live Zelenskyy meets Trump at the White House
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House to discuss military support for Ukraine amid it...
Air Canada and the union representing 10,000 striking flight attendants resumed initial talks on Monday night, the first contact in nearly a week, according to a statement from the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE).
The walkout, which began Saturday after contract talks broke down, has disrupted travel for hundreds of thousands of passengers. Despite the Canada Industrial Relations Board declaring the strike illegal, CUPE has refused to return to work. The latest discussions are taking place in Toronto with mediator William Kaplan, the union confirmed on Facebook.
Before the meeting, the two sides had not spoken since the strike began. Sources told Reuters that talks include whether to enter formal mediation-on the condition that flight attendants go back to work.
Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu has urged both sides to reach a settlement quickly. Air Canada CEO Mike Rousseau defended the airline’s compensation proposal, saying it would increase pay by 38%, though he acknowledged a “big gap” remains with the union’s demands. Hours later, Hajdu escalated pressure by launching a probe into airline pay practices, saying a negotiated deal would deliver the “best outcome.”
The union, however, has stood firm, insisting the strike will continue until pay and unpaid work issues are addressed. Flight attendants want higher wages and payment for time spent on boarding and ground duties, which currently goes unpaid. Hajdu said she was surprised by the allegations of unpaid labour and has ordered an investigation into the wider airline sector.
Union leaders said they are prepared to risk jail rather than accept a back-to-work order. Rousseau called the strike unlawful and damaging to customers and the company’s reputation but said Air Canada remains open to dialogue. The airline claims its four-year offer represents a 17.2% pay increase, while CUPE says that is not enough.
Prime Minister Mark Carney appealed for a resolution, warning that “hundreds of thousands of Canadians and visitors” were being caught up in the dispute. The strike, now in its third day, has forced Air Canada to suspend its financial guidance for the year and sent its shares down nearly 3%. The carrier, which flies about 130,000 people daily as part of Star Alliance, is already under pressure from reduced U.S. bookings.
Passenger frustration is also mounting. Some, such as Winnipeg resident Danna Wu, expressed sympathy for the attendants’ demands but criticised the disruption, saying travellers were being left “in chaos.”
The Canadian government has several options, including court enforcement of the labour board’s order or legislation to end the strike. While Ottawa has previously intervened in major labour disputes, it is rare for a union to openly defy the CIRB, raising the stakes in an already tense standoff.
Video from the USGS (United States Geological Survey) showed on Friday (19 September) the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii erupting and spewing lava.
At least 69 people have died and almost 150 injured following a powerful 6.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Cebu City in the central Visayas region of the Philippines, officials said, making it one of the country’s deadliest disasters this year.
Authorities in California have identified the dismembered body discovered in a Tesla registered to singer D4vd as 15-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, who had been missing from Lake Elsinore since April 2024.
A tsunami threat was issued in Chile after a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck the Drake Passage on Friday. The epicenter was located 135 miles south of Puerto Williams on the north coast of Navarino Island.
The war in Ukraine has reached a strategic impasse, and it seems that the conflict will not be solved by military means. This creates a path toward one of two alternatives: either a “frozen” phase that can last indefinitely or a quest for a durable political regulation.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House to discuss military support for Ukraine amid its ongoing war with Russia.
Pakistan and Afghanistan have agreed to extend their 48-hour ceasefire until the conclusion of peace talks expected to begin on Saturday in Doha, Qatar, following days of border clashes.
Admiral Alvin Holsey, head of U.S. military forces in Latin America, will step down at the end of the year, two years earlier than expected, amid rising friction with Venezuela.
Iran’s Secretary of Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) Ali Larijani and a senior advisor to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei submitted his message to Russian President Vladimir Putin in Kremlin amid a flurry of momentous bilateral, regional and international developments.
Heads of security and intelligence agencies from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) convened in Samarkand on October 16 for the 57th meeting of the Council of Heads of Security and Special Service Agencies.
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