Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mayors From Around The World Gather To Discuss How To Tackle Radicalization

The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2015 11:12 AM
    MONTREAL — The mayor of Paris says if cities want social peace, they should fight against inequities among their citizens and reach out to them before they become radicalized.
     
    Anne Hidalgo made the comment Thursday at the first Living Together summit, an international gathering of 23 mayors in Montreal.
     
    They were invited by Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre to discuss combating radicalization following terrorist attacks in Paris, Copenhagen, Saint-Jean-sur-Richeleu, Que. and other cities around the world.
     
    Hidalgo said cities are places of great inequities that are the source of frustration and can degenerate into violence and radicalization.
     
    She said one solution is the example of schools in her city, which are open on Saturday with the help of volunteers so that youth have a place to go.
     
    Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, D.C., said cities also must fight poverty.
     
    She suggested measures she has put forward like offering jobs to youth, affordable social housing and increasing the minimum wage.
     
    Coderre said he would like to increase access to sports and cultural equipment.
     
    The next summit will be held two years from now in Casablanca, Morocco.
     
    Among the cities represented at the summit were Hiroshima, Dakar, Bamako and Beirut.
     
    Mayors from Halifax, Quebec City and Lac-Megantic, Que. were also present.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger To Shuffle Cabinet Following Internal Revolt

    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger is expected to shuffle his cabinet this afternoon following a leadership challenge that he barely survived.

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger To Shuffle Cabinet Following Internal Revolt

    Philippe Couillard Not Excluding Possibility Of Tightening Quebec Language Law

    QUEBEC — Premier Philippe Couillard is not excluding the possibility of tightening Quebec's language law to force major retailers to include French wording in their commercial trademark English names.

    Philippe Couillard Not Excluding Possibility Of Tightening Quebec Language Law

    Arguments Over Evidence Puts Duffy Trial On Pause Until Next Week

    Arguments Over Evidence Puts Duffy Trial On Pause Until Next Week
    Justice Charles Vaillancourt will hear arguments Monday in what is called a voir dire, basically a mini-trial within the main trial.

    Arguments Over Evidence Puts Duffy Trial On Pause Until Next Week

    Statistics Canada Says Underground Economy Totalled $42.4 Billion In 2012

    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says the underground economy totalled $42.4 billion in 2012, roughly 2.3 per cent of gross domestic product.

    Statistics Canada Says Underground Economy Totalled $42.4 Billion In 2012

    McMaster University To Increase Female Faculty's Pay After Review

    McMaster University To Increase Female Faculty's Pay After Review
    HAMILTON — Female faculty at McMaster University will be getting a raise after a two-year study showed differences in salary between the sexes at the Hamilton school.

    McMaster University To Increase Female Faculty's Pay After Review

    Trial Of Accused Terrorists Gets First Look At Pressure Cookers Lined With Nails

    Trial Of Accused Terrorists Gets First Look At Pressure Cookers Lined With Nails
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court jury has had a firsthand look inside the pressure cookers that were allegedly turned into bombs and left to detonate outside the provincial legislature.

    Trial Of Accused Terrorists Gets First Look At Pressure Cookers Lined With Nails