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Marines are seen standing guard outside a federal building in Los Angeles

Marines are seen standing guard outside a federal building in Los Angeles

Toronto Star14 hours ago

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King Charles III marks Air India tragedy at Trooping the Colour
King Charles III marks Air India tragedy at Trooping the Colour

CTV News

time34 minutes ago

  • CTV News

King Charles III marks Air India tragedy at Trooping the Colour

King Charles III attends the Trooping The Colour parade, in London, June 17, 2023. Trooping the Colour is the King's Birthday Parade and one of the nation's most impressive and iconic annual events attended by almost every member of the Royal Family.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File) LONDON — King Charles III and other members of the royal family in uniform wore black armbands and observed a moment of silence during his annual birthday parade Saturday as the monarch commemorated those who died in this week's Air India plane crash. Charles requested the symbolic moves 'as a mark of respect for the lives lost, the families in mourning and all the communities affected by this awful tragedy,' Buckingham Palace said. An Air India flight from the northwestern city of Ahmedabad to London crashed shortly after takeoff on Thursday, killing 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground. The plane was carrying 169 Indians, 53 Britons, seven Portuguese and one Canadian. One man survived. In addition to being Britain's head of state, Charles is the head of the Commonwealth, an organization of independent states that includes India and Canada. The monarch's annual birthday parade, known as Trooping the Colour, is a historic ceremony filled with pageantry and military bands in which the king reviews his troops on Horse Guards Parade adjacent to St. James' Park in central London. The military ceremony dates back to a time when flags of the battalion, known as colours, were 'trooped,'' or shown, to soldiers in the ranks so they could recognize them. All members of the royal family in uniform wore black armbands. The moment of silence occurred while the king was on the dais after reviewing the troops. Charles' mother, Queen Elizabeth II, held a similar moment of silence in 2017 when Trooping the Colour took place three days after a fire ripped through the Grenfell Tower apartment bloc in west London, killing 72 people. Danica Kirka, The Associated Press

Rare spirit bear cub living near B.C. highway stirs excitement, concern, as word of its existence spreads
Rare spirit bear cub living near B.C. highway stirs excitement, concern, as word of its existence spreads

CBC

time36 minutes ago

  • CBC

Rare spirit bear cub living near B.C. highway stirs excitement, concern, as word of its existence spreads

Shelley Lindaas has long dreamed of seeing a Kermode bear cub in person. An amateur wildlife photographer based in Terrace, near B.C.'s north coast, she spends much of her free time hiking the backwoods and camped out with camera equipment in one spot for hours at a time, waiting to catch a glimpse. But her goal of seeing the rare, light-furred variant of a black bear came almost accidentally this year as she was driving along the highway and spotted the cub, with its family, just off the road. "They were sitting right on the highway," Lindaas said. "I get unusually excited when I see any wildlife ... but I was off the charts excited." Kermodes, also known as spirit bears, are a subset of black bears that live in B.C.'s North and Central Coast regions. Their unique colouring occurs due to a recessive gene passed on through black bears. The official animal of British Columbia, a recent survey estimated their population to be fewer than 500, making them one of the rarest bear sightings in the world. For generations, First Nations limited information about the bears out of concern they would be targeted for hunting and trapping, but in more recent years some groups have taken to highlighting their existence as a way of raising wider awareness about the need for ecosystem management on B.C.'s coast. And that debate, about how best to handle it when an animal many dream of seeing is discovered, is playing out in miniature in Terrace where many are celebrating sightings of the cub while others worry posting photos and video of it will put the animal at risk by drawing too many people to the region. Concerns over habituation Lindaas, who grew up in the northwest and whose father was a hunter and trapper, didn't see her first Kermode until 2023, after years of exploration in the region. Since then, she's managed to track a few bears and document them through her Instagram account and a calendar she sells locally. But, she said, she doesn't generally share her photos until after she's confident the bears have moved away from the area she spotted them in. "I always wait until August before I post pictures, and I get bombarded by other wildlife photographers about where I took them," she said. "If I have friends in the area, I'll tell them, but I try to keep it quiet." She made an exception in posting the photo of the cub because there had already been so many other sightings and posts on social media that it seemed "everyone knew." Indeed, a search through local Facebook groups reveals multiple photos and videos of the bear, along with its mother and two black bear siblings. Along with those posts are comments from locals worried about too many people getting too close to the bear, a concern that has been amplified by the conservation officer service, which put out a message urging people to give the bears space and not do anything — such as feeding — that might acclimatize them to human contact. "It's natural for people to be curious if they see a white bear on the side of the road, I understand," said Sgt. Micah Kneller of the Terrace conservation officer service. "We just encourage people that if they see the bear, or bears in general ... they move on fairly quickly." He said some of the most concerning behaviour would be rolling down windows to make noise to try and get the bear's attention, as well as anything that might lure them toward the highway or other people. He said while there'd been no reports of people feeding the bears yet, he worries it will become a greater risk as more tourists less familiar with wildlife behaviour came to the region over the summer. "Inevitably some traveler ends up throwing food toward some of these bears so they can get a better picture of them," he said. Even without the food, he said, frequent vehicle stops would get the bears used to traffic, leading to a greater likelihood to them getting hit or, in a "worst-case scenario," crawling onto vehicles, forcing them to be killed by the conservation officer service. Hundreds of black bears killed annually Provincial statistics show hundreds of black bears are destroyed each year as they are deemed a risk to humans, with more than 8,000 over a 14-year span from 2011 to 2024. Statistics are not kept specifically for Kermodes, but hunting the rare white bears is illegal, with penalties of up to $100,000 and/or one year in prison. Lindaas said it is important for members of the public to understand that although the photos she takes look like she's up close and personal with the bears, she uses specialized equipment that lets her zoom in and enhance images from great distances. "It's a heavy, heavy edit," she said. "It's really frustrating when you're giving them a respectful distance but then people pull up, like, two feet from it with their iPhone and they're leaning out the window, stressing the animal out." She encouraged people to get familiar with animal behaviour and follow the advice of wildlife officials to stay far away when encountering any wild animals.

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