
2025 World Athletics Continental Tour: Nairobi
Watch Canadian Olympic gold medalists Camryn Rogers and Ethan Katzberg compete in the women's and men's hammer throw, respectively during the latest stop of the 2025 World Athletics Continental Tour in Nairobi, Kenya.
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Nova Scotia man accused of sexually abusing Lloydminster youth
An undated photo of Travis James Birt, who was arrested and charged with sexual offences against a Lloydminster, Alta., youth in May 2025. (Source: Alberta RCMP) A Nova Scotia man has been accused of sexually abusing a minor in Lloydminster, Alta. Travis James Birt, 29, is originally from Nova Scotia but was living in Ontario when police say he began a Snapchat exchange of sexually explicit pictures with the Lloydminster youth. He then went to Lloydminster to commit other offences, according to Lloydminster RCMP, to whom the crimes were reported on March 18. As Birt moved back to Nova Scotia while police were investigating, Nova Scotia police executed the arrest warrant on May 27. Birt was charged with sexual assault, sexual interference, child luring, possession of child pornography and making sexually explicit material available to a child. He is scheduled to appear in court in Lloydminster on Monday. Mounties said there could be other victims.


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What the Trump travel ban means for the 2026 World Cup and 2028 Olympic Games
FIFA President Gianni Infantino addresses the FIFA 75th Congress at the Conmebol Convention Center in Luque, Paraguay, Thursday, May 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Fernando Calistro) GENEVA — U.S. President Donald Trump often says the 2026 World Cup and 2028 Los Angeles Olympics are among the events he is most excited about in his second term. Yet there is significant uncertainty regarding visa policies for foreign visitors planning trips to the U.S. for the two biggest events in sports. Trump's latest travel ban on citizens from 12 countries added new questions about the impact on the World Cup and the Summer Olympics, which depend on hosts opening their doors to the world. Here's a look at the potential effects of the travel ban on those events. What is the travel ban policy? When Sunday ticks over to Monday, citizens of 12 countries should be banned from entering the U.S. They are Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. Tighter restrictions will apply to visitors from seven more: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. Trump said some countries had 'deficient' screening and vetting processes or have historically refused to take back their own citizens. How does it affect the World Cup and Olympics? Iran, a soccer power in Asia, is the only targeted country to qualify so far for the World Cup being co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico in one year's time. Cuba, Haiti and Sudan are in contention. Sierra Leone might stay involved through multiple playoff games. Burundi, Equatorial Guinea and Libya have very outside shots. But all should be able to send teams to the World Cup if they qualify because the new policy makes exceptions for 'any athlete or member of an athletic team, including coaches, persons performing a necessary support role, and immediate relatives, traveling for the World Cup, Olympics, or other major sporting event as determined by the secretary of state.' About 200 countries could send athletes to the Summer Games, including those targeted by the latest travel restrictions. The exceptions should apply to them as well if the ban is still in place in its current form. What about fans? The travel ban doesn't mention any exceptions for fans from the targeted countries wishing to travel to the U.S. for the World Cup or Olympics. Even before the travel ban, fans of the Iran soccer team living in that country already had issues about getting a visa for a World Cup visit. Still, national team supporters often profile differently to fans of club teams who go abroad for games in international competitions like the UEFA Champions League. For many countries, fans traveling to the World Cup — an expensive travel plan with hiked flight and hotel prices — are often from the diaspora, wealthier, and could have different passport options. A World Cup visitor is broadly higher-spending and lower-risk for host nation security planning. Visitors to an Olympics are often even higher-end clients, though tourism for a Summer Games is significantly less than at a World Cup, with fewer still from most of the 19 countries now targeted. How is the U.S. working with FIFA, Olympic officials? FIFA President Gianni Infantino has publicly built close ties since 2018 to Trump — too close according to some. He has cited the need to ensure FIFA's smooth operations at a tournament that will earn a big majority of the soccer body's expected $13 billion revenue from 2023-26. Infantino sat next to Trump at the White House task force meeting on May 6 which prominently included Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. FIFA's top delegate on the task force is Infantino ally Carlos Cordeiro, a former Goldman Sachs partner whose two-year run as U.S. Soccer Federation president ended in controversy in 2020. Any visa and security issues FIFA faces — including at the 32-team Club World Cup that kicks off next week in Miami — can help LA Olympics organizers finesse their plans. 'I don't anticipate any, any problems from any countries to come and participate,' LA Games chairman Casey Wasserman told International Olympic Committee officials in March. He revealed then, at an IOC meeting in Greece, two discreet meetings with Trump and noted the State Department has a 'fully staffed desk' to help prepare for short-notice visa processing in the summer of 2028 — albeit with a focus on teams rather than fans. 'Irrespective of politics today,' Wasserman said in March, 'America will be open and accepting to all 209 countries for the Olympics.' FIFA and the IOC didn't immediately respond to requests for comment about the new Trump travel ban. What have other host nations done? The 2018 World Cup host Russia let fans enter the country with a game ticket doubling as their visa. So did Qatar four years later. Both governments, however, also performed background checks on all visitors coming to the month-long soccer tournaments. Governments have refused entry to unwelcome visitors. For the 2012 London Olympics, Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko — who is still its authoritarian leader today — was denied a visa despite also leading its national Olympic body. The IOC also suspended him from the Tokyo Olympics held in 2021. ___ Graham Dunbar, The Associated Press


CTV News
29 minutes ago
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Banwell Road listed as worst road in the southwestern region: CAA
The intersection of Banwell Road and Mulberry Drive in Windsor, Ont. is seen on August 8, 2022. (Bob Bellacicco/CTV News Windsor) The 2025 CAA Worst Roads Campaign has revealed Ontario's worst roads, with Banwell Road in Windsor taking the top spot in the southwest region. The Residential and Civil Construction Alliance of Ontario (RCCAO) supported the Canadian Automobile Association (CAA) as a technical partner for the campaign. South West: Top 5 Includes Windsor, Chatham-Kent Municipality, Essex County and Lambton County. Banwell Road, Windsor Blackwell Sideroad, Sarnia Michigan Avenue, Sarnia Riverside Drive, Windsor Vidal Street South, Sarnia None of the region's roads made the Top 10 list in the province. Top 10 List Ontario Aberdeen Avenue, Hamilton Barton Street East, Hamilton County Road 49, Prince Edward County Eglinton Avenue West, Toronto Hurontario Street, Mississauga Leveque Road, South Frontenac Highway 50, Caledon (Bolton) Sider Road, Fort Erie Frederick G. Gardiner Expressway, Toronto Sheppard Avenue West, Toronto 'Drivers across Ontario are all too aware of poor road upkeep and the negative impact it has on everyone's ability to get around their community,' said Nadia Todorova, executive director of RCCAO. In addition to raising awareness of roads most needing maintenance work, CAA public opinion research conducted online in January 2025, also revealed that 85 per cent of Ontarians agreed that short-term inconvenience due to road maintenance work is worth it to realize the long-term improvements needed. The complete results of this year's CAA Worst Roads Campaign can be viewed at