Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

White House: Obama awaiting chance to speak with Harper about Ottawa shooting

The Canadian Press , 22 Oct, 2014 12:27 PM
  • White House: Obama awaiting chance to speak with Harper about Ottawa shooting
WASHINGTON - U.S. President Barack Obama has been briefed on the shooting in Ottawa and is awaiting a chance to discuss it with Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
 
A spokesman for the president began today's daily White House briefing with a reference to events in Canada, which he called a valued friend and partner.
 
Josh Earnest said U.S. government officials have been in close touch with their Canadian counterparts.
 
He says they're trying to arrange a phone call between the president and the prime minister, at Harper's earliest availability.
 
The North American Aerospace Defence Command says it's taken steps so that it could respond, should there be any incidents involving aviation.
 
Down the street from the White House, on Pennsylvania Avenue, the Canadian Embassy says it's not been placed in lockdown, as suggested in some news reports.
 
A spokeswoman for the embassy says that, following news of the shooting, staff there simply locked the embassy's front door.
 
The shooting around Parliament has become the top news story in numerous countries.
 
All the main American news networks are offering live coverage; it's also the lead item on the best-known newspapers in a number of countries including the U.S., the UK, Mexico, France and Italy.
 
Even in Turkey — which borders an active war zone where an international coalition is fighting Islamist rebels — the Canadian events are now a top news item.
 
In CNN's coverage, a recurring question that a host has kept asking guests is: How did a gunman manage to walk into Canada's Parliament?
 
One U.S. law-enforcement analyst says this incident will prompt the same kind of scrutiny that occurred when a knife-wielding man recently jumped the fence to enter the White House.

MORE National ARTICLES

Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

PM Harper Cancels Malala Citizenship Ceremony In Light Of Ottawa Shooting

PM Harper Cancels Malala Citizenship Ceremony In Light Of Ottawa Shooting
TORONTO - Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office says two scheduled events today in Toronto with Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai have been cancelled.

PM Harper Cancels Malala Citizenship Ceremony In Light Of Ottawa Shooting

NHL postpones Senators vs. Maple Leafs in wake of Ottawa shootings

NHL postpones Senators vs. Maple Leafs in wake of Ottawa shootings
OTTAWA - Tonight's NHL game between the Ottawa Senators and the Toronto Maple Leafs has been postponed following the shootings on Parliament Hill.

NHL postpones Senators vs. Maple Leafs in wake of Ottawa shootings

MPs Credit Sergeant-at-arms For Saving Lives In Parliament Hill Shootings

MPs Credit Sergeant-at-arms For Saving Lives In Parliament Hill Shootings
OTTAWA - The man who is reported to have shot an assailant on Parliament Hill today is a former police officer with a background in providing security services for dignitaries, including members of the Royal Family.

MPs Credit Sergeant-at-arms For Saving Lives In Parliament Hill Shootings

Petronas-led Pacific Northwest LNG consortium reviewing B.C. tax announcement

Petronas-led Pacific Northwest LNG consortium reviewing B.C. tax announcement
CALGARY - A consortium led by Malaysian energy giant Petronas says it's reviewing British Columbia's newly announced tax on its liquefied natural gas.

Petronas-led Pacific Northwest LNG consortium reviewing B.C. tax announcement

B.C. Government Sets 3.5 Per Cent Income Tax On LNG, Half Of What Was Planned

B.C. Government Sets 3.5 Per Cent Income Tax On LNG, Half Of What Was Planned
VICTORIA - The British Columbia government climbed down from its proposed goal of a seven per cent income tax on liquefied natural gas, earning praise from the industry, but forcing the finance minister to admit an election promise to eliminate the debt will be up to 15 years behind schedule.

B.C. Government Sets 3.5 Per Cent Income Tax On LNG, Half Of What Was Planned

PrevNext