Man Accused in Plot to Assassinate Sikh Separatist Pleads Not Guilty
Prosecutors say that Nikhil Gupta, at the behest of an Indian government official, tried to engage a hit man to kill an American citizen who is a Sikh separatist.
By Maia Coleman
Prosecutors say that Nikhil Gupta, at the behest of an Indian government official, tried to engage a hit man to kill an American citizen who is a Sikh separatist.
By Maia Coleman
Families of patients in a Cold War-era mind-control experiment in Montreal are pressing forward after a recent setback in their class-action lawsuit.
By Vjosa Isai
Human rights groups are urging Canada to stop holding migrants seeking asylum in jails, often with people accused of violent crimes.
By Ian Austen
The return of the Edmonton Oilers to the Stanley Cup finals after 18 years has brightened up Alberta’s capital after some difficult times.
By Ian Austen
Ernest Shackleton was sailing for Antarctica on the ship, called the Quest, when he died in 1922. Researchers exulted over the discovery of its wreckage, 62 years after it sank in the Labrador Sea.
By Hank Sanders
In a cold, remote corner of northern Quebec, a sexual abuse scandal pushed a church to the edge. The Rev. Gérard Tsatselam, from Cameroon, must comfort the afflicted to bring it back.
By Norimitsu Onishi and Renaud Philippe
The Group of 7 gathers major industrialized countries, but its leaders are politically weak and Ukraine and Gaza remain unsolved.
By Mark Landler and Steven Erlanger
A Toronto police officer mounted a defiant social media campaign against her employer. The police ruled that she had tried to destroy the agency’s reputation.
By Vjosa Isai and Tara Walton
Grizzly Bear 178, or Nakoda, as she was known to her fans on social media, was hit in Yoho National Park, hours after her cubs were struck and killed in a separate accident, officials said.
By Sara Ruberg
Researchers have long assumed that a tube in the famous Pikaia fossil ran along the animal’s back. But a new study turned the fossil upside down.
By Carl Zimmer
American travelers going abroad this summer will find their money buys more in some unexpected countries, including Japan and Australia.
By Elaine Glusac
A report by a parliamentary committee said that politicians, who were not named, had helped China, India and other countries meddle in Canadian politics.
By Ian Austen
A police force outside Toronto said that charges against Frank Stronach, 91, relate to episodes from as long ago as the 1980s and as recent as last year.
By Ian Austen
Including titles by John Vaillant, Ayana Mathis, Katie Williams and more.
By Shreya Chattopadhyay
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It turns out A.I. is surprisingly Canadian.
By Kevin Roose, Casey Newton, Rachel Cohn, Whitney Jones, Jen Poyant, Alyssa Moxley, Dan Powell, Diane Wong, Pat McCusker and Marion Lozano
A new bulletin says China is trying to step up recruitment of Western-trained fighter pilots to improve its air combat capability.
By Julian E. Barnes and Helene Cooper
Lower-than-normal rain and snow have reduced Canada’s hydropower production, raising worries in the industry about the effects of climate change.
By Ivan Penn and Ruth Fremson
Convicted in the murder of six women (though he boasted of killing many more), he died of unspecified injuries after being assaulted in prison.
By Trip Gabriel
A watchdog agency found roadblocks to the flow of information both within the spy agency and the public service.
By Ian Austen
Federal regulators said that the portable bed rails posed a serious entrapment hazard and a risk of death by asphyxiation.
By Johnny Diaz
Trees have been cut to create fire guards in Banff, the country’s most popular national park. After its warmest winter in history, Canada braces for another season of wildfires.
By Norimitsu Onishi
Officials in Toronto and many residents ask why the province of Ontario is turning a former waterfront park over to an Austrian spa operator.
By Ian Austen and Ian Willms
The bluffs, dunes and lagoons of the Magdalens, a colorful yet tranquil island chain north of Prince Edward Island, are far from everywhere. That’s the point.
By Richard Rubin
While the post office considers plans to revamp its business model, any major fixes are likely to be politically vexing.
By Ian Austen
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Despite a relatively wet spring, government officials are warning that persistent drought across Western Canada could leave the region vulnerable to major fires.
By Vjosa Isai
The trading card maker Topps said it made 110 custom cards for Liz McGuire, who was hit by a ball at a game in Toronto on Friday between the Blue Jays and the Tampa Bay Rays.
By Jesus Jiménez
In Canada, cannabis poisonings rose sharply among people 65 and older after the country legalized the drug, a new study found.
By Matt Richtel
On an epic road trip, a family plots a course from Alaska to the Lower 48, passing through some of Canada’s most spectacular scenery. The tally: 2,200 miles, five national parks, numerous hot springs and one excellent reindeer hot dog.
By Elaine Glusac
Three new books show us why the United States should do everything it can to nip the possibility in the bud.
By Thomas E. Ricks
In newspaper columns and on radio and TV, he was his country’s “premier provocateur,” gaining a wide audience for his conservative attacks on liberals and environmentalists.
By Adam Nossiter
The Nobel laureate, whose precisely written stories about southwestern Ontario many considered “without equal,” died this week at 92.
By Ian Austen
The police believe the killer, who died in an Idaho jail, may be linked to the unsolved murders of other women in British Columbia, Alberta and the United States.
By Vjosa Isai and Jeremy Appel
The Biden administration is betting that new China tariffs will be politically popular, even if they could slow the transition from fossil fuels.
By Jim Tankersley and David Gelles
The fire, near Fort McMurray, Alberta, has put the community, which is haunted by the costliest wildfire in Canadian history, on high alert.
By Ian Austen
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Her stories were widely considered to be without equal, a mixture of ordinary people and extraordinary themes.
By Anthony DePalma
Smoke from wildfires in Canada draped Minnesota and parts of Wisconsin on Sunday and Monday. But experts say the air quality in the nation’s middle is unlikely to be as bad as last summer.
By Ernesto Londoño
As smoke from wildfires drifted south over the weekend, officials urged people to avoid prolonged exertion and to limit their time outdoors.
By Claire Moses
After their strike last year failed to win the right to work remotely, the unions are challenging a plan calling for three days a week at workplaces.
By Ian Austen
The Canadian comedian, known for “American Pie,” “Schitt’s Creek” and now, “The Reluctant Traveler,” isn’t at all reluctant to share what he loves about his hometown.
By Abbie Kozolchyk
A province that was a global pioneer in harm reduction took a step back after a political backlash.
By Ian Austen
The police said that they did not know whether the shooting was related to the recent exchange of increasingly personal diss tracks traded between Drake and Kendrick Lamar.
By Joe Coscarelli
New Ho King, open since 1976 in Toronto, has become an unlikely pop-culture battleground after being featured in songs from both rappers.
By T.M. Brown
Montreal is a city as appealing for its beauty as for its shadows. Here, the novelist Mona Awad recommends books that are “both dreamy and uncompromising.”
By Mona Awad
India’s external spy agency, the Research and Analysis Wing, has long been accused of tapping into criminal networks to carry out operations in South Asia. Is the agency now doing similar operations in the West?
By Mujib Mashal and Suhasini Raj
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In a visit supported by the U.S. government, a group of Mexican experts came to British Columbia to discuss ways of responding to rampant opioid deaths.
By Vjosa Isai
The killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Sikh nationalist who had sought a separate state in India and was viewed as a terrorist by New Delhi, set off diplomatic tensions between Canada and India.
By Vjosa Isai
A three-team race is deciding this year’s Premier League champion. The competition’s global reach means a significant portion of the world’s population is following along.
By Muktita Suhartono, Elian Peltier, Shawna Richer and Rory Smith
Alberta is seeking powers to veto funding agreements between the federal government and provincial entities, including postsecondary institutions.
By Vjosa Isai
The Japanese automaker, which has been slow to sell electric vehicles, said it would invest $11 billion to make batteries and cars in Ontario.
By Jack Ewing
Avani Dias said that she had been denied a visa renewal for weeks because of her reporting on the Sikh separatist movement. Indian officials disputed her account.
By Sameer Yasir and Yan Zhuang
The measure from a member of the Bloc Québécois would ban changes to the supply management system for dairy, poultry and eggs.
By Ian Austen
She was believed to be the first Western scientist to study the animals in their natural habitat, but she struggled to overcome sexism in academia.
By Clay Risen
The stolen gold was partly used to buy guns that were bound for Canada, the police said.
By Ian Austen
An ascending jet’s contrail over Montreal added to the wonder of last Monday’s eclipse.
By Chloe Rose Stuart-Ulin
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Andrew Furey, Canada’s only Liberal premier, recently asked the Liberal federal government to suspend the scheduled increases.
By Ian Austen
From airlines to pork sellers, corporate brands face legal and regulatory challenges for misleading the public with lofty climate claims.
By Somini Sengupta
Savor the diversity of this lakefront city through its hidden bars, small-but-fascinating museums and restaurants with dishes like jerk chicken chow mein and Hong Kong-style French toast.
By Ingrid K. Williams
Department lawyers said in a brief that Enbridge, a Canadian company, “lacks any legal right” to operate its Line 5 pipeline on reservation territory.
By Rebecca Halleck and Dionne Searcey
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau testified that past elections had been “free and fair,” but intelligence reports said meddling by China was “sophisticated” and “pervasive.”
By Norimitsu Onishi
Internet traffic dropped by 40 percent or more during the eclipse in states in the path of totality, including Maine, New Hampshire and Ohio, Cloudflare found.
By Jenny Gross
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