Return of Yum Yum chips logo triggers outrage
It is not new and it has been on the shelves of the grocery stores in Quebec and Ontario for decades.
It is not new and it has been on the shelves of the grocery stores in Quebec and Ontario for decades.
Leaving home for a better education is not uncommon.
What is uncommon is when kids as young as thirteen have to do it.
It is devious and unforgiving.
Also it is relatively rare in Canada affecting only one in seven- thousand people.
A Mohawk man in the Quebec Community of Kanesatake received an unusual call the other day.
The Quebec First Nations youth forum was in full swing last week.
Quebec’s provincial police force is investigating a video which appears to show two of its officers beating an Innu man.
The Mohawk Council of Kanesatake is facing a $31,000 bill for just six days for legal work battling its own grand chief and the board of the community’s health centre, according to an invoice submitted to the band council by the Delegatus law firm, based in Montreal.
Aboriginal Affairs is refusing to recognize the results of a June 15 referendum vote in Kanesatake which turfed four councillors from office.
They say an image is worth a thousand of words and this saying particularly applies to what is happening in Montreal this week.