Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Watch: Nova Scotia Launches 'Birds And Bees' Videos Addressing Sexual Violence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2016 12:57 PM
    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia has launched a video campaign on sexual violence that features animated birds and bees discussing consent and other issues at a house party.
     
    The campaign — entitled Sexual Violence with the Birds and the Bees — consists of short 30- to 60-second videos aimed at youth aged 14 to 20.
     
    Community Services Minister Joanne Bernard says the province produced the videos in consultation with young people in order to talk about sexual violence in a way that "makes sense to them."
     
     
    The videos are available on YouTube, Instagram and Facebook, and will also be shown in cinemas across the province.
     
    There is also a campaign website at birdsandthebees.ca that includes information on where to get help and how to support friends who have been subjected to sexual violence.
     
    Bernard says the campaign, which is part of the government's $6 million sexual violence strategy, will cost $300,000.
     
     
    Canadian photographer, 74, is 'robbed and strangled to death by an airport bus driver in Mexico who dumped her body at the roadside'
     
    Barbara McClatchie Andrews 'robbed and strangled to death by bus driver in Mexico'

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Clinic Operator, Proponent Of Privatized Health Care Heads To Court Next Week

    Clinic Operator, Proponent Of Privatized Health Care Heads To Court Next Week
    "This is about making medicare better," said Day.

    Clinic Operator, Proponent Of Privatized Health Care Heads To Court Next Week

    Six Polish Citizens Charged With Improper Entry Into The U.S. From Canada

    Six Polish Citizens Charged With Improper Entry Into The U.S. From Canada
    SARNIA, Ont. — Authorities in Canada and the United States say they have thwarted a human smuggling attempt near Sarnia, Ont.

    Six Polish Citizens Charged With Improper Entry Into The U.S. From Canada

    Head Of Missing Women's Inquiry Says 'Concrete' Recommendations Needed

    VANCOUVER — When Marion Buller looks back on the Saskatchewan First Nation territory where she spent her summers growing up, some of her childhood friends are no longer there.

    Head Of Missing Women's Inquiry Says 'Concrete' Recommendations Needed

    35 Hells Angels Members In Quebec Have Their Prison Sentences Reduced

    35 Hells Angels Members In Quebec Have Their Prison Sentences Reduced
    A Quebec Superior Court justice ordered a stay of proceedings last October in the case of five other accused because the Crown had failed to communicate certain evidence it possessed.

    35 Hells Angels Members In Quebec Have Their Prison Sentences Reduced

    Teachers, Kids Head Back To School To Teach Each Other, Learn Together

    Teachers, Kids Head Back To School To Teach Each Other, Learn Together
    TORONTO — After spending 25 years in the classroom, Ontario schoolteacher Tammy Doyle no longer considers herself an educator. She calls herself a "learning partner."

    Teachers, Kids Head Back To School To Teach Each Other, Learn Together

    A Tale Of Two Neighbours: In U.S. Election, Only The Southern One Gets The Heat

    A Tale Of Two Neighbours: In U.S. Election, Only The Southern One Gets The Heat
    HOLTVILLE, Calif. — In this election year, in this place, in the rare event someone mentions Canada it's liable to be as a joke. John Hernandez offers an example of the genre.

    A Tale Of Two Neighbours: In U.S. Election, Only The Southern One Gets The Heat