| | | | FIVE THINGS TO KNOW | | | | AstraZeneca concerns Canada's top doctor and federal health minister say they see no reason to halt the use of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine in Canada, as some European countries have done citing blood clots following inoculations. |
| | | | Expiring visas International permanent residency holders who have not been able to come to Canada because of COVID-19 travel restrictions will be allowed into the country even if their confirmations have expired, a spokesperson for the federal government said. |
| | | | Vaccine passports With G7 countries considering the use of vaccine passports to restart international travel, one expert says the most important conversations will be between the Canadian and U.S. governments because of the high level of traffic at the border crossings. |
| | | | 'Enormous change' One year after the pandemic was officially declared, newly-released data by Statistics Canada breaks down the social and economic impact that COVID-19 has had on Canadians. |
| | | | Deportation halted A Colombian-born mother says she is overjoyed after a federal judge temporarily stayed her deportation from Canada, which could have meant separation from her daughter for two years. |
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| | | On the one-year anniversary of the World Health Organization's declaration that the novel coronavirus had become a pandemic, Canadians are reflecting on what they're looking forward to most once restrictions are lifted. | | |
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| | | Myth busted | | A Canadian-led international team of scientists have disproven what was thought to be the discovery of the 'world's older crater' from a meteorite in Greenland in 2012. |
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