Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Wants To Attract Quebec Civil Servants Worried About Clothing Law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2019 08:29 PM

    WINNIPEG - The Manitoba government wants to recruit civil servants from Quebec who are concerned about a new law banning religious symbols.

     

    Premier Brian Pallister says Manitoba has a shortage of bilingual civil servants and will reach out to Quebec public-sector workers to tell them Manitoba has no, quote — "clothing police."

     

    Pallister says letters will soon be sent to professional organizations in Quebec as well as colleges and other training centres.

     

    The Quebec law bans teachers, police and other public servants in positions of power from wearing religious symbols, and critics say it unfairly targets Muslims, Sikhs and other religious minorities.

     

    Pallister raised his opposition to the Quebec law at a meeting of Canada's premiers earlier this month.

     

    Quebec Premier Francois Legault has said the bill is supported by a majority of Quebecers and fulfills a campaign promise.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CBC Head Defends Coverage After Scheer Suggests Too Much Focus On U.S. Politics

    Catherine Tait appeared Thursday before a committee of MPs in Ottawa and was asked by Liberal MP Wayne Long to respond to Scheer's comments, which he said he found concerning.

    CBC Head Defends Coverage After Scheer Suggests Too Much Focus On U.S. Politics

    Woman Can't Have Embryo Implanted Without Ex-Husband's Consent, Court Rules

    Woman Can't Have Embryo Implanted Without Ex-Husband's Consent, Court Rules
    TORONTO — A divorced woman cannot have a purchased frozen embryo implanted over the objections of her ex-husband, Ontario's top court ruled on Friday in a ground-breaking case.

    Woman Can't Have Embryo Implanted Without Ex-Husband's Consent, Court Rules

    Sentencing Hearing To Continue For Calgary Couple Convicted In Son's Death

    Sentencing Hearing To Continue For Calgary Couple Convicted In Son's Death
    A sentencing hearing is to continue today for a Calgary couple convicted in the death of their 14-month-old son.

    Sentencing Hearing To Continue For Calgary Couple Convicted In Son's Death

    Five Charged With Dozens Of Trafficking Offences In Surrey, B.C.

    Five Charged With Dozens Of Trafficking Offences In Surrey, B.C.
    A 51-year-old man and four teenagers face multiple charges in what police in Surrey, B.C., allege is an illicit drug trafficking group operating in the Lower Mainland.

    Five Charged With Dozens Of Trafficking Offences In Surrey, B.C.

    Negotiations Continued Through The Night In Effort To Avoid B.C. Port Lockout

     Talks continued through the night between British Columbia's longshore workers' union and the association representing port employers.

    Negotiations Continued Through The Night In Effort To Avoid B.C. Port Lockout

    B.C. Health Ministry Launches Review Over Medical Response In Patient's Death

    B.C. Health Ministry Launches Review Over Medical Response In Patient's Death
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's health minister has ordered a review of the emergency medical response for a patient who died last November in the Lower Mainland.

    B.C. Health Ministry Launches Review Over Medical Response In Patient's Death