Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Road Show Offers PM No Respite From Questions About Aga Khan Vacation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2017 01:08 PM
    PETERBOROUGH, Ont. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's grassroots town-hall tour is offering no respite from questions about his family vacation on a secluded private island belonging to the Aga Khan.
     
    Trudeau continues to defend his use of a private helicopter belonging to the wealthy spiritual leader, even though the federal Conflict of Interest Act expressly forbids such perks.
     
     He says Canadians expect to have confidence in their government, which is part of the conversation he'll be having with the federal ethics commissioner with regards to what he calls a "personal family vacation."
     
    The Aga Khan, however, appeared furthest from the minds of the ordinary Canadians who packed a hall in Peterborough, Ont., to give the prime minister a piece of their minds.
     
    Soaring hydro rates in Ontario, the impact of carbon taxes. pipeline projects and the imminent presidency of Donald Trump were among the most popular lines of questioning.
     
    Trudeau began his morning with soldiers in Quinte West and will stop in Toronto before another town hall tonight in London, Ont.
     
     
    But he's been under pressure all week about the hospitality he and his family enjoyed from the Aga Khan, a longtime family friend who also happens to be the spiritual leader of the world’s 15 million Ismaili Muslims.
     
    The Trudeau entourage, which included a Liberal MP and the party's president, travelled on a private helicopter once in Nassau because it was the only way to get to their ultimate destination, a private Bahamian island.
     
    Both the Conflict of Interest Act and Trudeau's own ethics guidelines bar the use of sponsored travel in private aircraft, allowing only for exceptional circumstances related to the job of prime minister and only with the prior approval of the ethics commissioner.
     
    Trudeau has said he will discuss the matter with conflict of interest and ethics commissioner Mary Dawson "and answer any questions she may have."
     
     On Wednesday, Conservative MP Blaine Calkins asked Dawson to investigate Trudeau's trip, a request that came a day after Tory leadership contender Andrew Scheer made a similar request.
     
    Both complaints question whether it is OK for the prime minister to accept the hospitality of someone whose foundation receives funds from the Canadian government.
     
     
     The Aga Khan Foundation has been the beneficiary of tens of millions of dollars in government contributions to international development projects.
     
    The Aga Khan himself, while not a registered lobbyist, is a noted philanthropist and the hereditary spiritual leader of the world's approximately 15 million Ismaili Muslims.
     
    In 2009, then-prime minister Stephen Harper made him an honorary citizen of Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Lab Researcher Potentially Exposed To Ebola Virus Cleared After Isolation

    Winnipeg Lab Researcher Potentially Exposed To Ebola Virus Cleared After Isolation
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg lab researcher who was potentially exposed to the Ebola virus has been cleared to return to work.

    Winnipeg Lab Researcher Potentially Exposed To Ebola Virus Cleared After Isolation

    Canada Asks U.S. Court To Toss Case Alleging It Wrongly Named Woman A Terrorist

    Canada Asks U.S. Court To Toss Case Alleging It Wrongly Named Woman A Terrorist
    The Canadian government wants a United States court to throw out a lawsuit that accuses it of ruining the life and multimillion-dollar business of a British Columbia woman after it wrongly branded her a terrorist.

    Canada Asks U.S. Court To Toss Case Alleging It Wrongly Named Woman A Terrorist

    B.C. Enacts Ministerial Order To Create Overdose Prevention Sites

    Terry Lake says the order gives provincial emergency health services and regional health authorities the ability to provide overdose prevention treatment as necessary on an emergency basis.

    B.C. Enacts Ministerial Order To Create Overdose Prevention Sites

    Delta Man, 53, Dead After Bar Fight In South Delta

    Delta Man, 53, Dead After Bar Fight In South Delta
    On December 11, 2016 at approximately 0130 hrs., Delta Police responded to a report of a fight at the rear of Rose and Crown Pub  in the 1200 blk 56th Street in South Delta.

    Delta Man, 53, Dead After Bar Fight In South Delta

    Cheers! 'Slightly Intoxicated' Chilliwack Birthday Boy Given $288 Fine For Dangerous SkyTrain Ride

    Cheers! 'Slightly Intoxicated' Chilliwack Birthday Boy Given $288 Fine For Dangerous SkyTrain Ride
    Transit Police in Metro Vancouver say a young man's "recklessness" on his 20th birthday led to a gift of fines totalling nearly $300.

    Cheers! 'Slightly Intoxicated' Chilliwack Birthday Boy Given $288 Fine For Dangerous SkyTrain Ride

    Nova Scotia Grandmother Hosts Christmas Dinner For Those Alone During The Holidays

    BLOCKHOUSE, N.S. — A grandmother in Nova Scotia has invited nine strangers to her dinner table this Christmas for a festive get together for those who can't spend the holidays with their families.

    Nova Scotia Grandmother Hosts Christmas Dinner For Those Alone During The Holidays