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Posts Tagged ‘Prime Minister Stephen Harper’

Due to Iceland volcano eruption Obama to cancel Poland trip

According to the News Agencies , Obama called Poland’s acting president, Bronislaw Komorowski, to tell him he would be unable to attend because of the cloud of volcanic ash that is disrupting flights across Europe. US Ambassador to Poland Lee Feinstein will represent the United States instead.
Kaczynski and 95 others, including his wife and many [...]

PM leaves for US, Brazil

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Saturday left for a week-long visit to the US and Brazil to meet President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao and attend a summit on nuclear security.
The special aircraft carrying the prime minister and his delegation took off from the Palam air force station at 9.40 a.m.
In his departure statement [...]

Canadian Prime Minister begins visit with a call for more trade

Visiting Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Monday began his three-day visit to India with a pitch to strengthen bilateral economic relations between the two countries.
Addressing a huge audience including eminent business delegates and the media, Harper said that India, the South-Asian tiger, had awakened. Heaping praise on the economic might of the country, he [...]

Cat’s demise starts false rumors of Margaret Thatcher’s death

The death of a cat in Canada sparked embarrassing calls to London about former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher. During a dinner in Toronto for 1,700 luminaries, including Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, mobile phones throughout the room began to buzz with the news: “Lady

Passport row Canadian back home

By Lee Carter
BBC News, Toronto

Suaad Mohamud reaches for her 12-year-old son on arrival in Toronto

A Canadian woman, stranded in Kenya for three months because officials said she did not resemble her passport photo, has arrived home in Toronto.

Suaad Mohamud was prevented in May from returning from a two-week holiday.

Canadian consular officials accused her of being an imposter, voided her passport and asked Kenyan officials to prosecute her.

The results of a DNA test finally proved her identity, clearing the way for her return to Canada.

Family members and a throng of reporters were waiting for Suaad Hagi Mohamud as she arrived back in Canada.

The lawyer for the the 31-year-old Somalian-born Canadian woman said that she intended to sue the governments of Canada and Kenya for their alleged roles in her detention.

Ms Mohamud’s ordeal began in May when she tried to leave Kenya after visiting her mother there.

Kenyan officials said that her face did not match her passport photo.

Canadian consular staff in Nairobi maintained that she was not who she claimed to be, even when Ms Mohamud handed over several other forms of identification.

It was not until a DNA test confirmed her identity on Monday that Canadian officials prepared emergency travel documents so that she could return to Toronto.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has promised a review of the case.

But opposition politicians and other critics say Suaad Mohamad’s case raises serious questions about the willingness of Canadian officials to protect their citizens who get into difficulties abroad.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Three amigos’

Harper, Calderon and Obama in Guadalajara

By Stephen Gibbs
BBC News, Guadalajara

The term "tres amigos" was coined by former US President George W Bush to describe the first North American Leaders’ Summit in 2005, held that time near his ranch in Texas.

The idea was simple: three North Americans, leaders of almost half a billion people, take time out to chew the cud, and shoot the breeze over how they can work more closely together.

There was a feeling then that the two presidents and a prime minister did not get to see enough of each other, and that a format needed to be found to make sure that in the midst of global distractions, the neighbours were not forgotten.

Four years on, one thing has changed. Summit or no summit, the three participants seem to spend plenty of time together.

To such an extent, that when they incessantly insist on describing each other as "my good friend", you almost believe them.

In the few months since being elected, President Obama has had six meetings with Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and five with President Felipe Calderon.

Drugs war

But there is a reason for all the face time. This region has three acutely pressing cross-border problems, which no country can possibly solve alone.

An officer at a crime scene in Ciudad Juarez, northern Mexico, 18 Feb

The first is the Mexican drug war.

At least six immensely rich and powerful drug cartels are fighting each other and Mexican government forces to retain control of what is possibly the world’s most lucrative business: shipping cocaine and other recreational drugs to the United States.

If ever there was a transnational problem, this is it.

In its simplest form it operates as follows: drugs flow north through Mexico; money and weapons flow south.

As the border between the US and Mexico is better policed, the traffickers explore new markets and new smuggling routes on the east and west coasts of Canada.

Total unity

It is a dangerous, intractable issue, but one in which publicly, the three leaders want to express total unity.

And so they did.

As they stood at their podiums alongside a neo-classical former home for destitute orphans, all were united in their support for President Calderon’s controversial hard-line against drug trafficking.

"I heartily compliment President Calderon and his government for their determination," said President Obama.

"We need to expand trade, not restrict it"

US President Barack Obama

Prime Minister Harper pointed to the "great personal risk" the Mexican leader had assumed by taking on drug cartels.

Earlier in the day a plot to kill Mr Calderon had apparently been uncovered by the Mexican police.

But behind the scenes it is more complex.

Mexico is frustrated that still it has received little of the almost $1.4bn (£0.85bn) in aid from the United States to battle the problem that has been promised.

Canada is worried that Mexico’s problem is becoming its own. It has recently toughened its visa requirements for Mexicans visiting Canada.

The policy is designed to control bogus visa applications, and ensure better control over who is entering Canadian territory.

Another vexing issue is swine flu.

The H1N1 virus is an enemy which the leaders did seem more comfortable uniting against in practical terms.

All signed up to a declaration promising to share information at every level regarding the disease.

It is seen as an inevitability that it will return to North America with a vengeance this winter.

Trade disputes

But the issue that is most sensitive for all three leaders is their intricately linked economies. The United States is the main trading partner of Canada and Mexico.

Marisol Lopez wears a mask in Mexico City in May

Its economic contraction has caused direct harm to the economies of both its neighbours, but most acutely that of Mexico, which sends 80% of its exports to the US.

Mexican assembly plants are finding that the business which expanded rapidly in the duty-free climate following the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) can be switched off as quickly as it was switched on.

Auto exports are down almost 50% on last year. Cargo trade to the United States has also halved.

In the midst of this there are fears in Mexico City and Ottawa that protectionist voices in the US might be getting the upper hand.

Mexico says that a US ban on Mexican trucks operating inside the United States is inward-looking and counterproductive.

Canada has a similar position on the US decision to purchase from only American companies in its ongoing economic recovery programme.

President Obama attempted to be a voice of calm. "We need to expand trade, not restrict it," he said.

But no solution was offered for any of the individual trade disputes.

After deciding to skip lunch, the three amigos got into their respective planes, and left for their capitals. They vowed to see each other soon, at the G20 summit in Pittsburgh next month.

All know that the coming months will be difficult. And friendships will be tested.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Obama backs Mexico’s drugs war

US President Barack Obama waves as he boards a helicopter on his way to Mexico on 9 August 2009

Leaders of the US, Canada and Mexico are to meet for talks focusing on the economic crisis and rising drug crime.

The three men will meet late on Sunday and then hold talks all day Monday in the Mexican city of Guadalajara.

It will be President Barack Obama’s first attendance at the annual meeting of North American leaders.

It has been dubbed the meeting of three amigos, but difficult issues divide the participants, says BBC Mexico correspondent Stephen Gibbs.

Mexico is currently experiencing what looks set to be its deepest recession since the 1930s.

It is concerned that recent US moves, including a ban on Mexican truckers operating in the US, suggest protectionism and could worsen its economic situation, our correspondent says.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is expected to press Mr Obama to revise the Buy America policy on public works, which has hit Canadian exporters hard.

Mexico is also unhappy with Canada’s decision to require visas from Mexican visitors to the country.

The threat of organised crime is something which is more likely to unite the leaders, our correspondent adds.

Drug violence, an acute problem in Mexico, is showing some signs of spilling over the border into the southern US.

It also a growing problem in parts of Canada. Mexico will be pressing the US to free up more of its promised $1.4bn (£840,000m) in aid to combat drug trafficking.

The leaders are also planning to discuss swine flu during their two-day summit.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Shirin Neshat: A Cry for Help: An Open Letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper

Maziar is a jewel of an artist to any society. Let us protect our artists so they can live to go on to tell our stories.