Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto's Union Station Was Terror Target: Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2018 02:35 PM
    REGINA — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says Toronto's downtown Union Station was the target of a foiled terrorism plot in 2016.
     
    Goodale made the revelation in Regina at an event where new RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki was announced.
     
    Goodale paid tribute to heroic RCMP officers who helped organize an evacuation of Fort McMurray, Alta., during the 2016 wildfires and who caught a school shooter that same year in La Loche, Sask.
     
    Goodale also asked those in attendance to think of the officers who stopped suspected terrorist Aaron Driver "before he could attack Union Station in Toronto."
     
    It was the first time Union Station was confirmed as Driver's target.
     
    Driver died in 2016 during an altercation with RCMP officers in Strathroy, Ont., after they were tipped to a martyrdom video made by someone planning an attack using homemade explosive devices.
     
    At the time, RCMP said the attack was imminent, targeting an urban centre during rush hour.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal
    Canadas first Cabinet minister of Indian origin, Herb Dhaliwal, says the focus of the on-going visit of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to India has been derailed by the Khalistan issue.

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man has pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of his mother.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A judge has ruled a notorious sexist slur aimed at a reporter in St. John's, N.L., was vulgar and offensive but wasn't a crime under the circumstances.

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance

    Canada 150 Saw Record Number Of International Tourists: Statistics Canada

    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says international tourism set an annual record during Canada 150 last year, with 20.8 million trips of one or more nights.

    Canada 150 Saw Record Number Of International Tourists: Statistics Canada

    Commercial Airplane Incidents, Accidents Jump In 2017, Safety Board Says

    A national pilots association is raising alarm bells over new accident numbers showing a year-over-year jump in incidents involving commercial airliners.

    Commercial Airplane Incidents, Accidents Jump In 2017, Safety Board Says

    Case Of Man Accused In Murder Of Halifax Yoga Instructor Back In Court

    Case Of Man Accused In Murder Of Halifax Yoga Instructor Back In Court
    The case of a Halifax man charged with the second-degree murder of a Montreal-born yoga instructor was back in court Tuesday.

    Case Of Man Accused In Murder Of Halifax Yoga Instructor Back In Court