Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau In Malta For Commonwealth Summit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2015 01:36 PM
    VALETTA, Malta — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has arrived in Malta for the second leg of his three-stop, European conference tour.
     
    Trudeau meets this evening with Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat before the full Commonwealth heads-of-government summit begins Friday.
     
    Malta, an island republic of less than half a million citizens in the Mediterranean Sea, is an historic migratory crossroad between North Africa and Italy.
     
    The current refugee crisis in the Middle East is literally lapping at its shores.
     
    Trudeau will be discussing Canada's role in fighting Islamic terrorism as well as climate change and matters of Commonwealth governance during his three-day stay.
     
    From Malta, Trudeau is to move on to Paris for a UN climate change conference before returning to Canada and the opening of Parliament next week.
     
    French President Francois Hollande is expected to attend the Commonwealth meeting on Friday to brief the organization on the Paris climate negotiations.
     
    Trudeau departed London today as British Prime Minister David Cameron was making the case in Parliament for an expanded air war over Syrian territory.
     
    Cameron told the British House of Commons that you can't "sub-contract" national security.
     
    His efforts to widen the British air war come as Trudeau is vowing to withdraw Canada's six CF-18 jets from the American-led bombing mission in Iraq and Syria.
     
    France has also upped its air war since the deadly terror attacks in Paris two weeks ago that claimed at least 130 lives.
     
    A senior Trudeau adviser, briefing reporters on the flight to Malta under agreement not to be named, said Cameron did not pressure Trudeau to reconsider his CF-18 decision when the two prime ministers met in London on Wednesday evening.
     
    In fact, the adviser said not a single world leader has questioned Canada's pending withdrawal from the air war during the last two weeks of intense international summitry.
     
    Trudeau has made it clear Canada is not leaving the military coalition fighting Islamic militants and will expand its military training role, a move his officials say has been accepted abroad without complaint.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mosque In Peterborough, Ont., Deliberately Set On Fire: Police

    Mosque In Peterborough, Ont., Deliberately Set On Fire: Police
    Police say they don't know the motive, and they don't have a suspect. They couldn't say whether the fire was connected to the attacks in Paris that the Islamic State is taking credit for.

    Mosque In Peterborough, Ont., Deliberately Set On Fire: Police

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's unexpected baptism of fire in international statesmanship began Saturday when he arrived at the G20 summit in Turkey, less than a day after the deadly Paris attacks.

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'
    It was an anonymous two-story house with an outdoor side staircase, nothing that looked ominous to Kevin Koliner when he passed by going to and from work

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'

    The New Brunswick Government Has Formed A Committee To Handle Incoming Refugees

    The New Brunswick government has formed a committee aimed at facilitating a smooth transition of the Syrian refugees to the province.

    The New Brunswick Government Has Formed A Committee To Handle Incoming Refugees

    Government Says Assisted-Death Panel Won't Give Advice For Legislation

    Government Says Assisted-Death Panel Won't Give Advice For Legislation
    A federal panel created in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling on assisted death will no longer be asked to make recommendations to the government and will now simply report on its consultations on the issue.

    Government Says Assisted-Death Panel Won't Give Advice For Legislation

    Speed A Factor In Crash That Killed 68-Year-Old Man On Oak Street: Vancouver Police

    Speed A Factor In Crash That Killed 68-Year-Old Man On Oak Street: Vancouver Police
    Vancouver police say speed is likely a factor in a crash that killed one man and sent another to hospital on Saturday.

    Speed A Factor In Crash That Killed 68-Year-Old Man On Oak Street: Vancouver Police