloudy but calm morning early in April, a helicopter touched down on a string of remote islands off British Columbia’s Pacific coast. One person alighted; two others climbed onboard and the aircraft rose into the sky. The lone man made his way towards Triple Island lighthouse, an octagonal concrete tower erupting from the trio of islets.

  • 1 week ago | msn.com | Leyland Cecco

    Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.

  • 1 week ago | theguardian.com | Leyland Cecco

    King Charles has said Canadians can “give themselves far more than any foreign power on any continent can ever take away” as he gave a rare speech in the country’s parliament that served as a rebuke of the US president, Donald Trump, and his threats to annex the country. Charles, who serves as Canada’s head of state, is the first British monarch since 1957 to preside over the opening of a new Canadian parliament.

  • 1 week ago | theguardian.com | Leyland Cecco

    The decision by King Charles to formally open Canada’s parliament on Tuesday reflects his role as a “steadfast defender” of the country amid threats to its sovereignty, says prime minister Mark Carney. But Indigenous leaders say the rare visit is also a reminder that Canada’s founding relationship between the monarchy and the country’s first peoples cannot ever be “forgotten or displaced or broken”.

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Leyland Cecco
Leyland Cecco @LeylandCecco
9 Feb 24

RT @chrismichaelgdn: This @LeylandCecco story combines shipwrecks, Newfoundland and a mystery – I must be praying to the right gods of news…

Leyland Cecco
Leyland Cecco @LeylandCecco
16 Dec 23

RT @amydempsey: New from me: A story I should have learned in high school history class. Inside the fight for $120B: How Canada’s broken…

Leyland Cecco
Leyland Cecco @LeylandCecco
15 Dec 23

“It’s not just about the annuity. It’s about the erosion of our rights and our people’s ability to live their lives." In northern Ontario, a dozen First Nations have been left struggling- and could see compensation up to C$126bn. https://t.co/uxAmarbrtc