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Aujourd’hui — 21 juillet 2025Flux principal
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Online campaign targeting Globe journalist draws condemnation as an attack on press freedom
    An online campaign that targeted a Globe and Mail journalist, in part using surreptitiously taken photos of her in public, was widely condemned on Monday, including by Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and a national journalism organization that called the campaign an attack on press freedom.Reporter Carrie Tait, who has been investigating allegations of political interference at Alberta’s provincial health authority, has been the target of an anonymous account on X, called The Brokedown, which pos
     

Online campaign targeting Globe journalist draws condemnation as an attack on press freedom

21 juillet 2025 à 21:54

An online campaign that targeted a Globe and Mail journalist, in part using surreptitiously taken photos of her in public, was widely condemned on Monday, including by Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and a national journalism organization that called the campaign an attack on press freedom.

Reporter Carrie Tait, who has been investigating allegations of political interference at Alberta’s provincial health authority, has been the target of an anonymous account on X, called The Brokedown, which posted photographs of Ms. Tait meeting with two former political staffers in the Alberta government. The account also referenced her movements around Calgary.

Someone also recently disguised a phone number to look like Ms. Tait’s mobile number to make calls to multiple people.

© Todd Korol

An ambulance parked at the Peter Lougheed Centre in Calgary, Alberta, April 30, 2021. Todd Korol/The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Globe and Mail reporter targeted by online campaign, photographed surreptitiously in public settings
    A Globe and Mail reporter investigating allegations of political interference at Alberta’s provincial health authority has been targeted by an anonymous account on X, which posted surreptitiously obtained photographs of her in public settings and described her private movements. Pictures of Calgary correspondent Carrie Tait meeting two women, who are former political staffers in the government of Premier Danielle Smith, were posted earlier this month by an account calling itself The Brokedown.De
     

Globe and Mail reporter targeted by online campaign, photographed surreptitiously in public settings

21 juillet 2025 à 07:00

A Globe and Mail reporter investigating allegations of political interference at Alberta’s provincial health authority has been targeted by an anonymous account on X, which posted surreptitiously obtained photographs of her in public settings and described her private movements.

Pictures of Calgary correspondent Carrie Tait meeting two women, who are former political staffers in the government of Premier Danielle Smith, were posted earlier this month by an account calling itself The Brokedown.

Details about the photographs were also posted beforehand by a podcaster, who made references in a video to a meal that Ms. Tait attended. He confirmed to The Globe that he was supplied with the photographs in advance of their posting on X. Separately, someone disguised a phone number to look like Ms. Tait’s mobile number to make calls to multiple people.

© Todd Korol

An ambulance parked at the Peter Lougheed Centre in Calgary, Alberta, April 30, 2021. Todd Korol/The Globe and Mail
À partir d’avant-hierFlux principal
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • London, Ont., hospital accuses former CEO of failing to act on evidence of alleged $50-million contract fraud
    One of Ontario’s largest hospital corporations is taking the unusual step of suing its former chief executive and two senior administrators, alleging they failed to act properly when they were presented with evidence of a procurement fraud. London Health Sciences Centre, which manages three hospitals and more than 15,000 employees, announced two lawsuits this week stemming from an investigation into an alleged $50-million fraud scheme. The hospital network alleges inflated contracts were steered
     

London, Ont., hospital accuses former CEO of failing to act on evidence of alleged $50-million contract fraud

10 juillet 2025 à 22:57
London Health Sciences Centre alleges inflated contracts were steered to companies with ties to a former vice-president of the hospital network.

One of Ontario’s largest hospital corporations is taking the unusual step of suing its former chief executive and two senior administrators, alleging they failed to act properly when they were presented with evidence of a procurement fraud.

London Health Sciences Centre, which manages three hospitals and more than 15,000 employees, announced two lawsuits this week stemming from an investigation into an alleged $50-million fraud scheme. The hospital network alleges inflated contracts were steered to companies with ties to a former vice-president of London Health Sciences.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • CSIS flags extremist Khalistani activists as national security threat
    Canada’s spy agency is warning that a small but militant group of Sikhs are using the country as a base for promoting, fundraising and planning violence in India in support of an independent homeland in Punjab, a caution some see as a sign of shifting policies toward New Delhi. In its annual report to Parliament in June, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service said these homegrown extremists represent only a small group among Sikhs who are otherwise pursuing non-violent advocacy for a state t
     

CSIS flags extremist Khalistani activists as national security threat

26 juin 2025 à 13:17
CSIS says the presence of Sikh extremists in Canada 'continues to pose a national security threat to Canada and Canadian interests,' but didn't point to any specific examples.

Canada’s spy agency is warning that a small but militant group of Sikhs are using the country as a base for promoting, fundraising and planning violence in India in support of an independent homeland in Punjab, a caution some see as a sign of shifting policies toward New Delhi.

In its annual report to Parliament in June, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service said these homegrown extremists represent only a small group among Sikhs who are otherwise pursuing non-violent advocacy for a state they call Khalistan.

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