Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper To Visit Canadian Frigate In Baltic Sea, Polish Counterpart Says

The Canadian Press, 09 Jun, 2015 11:39 AM
    WARSAW, Poland — Prime Minister Stephen Harper will visit a Canadian frigate conducting military exercises with NATO forces in the Baltic Sea, the Polish prime minister revealed today.
     
    Eva Kopacz spoke of the visit during a joint statement with Harper in Warsaw, catching officials with the Prime Minister's Office off-guard and raising questions about whether operational safety may have been compromised.
     
    "You might want to know that the prime minister is going to Gdansk tomorrow ... where he will be visiting Canadian frigates participating in the military exercises," Kopacz said through a translator to a room packed with journalists.
     
    The trip had not been publicly announced by Harper's office. The leaders delivered joint statements and did not take questions from journalists.
     
    Harper did not appear to be thrown off stride by the revelation, but it overshadowed his scheduled announcement for the day — the signing of a defence co-operation agreement between Poland and Canada.
     
    Defence Minister Jason Kenney later confirmed that the prime minister would visit HMCS Fredericton as a show of solidarity with Canadian military personnel and their allies.
     
    "I'm not going to discuss exactly what we might be doing in the next 24 hours except to say that obviously our prime minister will be visiting one of the frigates that's been on joint training exercises in the Baltic Sea with a large-scale NATO naval exercise," Kenney said.
     
    Kenney was in Warsaw for meetings with Polish military officials.
     
    Earlier, Harper took part in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, in the historic square where in June 1979, Polish-born Pope John Paul II delivered a stirring homily in support of the Poland's anti-communist Solidarity movement.
     
    Harper also met Kopacz and Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski.
     
    Poland is a major European ally of Canada, which deployed more than 200 troops here on NATO training exercises last year.
     
    Earlier, Harper attended the G7 summit in Germany, where the continuing unrest between Ukraine and Russia was a hot topic.
     
    "Canada and Poland served side by side in Afghanistan and we now stand together in promoting freedom and democracy in Ukraine," Harper said in his Warsaw comments.
     
    Harper enjoys strong relations with Poland after forging a bond with Kopacz's predecessor Donald Tusk.
     
    The Polish diaspora in Canada is estimated to be about one million people, which Harper said represents the strong bond between the two countries.
     
    Before the G7, Harper stopped in Ukraine to pledge Canadian solidarity in the country's fight against Russian-backed rebels in the country's east. While he was there, months of shaky ceasefire gave way to some of the worst violence of the conflict.
     
    Standing next to Kopacz, Harper reiterated Canada's solidarity with its allies against Russian President Vladimir Putin in east Ukraine. Harper's visit to the frigate is part of that effort, Kenney said.
     
    "One of the reasons the prime minister is here is to underscore solidarity with our allies in eastern Europe — both Ukraine, Poland and the three Baltic states — who are concerned obviously about Vladimir Putin's policy of aggression."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency
    The plan calls for $137 million over five years for the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service and $41 million a year afterward.

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency

    Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

    OTTAWA — Canadians are saving enough and are reasonably well-prepared for life after work, said a report Thursday by the C.D. Howe Institute, which challenges some of the common assumptions about retirement planning.

    Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety
    HALIFAX — The wife of a man accused of stockpiling chemicals in Nova Scotia says she went to police out of fear that her children would come in contact with a dangerous substance in a shed on their property.

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings
    MONCTON, N.B. — The widows of three fallen Mounties are thanking the public for their support one year after their husbands were gunned down in Moncton, N.B.

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings

    Nurses Unions Plan To Get Involved In Federal Election Campaigning

    HALIFAX — A national nurses union is training its members to spread the message about health care and become a political force during the upcoming federal election campaign.

    Nurses Unions Plan To Get Involved In Federal Election Campaigning

    Sikh Protester Killed In Police Firing In Jammu Over Removal Of Bhindrawale's Poster

    Sikh Protester Killed In Police Firing In Jammu Over Removal Of Bhindrawale's Poster
    The protester, identified as Jagjit Singh, son of Narveer Singh, resident of Chohala in RS Pura, was killed when police opened fire in Gadigarh (Satwari) area as protesters indulged in violence injuring three policemen,

    Sikh Protester Killed In Police Firing In Jammu Over Removal Of Bhindrawale's Poster