Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sen. Lynn Beyak Apologizes For Racist Letters, Says She'll Obey Ethics Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2020 09:45 PM

    OTTAWA - Sen. Lynn Beyak sought to stave off suspension from the upper chamber today, apologizing unreservedly for posting offensive letters online and pledging to do more to show her contrition.

     

    Beyak says after careful consideration, she now regrets both posting the letters — which included suggestions that Indigenous cultures are inferior — and later fighting demands she take them down.

     

    She was temporarily suspended from the Senate over the issue, but that automatically ended when Parliament was dissolved for the 2019 federal election.

     

    Last month, the Senate's ethics committee concluded the suspension should be reinstated, saying Beyak hadn't sufficiently apologized nor participated in education programs on racism towards Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

     

    Beyak rose in the Senate today to address the report, saying she will comply with the committee's recommendations.

     

    She says she has learned from the experience, and is sorry, ready to listen and engage meaningfully in the process.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadians From Coronavirus-Stricken Cruise Ship In Japan To Fly Home Thursday: Champagne

    Canadians who have spent weeks on a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship in Japan will board a government-chartered plane to take them home Thursday evening, the foreign affairs minister says.

    Canadians From Coronavirus-Stricken Cruise Ship In Japan To Fly Home Thursday: Champagne

    Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies

    Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies
    TORONTO - An Ontario court has extended an order suspending legal proceedings against three major tobacco companies as they try to negotiate a settlement with their creditors.    

    Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies

    CP Rail Conductor Fired For Social Media Posts Awarded Money, But Not Reinstatement

    CALGARY - An arbitrator says a former Canadian Pacific train conductor who was fired over social media posts is entitled to monetary compensation, but not to getting her job back at the railroad.

    CP Rail Conductor Fired For Social Media Posts Awarded Money, But Not Reinstatement

    Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades

    Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades
    Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says the RCMP in British Columbia has offered to move its officers to a town away from the area where traditional leaders of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation have been opposing a pipeline project on their territory.

    Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades

    Top Court Decision Allows Former N.S. Crown Lawyer To Sue Premier For Libel

    Top Court Decision Allows Former N.S. Crown Lawyer To Sue Premier For Libel
    HALIFAX - The Supreme Court of Canada has opened the door to a libel lawsuit against Nova Scotia's premier by a former government lawyer who says the premier damaged his reputation by denouncing his courtroom arguments.    

    Top Court Decision Allows Former N.S. Crown Lawyer To Sue Premier For Libel

    Ex-Toronto Bar Owner Gets Bail Pending Appeal Of Gang Sexual Assault Conviction

    TORONTO - A former downtown bar owner has been granted bail pending his appeal of a conviction for the gang sexual assault of a barely conscious woman.    

    Ex-Toronto Bar Owner Gets Bail Pending Appeal Of Gang Sexual Assault Conviction