Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mexico-Born B.C. Construction Worker Plants Mexican Flag On Roof Of Vancouver’s Trump Tower

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2016 06:07 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Mexican-born construction worker says he hung his native country's flag high above Vancouver to remind Donald Trump that his compatriots built the 63-storey tower.
     
    Diego Reyna has drawn the attention of international media after hanging a Mexican flag atop the Trump International Hotel and Tower over the weekend and recording a 43-second video that says the building wouldn't exist without immigrants.
     
    In the video he says Mexicans performed everything from drywall to concrete finishing on the project.
     
    The Holborn Group of Companies, the Vancouver developer behind the project, could not be reached for comment.
     

    During his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination, Trump has been criticized after suggesting some Mexicans entering the U.S. are murderers and rapists.
     
    Reyna, who wasn't available for comment on Monday, says in a separate Facebook post that Mexicans didn't steal or rape but just did the best work they possibly could.
     
    This isn't the first time the building has been at the centre of a Trump backlash.
     
     
    In December, Mayor Gregor Robertson sent a letter urging the developer to drop Trump's name from the tower, writing that Vancouver is known for diversity, equality and freedom from discrimination.
     
    He referenced a petition signed by more than 50,000 people asking that the U.S. businessman's name be removed from the tower following the Republican hopeful's call to ban Muslims from entering the United States.  
     
    The Holborn Group did not respond to a request for comment on the mayor's comments late last year.
     
    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark says she agrees that Trump's name doesn't represent Vancouver, but that ultimately the city and the developer should make the decision.
     
    Trump visited the city in 2013 to help announce the $360-million project. The Trump Organization said at the time that it was lending its brand power and operating the tower, but that the family would not be investing in the development.
     
    When it is completed, the building will become the second Trump International Hotel and Tower in Canada after the one in Toronto.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Budget Could Add Many More Spaces In Domestic Violence Shelters

    The federal budget promised $89.9 million over two years that would allow 3,000 spaces to be renovated or created.

    Federal Budget Could Add Many More Spaces In Domestic Violence Shelters

    B.C. Man Facing Sexual Assault Charges In Denver Released From Custody

    B.C. Man Facing Sexual Assault Charges In Denver Released From Custody
    Colby Messer has been charged with six counts of sexual assault after a 27-year-old woman alleged she was sexually assaulted at a Denver hotel last November

    B.C. Man Facing Sexual Assault Charges In Denver Released From Custody

    Business Groups To Urge New Brunswick Government To End Fracking Moratorium

    Business Groups To Urge New Brunswick Government To End Fracking Moratorium
    A collection of business groups is calling on the New Brunswick government to lift its fracking moratorium.

    Business Groups To Urge New Brunswick Government To End Fracking Moratorium

    'Almost Fell Over:' Alberta Couple Expecting Bundle Of Joy Times Four

    'Almost Fell Over:' Alberta Couple Expecting Bundle Of Joy Times Four
    Tim and Bethani Webb of Hythe planned to have a family when they got married last June and were thrilled when they found out not long after that they were expecting.

    'Almost Fell Over:' Alberta Couple Expecting Bundle Of Joy Times Four

    Searchers Expand Efforts To Find Crab Fishermen Missing Off Vancouver Island

    Searchers Expand Efforts To Find Crab Fishermen Missing Off Vancouver Island
    The unnamed men were reported overdue early Sunday morning, almost two days after they set out from the Port Renfrew area, about 100 kilometres northwest of Victoria.

    Searchers Expand Efforts To Find Crab Fishermen Missing Off Vancouver Island

    Canadian Drugmaker Valeant Share Plunge After CEO Subpoenaed By Congress

    Canadian Drugmaker Valeant Share Plunge After CEO Subpoenaed By Congress
    Shares of beleaguered Canadian drugmaker Valeant Pharmaceuticals are plunging again after its CEO was subpoenaed by a congressional committee.

    Canadian Drugmaker Valeant Share Plunge After CEO Subpoenaed By Congress