Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Put politics aside and act on online harms, mother of sextortion victim tells MPs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Dec, 2024 02:18 PM
  • Put politics aside and act on online harms, mother of sextortion victim tells MPs

Parents of children who died because of online sexual extortion are urging MPs to act on online harms legislation.

The bill and other legislation have been blocked from moving forward for months due to a parliamentary privilege debate raging between the Liberals and Conservatives.

Justice Minister Arif Virani split the bill into two parts this week heeding calls from critics to separate the more controversial hate speech provisions from the child exploitation components.

But the bill still can't move forward until the privilege filibuster is over.

Barbie Lavers, whose teenage son died by suicide after being extorted online over intimate images, told House of Commons committee today that she supports the act and asked politicians to come to a temporary alliance and stop using children as political pawns to show “one party is more correct than the other.”

Carole Todd, whose daughter Amanda died by suicide due to online sextortion, told MPs it is hurtful to watch political arguments after waiting 12 years for legislation.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

One dead in float plane crash in remote area of B.C.'s central coast

One dead in float plane crash in remote area of B.C.'s central coast
Police say one person is dead after a float plane crashed in a remote area along British Columbia's central coast. Mounties in the Vancouver Island community of Port Hardy, southwest of the crash site, say the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria notified the detachment of the crash on Wednesday night. 

One dead in float plane crash in remote area of B.C.'s central coast

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation
Meet President and CEO of Surrey Hospitals Foundation, Nicole Robson. Robson shares more on her role, vision for the foundation, and pushing the mandate of diversity forward.

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation

DoorDash increasing its fees

DoorDash increasing its fees
DoorDash says it's increasing fees in the province in response to provincial regulations that require it to pay its workers more. Starting this month, a new fee of 99 cents for restaurant delivery orders and up to two-dollars-99 cents for all other delivery orders will be added.

DoorDash increasing its fees

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly
British Columbia NDP Leader David Eby is set to roll out the party's complete election platform as Conservative Leader John Rustad says his government would end the provincial insurance corporation's monopoly on basic vehicle insurance. Eby has a news conference scheduled in Surrey as the province nears the midway point of the election campaign ahead of the Oct. 19 election day.

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly

Expected La Nina weather pattern could ease ongoing drought conditions in B.C.

Expected La Nina weather pattern could ease ongoing drought conditions in B.C.
British Columbia's nagging drought could be eased by an incoming weather pattern that may bring a colder and wetter than normal winter, says Sean Fleming, an adjunct UBC professor of atmospheric sciences. The prolonged drought has caused wildfires to burn year-round, forced some communities to ration water supplies and dangerously lowered water levels in rivers, impacting salmon runs. 

Expected La Nina weather pattern could ease ongoing drought conditions in B.C.

B.C. party leaders tussle over affordability in radio debate before Oct. 19 vote

B.C. party leaders tussle over affordability in radio debate before Oct. 19 vote
British Columbia's party leaders have jousted over affordability in their first and only radio debate of the province's election campaign. The debate brings together NDP Leader David Eby, B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad and Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau for the first time on the campaign trail ahead of the Oct. 19 vote.

B.C. party leaders tussle over affordability in radio debate before Oct. 19 vote