Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Protest Against Donald Trump Planned For Toronto In Light Of Anti-Muslim Comments

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2015 12:45 PM
    TORONTO — Protesters are expected to gather in front of the Trump Tower in Toronto later today to decry Donald Trump's recent anti-Muslim comments.
     
    The Republican presidential candidate has called for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the U.S. in the aftermath of attacks in the country and abroad.
     
    His remarks this week have drawn international criticism. The White House said the comments disqualify him from being president and some politicians have joked about banning Trump himself.
     
    In Toronto, protesters who say they plan to rally against Trump's statements and celebrate the city's diversity are expected to gather outside the building which bears his name in the city's financial district.
     
    The Trump International Hotel and Tower in Toronto is owned by a private real estate development company called Talon International Development, as well as other investors and condo owners.
     
     
    The Trump Organization operates a hotel which makes up part of the building.
     
    At least one Toronto city councillor has asked the owners of the building to remove Trump's name from the property in light of his recent inflammatory comments.
     
    Trump's image and name have been stripped from a Dubai golf course in light of his statements, while Trump Towers Istanbul also says its "assessing" its partnership with Trump.
     
    The Trump Hotel and Tower in Toronto says the Trump Organization operates the building but is not the owner.
     
    "Donald Trump's opinions as a private citizen in no way reflect the position of the company's views or those of its other investors and owners," the hotel said in statement earlier this week.
     
    ANTI-TRUMP PROTESTERS STORM $1,000-A-PLATE NEW YORK CITY LUNCHEON
     
    NEW YORK — About a dozen protesters disrupted Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's speech at a $1,000-a-plate New York City luncheon Friday, criticizing the billionaire businessman's recent anti-Islam rhetoric as security staff forcibly ejected some of them from the event.
     
     
    Four protesters chanting "Trump is trying to bring us down, targeting people black and brown," tried to storm a side entrance into the speech at Manhattan's The Plaza Hotel as security staff pushed them away.
     
    The protesters were affiliated with various Arab-American and Muslim-American groups, as well as groups for racial equality.
     
    One of those protesters, Jorge Gonzalez, fell down a flight of stairs after a hotel security worker pushed him. He said he was uninjured. Another was thrown to the ground in the hotel lobby and two reporters from The Associated Press were also forcibly removed from the hotel lobby.
     
    Later in Trump's speech, about nine other protesters from various advocacy groups stood up to denounce his recent comments to temporarily bar Muslims from entering the U.S., protesters said.
     
    "I'm really frightened by that kind of rhetoric," said Martha Acklesberg, 69, a member of the group Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, who along with Judith Plaskow, 68, paid to hear Trump speech and then disrupted it in protest.
     
    Trump, said Acklesberg, briefly stopped his speech during their protests and quipped, "when you're the front runner you get a lot of attention."
     
     
    The event, sponsored by the Commonwealth Club, a Pennsylvania Republican group, was closed to the press.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberal Plan To Hike Taxes On Top One Per Cent May Lead To Revenue Hole: Study

    Liberal Plan To Hike Taxes On Top One Per Cent May Lead To Revenue Hole: Study
    TORONTO — The Liberal government's plan to switch some of the tax burden from middle-income earners to the top one per cent will likely lead to multibillion-dollar annual revenue shortfalls for Ottawa and the provinces, according to the C.D. Howe Institute.

    Liberal Plan To Hike Taxes On Top One Per Cent May Lead To Revenue Hole: Study

    Liberals Announce Advisory Board To Quickly Choose New Independent Senators

    Liberals Announce Advisory Board To Quickly Choose New Independent Senators
    OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is setting up a five-member advisory board to fill the empty seats in the Senate with independent senators.

    Liberals Announce Advisory Board To Quickly Choose New Independent Senators

    Retired Couple In Orangeville, Ont., Opens Home To Syrian Refugees

    Retired Couple In Orangeville, Ont., Opens Home To Syrian Refugees
    The Logels' three children and five grandchildren, themselves frequent visitors to the family homestead located on four hectares outside town, are coming for Christmas, though the Logels recognize the holiday isn't one their guests celebrate.

    Retired Couple In Orangeville, Ont., Opens Home To Syrian Refugees

    Quebec Tells Doctors To Respect Court Decision Suspending Right-to-die Law

    Quebec Tells Doctors To Respect Court Decision Suspending Right-to-die Law
    MONTREAL — Doctors must respect a court ruling suspending Quebec's assisted-suicide law but the government won't go on a "witch hunt" against physicians who offer palliative sedation,  the province's health minister said Wednesday.

    Quebec Tells Doctors To Respect Court Decision Suspending Right-to-die Law

    Defence Lawyer Calls Travis Vader, Accused In Deaths Of Couple, A 'Victim'

    Brian Beresh's comments came Wednesday during his questioning of Sgt. Rick Jané, the head RCMP investigator in the deaths of Lyle and Marie McCann, who vanished on a trip to B.C. in 2010.

    Defence Lawyer Calls Travis Vader, Accused In Deaths Of Couple, A 'Victim'

    Toronto Teen With Cystic Fibrosis Gets Second Go At Life With First-of-its-kind Triple Transplant

    Toronto Teen With Cystic Fibrosis Gets Second Go At Life With First-of-its-kind Triple Transplant
    TORONTO — A Toronto teen with cystic fibrosis has been given a second chance at life with a first-of-its-kind triple-organ transplant.

    Toronto Teen With Cystic Fibrosis Gets Second Go At Life With First-of-its-kind Triple Transplant