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Ottawa remains concerned about Iranian-sponsored violence in Canada, Anand says

Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand speaks to reporters in The Hague on Tuesday.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says Ottawa remains very concerned about possible Iranian government activities in Canada after former justice minister Irwin Cotler warned Tehran may have activated sleeper cells in this country.

Speaking to reporters in The Hague on Tuesday, where she and other Canadian officials including Prime Minister Mark Carney are attending a NATO summit, Ms. Anand addressed comments made by Mr. Cotler to The Globe and Mail.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says Canada must spell out clear strategy for dealing with China

China's countertariffs on Canadian agriculture are hurting Manitoba farmers, says Premier Wab Kinew.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says the Canadian government needs to spell out a clear strategy for repairing ties with China’s authoritarian rulers that doesn’t sacrifice Canada’s principles, including respect for human rights.

Mr. Kinew, whose province exported nearly $1.6-billion in goods to China in 2024, according to Manitoba government records, is eager to see a trade war between Ottawa and Beijing resolved. China’s government imposed retaliatory tariffs on Canadian agriculture and seafood in March after Ottawa applied steep tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles, steel and aluminum.

Carney accelerates talks with Trump to reach economic-security deal within 30 days

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra attend a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Mark Carney, at the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta., on Monday.

Mark Carney and Donald Trump have agreed to negotiate with the aim of striking “within the coming 30 days” an economic and security deal that would end the Canada-U.S. trade war, the Prime Minister’s Office says.

The commitment followed a 70-minute meeting between Mr. Carney and the U.S. President at the Group of Seven summit in Canada’s Rocky Mountains.

Carney to meet Trump at G7 on Monday morning, PMO says

U.S. President Donald Trump is escorted by Air Force Col. Angela F. Ochoa as he prepares to leave for the G7 Summit. Mr. Trump said he expects to secure trade deals during the leaders' meeting.

Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to hold a one-on-one meeting Monday with U.S. President Donald Trump at the G7 summit, providing an opportunity for the two leaders to make progress on resolving a damaging three-month trade war.

The Prime Minister’s Office on Sunday told reporters about the coming meeting during the Group of Seven leaders’ summit, which is taking place in the Rocky Mountain resort of Kananaskis, Alta.

Ottawa urges Canadians to leave the Middle East if they can as Israel-Iran conflict escalates

Residential buildings in Ramat Gan, Israel, are destroyed after an Iranian airstrike on Saturday.Missiles launched from Iran towards Israel are seen from Tubas, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.Rescue personnel work at an impact site following an attack from Iran in Rishon Lezion, Israel.Israeli soldiers inspect the impact site of an Iranian missile in Ramat Gan, Israel.Demonstrators in Tehran carry posters of top Iranian commanders killed in Friday's Israeli strikes on Iran.A residential area in Rishon Lezion, Israel, is heavily damaged following a missile attack from Iran.Israeli emergency responders inspect the impact site of an Iranian missile south of Tel Aviv.People protest Israeli attacks in Tehran, as further waves of deadly attacks continued from both sides on Saturday.Rescue personnel inspect the impact site of a missile fired from Iran, in Rishon Lezion, Israel.An injured man has his head bandaged at the site of an Iranian airstrike near Tel Aviv.A residential building in Tel Aviv is damaged after being hit by an Iranian airstrike.People gather in Tehran to protest Israel's attacks on Iran, amid ongoing strikes from both sides.An emergency worker carries a dog rescued from the site of an Iranian airstrike in Ramat Gan, Israel. Iranians drive past an anti-Israel poster in Tehran's Enghlab Square on June 14.People embrace at an impact site following missile attack from Iran on Israel, in Rishon LeZion, Israel, June 14, 2025. REUTERS/Ammar AwadSmoke rises near Iran's Abadan oil refinery, as seen from the al-Siba district on the Iraqi side of the border.Rescue personnel work at an impact site in Rishon Lezion, Israel, following missile strike from Iran.A man inspects the debris at a residential site south of Tel Aviv after an Iranian missile strike.Portraits of Iranian military generals and nuclear scientists killed in Israel's June 13 attack is displayed in Tehran, Iran. Emergency workers walk amid destroyed buildings in Ramat Gan, Israel, after an overnight strike by Iran.Iranian airstrikes on Israel are seen from Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip, late on June 13.A building in Tehran, Iran is damaged by an Israeli airstrike on Friday evening.

Canada’s foreign ministry is advising all Canadians to leave the Middle East if possible as the conflict between Israel and Iran worsens.

The Department of Global Affairs in a Friday statement urged “Canadians in the Middle East to ensure their travel documents are valid and to leave via commercial options if safe.”

© Gideon Markowicz

Smoke billows following a missile attack from Iran on Israel, at Tel Aviv, on Friday.

Growing Israel-Iran conflict threatens to dominate G7 summit

The view from a living room of a residential building that was destroyed by Israeli strikes on Friday in Tehran. Early this morning, Israel attacked Iran, targeting military and nuclear sites.

A growing conflict between Israel and Iran threatens to dominate, or derail, the economic prosperity agenda at the Group of Seven summit hosted by Canada that begins Sunday in a Rocky Mountain resort.

Prime Minister Mark Carney chaired a meeting of Canada’s National Security Council on Friday but offered no comment on the exchange of missiles between Iran and Israel that began with a pre-emptive strike on Iranian nuclear facilities that killed the country’s top military commanders.

Carney lays out defence boost, says era of U.S. dominance over

Canadian troops of the 4th Canadian Division wait as Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney attends a tour of the Fort York Armoury on Monday in Toronto.

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada is too reliant on the United States for security as he announced a significant boost in military spending to meet NATO’s 2-per-cent military expenditure target this fiscal year, five years ahead of schedule.

Declaring that the U.S.’s predominant role on the world stage “is a thing of the past,” Mr. Carney said Canada must take matters into its own hands and work more closely with European allies. He said his government will increase the 2025-26 allocation for the Department of National Defence by $9.3-billion, on top of its existing budget of just under $40-billion.

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