www.theasianstar.com Vol 19 - Issue 32
Saturday, September 7, 2019
Tel:604-591-5423
Surrey RCMP aim to calm fears with outreach session days after shooting Days after a targeted shooting injured two men in Surrey, RCMP held a community engagement meeting to address concerns of residents. The shooting happened in the Fraser Heights neighbourhood on Tuesday evening, in an area with daycare centres and a school nearby. Two men were taken to hospital with serious injuries but police say there was no indication of a continued risk to the public. Still, it was a scary evening for Shawneen Davenport and her three-year-old granddaughter.
Davenport had just picked her daughter up from daycare that evening when they saw the emergency vehicles rushing past. Shooting near schools, daycares “That day was traumatic for her,” Davenport said. “Her hands were up in the air she was crying, she was scared.” Police warn against interacting with man injured in Surrey shooting Davenport brought her granddaughter to the community engagement event at a North Surrey strip mall Thursday evening so she could see the police officers and know everything is okay.
There are at least three schools and daycares near where the shooting happened. RCMP say the intended victim was Thomas Gabriel Saul, 35, from New Westminster. He was also the target of a shooting in Burnaby in August. Saul has a history of involvement in the drug trade, according to police. They have spoken to him since the incident and are asking British Columbians to avoid interactions with him. Shawneen Davenport brought her threeyear-old granddaughter to the event at the
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India’s Chandrayaan 2 landed on the moon Friday afternoon By the time you read this, history would have been created with India landing its spacecraft Chandrayaan 2 on the South Pole of the moon. The landing is scheduled for between 4 Pp.m. and 5 p.m. Friday New York time. (In India, it will already be Saturday, Continued on between page 2 1:30 and 2:30 a.m.) The Indian Space Research Organization, or ISRO, which is India’s equivalent of NASA, streamed coverage of the launch on its website, YouTube and on
Liberals denounce Jerusalem Post immigration story as false The Liberal government is calling for corrections from The Jerusalem Post, an Israel-based broadsheet publication, over a story about Canadian immigration that they’re labelling “misinformation”. A recent news story in the mainstream publication claimed that “there is an understanding between the United States and Canada for Canada to receive 100,000 Palestinians (40,000 from Lebanon and another 60,000 from Syria”). Their source was an Arabic language
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NDP’s Jagmeet Singh tackles turban issue head-on in Frenchlanguage campaign ad The NDP has unveiled its slogan and campaign ads ahead of the federal election, and in a Frenchlanguage ad targeting Quebecers, leader Jagmeet Singh makes clear that he will be the party’s face in Quebec, despite concerns his turban could turn off voters. The ad comes as the NDP struggles to hold ground in Quebec, with candidates nominated in less than half
of Quebec’s ridings and polls suggesting the party could be facing collapse in the province. The party has chosen “In it for you” as its national campaign slogan, an effort to position the NDP as the party working on behalf of ordinary people. The French slogan, “On se bat pour vous,” translates to “We’re fighting for you.” Continued on page 7
BC municipalities keep racking up bigger and bigger surpluses The next time your city hall says they’re strapped for cash, take a closer look at their audited financial statement. For the seventh straight year, the cumulative surplus for all 162 B.C. municipalities went up in 2018, reaching $2.98 billion, up 27 per cent from 2017. Much of that surplus went back into reserves to pay for future capital projects. B.C. municipalities had a total of $6.4 billion in net financial assets, up from $5.4 billion in 2017. “[We’re] trying to make sure development pays its way, and that means we end up with a reserve in order to fund some of the needed infrastructure once
development happens,” said Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart, whose municipality recorded a $179 million surplus in 2018 (fifth highest in B.C. behind Vancouver, Surrey, Burnaby and Richmond) and has $523 million in net financial assets (third highest, behind Burnaby and Richmond). Frank Leonard, former Saanich mayor and chair of the Municipal Finance Authority of B.C., says it’s part of a longstanding political culture in B.C. communities. “British Columbia is a very small-c conservative, pay-as-you-go approach,” he said, adding
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