Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Grants Another $500,000 To Montreal Anti-Radicalization Centre

IANS, 04 Mar, 2016 11:12 AM
  • Quebec Grants Another $500,000 To Montreal Anti-Radicalization Centre
MONTREAL — The Quebec government has granted another $500,000 to an anti-radicalization centre in Montreal.
 
The sum is in addition to another $1 million the province gave the centre, as well as $1 million it will receive from the City of Montreal between last year and 2017.
 
Public Security Minister Martin Coiteux made the announcement Thursday alongside Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre and Herman Deparice-Okomba, head of the facility.
 
Coderre, who recently spoke to a United Nations group about migrants, said the centre was the focus of much admiration when he was in New York City.
 
It has received 647 calls since opening a year ago. Nine of those were referred to police, while 147 required "direct intervention" because the people involved were just getting started in the radicalization process, said Deparice-Okomba.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey Youth Soccer Coach Kuldip Mahal Pleads Guilty To Seeking Sex With 12-Year-Old Girl In Seattle

Surrey Youth Soccer Coach Kuldip Mahal Pleads Guilty To Seeking Sex With 12-Year-Old Girl In Seattle
Mahal sent multiple sexually explicit photos and messages to the agent and asked if could she send him photos, too, even after the agent claimed she was 12.

Surrey Youth Soccer Coach Kuldip Mahal Pleads Guilty To Seeking Sex With 12-Year-Old Girl In Seattle

What Are They Thinking? Teenagers, Naked Photos And Cyberbullying

Several new Atlantic Canada cyberbullying cases have raised fresh questions about what teens have learned from Rehtaeh Parsons' death and similar tragedies.

What Are They Thinking? Teenagers, Naked Photos And Cyberbullying

Custom-Fit Therapy In B.C. Targets Advanced, Hard-to-treat Cancers

Custom-Fit Therapy In B.C. Targets Advanced, Hard-to-treat Cancers
The B.C. government is investing $3 million in advanced genome sequencing research to customize treatment for thousands of new patients suffering from advanced cancer.

Custom-Fit Therapy In B.C. Targets Advanced, Hard-to-treat Cancers

Nipigon Bridge Delays Slow $100 Million Of Goods Shipped Daily

Nipigon Bridge Delays Slow $100 Million Of Goods Shipped Daily
About 1,300 trucks cross the Nipigon River Bridge, in Nipigon, Ont., every day, according to the Ontario Ministry of Transportation's 2012 commercial vehicle survey — amounting to about $100 million in cargo daily.

Nipigon Bridge Delays Slow $100 Million Of Goods Shipped Daily

B.C. Workers, Families Seek Class Action Suit Over Deadly Sawmill Explosions

B.C. Workers, Families Seek Class Action Suit Over Deadly Sawmill Explosions
The separate blasts in 2012 killed four workers and injured 42 people at Babine Forest Products in Burns Lake and Lakeland Mills in Prince George.

B.C. Workers, Families Seek Class Action Suit Over Deadly Sawmill Explosions

.joint Committee On Doctor-assisted Suicide Dying Sets First Meeting For Monday

.joint Committee On Doctor-assisted Suicide Dying Sets First Meeting For Monday
The joint parliamentary committee that's examining the divisive issue of doctor-assisted death has scheduled its first meeting for next Monday.

.joint Committee On Doctor-assisted Suicide Dying Sets First Meeting For Monday