Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds Give UN $100 Mil For Syrian Refugee Relief, Including Work For Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2015 02:09 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government is giving $10 million to the United Nations refugee agency as part of the program to resettle thousands of Syrian refugees to Canada over the next few months.
     
    It's part of a larger $100 million contribution to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees that the Liberals promised during the election campaign.
     
    UN staff in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey are currently working overtime and on weekends to help select some 15,000 Syrians who will be brought to Canada by the end of February directly by the government, and the money will go to supporting those efforts. 
     
    The government is also giving the UN in those countries, as well as in Syria, Iraq, Egypt and Europe, money to help deal more broadly with the effect of the refugee crisis in those countries.
     
    The money will be used to pay for basic needs and services for the four million people displaced by the ongoing civil war in Syria.
     
    Thursday's announcement brings to $969 million the total amount of humanitarian assistance from Canada in response to the Syrian crisis.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Is Back: Rocker Neil Young Supports Alberta's Carbon Tax, Pleased By Liberal Government

    "I'm very happy," said the 70-year-old Canadian who has lived in California for years.

    Canada Is Back: Rocker Neil Young Supports Alberta's Carbon Tax, Pleased By Liberal Government

    B.C. Green To Seek Party Leadership As Federal Green Leader Attends Announcement

    Oak Bay-Gordon Head MLA Andrew Weaver will announce his candidacy Tuesday at the University of Victoria, where he will follow his leadership announcement with a speech.

    B.C. Green To Seek Party Leadership As Federal Green Leader Attends Announcement

    Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head

    Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head
    CIBC chief executive Victor Dodig told The Canadian Press in an interview Tuesday that much of Canada's eventual growth will come from entrepreneurs who commercialize new ideas and technologies for all sectors of the economy.

    Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head

    Feds Updating Wary Stance On Self-Driving Cars; Goal Of Encouraging Public Use

    Feds Updating Wary Stance On Self-Driving Cars; Goal Of Encouraging Public Use
    LOS ANGELES — Federal transportation officials are rethinking their position on self-driving cars with an eye toward getting the emerging technology into the public's hands.

    Feds Updating Wary Stance On Self-Driving Cars; Goal Of Encouraging Public Use

    Manmeet Bhullar Was Helping A Troubled Motorist On Icy Highway When Semi-Truck Killed Him

    Manmeet Bhullar Was Helping A Troubled Motorist On Icy Highway When Semi-Truck Killed Him
    Manmeet Bhullar, who at the age of 28 became the youngest Indian Canadian to get elected as an MLA, was killed in a road accident near Red Deer city

    Manmeet Bhullar Was Helping A Troubled Motorist On Icy Highway When Semi-Truck Killed Him

    Wrongfully Convicted Man's Decision To Represent Himself Was 'Unwise': Crown

    John Hunter says that Ivan Henry's decision to refuse legal counsel when he was on trial for 10 charges of sexual assault was "fateful" and "unwise," and should be a cautionary tale for those accused of crimes.

    Wrongfully Convicted Man's Decision To Represent Himself Was 'Unwise': Crown