Archive for July, 2011

CANADA STOCKS-TSX opens lower on U.S. debt deadlock

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 31st, 2011

Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC Content marked with this symbol is provided by Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC (“FBS”), an SEC registered broker-dealer and member NYSE, SIPC. FBS makes available a full range of stocks, bonds, and mutual funds to individual and other investors through retirement and non-retirement accounts. FBS services its customers through local investor centers, regional telephone service centers and the internet. FBS is an affiliate of FICS.

Before investing, consider the funds’ investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses. Contact Fidelity for a prospectus or, if available, a summary prospectus containing this information. Read it carefully.

Article source: https://news.fidelity.com/news/news.jhtml?articleid=201107280953RTRSNEWSCOMBINED_T5E7IF021_1&IMG=N&cat=default&ccsource=rss-default

Canada learns 2014 World Cup qualification path

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 31st, 2011

Canada will begin its journey towards the 2014 World Cup in Brazil with a series of qualifying games against a trio of unheralded island nations.

Coach Stephen Hart’s Canadian side was drawn into a preliminary qualifying group with St. Lucia, Puerto Rico and St. Kitts and Nevis on Saturday at the World Cup qualification draw in Rio de Janeiro.

Canada avoids Guatemala in the second round, but faces challenging matches against Cuba and Honduras, and possibly Panama, if it makes it through to the third round. Earlier this week, Hart told CBCSports.ca he was hoping to avoid Guatemala.

Canada also avoided potential third-round matches with CONCACAF heavyweights Mexico and the United States.

“I think it’s a decent draw. You still have to come out of the group on top, but all in all, I happy with the draw,” Hart told CBC Sports reporter Elliotte Friedman in Rio.

Hart admitted he didn’t know much about Canada’s second-round opponents and would need to do some scouting ahead of the matches.

“The main thing is you [have] take care of business at home and you get results [on the road) and you should be okay,” Hart said.

The Canadian coach also likes the way his team has been playing.

“We know we still have some work to be done. We’ve had some very good performances and we just need a little more consistency, maybe better concentration. If we stay healthy I think this team can do very well,” Hart stated.

The World Cup in Brazil, involving 32 countries playing 64 matches, will be held from June 12 to July 13, 2014.

CONCACAF, the soccer confederation covering North and Central America and the Caribbean, receives three automatic berths for the World Cup. The fourth-place team from CONCACAF will play a two-game, home-and-away playoff against the winner of the Oceania region in order to qualify.

The other intercontinental playoff sees the fifth-place team from Asian facing South America’s fifth-best side. As hosts, Brazil automatically qualifies.

The second round of CONCACAF qualifying is scheduled for Sept. 2 to Nov. 15. That stage sees 24 teams split into groups of four with the six group winners moving on.

Six other nations — Mexico, the United States, Jamaica, Honduras, Costa Rica and Cuba — received byes into the third round where they will joined by the six group winners from the previous round. The 12 teams in the third round will be divided into groups of four with the top two in each moving on.

The final and fourth round consists of the six remaining teams fighting it out in one round-robin group for three automatic World Cup berths.

In the latest FIFA world rankings published on Wednesday, Canada dropped 22 places to No. 105, its lowest position since FIFA introduced the rankings in 1993.

Canada is the highest ranked nation in its second-round group, ahead of St. Kitts and Nevis (No. 122), Puerto Rico (No. 141) and St. Lucia (No. 183).

Canada has qualified for the World Cup once, in 1986 in Mexico, when it bowed out in the first round after losing all three of its games and failing to score a single goal.

Article source: http://sports.yahoo.com/soccer/news?slug=cbc-sports_soccer_sp_world_cup_draw_canada-2000448492

U2 wrap record-breaking tour in Canada

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 31st, 2011

U2 made history as they wrapped their 360 Tour in Canada on Saturday after pulling in more than $736 million and playing for 7.2 million fans around the world.

The Irish rockers took the stage in Moncton, New Brunswick for the final stop on the massive trek, which has become the highest-grossing tour ever since kicking off on June 30, 2009.

Supporting acts Carney and Arcade Fire warmed up the 75,000-strong crowd, before U2 took the stage for a set which included their hits I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For, Beautiful Day, Elevation and Sunday Bloody Sunday.

One of the evening’s most poignant moments came when frontman Bono performed The Ballad of Springhill in honour of the nearby town destroyed by an earthquake in 1958.

Before taking their final bow, Bono sprayed the front rows with a bottle of champagne cracked open for the special occasion.

He told the crowd, “This is the best time we could be having anywhere.”

 

Article source: http://www.torontosun.com/2011/07/31/u2-wrap-record-breaking-tour-in-canada

Hay gets first look at Canada WJC hopefuls

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 31st, 2011

DonHay_325

Don Hay hopes the players chosen to represent Canada at the 2012 World Junior Championship are in some way similar to those he helped lead to a gold medal at the 1995 tournament in Red Deer, Alta.

That team, which went 7-0-0 and outscored its opponents 49-22, included as part of its 22-man roster Bryan McCabe, Ed Jovanovski and Wade Redden on defense and Jason Allison, Jeff Friesen, Ryan Smyth and Alexandre Daigle at forward.

Hay will coach Canada’s national junior team for the first time since winning that gold medal 17 years ago. The process of picking the players that will make up this year’s World Junior Championship team starts this week, when Hockey Canada hosts a national junior team summer development camp in Edmonton and Fort McMurray, Alta, from Aug. 3-7.

The 2012 World Junior Championship will be played in Edmonton and Calgary from Dec. 26 to Jan. 5, 2012.

“Hopefully, the players will be comparable to those players in ‘95,” Hay said. “I think as a coach, you never know if another opportunity will come around like this. It’s great to be able to get an opportunity to coach this team again. I feel it’s the right time to get back into it since the players are as good as they were in ‘95. The game has changed, but hasn’t changed that much … the speed and competiveness is still there.”

There will be two scrimmages, Saturday at Rexall Place in Edmonton, and Sunday at the Casman Centre, Fort McMurray. The 47-player camp roster includes four goalies, 17 defensemen and 26 forwards.

“I think players need to skate hard and compete hard at a high level,” Hay said. “I’m looking for a high hockey IQ. It’s a short tournament and there’s really no time for teaching, so you have to play smart and pick up different aspects that the coaching staff throws at them. You want them to compete and execute, but we all know it comes down to winning.”

Seven returning players from Canada’s silver medal-winning 2011 WJC team highlight the roster — forwards Brett Connolly, Sean Couturier, Quinton Howden, Ryan Johansen and Jaden Schwartz, defenseman Erik Gudbranson and goaltender Mark Visentin.

“Last year’s team was pretty much a blue-collar team that was big, hard-working and fit the bill of (coach) Dave Cameron’s type of coaching,” Hockey Canada head scout Kevin Prendergast said. “What I think we’re going to have this year, we’re going to be a lot smaller, but we’re also going to be a lot more skilled.”

Russia proved small and skilled could work last year en route to rallying from a 3-0 third-period deficit against Canada in the gold-medal game to a 5-3 victory.

Among the players attending the camp, 20 were selected during the 2011 Entry Draft, including 14 in the first round — Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (Oilers,  No. 1), Jonathan Huberdeau (Panthers, No. 3), Ryan Strome (No. 5, Islanders), Mark Scheifele (Jets, No. 7), Sean Couturier (Flyers, No. 8), Dougie Hamilton (Bruins, No. 9), Duncan Siemens (Avalanche, No. 11), Ryan Murphy (Hurricanes, No. 12), Nathan Beaulieu (Canadiens, No. 17), Joe Morrow (Penguins, No. 23), Matt Puempel (Senators, No. 24), Stuart Percy (Maple Leafs, No. 25) and Phillip Danault (Blackhawks, No. 26).

There also will be four defensemen eligible for the 2012 Entry Draft at the camp — Cody Ceci of the Ottawa 67’s, Martin Lefebvre of the Quebec Remparts, Ryan Murray of the Everett Silvertips and Matthew Petgrave of Owen Sound Attack. Lefebvre and Petgrave were eligible for last month’s draft but weren’t selected.

“I think you have to look for the best players available,” Hay said. “We have no control over if they’ll make their NHL teams, so you have to invite the best to return to your camp in December. You’re always hoping to have your best players.”

Following summer camp, all potential candidates will continue to be monitored throughout the season before a final selection camp is held in December and subsequent final roster.

Hay, coach of the Western Hockey League’s Vancouver Giants, will be assisted on Canada’s bench by George Burnett (Belleville Bulls) and Ryan Huska (Kelowna Rockets), and goalie coach Ron Tugnutt (Peterborough Petes).

Follow Mike Morreale on Twitter at: @mike_morreale

Related Links Rookie Tyler Ennis comes up big for Sabres Halak anything but shaky in must-win game Keith: ‘I just wanted to play in the NHL’ Hornqvist latest key Pred to get hurt in playoffs Laperriere willing to trade pain for victory

Article source: http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2011/07/31/hay-gets-first-look-at-canada-wjc-hopefuls/

newWar-crimes suspect removed from Canada

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 31st, 2011

Beginning of Story Content

The Canada Border Services Agency has announced a war-crimes suspect taken into custody this week has been removed from the country.

Manuel de la Torre Herrera, 58, was taken into custody on Monday in Toronto. He came to Canada in 2000 from Peru and has been subject to a removal order since 2004, the federal government said.

Prompted by a media report, the federal government launched a website last Thursday with the names, birthdates and photographs of 30 individuals it identified as suspects in war crimes and crimes against humanity. The government appealed for any information that could lead to their whereabouts.

Manuel de la Torre Herrera, 58, came to Canada in 2000 from Peru and has been subject to a removal order since 2004, the federal government said. CBSA

Five of the individuals listed have since been taken into CBSA custody.

The government has previously said none of the 30 people on its list is facing criminal charges abroad. But they have been deemed inadmissible by the Immigration and Refugee Board based on having “reasonable grounds” to believe they were involved in war crimes or crimes against humanity.

Human rights lawyers in Canada have criticized the CBSA’s list, calling it a violation of individual rights and international law. Amnesty International also criticized the list and arrests, reminding Canadian authorities that they have a legal responsibility to provide due process for the suspects.

CBC News’ practice is not to name suspects who have not been charged with offences, and therefore is not publishing the full list of names and photos at this time.

P.O.V.: How should Canada handle alleged war criminals?

Numerous Peruvians have faced charges stemming from the time of former president Alberto Fujimori, who governed between 1990 and 2000. His administration is accused of severe human rights abuses, including the use of death squads, torture and forced sterilizations.

Accusations have also arisen from the practices of the Shining Path militant group, which fought a 12-year insurgency through the 1980s and early 1990s in which up to 70,000 people died or disappeared. But Peru has had considerable difficulty in prosecuting war crimes and crimes against humanity.

When asked by CBC News this week for more information on the allegations against de la Torre Herrera, a CBSA spokeswoman said the agency is “unable to divulge specific details in accordance with privacy laws.”

End of Story Content

Back to accessibility links

Article source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2011/07/31/war-crimes-suspect-removal.html

Canada avoids Guatemala in World Cup draw

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 30th, 2011

Canada will begin its journey towards the 2014 World Cup in Brazil with a series of qualifying games against a trio of unheralded island nations.

Coach Stephen Hart’s Canadian side was drawn into a preliminary qualifying group with St. Lucia, Puerto Rico and St. Kitts and Nevis on Saturday at the World Cup qualification draw in Rio de Janeiro.

Canada avoids Guatemala in the second round, but faces challenging matches against Cuba and Honduras, and possibly Panama, if it makes it through to the third round. Earlier this week, Hart told CBCSports.ca he was hoping to avoid Guatemala.

Canada also avoided potential third-round matches with CONCACAF heavyweights Mexico and the United States.

“I think it’s a decent draw. You still have to come out of the group on top, but all in all, I happy with the draw,” Hart told CBC Sports reporter Elliotte Friedman in Rio.

Hart admitted he didn’t know much about Canada’s second-round opponents and would need to do some scouting ahead of the matches.

“The main thing is you [have] take care of business at home and you get results [on the road) and you should be okay,” Hart said.

The Canadian coach also likes the way his team has been playing.

“We know we still have some work to be done. We’ve had some very good performances and we just need a little more consistency, maybe better concentration. If we stay healthy I think this team can do very well,” Hart stated.

The World Cup in Brazil, involving 32 countries playing 64 matches, will be held from June 12 to July 13, 2014.

CONCACAF, the soccer confederation covering North and Central America and the Caribbean, receives three automatic berths for the World Cup. The fourth-place team from CONCACAF will play a two-game, home-and-away playoff against the winner of the Oceania region in order to qualify.

The other intercontinental playoff sees the fifth-place team from Asian facing South America’s fifth-best side. As hosts, Brazil automatically qualifies.

The second round of CONCACAF qualifying is scheduled for Sept. 2 to Nov. 15. That stage sees 24 teams split into groups of four with the six group winners moving on.

Six other nations — Mexico, the United States, Jamaica, Honduras, Costa Rica and Cuba — received byes into the third round where they will joined by the six group winners from the previous round. The 12 teams in the third round will be divided into groups of four with the top two in each moving on.

The final and fourth round consists of the six remaining teams fighting it out in one round-robin group for three automatic World Cup berths.

In the latest FIFA world rankings published on Wednesday, Canada dropped 22 places to No. 105, its lowest position since FIFA introduced the rankings in 1993.

Canada is the highest ranked nation in its second-round group, ahead of St. Kitts and Nevis (No. 122), Puerto Rico (No. 141) and St. Lucia (No. 183).

Canada has qualified for the World Cup once, in 1986 in Mexico, when it bowed out in the first round after losing all three of its games and failing to score a single goal.

Article source: http://www.cbc.ca/sports/soccer/story/2011/07/30/sp-world-cup-draw-canada.html

Canada’s budget deficit shrinks in April-May

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 30th, 2011

OTTAWA — Canada’s budget deficit shrank in April and May from the same period a year earlier as revenues increased by 2.9 per cent, the Finance Department said Friday.

The federal government shortfall for the first two months of fiscal 2011-12 was $3.3 billion, down from a deficit of $4.43 billion for April and May last year.

For April of this year, the deficit totalled $442 million, down from $2.44 billion a year earlier, while the government had a $2.86 billion shortfall in May, compared with $1.99 billion in May 2010.

Revenues during those two month rose by $1.1 billion to $38.3 billion, reflecting gains from personal taxes (up $1.4 billion, or 7.8 per cent) and corporate taxes (up $400 million, or 10 per cent), as well as employment insurance premiums (up $300 million, or 8.5 per cent).

Those increases were partly offset by lower revenues from the goods and services tax.

Meanwhile, program expenses declined by $700 million, or two per cent, mainly the result of lower transfer payments.

In its June 6 budget, the government trimmed its deficit forecast for the current year and said it would eliminate its deficit ahead of schedule.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said that following a spending review the government “will achieve $4 billion in annual savings and allow the government to return to budget balance by 2014-15, one year earlier than previously planned.”

In the pre-election March budget, Flaherty had forecast the deficit would be erased by 2015-16.

For 2010-11, preliminary estimates put the shortfall at $36.2 billion, down from the previous forecast of $40.5 billion. The government expects a 2011-12 deficit of $32.3 billion.

Twitter.com/PNBusiness

Article source: http://www.canada.com/business/Canada+budget+deficit+shrinks+April/5179083/story.html

Canada joins propaganda war aimed at Gadhafi forces

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 30th, 2011

CATANIA, Italy — Canada has joined an air war of a different kind in the skies over Libya, one where persuasion and sometimes insults are the weapons.

Canadian CP-140 Aurora surveillance planes recently started broadcasting propaganda messages aimed at forces loyal to Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi.

It’s a psychological warfare operation, or PSYOPS, initially started by the Americans but now overseen by NATO — the kind of mission western militaries are reluctant to talk about openly.

The Canadian broadcasts are relatively benign in comparison to some of the harsher messages NATO has aimed at Gadhafi’s troops, in which women’s voices are telling them to stop “killing the children.”

The Canadian messages, in English, are read hourly during patrols along the Libyan coast over AM/FM frequencies that Libyans usually monitor.

“For your safety return to your family and your home,” says the message, which can be heard over unencrypted frequencies the military uses to broadcast basic information.

“The Gadhafi regime forces are violating United Nations resolution 1973.”

The message goes on to urge Gadhafi’s troops not to take part in further hostilities and not to harm their fellow countrymen.

The Libyans have apparently yelled back telling the “Yankee pigdogs” to go home. On at least one occasion last week, an Arabic sounding voice challenged the broadcasts.

“Who are you talking to?” the voice asked.

“Anyone who will listen,” replied the other voice who had read the message.

Gadhafi’s regime has tried to jam the transmissions.

A Canadian air force spokeswoman wouldn’t talk about the broadcasts, calling it “a NATO policy.” She referred all questions to the alliance’s southern headquarters in Naples.

NATO officials were also reluctant to talk and asked not to be quoted on the record.

“Since the start of operations NATO have been encouraging pro-(Gadhafi) forces to lay down their arms,” said one military official on background.

The “NATO mission is to prevent attacks and threats against civilians and we are doing it with care and precision. NATO will continue to keep up the pressure on those forces which are attacking or threatening civilians and civilian populated areas until that violence comes to an end.”

The messages are part of a stepped up PSYOPS campaign which is sometimes referred to in the army as the “black art.” Italian aircraft dropped propaganda leaflets over Tripoli last May as part of the increased pressure.

At the beginning of the air war, the United States dispatched its secret, specially outfitted C-130J transport plane known as “Commando Solo” to warn Libyan ships to stay in port or risk being destroyed by NATO.

Although propaganda broadcasts have been around a long time and reached their zenith during the Second World War, the use of radio and sometimes television messages broadcast from aircraft to bend the mind of enemies goes back to the Vietnam War era.

The two Aurora surveillance planes, with crews and support teams from Nova Scotia and B.C., were initially tasked with monitoring the sea lanes around Libya to watch for ships trying to skirt the UN arms embargo.

They have also been searching for some of the mines the pro-Gadhafi forces have dropped into the water near major ports.

“We support the maritime commander in whatever he requires,” said Maj. Jeff Rodger, the Aurora detachment commander who belongs to 407 Squadron out of Comox, B.C.

But as the Libyan conflict unfolded, the aircraft have been used more for their ability to spy on ground threats and to catalogue possible Gadhafi regime vehicles and command centres.

It is patient and precise work for aircrew who end up on the extended missions that fly right up to the Libyan coastline. Some of the aircrew compared it to cops on a stakeout.

“Sometimes, it just as simply as following something for a while to see where it goes and what it does,” said Capt. Jerry Collins, of 405 Squadron, based in Greenwood, N.S.

Occasionally, they end up witnessing battles — or the aftermath of fighting — through their high-resolution cameras and sensors.

“They’re always jockeying back and forth for position,” said Collins. “All we do is take note of it. Times. Places. Positions.”

It can be tough sometimes to turn away from the displays. “People are losing their lives,” said Collins.

He added that bearing witness and passing information back so that NATO jet fighters can target Gadhafi forces is “why we’re here, to make this stops.”

The patrols can sometimes be gruelling in the 30-year-old Auroras, which are used for coastal surveillance and fisheries patrols back home.

Designed as an anti-submarine warfare plane, the crews jokingly describe it as a “flying Winnebago” for its 1980s decor and aft kitchen where meals can be taken on long flights.

Article source: http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/SciTech/20110729/canada-joins-propaganda-war-aimed-at-gadhafi-forces-110729/

U2 360 – The Most Successful Tour in History Ends Tonight July 30th in Canada

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 30th, 2011

/PRNewswire/ — U2 360, the most successful concert tour of all time, came to an end in Moncton, N.B., Canada tonight.

The massive 26 month undertaking by Live Nation Global Touring saw U2 play 110 concerts in front of more than 7.1 million fans in 30 countries across five continents.

The tour opened in Barcelona on June 30, 2009 before hitting the road. U2 performed in the Balkans for the first time since 1997 and played three historic home town concerts at Dublin’s Croke Park, before heading to California to perform in front of 97,000 fans at the Rose Bowl (and streamed live via YouTube to 7 continents).  A second European leg started in August 2010, featuring U2’s first appearances in Russia and Turkey – later that year U2 360 headed to Australia and New Zealand with JAY-Z. In 2011, U2 returned to South Africa for the first time since 1998 playing two huge concerts in the World Cup Stadiums of Capetown and Johannesburg. After playing three sold out nights at Estadio Morumbi in Sao Paulo Brazil, U2 360 passed 5 million tickets sold and became the biggest tour of all time. The tour’s biggest single audience was 108,800 at Stadium Azteca in Mexico City on May 14th, 2011.

With a revolutionary production, U2 360 caught the imagination of its audience, who nicknamed U2’s circular stage the Claw, the Spaceship and when in Houston – the Space Station. USA Today described it as “a four-pronged UFO anchored by a glowing 164-foot pylon and cylindrical LED screens.” But whatever it was called, for the Chicago Tribune, “The lights, the songs, the audience all synced up. Sometimes size matters.” 

Arthur Fogel, Chairman, Global Music CEO, Global Touring, Live Nation, said, “This tour was a brilliant success on every level and all involved should be extremely proud. U2 once again have set the standard for achievement – perhaps for all time.”

“With tonight’s final show, U2’s 360 tour will go down as the biggest tour ever reported both in terms of box office gross and attendance,” says Ray Waddell from Billboard. “This tour is a remarkable feat on a global scale, from its staging and production, to its video elements, all the way to the scaling of the house, routing and execution. Most importantly, U2 rocked mightily all over the world.” 

U2 360 By Numbers7,100,000 Fans 10 million People watched a live stream of U2 360 at the Rose Bowl on YouTube320,000 Fans saw 360 in Mexico City   92,270 Meals fed to working staff and guests29,000 Tee shirts given to local stagehands9,760 Guitar strings utilized7,100 Miles – approximate distance travelled by space station while talking with U25,200 Years – collective touring experience of U2 tour personnel 400 Tons – weight of the fully loaded claw134 Crew members   126 Truck drivers   110 Concerts53 Gigs attended by a single fan33 Flemish speaking crew members30 Countries12 Bus drivers11 Babies born to crew  7 Astronauts attended4  Appreciative Irishmen 2 fairytale crew weddings1 Singer in surgery1 World leader released from house arrest during tour

www.U2.com

About Live Nation Entertainment:

Live Nation Entertainment is the world’s leading live entertainment and eCommerce company, comprised of four market leaders: Ticketmaster.com, Live Nation Concerts, Front Line Management Group and Live Nation Network.  Ticketmaster.com is the global event ticketing leader and one of the world’s top five eCommerce sites, with over 26 million monthly unique visitors.  Live Nation Concerts produces over 20,000 shows annually for more than 2,000 artists globally.  Front Line is the world’s top artist management company, representing over 250 artists.  These businesses power Live Nation Network, the leading provider of entertainment marketing solutions, enabling over 800 advertisers to tap into the 200 million consumers Live Nation delivers annually through its live event and digital platforms. For additional information, visit www.livenation.com/investors.  

SOURCE Live Nation

Article source: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/07/30/3805949/u2-360-the-most-successful-tour.html

North Korea criticizes Canada for boycott

Posted in Beavers  by: admin
July 30th, 2011

OTTAWA — Now this is rich.

Canada has been blasted at the United Nations by none other than the brutal and dangerous dictatorship of North Korea for boycotting the Conference on Disarmament while the backwards terrorist state is the temporary chair.

But Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said he’ll wear North Korea’s criticism of Canada’s principled foreign policy as a “badge of honour.”

At a meeting of the General Assembly in New York Thursday, Canada voiced its concern that the disarmament body of the UN is “effectively broken” and again was critical of the move to make North Korea the body’s chair.

But the North Korean delegate shot back, saying they have every right to chair the disarmament conference because they are a member of the UN, which should be a place for dialogue and multilateralism, not for Cold War-type “confrontation.”

The North Korean delegate also blasted Canada for taking similar principled stances in the past, saying Canada has set a “very disgraceful precedent.”

“It is not the first time by a Canadian delegate boycotting international forums “¦ and (setting) a very disgraceful precedent in the practice of international multilateralism,” the North Korean delegate said. “This is the third time by a Canadian delegate to take such an action in the (Conference on Disarmament) in Geneva, and therefore the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) strongly condemns this behaviour of the Canadian delegate.”

Baird said Saturday it’s “absurd” and “ridiculous” to allow North Korea to chair the international Conference on Disarmament, and somebody had to stand up against it.

“Their record in arms proliferation is terrible. Their uranium enrichment program going on in the country now is of deep concern to Canada, and of course they pulled out of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty,” Baird told QMI Agency Saturday. “Canada is speaking up and sending a message. It certainly has received the anger of the North Korean regime in Pyongyang, and we hope that others take note.”

“The fact that the North Korean regime is attacking Canada, frankly, I believe is a badge of honour.”

Earlier in July, Baird announced Canada would boycott the conference until mid-August when North Korea will no longer be chairing the Geneva-based meetings. The chairmanship of the Conference on Disarmament is rotated alphabetically among the 65-member states, though Canada has pledged to try and change the way the chair is selected to avoid presidencies of aggressive states like North Korea and Iran.

North Korea has repeatedly defied UN resolutions on arms control and continues to enrich uranium to develop a nuclear arms program. Last year, it sunk a South Korean naval vessel with a torpedo.

“North Korea chairing the disarmament conference make just as much sense as having Saudi Arabia on the UN’s committee for women’s rights, or Iran on the human rights council. It’s proof that the United Nations is not just useless — it’s actually a force for evil,” said author and commentator Ezra Levant, a long-time critic of the UN. “Taking lessons on disarmament from North Korea is like taking lessons on chastity from Hugh Hefner. Except that it’s not funny — besides threatening its neighbours with nuclear attacks, North Korea’s dictator has created a man-made famine for his own people, and jails democracy activists in hard labour camps.”

North Korea will cease chairing the Conference on Disarmament on August 19, when the feds say Canada will resume its participation.

The UN Conference on Disarmament was created in 1979 as the world’s main forum for negotiating disarmament treaties and arms control measures, but critics have warned the body has lost its way and is no longer capable of achieving meaningful results.

bryn.weese@sunmedia.ca

Article source: http://www.torontosun.com/2011/07/30/north-korea-criticizes-canada-for-boycott