Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Boxing Day For PM In NYC: First With Students' Questions, Then In A Brooklyn Gym

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2016 12:01 PM
    NEW YORK — Justin Trudeau went boxing in New York City on Thursday — in the morning, he did some metaphorical parrying, then in the afternoon planned to step into a real Brooklyn ring.
     
    The prime minister fielded a series of questions from students at New York University, some more pointed than others. One student asked how he could justify backing new oil pipelines after campaigning on climate change.
     
    Trudeau replied that he was very explicit before the election that he backed the now-cancelled Keystone XL project. He said the best path to a clean energy future involves being flexible.
     
    That means encouraging prosperity, spending on innovation, and policies that support clean technology — not in shutting down industries.
     
    "That's a simplistic solution that can be very appealing," he said, of halting fossil fuel development. 
     
    "If it does then involve everyone leaving their car at home, and everyone stopping to use fossil fuels tomorrow, our world would come to a crashing halt. So we have to be a lot more thoughtful and reasonable... Do I agree that in the future we're going to have to get off fossil fuels? Absolutely. Is that future tomorrow? No it's not...
     
    "We're very much better off doing that from a position of having a capacity to invest and research than doing it by firelight in a cave 100 years from now, when we've reached a collapse."
     
    Nearly half the students at the forum were Canadian — including one young man in a red Maple Leaf-emblazoned hockey jersey who asked Trudeau about Lester Pearson's peacekeeping legacy.
     
     
    Trudeau replied that one of the reasons Canada had the clout to shape the creation of the United Nations and the design of its peacekeeping system was that it had previously fought in conventional wars.
     
    The students greeted him with warm applause at the start and the end — even if they found some of his answers a bit light on detail.
     
    "This was a good introduction," said Sundus Nasir, a first-year dentistry student originally from Toronto.
     
    "There wasn't a lot of specifics. A lot of politicians do tend to do that... Just that he's here, to engage in a dialogue, I think that's an important step."
     
    She said expectations for him are high, and noted the level of celebrity he has gained outside the country. She said her friends at school are well aware of him — watching, for example, the video of him talking about quantum computing.
     
    He is apparently gearing up for another viral-video moment.
     
    Trudeau will be jabbing for the cameras later Thursday at the legendary Gleason's Gym — where champions Muhammad Ali, Jake (Raging Bull) LaMotta and Mike Tyson trained, albeit in the gym's previous locations.
     
    On Friday, he will sign a climate pact at the United Nations.
     
     
    This is the prime minister's fourth trip to the U.S. since last month: he has also been hosted at a White House state dinner, attended a nuclear arms-control summit and attended meetings at the United Nations.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Modi Praises Indian Workers' Hard Work In Saudi Arabia

    Modi Praises Indian Workers' Hard Work In Saudi Arabia
    The large number of Indian blue collar workers in Saudi Arabia on Saturday came in for much appreciation from Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the hard work they have put in for the development of the Gulf kingdom.

    Modi Praises Indian Workers' Hard Work In Saudi Arabia

    Quebec Bill 74 Would Force Internet Firms To Block Access To Online Gaming Sites

    Quebec Bill 74 Would Force Internet Firms To Block Access To Online Gaming Sites
    Bill 74 includes a provision that seeks to force Internet service providers to block Quebecers' access to online gambling sites that aren't approved by the government.

    Quebec Bill 74 Would Force Internet Firms To Block Access To Online Gaming Sites

    Suspected MH 370 Debris Found On Mauritius Coast

    Suspected MH 370 Debris Found On Mauritius Coast
    A piece of debris thought to be from the Malaysian airliner that went missing more than two years ago over the Indian Ocean has been found in the island nation of Mauritius, media reported on Sunday.

    Suspected MH 370 Debris Found On Mauritius Coast

    India, Saudi Arabia To Strengthen Anti-Terror Cooperation

    India, Saudi Arabia To Strengthen Anti-Terror Cooperation
    Modi was also conferred with the Gulf kingdom's highest civilian honour, the King Abdulaziz Sash.

    India, Saudi Arabia To Strengthen Anti-Terror Cooperation

    Canada Will Offer $42 Million To Help Protect Nuclear Material From Terrorists: PM Trudeau

    Canada Will Offer $42 Million To Help Protect Nuclear Material From Terrorists: PM Trudeau
    World leaders watched a video of a hypothetical nuclear terrorist plot Friday as they closed out a two-day summit dedicated to ensuring such a calamity never comes to pass.

    Canada Will Offer $42 Million To Help Protect Nuclear Material From Terrorists: PM Trudeau

    India failed to provide evidence about Pathankot attack: Pakistan

    New Delhi failed to provide evidence to Islamabad's Joint Investigation Team, visiting India to probe the Pathankot attack, to prove their allegation that Pakistan based militants stormed the Air Force base, sources close to the team said.

    India failed to provide evidence about Pathankot attack: Pakistan