Close
Help
Login
Staff Login
Register
FR
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Add to Cart
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
CP17154097 | Public Safety Minister Bill Blair asked about terrorism
CP17153669 | Newsroom Ready: Public safety minister says all Canadians are entitled to police services
CP17153667 | Public safety minister says all Canadians are entitled to police services
CP155479871 | Newsroom Ready: Public safety minister says inquiry could include cabinet secrets
CP16948917 | Newsroom Ready: Conservatives demand PM apology for allegedly mis-stating facts about firearms
CP151154471 | Newsroom Ready: Conservative MP asks what else PM Trudeau tried first
CP165127887 | Newsroom Ready: Prime Minister, public safety minister condemn those who travel to join terrorist groups
Mp4
CP12022926 | Newsroom Ready: Jane Philpott asks Liberals about help for Kashechewan First Nation
CP151083410 | Newsroom Ready: Feds will do whatever necessary to restore order: Blair
CP155478021 | Newsroom Ready: Trudeau says police asked for emergency declaration
Placeline/People
City
Vaughan
Country
Canada
Newsroom Ready: Public Safety Minister Bill Blair asked about terrorism
Conservative MP Doug Shipley posed a pointed question of Public Safety Minister Bill Blair on Thursday morning during testimony at the House of Commons public safety and national security committee: do rail blockades in Quebec and Ontario constitute acts of terrorism? No, Blair replied. The minister explained further to reporters after his testimony.
Actions
Add to collection
Add to cart
Information
Source name:
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier:
CP17154103
Legacy Identifier:
r_Bill-Blair-Blockades20200227T1330
Type:
Video
Duration:
1m3s
Dimensions:
1920px × 1080px 78.06 MB
Create Date:
2/27/2020 1:30:00 PM
Display aspect ratio:
16:9
Tags
act of terror
blockades
first nations
indigenous rights
Ottawa
public safety