Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s premier urges Meta to allow news sharing in B.C. amid wildfire crisis

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2023 02:11 PM
  • B.C.'s premier urges Meta to allow news sharing in B.C. amid wildfire crisis

Premier David Eby is calling on the social media company Meta to reverse its decision to block Canadian news from being shared online in British Columbia, saying it feels like it is holding the province "ransom" in its ongoing spat with Ottawa.

Eby is imploring the company and its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, to open up access to critical information that could help keep residents safe as the province grapples with devastating wildfires that have forced thousands of people from their homes.

He says the decision to permanently ban Canadian news on Facebook an Instragram is "incredibly frustrating" and he hopes "common sense prevails."

Meta's decision to block news came in response to Canada's Online News Act, which will require tech giants like Meta and Google to make deals with news publishers whose content they link to or repurpose on their platforms to compensate them for their work.

Meta showed an unwillingness to co-operate on a potential deal and decided to remove news content from its platforms in Canada instead.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau echoed Eby's sentiments at an earlier news conference in Charlottetown, saying it is "inconceivable" that a company would put corporate interests and profits over people's safety during an emergency.

MORE National ARTICLES

West Kelowna evacuations triple, as City of Kelowna declares wildfire emergency

West Kelowna evacuations triple, as City of Kelowna declares wildfire emergency
The "very active and unpredictable" McDougall Creek wildfire has grown more than six times during a frightening night, destroying homes and putting more than 2,400 West Kelowna properties under evacuation order, up from about 800 Thursday afternoon.  

West Kelowna evacuations triple, as City of Kelowna declares wildfire emergency

BC Ferries suspends sailings of Coastal Renaissance ferry

BC Ferries suspends sailings of Coastal Renaissance ferry
B-C Ferries says it has suspending sailings of the Coastal Renaissance due to a mechanical problem. The move affects trips between Tsawwassen in Metro Vancouver and Duke Point in Nanaimo.

BC Ferries suspends sailings of Coastal Renaissance ferry

Unprovoked attack in East Vancouver

Unprovoked attack in East Vancouver
A passerby found the injured victim and called 9-1-1. The man, who lives nearby, was taken to hospital with head injuries. He is expected to survive.  

Unprovoked attack in East Vancouver

West Kelowna declares state of emergency over encroaching wildfire

West Kelowna declares state of emergency over encroaching wildfire
Central Okanagan Emergency Operations has also placed 68 properties on evacuation order and another 5,700 properties on alert due to the nearby McDougall Creek wildfire, which grew to three square kilometres in a matter of hours after it started on Wednesday. 

West Kelowna declares state of emergency over encroaching wildfire

WestJet, Air Canada adjust prices and schedules amid Yellowknife evacuation efforts

WestJet, Air Canada adjust prices and schedules amid Yellowknife evacuation efforts
Airlines are adjusting prices and adding capacity to help with evacuation efforts in Yellowknife. WestJet and Air Canada both said they are taking steps to avoid elevated prices, adding extra flights and swapping in bigger planes amid the rapidly unfolding situation up north.

WestJet, Air Canada adjust prices and schedules amid Yellowknife evacuation efforts

Justice minister says Canada remains 'open' to criminalizing coercive control

Justice minister says Canada remains 'open' to criminalizing coercive control
The recent letter from Arif Virani to Ontario's chief coroner outlined the Liberal government's response to a series of recommendations that came from an inquest into the 2015 slayings of three women in the rural Renfrew County area, about 180 kilometres west of Ottawa.

Justice minister says Canada remains 'open' to criminalizing coercive control