Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Pulse Exporters To India Get 3-Month Extension To Pest Treatment Exemption

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Mar, 2017 12:40 PM
    OTTAWA — India has given another last-minute extension to a waiver allowing Canadian pulse exports to the country without the required pest treatment, Canadian Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAulay says.
     
    Uncertainty around whether Canadian pea and lentil exports to India would be allowed in had caused some shippers to refuse to take the cargo, and threatened to disrupt trade with a country that bought $1.1 billion worth of pulses last year.
     
    The three-month extension comes just before the previous six-month waiver was set to expire at the end of March, and despite comments by India that more extensions would not be granted.
     
    Pulse Canada chair Lee Moats said the industry group was pleased with the extension, and the priority given to the issue by the Canadian government.
     
    MacAulay said in a statement that he and International Trade Minister François-Philippe Champagne secured the extension after a meeting with Indian officials in Delhi earlier in March.
     
    He said Canada would continue to work towards a long-term, science-based solution to the fumigation issue, which India has been granting exemptions to since 2004.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alleged Gunman In Quebec Shooting Reportedly Visited Mosque Before The Killing

    Alleged Gunman In Quebec Shooting Reportedly Visited Mosque Before The Killing
    QUEBEC — The president of a Quebec City mosque where six men were shot to death says the man charged in the killings visited the premises at least twice a few days beforehand.

    Alleged Gunman In Quebec Shooting Reportedly Visited Mosque Before The Killing

    B.C. Health Ministry Says Drug Users Testing Positive For Opioid Carfentanil

    B.C. Health Ministry Says Drug Users Testing Positive For Opioid Carfentanil
    VICTORIA — The appearance of the deadly opioid carfentanil may explain the dramatic spike in overdoses in British Columbia, despite efforts to slow the carnage, the provincial health officer says.

    B.C. Health Ministry Says Drug Users Testing Positive For Opioid Carfentanil

    Royal Canadian Mint Employee Who Hid Stolen Gold In His Rectum Gets 30 Months Behind Bar

    Royal Canadian Mint Employee Who Hid Stolen Gold In His Rectum Gets 30 Months Behind Bar
    OTTAWA — A man who stole gold "pucks" from the Royal Canadian Mint by hiding them in his rectum to evade metal detectors has been sentenced to 30 months in prison.

    Royal Canadian Mint Employee Who Hid Stolen Gold In His Rectum Gets 30 Months Behind Bar

    No Sign Trump Immigration Order Will Impact Asylum System: Immigration

    OTTAWA — The federal Immigration Department says it has no indication a controversial move by U.S. President Donald Trump to suspend refugee resettlement for 120 days will have an impact on the American asylum system.

    No Sign Trump Immigration Order Will Impact Asylum System: Immigration

    Disabled Daughter Traumatized After Being Left On School Bus All Day, Mother Says

    Disabled Daughter Traumatized After Being Left On School Bus All Day, Mother Says
    Laura Mastache says her daughter Wendy, who has both autism and epilepsy, has been noticeably more reserved and withdrawn since the incident on Jan. 23.

    Disabled Daughter Traumatized After Being Left On School Bus All Day, Mother Says

    B.C. Drug Overdose Crisis, Deadliest Of Long Career, Says Health Officer

    B.C. Drug Overdose Crisis, Deadliest Of Long Career, Says Health Officer
    B.C.'s provincial health officer laughs at the mock front page of a Vancouver newspaper from 1951 that was given to him by his father-in-law, also a doctor.

    B.C. Drug Overdose Crisis, Deadliest Of Long Career, Says Health Officer