Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Advocates: Farah’s story can help other trafficking victims

By DANICA KIRKA

1 of 5
Britain's Mo Farah celebrates after winning the One Hour Men's race, at the Diamond League Memorial Van Damme athletics event where he set a new world record, at the King Baudouin stadium in Brussels on Friday, Sept. 4, 2020. It is hard to be first. Mo Farah this week went from being a gold medal-winning runner to the most prominent person ever to come forward as a victim of people trafficking. The four-time Olympic champion’s decision to tell the story of how he was exploited as a child gives a face to the often faceless victims of modern slavery, highlighting a crime that is often conflated with illegal immigration. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco, File)


LONDON (AP) — Until this week, Mo Farah was a four-time Olympic champion winding down his hugely successful career as a long-distance runner. Now he’s an icon for another reason: He is the most prominent person to come forward as a victim of people trafficking.

Farah’s decision to tell the story of how he was brought to Britain illegally as a child and forced to work as a domestic servant has given a face to the often nameless victims of modern slavery, crime victims who many times are dismissed as “illegal” immigrants.

“I don’t think there’s ever been a case in British public life where somebody so familiar to the British public … reveals how dark, how difficult, how complex his back story is,” said Sunder Katwala, director of British Future, a nonpartisan think tank on identity and immigration. “We rarely have the voices and faces of people trafficked, but for it to be one of the most familiar public figures of Britain in this century is truly extraordinary.”

Farah’s revelations have the potential to create the safe space necessary for other trafficking victims to seek help, just as entertainers and athletes who came out as homosexual bolstered the gay rights movement, Katwala said. They will also put pressure on authorities to ensure that those who are exploited by traffickers are treated as victims, not criminals to be deported

Farah, 39, said he decided to speak out about his experience to challenge public perceptions of trafficking and modern slavery.

His story, which has resonated globally, comes as conflict, climate change and economic collapse displace record numbers of people around the world, pushing more and more migrants into the hands of gangs who smuggle them into Britain, the European Union and the U.S.

Those who can afford it pay thousands of dollars to reach countries where they hope to find jobs and security. Others fall prey to criminals who force them into sex work, drug crimes and domestic servitude.

More than 10,000 people were referred to British authorities as possible victims of modern slavery in 2020, up from 2,340 in 2014, according to a report from the Home Office, the government agency responsible for border enforcement.

Britain has struggled to respond to this complex environment, with the government opening its doors to refugees from Afghanistan and Ukraine in recent months while proposing to deport “illegal” immigrants from other countries who are seeking asylum to Rwanda. While Prime Minister Boris Johnson says the Rwanda plan will break the business model of criminals who smuggle people across the English Channel in small boats, immigrant advocates say the plan is illegal and inhumane.

Rob McNeil, deputy directory of The Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford, said Farah’s story is unlikely to change U.K. policy on its own, but it helps shift the debate by humanizing the abstract idea of an “illegal immigrant.”

“Policy narratives about irregular migrants typically deal with them as a sort of homogenous group of ‘wrongdoers’ and a problem to be solved, rather than individuals at risk,” he said. “A softening of the U.K.’s rhetoric and policy toward irregular arrivals seems likely only if the wider debate becomes more focused on the people who are being targeted, rather than the policy failures they represent.”

In a documentary broadcast this week by the BBC, Farah said his real name is Hussein Abdi Kahin and he was born in Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia ravaged by war during his childhood.

He said he was 8 or 9 years old and living in neighboring Djibouti when a woman he didn’t know brought him to Britain using fake travel documents that included his picture alongside the name Mohammed Farah, which became his identity.

Farah said he was excited because he’d never been on a plane and thought he was going to Europe to live with relatives. Instead, the woman took him to an apartment in west London, tore up a piece of paper that contained his relatives’ contact details and forced him to care for her children, Farah said. He wasn’t allowed to go to school until he was 12.

It was then that Farah’s talent as a runner helped him escape his life of servitude. Farah said he confided in a physical education teacher who arranged for him to live with another family from Somalia.

After that, he bottled up his emotions and kept the truth about his early life secret. He described the wave of support following the documentary as “incredible.”

“It has taken me a long time to come to this, but I’m glad I’ve made this documentary to show people the reality of what really happened to me as a child,” he told the BBC in an interview broadcast Wednesday.

London’s Metropolitan Police Service said it was “assessing” the information raised in the documentary.

Charity workers, lawyers and others who help victims of modern slavery praised Farah’s courage in coming forward and said the publicity will help bring humanity to the debate. Many victims, they say, struggle for years to escape and overcome the trauma caused by their exploitation.

“To know that there is someone, as tragic as it is, who has gone through it, come through, and been able to be successful in his chosen field and to speak from lived experience is an immensely important thing,” said Ryna Sherazi, director of fundraising and communications at Anti-Slavery International, a charity that works to eliminate slavery around the world.

Until this week, Farah had said he came to Britain as a refugee with his family. That is the story he told U.K. immigration officials when he became a citizen in 2000 at the age of 17.

He went on to represent Great Britain at three Olympic Games, winning gold in the 5,000- and 10,000-meter runs in both 2012 and 2016. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2017.

Despite his fame, Farah said he feared he would be deported if he told the truth about how he came to Britain. He expressed relief that after the documentary aired, the Home Office pledged not to take action against him.

Nando Sigona, an expert on migration at the University of Birmingham, put the Home Office’s “mild reaction” down to the fact that the ruling Conservative Party is in the middle of a leadership election.

“At this point, it is unclear if the Mo Farah case will lead to something good for others,” Sigona said. “The risk is that it remains a story that generates sympathy only because it involves an exceptionally talented person.’’

The documentary ends with Farah still wondering why he was brought to the U.K. Back in Africa, his mother tells him she never agreed for him to travel to England and only lost touch because of war and poor communications in her homeland.

But as Farah reveals his plan to come clean about his past, his mother offers unconditional support.

“Lying is a sin,” she tells him.
So little has changed on gun control in 25 years that top Democrats could restate exactly what they said in 1997 and almost no one would notice

Hanna Kang
Wed, July 13, 2022 at 1:03 p.m.·3 min read

Then-Sen. Joe Biden appears at the White House to discuss gun control measures in 1997
.Courtesy: C-SPAN

President Joe Biden and current Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Chuck Schumer's comments on guns in 1997 still apply today.

There have been more than 300 mass shootings in America so far this year.

The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act failed to revive the federal assault weapons ban that lapsed in 2004.

When then-Sens. Joe Biden and Dianne Feinstein and Rep. Chuck Schumer in 1997 addressed media about the dangers of assault weapons, they had little idea their comments would almost entirely hold up a quarter-century later.

"It's harder to get something passed than it is to prevent something good from repealed," said Biden, then a senator from Delaware, to reporters gathered on the White House lawn.

"So I think if you take away these big clips, then you reduce the firepower and if you have a big clip and a high velocity weapon, you have a real, real problem," said Feinstein in 1997, now the longest-serving senator in California history, over 25 years before the Uvalde shooting.

Schumer, then a congressman from New York, echoed the sentiment, telling reporters: "Until we do something real on guns, the tragedies, whether it be at the Empire State Building in New York, or in Los Angeles, or wherever, as long as criminals can get guns more easily than they can get a car, there are gonna be lots of killings."

Schumer then added: "Here we are in Washington, DC, tough gun laws. But as we're speaking, there's someone who's driving in a car up from Florida, or North Carolina, or South Carolina, and in the trunk of that car are 50 guns and they're gonna sell them on a street corner on Washington, DC."

There have been 112 homicides in Washington, DC, during 2022 through July 13 — more than all the homicides the city recorded for the entire year of 2014, according to DC Metropolitan Police Department crime statistic. Most are gun-related.

New York City leads other metro areas with 87% of all gun and 92% of handgun recoveries originating out-of-state, according to a 2016 report by the New York Office of the Attorney General that analyzed the city's aggregate crime gun trace information from 2010 to 2015.

This year, gruesome killings this year in Highland Park, Illinois; Buffalo, New York; and Uvalde, Texas; have received considerable international attention. The 18-year-old gunman responsible for the mass shooting in Uvalde that killed 19 elementary school children and two teachers carried two AR-15-style semi-automatic rifles, at least one of which he is reported to have bought soon after his birthday.

But across the nation, there have been an average of more than 10 mass shootings each week this year — the Gun Violence Archive has counted more than 300 in the US so far in 2022.

Furthermore, a February poll by the Pew Research Center found that the total gun deaths in 2020 represent a 43% increase from a decade prior.

Since 1994, Congress had been unable to advance major gun safety legislation, until last month. Then, Congress passed, and Biden signed, a bipartisan, but limited gun-safety bill.

To the disappointment of Democrats, the bipartisan gun control bill Biden signed last month did not revive the Federal Assault Weapons Ban, enacted in 1994, that included a sunset clause that automatically repealed the ban in 2004.

The bill also does not include more sweeping measures to restrict high-capacity ammunition magazines. Republicans said they refused to consider any mandatory waiting period for gun sales or a license requirement to purchase an assault weapon, as reported in the New York Times.

"Until you have a national law, you can't accomplish anything," Schumer, now the Senate majority leader, said in 1997.
Iowa assistant AG sues Des Moines police over protest arrest



Tue, July 12, 2022 

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An assistant attorney general in Iowa is suing the city of Des Moines and its police chief over his arrest during a June 2020 racial justice protest, alleging he was tackled, pepper-sprayed and handcuffed for no reason.

The lawsuit filed by Assistant Attorney General Paxton Williams is among at least eight cases filed against the Des Moines police, the Des Moines Register reported. The cases involve protests following George Floyd's death in the custody of Minneapolis police.

Paxton, who is Black, alleges police used unnecessary and excessive force in arresting him in front of his home. The lawsuit, filed May 31 in Polk County District Court, says Williams felt the effects of the pepper spray for several days and suffered shoulder, arm and hip pain.

According to court records, a failure-to-disperse citation that Williams received was dismissed under an agreement requiring him to avoid further criminal charges for six months.

A representative for the police department did not immediately respond Tuesday to an email seeking comment about the lawsuit. A spokesperson for the attorney general's office, Lynn Hicks, declined to comment, calling it a "personal matter."

Paxton also is suing a police sergeant and 10 unnamed officers. Paxton alleges the sergeant told him hours after his arrest that police video refuted Paxton's claims.

The Associated Press
San Francisco reaches $58 million opioid settlement with Teva, Allergan

Dietrich Knauth
Tue, July 12, 2022


 The logo of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries is seen during a news conference in Tel Aviv


(Reuters) - Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and AbbVie's Allergan unit on Tuesday reached a $58 million settlement with the city of San Francisco just before completion of a trial over claims that they fueled an opioid epidemic in the city.

Under the deal announced by City Attorney David Chiu, Israel-based Teva will pay $25 million in cash and contribute a $20 million supply of the overdose-reversal drug Narcan. AbbVie will pay $13 million.

"This will bring significant resources to help with education, prevention and treatment, and the addition of tens of millions of dollars worth of overdose reversal medication will save lives in the Bay Area," said Paul Geller, a lawyer who represented the city in negotiating the settlement.

Teva's settlement also resolves the city's claims against Teva-owned drug distributor Anda Inc.

San Francisco will receive $54 million, while $4 million will go toward attorneys' fees.

"Today's settlement is another critical step forward in getting life-saving treatments to people suffering from opioid addiction," Teva said in a statement.

AbbVie said its discontinued branded opioid business had only a minimal market share nationwide.

The settlement was reached before closing arguments in a trial that kicked off on April 25.

San Francisco proceeded with closing arguments on Tuesday against retail pharmacy chain Walgreens, the last remaining defendant in the case.

Jayne Conroy, an attorney for the city, said Walgreens had attempted to shift blame onto others, such as street level drug dealers and manufacturers who lied about the addictiveness of opioids.

Despite the pharmacy chain's "finger-pointing," it took a "fill, fill, fill" approach toward opioid prescriptions rather than attempting to weed out suspicious orders, she said.

"Walgreens claims it is blameless," Conroy said. "And that is just not true."

Parent company Walgreens Boots Alliance has denied wrongdoing. It will make its closing arguments in the case on Wednesday.

Neither Teva nor Allergan admitted wrongdoing as part of the settlement.

San Francisco had accused Walgreens, Teva, Allergan, and Anda of creating a "public nuisance" by flooding the city with prescription opioids and failing to prevent the drugs from being diverted for illegal use.

The companies argued that they sold legal medication prescribed by doctors.

The trial was selected as a bellwether case against drug manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies, testing the strength of claims in thousands of lawsuits filed by state and local governments. In other similar trials, drugmakers also have been accused of playing down the addiction and overdose risks in marketing their painkillers.

San Francisco has been hit hard by the opioid crisis, which has caused more than 500,000 overdose deaths nationwide in the past two decades, according to the U.S. data. Opioid-related health issues account for 25% of emergency room visits at the city's largest public hospital, according to a court filing at the start of the trial.

San Francisco's lawsuit, filed in 2018, initially included claims against drugmakers Purdue Pharma LP, Johnson & Johnson and Endo International Plc, and the three largest U.S. drug distributors - McKesson Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and AmerisourceBergen Corp.

The city settled with those defendants ahead of trial. It signed onto a $26 billion nationwide settlement with J&J and the drug distributors, and agreed to support Purdue Pharma's bankruptcy plan.

Teva has been attempting to reach a nationwide settlement of its opioid liability, and expects to reach a deal by the end of 2022.

(Reporting by Deitrich Knauth and Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Mark Potter and Bill Berkrot)






Costs announced for 2030 Indigenous-led Olympic and Paralympic bid in B.C.



Tue, July 12, 2022 

At a news conference held on Friday, July 8 it was announced that all organizational and operating costs for both the 2030 Olympics and Paralympics, led by First Nations in British Columbia, would be covered by private dollars. Costs are expected to be between $2.5 billion and $2.8 billion.

And it has been revealed that the publicly-funded estimates for both Games is between $1 billion and $1.2 billion.

The private funding estimate is virtually the same that it cost to run the 2010 Winter Olympics and Paralympics that were primarily staged in Vancouver.

The public funding estimate, however, is significantly down from the $1.9 billion in public money that was required for the 2010 Games.

Representatives from four First Nations – Squamish, Lil’wat, Musqueam and Tsleil-Waututh – have joined forces with officials from the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC) and Canadian Paralympic Committee (CPC) to spearhead bids for the proposed Games.

The group revealed details of the hosting concept last month. At the time it was announced that financial details for the bid would be forthcoming.

That information was made public this past Friday.

Sxwíxwtn, a spokesperson for the Squamish Nation, is pleased additional bid information has now been shared.

“We welcome the thoughtful work that has been done by all partners so far to support this vision,” he said. “The hosting concept focuses on sustainability while also making investments in new rental housing and sporting venues to create a legacy for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people that will remain long after the Games end.”

To keep publicly-funded costs down, organizers will rely heavily on using venues that were utilized during the 2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games staged in Vancouver. Games’ officials have identified a dozen venues they would like to utilize in 2030.

A total of $669 million was spent to build facilities for the 2010 Games. Upgrading these venues for 2030 is expected to cost between $299 million to $375 million, so more or less half the costs spent two decades earlier.

Also, if the Games are indeed awarded to B.C., more than 1,000 housing units, which would initially be part of the athletes’ village, would be constructed, creating some desired housing stock and affordable units in the region.

“It’s a real mix of the housing needs of the community,” said Mary Conibear, the impact and legacy lead for the 2030 Games’ feasibility team.

Conibear said estimates for public funding required is down from costs in 2010 in large part because advancements in technology have significantly reduced the proposed security and safety expenses.

About $1.1 billion was spent on security and safety at the 2010 Games. The proposed costs for the 2030 Games are between $560 million and $583 million.

Conibear said about 2,000 members of the military were required to guard access to some outdoor venues back in 2010.

“We can use cameras now,” Conibear said. “You don’t need 2,000 people to do that.”

Several Indigenous leaders praised the efforts of those involved with the bid and the effects it could have.

“The 2030 Games has the potential to have lasting impacts and benefits for the host Nations, broader Indigenous peoples and the larger society by building a stronger social fabric moving forward in reconciliation and the power of sport,” said Dennis Thomas-Whonoak, who is the technical team lead for Tsleil-Waututh Nation. “We are paddling to a brighter future and welcome the opportunity to showcase the good work that has taken place so far and the potential investment into our collective futures.”

Dean Nelson, chief of Lil’Wat Nation, is thrilled with his First Nation’s contributions towards the bid.

“We take great pride in this opportunity to be one of the four host Nations for an Indigenous-led 2030 Olympic and Paralympic Games,” Nelson said. “Having our Indigenous voice and presence in the forefront of a high-profile event occurring on our traditional lands is of utmost importance. It is an opportunity for us to share our history and culture. An Indigenous-led Games will be a true representation of our origins, where we are now, and what we envision for the future.”

Wayne Sparrow, the chief of Musqueam Indian Band, is hoping Friday’s financial announcement eases the minds of many.

“We know the public is eager to hear what the cost of the 2030 Games will be,” Sparrow said. “And I hope that the financial estimates are reassuring that it is not only feasible to host these Games, but it is beneficial to all of our communities.”

Tricia Smith, the president of the Canadian Olympic Committee, said “These Games present an incredible opportunity, and this is a responsible approach to investing for the future,” she said. “The operational costs will be covered privately, while public investment will be focused on building needed housing, providing security efficiently and ensuring the necessary rejuvenation of existing infrastructure.”

Gail Hamamoto, the vice-president of the Canadian Paralympic Committee, also likes what she has heard so far from bid organizers.

“The feasibility team has done excellent work in creating a responsible and resourceful financial plan for a potential Games in 2030,” she said. “An Indigenous-led 2030 Games offers an incredible opportunity for a sustainable, economically conscious, and fully inclusive Olympic and Paralympic Games with lasting legacies for communities in British Columbia and the entire sport system in Canada.”

Windspeaker.com

By Sam Laskaris, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Windspeaker.com, Windspeaker.com
Cree hockey hopeful living a childhood dream with Habs invite

Tue, July 12, 2022 

Israel Mianscum, who plays in the QMJHL for the Sherbrooke Phoenix, was one of only 40 players invited to take part in the Montreal Canadiens development camp happening until July 13 at the Bell Sports Complex in Brossard, Que. Yesterday, a hamstring injury kept him from skating, but his parents are hopeful he will be able to skate Tuesday morning. (Vincent Levesque Rousseau/ Sherbrooke Phoenix - image credit)More

It was Friday afternoon and Cree social media accounts started buzzing.

Israel Mianscum, a young Cree hockey prospect from the community of Mistissini, Que., had been invited to a development camp with the Montreal Canadiens hockey team.

"The whole Cree Nation is rooting for him … you see that through social media," said Israel's father, Louie Mianscum, adding the invite came less than an hour after the NHL entry draft wrapped up in Montreal on Friday afternoon.

"He was always crazy about the Montreal Canadiens. That was one of his dreams to actually play for them," said mom Tiffany Neeposh Mianscum, who up until the call came, was a committed Pittsburgh Penguins fan.

He was always crazy about the Montreal Canadiens. - Tiffany Neeposh Mianscum, Israel's mom

Israel got the call while he was in Gatineau playing in a hockey tournament. Someone reached out to his parents, who were in the stands, to make sure the 19-year-old answered his phone.

"It was very special," said Tiffany. "Just seeing his facial expression. He had a big smile on his face … a smile I haven't seen in a while."

This summer Israel has been training in Châteauguay, on break from his team, the Sherbrooke Phoenix in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL).

At Habs practice rink


Now, his parents, uncles and a few cousins and other family members are at the Bell Sports Complex in Brossard watching the development camp action on the ice.


submitted by Tiffany Neeposh Mianscum

"I told him to play his very best and that we are already super proud of him," said Tiffany.

"And I told him I loved him and that we support him 110 percent."

On the drive between Gatineau and Brossard, Israel and his dad talked about his hockey journey and his goals.

"[I told him] The invitation is just the start. Your hard work … you have to show them now. The chance is there," said father Louie.

[I told him]... you have to show them now. The chance is there. - Louie Mianscum, Israel's father

A total of 40 players are participating in the Canadiens development camp happening until July 13 at the Brossard rink, according to a news release by the organization. They include players recently drafted, like Juraj Slafkovsky and Filip Mesar.

Israel did not skate with the rest of the development camp on Monday, because of a hamstring injury, but the hope is he will get a chance on Tuesday morning.

Cree Nation Bears director also invited


The Canadiens have also invited guest coach and director of the Cree Nation Bears hockey program, Charly Washipabano, to its development camp as a coach. Washipabano is also the program co-ordinator of the Eeyou Istchee Sports and Recreation Association. He will accompany the Canadiens coaches on the ice during the sessions.


"It's huge indeed, and something I obviously don't take for granted. Couldn't feel luckier, and humbled by such an opportunity," wrote Washipabano on social media, adding that what Israel has accomplished by receiving his invite is "huge for all of us in the Cree Nation."

submitted by Tiffany Neeposh Mianscum

Raymond Shanoush is the President of the Eeyou Istchee Sports and Recreation Association.

"It means a lot [for Israel]," said Shanoush. "They will get to see him perform ... see his endurance ... and his potential."

As hockey player with professional potential from the North, Israel has had to deal with the isolation of moving away from home at a young age to pursue his hockey dreams.

In his case, it meant leaving home at the age of 11 and moving to another Cree community of Oujé-Bougoumou.

"It's a lonely road for him," said dad Louie.

Sights set on the NHL

It also means rarely visiting home. For the last three years, Israel has taken very little vacation, said his dad Louie.

On top of the isolation, Israel and his family have also struggled with the high costs associated with playing hockey at this level. In the lead-up to getting the invitation to join the Canadiens development camp, the 19-year-old was without a place to stay and was sleeping on a relative's couch.

"We know he's prepared for it. He only took a week off after the season. He's been doing that for the last three summers. He's really focused on trying to make it to the NHL," said dad Louie, thanking family and the whole Cree Nation for the support received so far.

Israel's mom Tiffany says she is now proudly wearing a Montreal Canadiens jersey.

"My whole family are Habs fans," she said. "I was a Pittsburgh fan for a long time. [I told Israel] the only time I'm going to change my team is if you play for the Montreal Canadiens."
Canadian 800m champ Marco Arop carries spirit of resilient family's journey with every step

Tue, July 12, 2022 

Marco Arop crosses the finish line first in the 800 metres during the Muller Birmingham Diamond League event in May. (Getty Images - image credit)

Surrounded by the ravages of a civil war in Sudan 20 years ago, the parents of emerging Canadian track star Marco Arop could never have imagined this life for their son.

But their decision to escape the unrest that ravaged their home country for a better life in Canada has allowed not only Marco to thrive, but the rest of the family of eight as well.

At the beginning of July, Arop's parents, mother Aluel Lual and father Rau Arop, were bursting with pride as they watched Marco run to victory in the 800 metres in the pre world invitational championships at Foote Field in Edmonton, the city the family now makes its home.

Watch live coverage of the World Athletics Championship July 15-24 exclusively on cbcsports.ca, the CBC Sports App and CBC Gem.

Marco stopped the clock in a time of one minute 43.61 seconds, a track record and the third-fastest time anyone has run the event this year.

To put forward that performance with family and friends watching, as a final tune-up ahead of this month's world championships in Eugene, Ore., was as good as it could get for the 23-year-old.

"They don't get to see me race often, but whenever they do it is nice to see them around," Marco said recently. "I find it interesting because I know some families are heavily involved in athletics and my family supports me. But it's nice to be able to go home and I don't think about track.

"I can go home and I can just be a part of the family."

WATCH | Marco Arop is heating up for world championships:

That run in Edmonton is one of Marco's most impressive 800-metres ever, about a half-second shy of his personal-best time 1:43.26, and came a week after he won the national championships in Langley, B.C., in a time of 1:44.39.

"It was my first time watching him run in Edmonton. The whole family and everybody here in Edmonton is so happy about it," Aluel told CBC Sports. "He's representing Canada. I think he's doing very good and we are so proud of him for what he's doing."

Equally proud is Rau, who knew at a young age Marco was destined for athletic greatness.

"All of our family and community members were there to see him. We were yelling and we were so excited," he said. "Marco was special in his own ways when he was young. He was smart and very quiet. He was careful with what he was doing since he was a kid.

"That let us know in his future he was going to be special."


Courtesy Marco Arop

Fled civil war in Sudan

In those early years, however, that future was laced with uncertainty and fear from a decades long civil war. In the 1990s, Aluel and Rau moved their young family from Abyei, which was in heart of disputed territory, to the safer confines of the country's capital of Khartoum. It was there Marco was born in 1998, the family's fourth son.

"It was a scary life. All of our people went through a scary life. We didn't feel we had a future," Rau said. "The civil war makes a human being scared. We needed to find stability."

Unfortunately, they didn't find it in Khartoum and after three years in Egypt, the family was presented with the option to move to Canada. It was during a conversation with a Canadian official that solidified the family's decision to move to Saskatoon.

"The Canadian representative interviewed us and he told us you have four boys and that there would be a good life for our kids. We appreciated his words. As parents we were so concerned for our kids, so when we said that we accepted right away," Rau said of their move in the early 2000s.

Rau knew English but Aluel did not, making it challenging for her to find work in Saskatoon. After spending a couple of years in the prairie city, the family, now eight after the birth of two more boys, moved to Edmonton.

"It was difficult because when we came to Canada I didn't know English. It was a new life," Aluel said. "But I thank Canada. You can get help anywhere you go.

"Life was busy but we are happy. We are blessed with a beautiful family. We have six boys. Our life is beautiful and we feel so blessed. A big family is good, especially where we come from."

Marco marvels at his mother, who endured all of the upheaval while raising six boys.

"She's probably the strongest person I know," he said.


Getty Images for IAAF

Didn't start competitive running until he was 16

Being the middle child of six boys helped prepare Marco for the battles he engages in as he speeds across the track.

"You can imagine what growing up with six boys in the house was like. We got pretty competitive," he said.

During elementary school in Edmonton, Marco ran but mostly as a hobby. In high school, he was a basketball star, his 6-foot-4 frame towering over the other competitors.

"He's still new in track and field. His skill was basketball but he would run in elementary school. He was the best basketball player in his school. But at the end of Grade 12 he was encouraged by a coach to start running," Rau recalled.

In a lot of ways that's what makes Marco's story even more remarkable. He didn't really get serious about track until 2016.

Natural athletic talent, a willingness to learn and adapt, as well as an incredible work ethic has allowed him to achieve the success he has in a short amount of time.

One could not believe an immigrant boy could become a star in the country and the world. - Marco Arop's father, Rau

"It all happened pretty quickly, but it was almost like a step I had to complete to get to the next," Marco said. "So by the time I made my first world championship team in Doha in 2019, I sort of felt like I had taken all the necessary steps to get to that point and then eventually getting up to the Olympics."

From the junior national team in 2017 to the world championships in 2019 to the Tokyo Olympics in the summer of 2021, Marco has been getting faster every step of the way.

And his parents have been in awe of their son's journey throughout.

"He is incredible. Marco is an incredible boy. He is a special boy," Rau said. "We are really blessed the way Marco came all the way from Africa to Canada, one could not believe an immigrant boy could become a star in the country and the world."

Aluel is not only impressed by his athleticism, but the way Marco carries himself off the track.

"He's a wonderful boy. He's a happy boy. All of them in the family are like that. Especially Marco. He's always smiling," she said. "We are really proud of him."

His resume is stacked with memorable performances, including winning gold at the 2017 Canadian U20 championships. A year later, while attending Mississippi State University, Marco finished second at the NCAA Division I championships.

WATCH | Marco Arop wins Diamond League event in Birmingham:

In the summer of 2019, Marco captured gold at the Pan Am Games in Lima, setting a new Games record in the 800m with a time of 1:44.25. He then went on to compete at his first worlds, finishing seventh in Doha, Qatar.

In his Olympic debut last summer, Marco fell short of his goal of advancing to the final, fading in the final metres of his semifinal. He has used that disappointment as an opportunity to learn and grow.

In May, he won the 800m in a Diamond League event in Birmingham, England, which will play host to the Commonwealth Games July 28-Aug.8.

"It definitely was a confidence builder to win in Birmingham just because it sort of reinforces and confirms that if I trust my instincts in a race, if I go out and not worry too much about the outcome and just allow it to play itself out, good things will happen. And that's exactly what happened there," he said.

That's the mentality Marco is taking into worlds, removing expectations of outcome and focusing on trusting himself and his body in every race he competes in. Should he do that, Marco says good things will happen.

His parents agree and will be watching back home from Edmonton. And there will be many more eyes on the 23-year-old watching from where this journey all began.

"Marco has made us so proud as Sudanese, South Sudanese and as Canadians. We're all so proud," Rau said. "Even my community back home is watching. They're all watching in South Sudan."
Calgary fire department looks to test first electric fire truck in Canada

Tue, July 12, 2022 

The electric fire truck from Pierce, an American manufacturing company, can run on batteries for 24 hours. (Pierce Manufacturing, Inc. - image credit)

The City of Calgary's fire department may soon be in line for testing the first electric fire truck in Canada.

An American manufacturer, Pierce, wants to try out their electric fire trucks on the job in different markets and climates, according to Calgary's Fire Chief Steve Dongworth.

"They wanted one in a cold climate so they came to Calgary," Dongworth said.

The fire truck can run on batteries for 24 hours. However, it can use a diesel motor if the batteries run out or another call prevents firefighters from returning it back to the station for a 90-minute recharge.


Pierce Manufacturing, Inc.

Dongworth said he's interested in electric vehicles as an e-truck could both lower emissions and save on fuel costs.

"We're constantly looking at what's the best technology," he said.

According to the fire chief, negotiations are underway with Pierce to bring an electric fire truck to Calgary. To have been chosen as one of the few cities the e-truck will be tested in is a compliment, Dongworth said.


CBC

"We're seen as a progressive agency and we said, 'No problem. There's no charge to us so why wouldn't we try that?' We know we have to move to that kind of technology in the future, so [it's] very, very exciting."

The electric fire truck is already in service in two American cities.

Dongworth said it's possible it could be in front-line service in Calgary sometime next year.
Deadline tight to implement dental care, but Duclos confident the feds will meet it


Tue, July 12, 2022



OTTAWA — Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos says he's confident the federal government will be able to set up its proposed dental-care program by the end of the year, though his department has not yet settled on a model or begun formal talks with the provinces.

As part of a confidence and supply deal with the NDP to avoid an election until 2025, the Liberals pledged to launch a federal dental-care program for low- and middle-income kids before the end of the year and aim to expand its eligibility over the next several years.

Duclos admits the timeline is tight, but says Health Canada is making every possible effort to stay on track and he is confident the government will make the deadline.

Dental care traditionally falls within the realm of the provinces and they, along with several stakeholder groups, have urged Ottawa to simply transfer the money to existing health systems to manage the program.

Several provinces say they have not yet had any formal talks with the federal government yet, even though the deadline in the Liberal-NDP agreement is now less than six months away.

The Denturist Association of Canada says the federal government should develop a stand-alone insurance program but warned the Liberals to be realistic about the time it will take to get it right.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 12, 2022.

Laura Osman, The Canadian Press
Ottawa fast-tracking travel visas for AIDS conference amid sharp criticism

Tue, July 12, 2022


OTTAWA — The federal government says it is now prioritizing temporary travel visas for people seeking to attend the International AIDS Conference in Montreal at the end of July.

The move comes as the head of the African Alliance health rights organization slams Canada for bidding to host the conference and spending millions of dollars on it without making sure all attendees would be given a visa to attend.

Founder Tian Johnson says it is "truly vile" that thousands of people from the Global South are still waiting to find out if they'll get a visa, leaving the conference to be only "white, privileged and academic."


The African Alliance is one of 250 Canadian and international humanitarian groups that signed a letter to Immigration Minister Sean Fraser in June asking him to intervene.

The letter warns there is a real risk the voices of people living in countries most affected by AIDS will be missing from the conversation.

A spokesman for Fraser says visa offices have now been sent lists of conference invitees and are being told to prioritize their temporary travel visa applications.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 12, 2022.

The Canadian Press