
Canada praises US stance on Ukraine security guarantees
'Robust and credible security guarantees are essential to any just and lasting peace. I welcome the openness of the United States to providing security guarantees as part of Coalition of the Willing's efforts,' Carney said in a statement.
'The leadership of President Trump and the United States is creating the opportunity to end Russia's illegal war in Ukraine.'

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Time of India
29 minutes ago
- Time of India
Ukraine may have to recognize territorial losses under peace deal, says French President Macron
French President Emmanuel Macron has said that Ukraine may ultimately have to recognise the loss of some of its territories as part of a potential peace settlement with Russia. "As part of a truce, a ceasefire or a peace deal, the country may recognize the loss of territories," Macron said in a video address released on the Elysee Palace's X page. "It will not recognize that they are under anyone else's sovereignty, but will recognize their loss though military action. It doesn't run counter to international law, but will be a very serious concession," he added, according to Russian news agency Tass. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Undo Macron stressed that "after three and a half years of conflict and so many victims, no country will accept even actual territorial losses if it has no guarantees that the rest of its territory will be protected." He said that the Coalition of the Willing met on Sunday to "discuss security guarantees to Kyiv," which will be once again discussed on Monday at a meeting with US President Donald Trump in Washington. In his words, the coalition wants to outline "the format of the Ukrainian army that will make it possible to guarantee a fair and lasting peace," as reported by Tass. Live Events The French leader also recalled that several Western countries have expressed readiness to send several thousand troops to Ukraine to ensure post-conflict peace, as per Tass. "Several states are ready to do this: from providing training and logistics to the presence in non-combat zones, i.e. not on the frontline or disputed territories," Macron noted, adding that the issue of the potential deployment of military contingents will be discussed with Trump "to clarify how the United States is ready to participate in this." Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will travel to Washington on August 18. He will be accompanied by French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has also announced plans to take part in this meeting.


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Amir is back, but kin of six other migrants left waiting
Kolkata: When 22-year-old Amir Sk, who had been deported to Bangladesh on suspicion of being an illegal immigrant, returned home to Malda's Kaliachak last week, hope flickered in Murarai, Birbhum. There, Bhodu Sk and Amir Khan are still waiting for the return of their family members, who were sent across the border under similar circumstances. Like Amir, they had shot a video pleading for help. Unlike him, they haven't come back. Fifty-two-year-old Bhodu has moved the Calcutta High Court seeking the return of his daughter Sunali Khatun, her husband Danish Sheikh and their minor son Sabir Sheikh. His petition notes that Sunali is eight-and-a-half months pregnant. The couple, who worked as ragpickers in Delhi's Rohini, were picked up by Delhi Police during an identity-verification drive. You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata | Gold Rates Today in Kolkata | Silver Rates Today in Kolkata "No warrant was issued. No prior notice given. They were not told the reason for their detention," the petition says. Bhodu claims that while others picked up with them were released, his daughter's family disappeared. He says he submitted their EPICs, Aadhaar cards and land deeds dating back to the 1950s to prove citizenship, but that did not help. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Canada is looking for skilled immigrants from Jamaica! Canadian Visa Professionals Learn More Undo Around June 26, he learnt they had been sent to Bangladesh. Amir Khan is fighting a similar battle. He has petitioned the Calcutta HC for the return of his cousin Sweety Biwi and her sons Qurban Sheikh (16) and Imam Dewan (6), allegedly deported to Bangladesh around June 27. "Apart from Aadhaar, PAN, ration card, we also produced land documents from 1966 and 1976. But those were sent back," he has alleged in his plea, calling the deportations "a betrayal of law." The Calcutta HC is scheduled to hear the matter this week. The case has slowed because of a parallel petition in the Delhi High Court. Sources say a confessional statement has surfaced in which the adults admitted to being Bangladeshi citizens. Lawyers for Bhodu and Khan have questioned the validity of such confessions, pointing out that the detainees are illiterate. Samirul Islam, chairperson of the Bengal Migrant Welfare Board and a Murarai resident, said: "The video in which they appealed for help makes it amply clear that illegalities are being committed on poor Bengali-speaking people. They have been living in Bengal for generations. I know some of the families personally. We hope the Calcutta High Court will give us justice, like in the Amir Sk case. Before deporting them, Delhi Police or BSF could have verified their identities with the Bengal govt. Intimidating and traumatising poor migrants cannot become the norm." Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.

Hindustan Times
6 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Life after death for Canada's crushed Conservatives
Voters of a conservative bent in the riding, or constituency, of Battle River—Crowfoot in rural Alberta should give a bit of thought to the spelling of Pierre Poilievre's name. They will need to write it in on a by-election ballot on August 18th. Mr Poilievre is not from the riding. The vote was in effect called as a means to give him a shot at a parliamentary seat. He needs it. He led the Conservatives to a crushing general-election defeat by Mark Carney's Liberals in April. Mr Poilievre lost the Ottawa riding he had maintained a firm grip on for two decades. Without a seat he cannot continue as Canada's formal opposition leader. So, along with more than 200 other candidates (hence the write-in ballot), he is contesting the by-election in Canada's second-safest Conservative district. It is far more than a matter of parliamentary procedure. Only a resounding victory will help restore his reputation and consolidate his grip on the party. The conditions that sent it to its fourth election loss in a row have not abated. At the end of 2024 the Liberal Party had sunk in opinion polls, with the Conservatives holding a commanding 25-point lead. Four months on, the Conservatives crashed yet again to the Liberals, this time led by Mr Carney in place of Justin Trudeau. What happened? The former central banker bristled against Donald Trump's graceless claim that Canada should become America's 51st state or face hobbling tariffs. No way, said Mr Carney: Canada would restructure and diversify its economy away from its previous overwhelming dependence on trade with the United States. He has been diligent in nudging his party back towards the centre on issues such as taxes and energy development and has dropped many of Mr Trudeau's policies deemed excessively 'woke'. When, on July 31st, Mr Trump carried out his threat to impose a 35% tariff on Canadian exports, it only added fuel to the nationalist outrage that drove the Liberal surge in April. At the same time, a swan-dive in support for the socialist third party, the New Democrats (NDP), has for the time being turned Canadian politics into a two-party tussle. But this means that the split vote among progressives is no longer bound to help the Conservatives to victory, as it has in the past. None of these developments bodes well for Mr Poilievre, who will face his party's verdict on his leadership in January. Amid all this, a few bright spots for Mr Poilievre. His decision to stick to cost-of-living issues did attract support from younger and working-class Canadians. The Conservatives' share of the vote rose to 8m, or 41% of the total—its highest in nearly four decades. Mr Poilievre believes that can be built upon next time around. When he hasn't been campaigning in Black River—Crowfoot, he has been asking the party faithful, 'How do we add another roughly a million votes to get us over the finish line?' The line may be receding; polling data suggest that backing for Mr Poilievre and his Conservatives is softening. A recent survey by Nanos Research put Liberal support at 45% against 32% for the Conservatives. That might be thanks to a lingering post-election honeymoon. But the poll also asked respondents for their preference for prime minister: 52% opted for Mr Carney and only 24% for Mr Poilievre. This suggests that quite a few Conservatives prefer the Liberal incumbent to their own standard-bearer, among them some powerful Conservative premiers of provincial governments. Perhaps that is because, like Tony Blair and Bill Clinton decades ago, he has junked his party's old leftist dogma to appeal to a broader swathe of centrist voters. He is spending more on national defence and has scrapped consumer taxes on carbon pollution. He is cutting bloated government departments by 15% and is preparing to enact tougher laws against crime. Much of this programme was pinched from Mr Poilievre's platform. Voters do not seem to mind the theft. Supporters of Mr Poilievre, especially among the 144 Conservative MPs elected in April, say he has earned the right to face down Mr Carney. At 46, Mr Poilievre remains a good communicator. And under his leadership his party continues to rake in more money than its rivals. Not good enough, says Regan Watts, a longtime Conservative whom Mr Poilievre has previously consulted. 'Measured against Mr Carney's immaculate credentials, Mr Poilievre's résumé looks parochial.' And the Conservative leader's insistence privately that he would be prime minister but for Mr Trump's intervention and for the slump in the NDP's vote share, says Mr Watts, evince a man who refuses to accept responsibility for the election loss. Instead, he should tone down the sloganeering and put more business luminaries on his front bench. Mr Poilievre's defenders say Mr Carney's honeymoon cannot last. It will take years for Canada to restructure its economy and diversify exports away from the United States. If the Liberals fail to fulfil their promises of massive infrastructure projects at high speed, voters will soon be disenchanted, they say. But that might seem to put the Conservatives' fate in the hands of the Liberals. 'Hope,' says Mr Watts, 'is not a strategy.'