Close X
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

PHAC ordered to explain fired scientists

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2021 06:10 PM
  • PHAC ordered to explain fired scientists

A House of Commons committee is ordering the Public Health Agency of Canada to turn over all documents related to the firing of two scientists from Canada's highest-security laboratory.

The Canada-China relations committee is also ordering PHAC to hand over documents related to a transfer of Ebola and Henipah viruses to China's Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The committee is giving PHAC 20 days to turn over the documents in an unredacted form, after which committee members will meet behind closed doors with the parliamentary law clerk to determine what can be made public without compromising national security or revealing the details of an ongoing RCMP investigation.

PHAC president Iain Stewart has refused to explain to the committee why Xiangguo Qiu and her husband, Keding Cheng, were fired in January, 18 months after being escorted from the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg.

Qiu was responsible for a shipment of Ebola and Henipah viruses to the Wuhan Institute of Virology in 2019 but PHAC has said that had nothing to do with her subsequent escorted exit from the lab four months later.

Iain Stewart sent the committee a letter last week saying that the Privacy Act does not allow him to share "employment or labour-relations matters concerning public servants."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Severe COVID cases may continue to rise: Tam

Severe COVID cases may continue to rise: Tam
Dr. Theresa Tam says hospitalizations and deaths tend to lag behind new cases by one or more weeks, raising concerns that Canada has yet to see the full extent of impacts associated with increasing COVID-19 transmission in many parts of the country.

Severe COVID cases may continue to rise: Tam

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote
As results trickled in from those key states on Wednesday, anxious expat Americans from those states watched the ongoing count with at least some degree of satisfaction.

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver
A notice on the BC Hydro website blamed a transmission circuit failure for the problem.

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger
The U.S. presidential race remains too close to call, with millions of votes still being counted in battleground states including Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and North Carolina.

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file
According to surveillance video, a woman and man were involved in an altercation along West 59th before two men arrived minutes later in a white SUV.

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98
Family friend Jacquie Perrin says Ward collapsed yesterday at his home in Edmonton and died shortly after in hospital, surrounded by his family and 20 days short of his 99th birthday.

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98