Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

$250,000 Task Force Set Up By UBC To Fight Trump Travel Ban

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jan, 2017 12:06 PM
    VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia is setting up a task force in response to an American travel ban that prevents residents of seven countries from entering the United States for 90 days.
     
    UBC president and vice-chancellor Santa Ono says in a news release that the university is deeply concerned about the new executive order signed by President Donald Trump on Friday.
     
    Ono says UBC is especially concerned about the effect of the executive order on some students, faculty and staff, as well as other scholars in Canada, the U.S. and around the world.
     
    The newly formed task force has an initial budget of $250,000 and Ono says it will immediately begin work to determine what assistance the university can offer those affected by the travel ban.
     
    A release issued Sunday night says UBC strongly affirms that it will continue to welcome students, faculty and staff from around the world, including those seeking refuge from violence and hardship.
     
    It says UBC's academic strength and stature depend on the freedom of faculty, staff and students to travel abroad, and actions that restrict this movement based on a person's nationality or birthplace go against the university's values.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Hockey Exec Apologizes For Slur Directed At Canadian Female Protesters

    Ontario Hockey Exec Apologizes For Slur Directed At Canadian Female Protesters
    An Ontario minor hockey executive has apologized for a slur aimed at Canadian women who travelled to Washington, D.C., over the weekend to join a massive march against U.S. President Donald Trump.

    Ontario Hockey Exec Apologizes For Slur Directed At Canadian Female Protesters

    Vancouver Council Debates Where To Spend Opioid-Crisis Tax Dollars

    Vancouver Council Debates Where To Spend Opioid-Crisis Tax Dollars
    VANCOUVER — Councillors in Vancouver are mulling how to spend about $3.5 million in tax money earmarked for addressing the ongoing illicit drug overdose crisis that claimed 215 people in the city last year.

    Vancouver Council Debates Where To Spend Opioid-Crisis Tax Dollars

    A Dream Come True: Numbers For Lotto 6-49 Winner Came While He Was Sleeping

    A Dream Come True: Numbers For Lotto 6-49 Winner Came While He Was Sleeping
      Bahadur Sultani and his mother won $5.3 million in the Lotto 6-49 draw on Dec. 28.

    A Dream Come True: Numbers For Lotto 6-49 Winner Came While He Was Sleeping

    Tent City Cleanup At Courthouse Involves Removing Drug-Contaminated Soil

    Tent City Cleanup At Courthouse Involves Removing Drug-Contaminated Soil
      Workers and heavy equipment were at the 3,000-square metre site Tuesday to clear the land.

    Tent City Cleanup At Courthouse Involves Removing Drug-Contaminated Soil

    Man Charged With Assault, Uttering Threats After Rebel TV Reporter Confronted At Women's March

    Man Charged With Assault, Uttering Threats After Rebel TV Reporter Confronted At Women's March
    EDMONTON — A man faces charges stemming from a political rally in Edmonton on the weekend.

    Man Charged With Assault, Uttering Threats After Rebel TV Reporter Confronted At Women's March

    Cheers, Jeers For Prime Minister Justin Trudeau At Calgary Town Hall

    Cheers, Jeers For Prime Minister Justin Trudeau At Calgary Town Hall
    CALGARY — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launched an impassioned defence for balancing the environment and economy at a raucous town hall in the heart of oil country Tuesday.

    Cheers, Jeers For Prime Minister Justin Trudeau At Calgary Town Hall