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January 2005 in Canada
This page deals with current events in Canada, of interest to Canada and/or involving Canadians.
- Calgary Member of Parliament Jason Kenney visits the home of the late Chinese communist leader Zhao Ziyang in Beijing. The Conservative parliamentarian is believed to be the first Western politician allowed to make such a visit to the home of the purged leader. Filming of the visit was forbidden. (CP)
- Prime Minister Paul Martin makes diplomatic remarks about China's human rights record during a speech in Beijing. Martin criticises Conservative Leader Stephen Harper in his new challenge that the lines cannot be clearly drawn on same-sex marriage and related laws. This followed a new agreement between China and Canada on tourism, believed to have the potential of generating billions of dollars from Chinese tourists in Canada in the years to come. (CBC)
- Canadian submarine HMCS Chicoutimi begins her second voyage home from Faslane naval base in Scotland, following the fatal fire aboard her during her first voyage last October. This time she is being carried aboard a Norwegian transporter. (BBC Scotland)
- The Canadian Red Cross receives its largest personal donation ever for a disaster appeal. Music World founders Kroum and Eva Pindoff donate $5 million dollars for Tsunami relief. (CBC)
- Former Montreal Canadiens general manager Irving Grundman receives a 23 month conditional sentence and is fined $50,000 after pleading guilty to accepting a bribe while he was a Montreal city councillor. Fellow ex-councillor René Dussault was also sentenced to 23 months to be served in the community and fined $25,000 for his part in the scandal. (CBC)
- Bloc Québécois leader Gilles Duceppe promises to force an election if the Spring Budget does not meet certain demands, notably that no great sums of money are allocated to the National Missile Defence Program. (CBC)
- Newfoundland and Labrador premier Danny Williams orders the Canadian flag back up on provincial buildings after he ordered them down 3 weeks ago after a dispute with Ottawa over off-shore oil revenues. The issue remains unresolved, but Williams has said that he has made his point and gotten the attention of Canadians across the country. (CBC)
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