Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Khizr Khan Cancels Toronto Talk After Travel Privileges 'Being Reviewed': Organizer

The Canadian Press, 06 Mar, 2017 01:19 PM
    TORONTO — The organizer of a luncheon featuring a speech by the father of an American Muslim soldier killed in Iraq said Monday that the event was cancelled because the man's "travel privileges are being reviewed."
     
    Ramsay Talks said Khizr Khan, who has publicly criticized U.S. President Donald Trump for his anti-Muslim rhetoric, was scheduled to be in Toronto on Tuesday to talk about tolerance, understanding and unity.
     
    "Late Sunday evening Khizr Khan, an American citizen for over 30 years, was notified that his travel privileges are being reviewed," Ramsay Talks said in a statement on its Facebook page.
     
    The company, which couldn't be reached immediately for comment, didn't say who is reviewing Khan's travel privileges.
     
    Ramsay Talks did, however, include what it said was a comment from Khan in its statement.
     
    "This turn of events is not just of deep concern to me but to all my fellow Americans who cherish our freedom to travel abroad," Khan was quoted saying in Ramsay Talks' statement. "I have not been given any reason as to why. I am grateful for your support and look forward to visiting Toronto in the near future."
     
    In advertising Khan's speech, Ramsay Talks had said the Harvard-trained lawyer who immigrated to the United States from Pakistan decades ago was going to talk about "what we can do about the appalling turn of events in Washington — so that we don't all end up sacrificing everything."
     
    Khan rose to prominence last year when he spoke at the Democratic National Convention about his son, Army Capt. Humayun Khan, who died in Iraq in 2004 trying to protect his unit from a suicide bomber.
     
    Khizr Khan held up his pocket-sized constitution and said Trump had sacrificed "nothing."
     
    Trump fired back a few weeks before the election saying Khan's son would still be alive if he was president in 2004 because he wouldn't have troops in Iraq — falsely insisting he was opposed to the Iraq War before it started.
     
    Khan has become a public face against Trump's immigration policies.
     
    "There comes a time in an ordinary citizen's life where you have to gather all the courage you have and you stand up and speak against tyranny and speak against un-American hate," Khan said in October.
     
    On Monday, Trump unveiled a revised travel ban that temporarily halts entry to the U.S. for people from six Muslim-majority nations who are seeking new visas and suspends the country's refugee program.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Home Prices May Have Seen 'Final Hurrah'

    Vancouver Home Prices May Have Seen 'Final Hurrah'
    TORONTO — Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper says house prices in Greater Vancouver grew 30.6 per cent year-over-year in the third quarter of the year, marking what may have been the real estate market's "final hurrah."

    Vancouver Home Prices May Have Seen 'Final Hurrah'

    B.C. Liberals Reject Nomination Bid From Former Cabinet Minister Terry Segarty

    B.C. Liberals Reject Nomination Bid From Former Cabinet Minister Terry Segarty
    CRANBROOK, B.C. — A former Social Credit cabinet minister in British Columbia won't get another crack at provincial politics as a Liberal.

    B.C. Liberals Reject Nomination Bid From Former Cabinet Minister Terry Segarty

    Man Tries To Fake Death In Saskatchewan To Avoid Charges In Manitoba: Police

    Man Tries To Fake Death In Saskatchewan To Avoid Charges In Manitoba: Police
    John Malcolm Ross, who is 44, pleaded guilty in Swift Current court Tuesday to public mischief and obstructing a police officer.

    Man Tries To Fake Death In Saskatchewan To Avoid Charges In Manitoba: Police

    Supreme Court Will Be Asked To Hear Appeal From Man Who Crashed Into Patio

    Supreme Court Will Be Asked To Hear Appeal From Man Who Crashed Into Patio
    Richard Suter was originally sentenced to four months in jail after pleading guilty to failing to provide a breath sample when there is a death.

    Supreme Court Will Be Asked To Hear Appeal From Man Who Crashed Into Patio

    'Impossible To Say' What Outcome Of New Housing Rules Will Be: Bill Morneau

    'Impossible To Say' What Outcome Of New Housing Rules Will Be: Bill Morneau
    TORONTO — Finance Minister Bill Morneau says it's "impossible to say with absolute clarity" what the impacts of new mortgage rules introduced by Ottawa earlier this month will be.

    'Impossible To Say' What Outcome Of New Housing Rules Will Be: Bill Morneau

    Rapper Classified Fires Back At Lawyers' Association In N.L. Rape Sentence Controversy

    Rapper Classified Fires Back At Lawyers' Association In N.L. Rape Sentence Controversy
    HALIFAX — A popular Canadian rapper says he can't understand why a prominent lawyers' group is condemning his angry response to a controversial sexual-assault sentencing.

    Rapper Classified Fires Back At Lawyers' Association In N.L. Rape Sentence Controversy