
'Pride and patriotism': 73 new Canadians take oath of citizenship on Canada Day
Article content
'I think it's important, considering how Alberta politics is going and the wide expanse of politics that we're experiencing globally,' said the 32-year-old, who moved to Canada in 2015 from her native Pakistan. 'I think it's very important for us to carve our own space.
Article content
Article content
Malik, who works in fashion but previously worked in medicine while living in Pakistan, was one of dozens of Calgarians who celebrated obtaining their citizenship on Tuesday, at a Canada Day ceremony hosted by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada at the central library's amphitheatre.
Article content
In total, 73 Canadians from 24 countries took their oath of citizenship, pledging to protect and honour their new country's institutions.
Article content
The new citizens raised their right hands as they repeated the oath — first in English, then in French, to symbolize embracing Canada's two official languages.
Article content
'On this Canada Day, we celebrate not only our country's birthday, but also you — our newest citizens,' said honorary Lt.-Col. Carolyn Patton, who presided over the ceremony.
Article content
Article content
'Canada is stronger, Canada is richer and more vibrant because of the many cultures, new stories and experiences that bring each of you together. As you take this important step, know you're now a part of a national family built on respect and equality.'
Article content
The ceremony also included a bagpipe performance, opening remarks and a video presentation highlighting the country's Indigenous peoples and the importance of reconciliation. Adrian Wolfleg, a Siksika Nation elder, provided the opening remarks.
Article content
Other speakers included Alberta Senator Scott Tannas, Calgary-Buffalo MLA Joe Ceci, Calgary-Centre MP Greg McLean, Mayor Jyoti Gondek and Calgary Public Library executive Barb Gillard.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


National Observer
26 minutes ago
- National Observer
Montreal's move to biweekly trash pick up is a slow process
The garbage may be piling up and causing some disgruntlement on the sidewalks of a few Montreal streets, but municipal officials say it's all part of a plan to become a zero-waste city by the year 2030. And they say their plan is working. "People are making progress in their thinking, realizing that when they participate in the recycling collection, the organic waste collection, that there is not much waste left," Marie-Andrée Mauger said. As a member of the city's executive committee in charge of ecological transition in Mayor Valérie Plante 's Projet Montréal party, Mauger is the point person overseeing a switch that has reduced the frequency of garbage collection in some neighbourhoods to a biweekly pickup. Three boroughs —St-Laurent, Verdun and Mercier-Hochelaga-Maisonneuve — have started implementing the plan, which is also a part of Plante's pledge to "make Montreal the greenest city in North America." But residents in Mercier-Hochelaga-Maisonneuve are not thrilled with the stench. Jonathan Haiun, a spokesman for Ligue 33, a community group in eastern Montreal that advocates for quality of life issues, said spacing out the collection hasn't had the desired effect since it was brought in late last year. "The problem seems to be some people who just aren't composting or at least not doing it properly, and then a lot of the stuff that we do find in the garbage is just a mix of everything," Haiun said. "What we have been asking for since the beginning is that they go back to collecting garbage every week because we don't feel that that's actually an ecological measure." According to most recent survey results conducted for the city and obtained by Ensemble Montreal, the opposition party at city hall, some 54 per cent of residents polled consider switching to trash pickup every two weeks 'unacceptable.' Meanwhile, other major Canadian cities have had biweekly pickup for years: Toronto since 2008, Halifax in 1999 and Vancouver in 2013. In each case, there were growing pains but all happened hand-in-hand with organic waste collection. Mauger said she expects once composting extends to 100 per cent of the city by the end of 2025, things will begin to shift. According to the Leger city survey, less than half of Montrealers use the so-called brown bin to dispose of organic waste and their knowledge of what goes in the bin has only risen by one per cent, to 41 per cent, since 2021. The survey results aren't surprising and transition rarely comes without complaint, said Karel Ménard, a Montreal environmentalist. "I think it's a shared responsibility between the citizens, and the municipality, which has an obligation to have a clean and healthy city," said Ménard, head of Front commun québécois pour une gestion écologique des déchets, an organization that promotes ecological waste management. "Also, I would even say, the producers, because what we often see in the alleys are short-lived, disposable items, so there's also a problem of overconsumption." Many municipalities in the Greater Montreal area and elsewhere in Quebec, have switched to biweekly pickup, if not every three weeks or monthly in some cases. But Greater Montreal is mainly suburbs with single-family homes, which isn't the case in the city's boroughs. "There are 900,000 doors in Montreal, plus 40,000 businesses, industries, and institutions that have municipal collection," Mauger said. 'We estimate that eighty per cent of the buildings in Montreal don't have their own driveway, so it's not really one size fits all." The zero waste plan places an emphasis on reducing food waste, more composting and recycling. The city has also prohibited the use of single-use plastic items, like cups, utensils and straws. Opposition Coun. Stephanie Valenzuela of Ensemble Montréal said the polling results suggest Projet Montréal has a lot of work to do. "The results really speak to the amount of energy and investment the city has been putting into informing residents on the goals that we're trying to achieve," Valenzuela said. Valenzuela said the public reaction also contrasts with how the administration has portrayed itself as being innovative and avant-garde when it comes to the environment. "We've seen that when it comes to their big promises, when it comes to the environment, they're actually missing the mark," Valenzuela said. But Mauger is confident the city will be able to extend biweekly pickup to all 19 Montreal boroughs by 2029. 'What we see in this poll, it's also that three-quarters of the population are aware of the problem of sending too much waste to the landfill that's filling up at a very high pace,' Mauger said. 'And they want to do more to be part of the solution … so that's really promising too.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025.


Vancouver Sun
33 minutes ago
- Vancouver Sun
Canada's population standstill rattling Vancouver's housing industry
For the first time in 74 years, the population of both B.C. and Ontario dropped by a few thousand people in the first months of 2025. Sounds dramatic. And in some ways it is. That's even though the dip in the total number of people doesn't make a statistical difference for either province. In the first quarter of this year, B.C. had 2,357 fewer residents than at the end of 2024; Ontario lost 5,644. But, as Statistics Canada says: 'While small compared to the size of each province, these were the largest quarterly losses in population for both Ontario and B.C. since comparable records began in 1951. ' Stay on top of the latest real estate news and home design trends. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Westcoast Homes will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. In each of the past two years B.C. had added more than 160,000 people, an unprecedented annual growth rate of more than three per cent, almost all of it fuelled by Ottawa's openness to international migration. The fact this year has seen the most significant dip in the two provinces' populations in almost three generations appears to signal the end of Canada's recent ultra-high migration experiment. This new phenomenon, a population standstill, is having repercussions, especially on the housing market. The federal Liberals, after a decade in power, seem to have finally got the public's message that their policies were creating too much demand on housing and rents. As a result, in May Prime Minister Mark Carney said, albeit vaguely, that his government will bring 'overall immigration rates to sustainable levels.' Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, meanwhile, is becoming bolder. Last month he said he wants 'severe limits' on population growth to restore some equilibrium to jobs, social services and housing. Such talk is alarming the property development industry, which is experiencing a softening of demand. Even though many analysts say it's simply part of the real-estate cycle, developers are renewing calls for a return to more foreign buyers in Canadian housing. Coinciding with the change in attitude among Ottawa's politicians, StatCan has just published two reports that highlight the power that vigorous migration rates have had on the cost of housing. Last week a new analysis led by Feng Hou showed that in the 15 years leading to 2021, the rise in immigration was linked to a 21 per cent i ncrease in median house values in 53 of Canada's large cities. Another StatCan report in May, by Haozhen Zhang and Hou, found immigrants own their own homes at a higher rate per capita than Canadian-born people. 'Immigrants exhibit higher housing use compared with Canadian-born individuals,' it said. 'Immigrants occupy, on average, 310 owned units … per 1,000 people. By contrast, Canadian-born individuals occupy 271 owned units … per 1,000 people.' However, the two studies, which correctly emphasize that other factors, such as interest rates, also impact housing costs, point to just the tip of how Canada's migration iceberg affects real estate. That's partly because the StatCan research primarily focuses on immigrants, defined as those who become permanent residents, which in 2023 amounted to 471,000. Such immigrants these days make up just a fraction of newcomers. There is now an historic high of about three million temporary residents in Canada, mostly international students and guest workers. Just as importantly, the StatCan studies don't look at how foreign money has in the past 15 years infiltrated the housing market. Other researchers have found evidence of the power of transnational capital to skew markets. A new peer-reviewed paper by B.C. researchers Josh Gordon, David Ley and Andy Yan shows foreign capital, especially from China, has been a striking factor in raising B.C. housing values, a fact the authors say is often 'celebrated behind closed doors by the real estate industry.' Given Canada's big cities have some of the most unaffordable homes in the world, Poilievre is responding with a policy position that aims for 'negative growth' in population. 'We're going to need more people to leave than to come for the next several years,' Poilievre told The Hub, an online news outlet. 'We have to have a hard rule … that the growth in the housing stock, job market and availability of doctors must always be higher than the growth in population. 'We can't overload any of those systems for our own people, and it's not fair for the people who come. It's actually a false promise if we invite people here and then they have no place to live.' In the midst of such Tory and Grit rhetoric, what is actually happening to migration rates? The Liberals are marginally dropping official immigration targets to up to 436,000 this fiscal year, which compares with 250,000 before they were brought into power in 2015. Temporary residents remain at 7.1 per cent of the population, compared with three per cent before 2020 . Carney's new goal is five per cent. Even with overall migration rates far above what they were a decade ago, property developers and their allies are telling the public and politicians they're stressed. Big real-estate players, like Wesgroup Properties LP and the Rennie Group, haven't been shy about telling journalists they're laying off staff. The luxury condo marketers at Rennie Group and Michael Audain , owner of Polygon Homes , are also calling for more foreign cash in Canadian housing. So is Anne McMullin, longtime president of B.C.'s Urban Development Institute, which represents developers. She's trying to rouse politicians at all levels into action . Five weeks ago McMullin sent a letter to federal Housing Minister Gregor Robertson arguing 'Canada's multi-family development model depends on pre-selling 60 to 70 per cent of units to secure construction financing.' 'With the departure of both foreign buyers and domestic investors, this model is faltering and choking off the supply pipeline,' she wrote. The recent decline in real-estate market activity has 'shown that (foreign buyers) were a critical componen t of the capital stack needed to get projects off the ground,' McMullin said. Robertson and the Liberal cabinet need to 'amend the foreign-buyer ban to allow foreign investment in newly constructed homes that carry rental covenants or demonstrable housing contributions,' said her letter. 'Looking ahead, the federal government should also consider expanding this allowance to permit foreign buyers to reside in the homes they purchase.' How will Robertson and Carney react? Even though both have received political donations from developers , it's hard to predict. Opinion polls show a firm majority have turned against current migration volumes. But since Carney hasn't said anything more specific than that he wants 'sustainable levels' of migration, he's left the door open to do almost whatever he sees fit to respond to the housing crisis. dtodd@


Vancouver Sun
39 minutes ago
- Vancouver Sun
'We are a Canadian family': Vancouver wife of deported climate activist pleads for his return
When climate activist Zain Haq was deported to Pakistan in January, his wife Sophia Papp followed. Now she is back in Vancouver to plead with Canada's new immigration minister, Lena Metlege Diab, to allow Haq to return while their spousal sponsorship application is processed. 'I am hoping the minister of immigration will bring Zain back on humanitarian and compassionate grounds,' said Papp, who is working in English Bay as a sailing instructor for the summer. Days on the water with her students offer her precious moments of grace during what she calls 'a lonely, unjust situation.' Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. A few weeks ago, a pod of orcas breached within sight. 'We saw a huge dorsal fin, as tall as a doorway, and baby orcas splashing and playing around it. It was this profound moment of unreality, that life could be so beautiful, and so perfect. We are so lucky to be here.' She broke down in tears. The tears were not just for what she has lost following her husband's removal by Canada Border Services Agency, but for all that is precious and vulnerable to the ravages of climate change — everything her husband was trying to stand up for as a student activist. 'We are a Canadian family. He might not be technically Canadian yet, but it's wrong to separate families for low-level charges for climate activism,' said Papp. Haq, an SFU student in Vancouver on a study permit, had his student visa revoked by Canada Border Services Agency in 2022 after participating in acts of civil disobedience related to climate justice, which resulted in mischief charges. The removal order was not based on the mischief charges, but on a claim Haq had violated his study permit by not progressing on his university degree. SFU wrote a letter of support, and then-Immigration Minister Marc Miller intervened to grant Haq a six-month temporary residency permit. The six-month reprieve was meant to allow him more time to apply for permanent residency through spousal sponsorship. The process dragged on, so Haq had to apply for an extension of the residency permit. Although Haq applied before the deadline, and had a Fed Ex receipt to show it was mailed in time, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada said they had not received it. The couple's spousal sponsorship application was rejected. 'I did not have due process to appeal,' said Papp. 'The explanation by (Immigration Canada) was that there was an active removal order in place, but the only reason there was an active removal order was that they lost the (temporary residency permit). It was a Catch-22.' Haq complied with the removal order on Jan. 26. Papp joined her husband, his parents and sister in Pakistan a month later. 'They welcomed me and treated me as a second daughter,' said Papp. Despite the warm embrace of Haq's family, she struggled to adjust to life in Karachi. 'Pakistan is not a comfortable place for women, especially foreigners. So for security and safety reasons, I was not able to go by myself outside of the home. I was stuck inside most of the time,' said Papp. Canada has a travel warning in place for Canadian women in Pakistan citing safety issues such as harassment, verbal abuse and gender-based violence. Haq has found employment as an investigative journalist on the climate beat for The Express Tribune , writing about the destruction of habitat and farmland in the port of Keti Bandar, Pakistan's energy crisis, and the impact of climate change on economic and socially vulnerable sectors. 'Regions in Pakistan and India are already experiencing some of the worst effects of this climate crisis — drought, or floods that have displaced millions of people,' said Papp. Haq wasn't deported for violence or serious criminal charges, but because of a clerical error, said Papp. He just wants to be back here with her, settle down and be a productive member of Canadian society. The couple is applying for spousal sponsorship from outside of Canada, a process that can take years. The normal questions that couples discuss with hope and excitement are exceedingly painful. Will they ever have a home together? Will they ever be able to start a family? 'My home is in Canada,' said Papp. 'He should be here with me.' Postmedia reached out to the Immigration Canada, but it would not comment, citing privacy legislation. dryan@