‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward | Globalnews.ca


The Toronto Police Service is investigating a fatal stabbing in the city’s east end that left a 27-year-old man dead.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

Police said in a release that officers were called to the area of Gamble Avenue and Donlands Avenue at approximately 9:35 p.m. on Wednesday for reports of unknown trouble.

Investigators said an altercation was heard behind a low-rise residential building on a nearby residential street.

Officers found the victim suffering from stab wounds and without vital signs. Despite life-saving efforts by paramedics, he was pronounced dead at the scene.

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The victim has been identified as 27-year-old Ahmed Hassan Asif. He did not live in the immediate area, according to police.

Det. Sgt. Sajeev Nair described the victim as a “hard-working young man,” an auto mechanic who was “very much loved by family and nieces.”

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Police said the suspect fled the area before their arrival and has not yet been found.


A white vehicle believed to be involved has been seized by forensic investigators, and officers are canvassing the neighbourhood for witnesses and surveillance footage.

Police also confirmed a vehicle involved in a collision within the taped-off area is part of the broader investigation, though its connection to the altercation has not been confirmed.

“We are coming for you.… Contact a lawyer and turn yourself in. We are going to catch you,” Nair said.

The killing marks Toronto’s fifth homicide of 2026.

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Canada could help ships sail Strait of Hormuz after ceasefire: Carney – National | Globalnews.ca


Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada might join efforts to ensure freedom of navigation in the Middle East if there is a ceasefire.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

Reporters asked Carney today how Ottawa might get involved in efforts to reopen shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which Tehran has blockaded in response to the U.S. and Israel launching a war on Iran a month ago.

Carney says Canada is talking to allies about how it could help restore the movement of vessels in the strait, offering the clearest scenario yet of how it might get involved.


Click to play video: 'How the Iran war is draining Canadians’ wallets at the pump'


How the Iran war is draining Canadians’ wallets at the pump



Carney is also defending the limited information his government has released about the war, saying that proactive disclosure could endanger troops.

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The government has been criticized for not telling the public about potential damage to Canadian assets at a Kuwait airbase.

Global Affairs Canada officials testifying at a Senate committee about Iran today said they never expected that strikes against Iran’s senior leadership would prompt a successful popular uprising to oust the regime.

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Watchdog finds little oversight over multi-billion-dollar Indigenous procurement program – National | Globalnews.ca


The federal government repeatedly ignored key safeguards meant to ensure that legitimate Indigenous businesses would benefit from a multi-billion-dollar procurement program, a watchdog’s investigation has shown.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

In a report made public Thursday, the Office of the Procurement Ombud said Indigenous Services Canada showed a “systemic disregard” for the principles behind the Procurement Strategy for Indigenous Business (PSIB), repeatedly failed to verify companies awarded work were Indigenous-owned, and failed to keep track of how the decades-old program actually benefitted Indigenous businesses.

Instead, the department’s “fragmented” guidance, failure to conduct mandatory audits and failure to respond to other government agencies’ questions led the watchdog to conclude the federal government can’t “credibly” say that it is accomplishing a key target for economic reconciliation with First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities.

“I would say this is the worst we have seen in terms of a systemic review. I don’t know that I could recall another situation where the actual rule set didn’t exist in its entirety,” said Procurement Ombud Alexander Jeglic, calling the government’s handling of the program “difficult to understand.”

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After years of criticism from Indigenous business leaders, internal government reviews and parliamentary hearings, the federal Liberals said they will continue to dole out contracts under the PSIB until a long-awaited “transformative” solution is revealed.

“The longer this goes unaddressed, the more risk to Indigenous communities,” said Jeglic in an interview with Global News.

“One thing I absolutely need to put on record is whatever the solution is, it cannot be worse for Indigenous suppliers … They are not the failing point of this strategy. The failing point is the (government’s) administration of the strategy.”

Jeglic’s office reviewed 27 separate procurement files from three separate departments from April 2023 to March 2025. It also examined Indigenous Services Canada’s overall administration of the program — which mandates that at least five per cent of all government procurement projects go to businesses that are at least 51 per cent owned and operated by Indigenous peoples.

It also followed years of internal government reports raising concerns about the administration of the program, uncovered by a months-long joint investigation by Global News and the First Nations University of Canada in 2024.

The investigation detailed multiple ways non-Indigenous companies were gaming the system to gain access to billions in federal work intended for First Nations, Inuit and Métis businesses.

Jeglic called his office’s own investigation “sobering,” and expressed surprise that a program that’s been around for three decades could be so poorly managed — to the point of not having a central set of rules to guide government officials in meeting their obligations under the PSIB.

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The report suggests the problems flow from an absence of central, clear rules from Indigenous Services Canada to govern how departments’ procurement officers award work to Indigenous companies, in what Jeglic calls a “cascading failure.”

The watchdog’s findings take on a sense of urgency not only because Indigenous companies will continue to lose out on federal work under the current system, but also because Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government is preparing to pump billions into spending on files like defence and infrastructure. 

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The PSIB was established in 1996 under Prime Minister Jean Chretien to help Indigenous businesses compete against multinational companies for a slice of federal contract spending.

It was designed both to increase the number of Indigenous suppliers to government and to serve as a tool of economic reconciliation.

But Jeglic’s office found that government departments weren’t tracking whether the work was actually being done by Indigenous companies.

Some major contracts worth more than $2 million proceeded without the mandatory audit to confirm that the company was at least 51 per cent owned by Indigenous peoples, the minimum representation required for eligibility.

Correctional Services Canada (CSC) — a department that was projected to spend at least $818 million on major contracts in 2024-25 alone — claimed they weren’t aware of the requirement to audit suppliers before awarding PSIB contracts.

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Jeglic’s probe broadly confirmed the findings of Global News and the First Nations University of Canada joint investigation, which found that billions in federal contracts had been awarded under the PSIB with little scrutiny of whether companies were, in fact, Indigenous-owned and operated.

The investigation also revealed serious problems with the government’s Indigenous Business Directory – a central database run by Indigenous Services Canada that lists companies eligible for PSIB contracts. After the reports, the government removed hundreds of companies and individual suppliers from the database, including some they deemed ineligible.

PSIB regulations require that a company be 51 per cent owned and operated by First Nations, Inuit or Métis people to qualify, and that at least 33 per cent of the resulting work be completed by Indigenous people.

The 33 per cent rule was designed to guard against shell companies being set up by non-Indigenous people to gain access to billions in work earmarked for Indigenous businesses.

Global’s investigation detailed those schemes — known in Indigenous procurement circles as “rent-a-feathers” — where Indigenous people serve as a figurehead for non-Indigenous companies to gain access to the contracts.

Jeglic’s team noted Indigenous Services Canada’s website indicated departments could request a post-award audit to verify the 33 per cent requirement, but ISC believes individual departments are responsible for monitoring and oversight of their contracts.

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Jeglic found no evidence that ISC communicated that position to departments, and ISC has no guidance documents on the 33 per cent rule.

“Not only is ISC’s direction on who is responsible for monitoring the 33 per cent criterion inadequately defined, but even more alarming is the complete absence of clear guidance to departments on when and how this monitoring should be applied,” the ombudsman report read.

Jeglic’s report also said that the federal government has been inflating the supposed economic benefits for Indigenous businesses for years, calling into question if departments are truly hitting their mandated target of five per cent.

Departments take the total value of contracts awarded to Indigenous businesses each year and divide that by the department’s total procurement spending to arrive at a percentage of work done by First Nations, Inuit and Métis companies. For instance, if a department spent $100 million total and $5 million went to Indigenous companies, the department hit the five per cent target.


But under the PSIB, Indigenous companies can subcontract as much as 67 per cent of contract work to non-Indigenous companies, making the aggregate numbers misleading.

“Because departments are not required to disaggregate the work performed by non-Indigenous entities, these contributions are still counted toward the five per cent target, overstating the actual economic benefit to Indigenous businesses,” the report read.

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“This approach creates a misleading impression that Indigenous businesses are receiving a larger share of federal procurement spending than they truly are.”

Jeglic’s report found that Indigenous Services Canada routinely ignored other government departments when they reached out with information or questions  about the procurement process.

For example, Indigenous Services Canada did not respond to a notification from Shared Services Canada about an Indigenous set-aside contract for two months, but by then the department had already gone ahead with the contract.

Another department contacted Indigenous Services Canada procurement mailbox with a question about Indigenous procurement. Seven weeks later, ISC responded, “they were not trained or specialized in federal procurement” and advised the department to consult the government’s procurement manual.

Employment and Social Development Canada went ahead with a sole-sourced contract to an Indigenous supplier that was not listed on the government’s Indigenous Business Directory — a requirement to access set-aside contracts.

Global News previously reported on the government’s lax verification of businesses on the directory, with one government employee telling an Algonquin tribal council they could upload anything to qualify, even a “picture of a bunny.”

Nevertheless, ESDC justified awarding the non-competitive contract because they felt the IBD was “exclusionary” and applying for certification would be too “burdensome” for some.

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Jeglic’s report includes more examples of “gaps” in the administration of the PSIB, and his office’s report examined just 27 contracts from three departments between April 2023 and March 31, 2025. The probe specifically did not examine ISC’s verification process for businesses applying to be listed on the IBD.

Auditor General Karen Hogan’s own investigation into the federal government’s Indigenous procurement program is expected later this year. The probe was taken on at the request of the Algonquin Anishinabeg Nation Tribal Council in the wake of Global’s investigation.

Algonquin Anishinabeg Grand Chief Savana McGregor told Global News last year she hoped Hogan’s investigation would demonstrate “the scope of how infiltrated the (IBD) is … with pretensions,” referring to people who falsely claim Indigenous ancestry.

In a February letter sent to the House of Commons’ Indigenous and Northern Affairs committee, Mandy Gull-Masty, the minister responsible for the PSIB, said her department has moved to strengthen its verification process to make sure businesses listed on the IBD are Indigenous-owned.

Gull-Masty noted that the government intends to update its policy guidance on the PSIB later this spring and is working with Indigenous leaders to completely overhaul the troubled program, turning over control of the IBD from public servants to Indigenous peoples.

Indigenous Services Canada told Jeglic’s office that it agrees with the report’s recommendations, including setting up an impartial arbiter for complaints about the Indigenous procurement program, publishing an “updated” policy and pushing the Treasury Board to reform how departments calculate their progress toward the five per cent spending mandate.

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But the changes won’t come quickly. The “updated” policy is not expected until 2027, and changes to how the government calculates economic benefits to Indigenous companies will take “2-3 years to implement fully,” the department wrote.

“We welcome the Procurement Ombud’s recommendations and we are taking concrete steps to address the recommendations,” the department wrote in a statement to Global News.

“We are co-developing, along with Indigenous partners, policy changes to improve our practices, including exploring the devolution of responsibility for verifying Indigeneity.”


Salim Touaibi guilty of murder in drive-by shooting of Montreal teen – Montreal | Globalnews.ca


Salim Touaibi has been found guilty of first-degree murder and four counts of attempted murder in the drive-by shooting of a teenager in Montreal in 2021.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

His co-accused, Aymane Bouadi, who was inside the car when Touaibi fired the shots, has been acquitted of all charges.

The Superior Court trial heard that Meriem Boundaoui, 15, was sitting in the passenger seat of a Volkswagen Jetta in Montreal’s St-Léonard borough on Feb. 7, 2021, when a white Mercedes with two men inside pulled up and one of them opened fire, hitting her fatally in the head.

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The death of high school student shook Quebec’s Algerian community and prompted wider calls for stronger measures to stop gun violence. Montreal’s mayor and police chief later announced a new police unit targeting gun traffickers in the wake of her death and that of two other teens the same year.

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Over the course of a trial spanning more than two months, the jury heard that Boundaoui was a bystander in the wrong place at the wrong time, caught in the crossfire of a conflict between two family businesses that did not concern her.


Touaibi said on the stand that he was the shooter, but testified he didn’t realize Boundaoui or anyone else was in the Jetta when he shot at it. He acknowledged being aware of the conflict between family businesses, but said his involvement was limited to trying to act as a peacemaker.

Bouadi’s lawyer argued during closing arguments that his client was just a “passive” passenger in the Mercedes who had gone to get food with his friend and should be acquitted. He said his client was aware of the conflict between groups but not involved.

The two men were arrested days apart by Montreal police in June 2022.

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OPP seek suspect after alleged identity fraud used to buy luxury vehicle in B.C. | Globalnews.ca


The Ontario Provincial Police are asking for the public’s help in identifying a suspect in connection with an interprovincial identity fraud investigation.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

Officers with the Nottawasaga detachment in Ontario issued a release saying they were first contacted on Nov. 27, 2025, by a victim who reported that their personal information had been used to create a fraudulent piece of identification.

Police allege that fake ID was then used at a banking institution in New Tecumseth, Ont., to open a credit card in the victim’s name.

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Investigators say the same identification was later used on Dec. 1, 2025, to purchase a luxury vehicle in Surrey, B.C.

The suspect has not been identified, and police are asking anyone who recognizes the individual or has information to come forward.

Police say a fraudulent ID was used in Ontario and B.C., urging the public to help identify a suspect.


Police say a fraudulent ID was used in Ontario and B.C., urging the public to help identify a suspect.

OPP

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Old Man Winter wallops B.C.’s Mainland/Southwest region, major highway closed | Globalnews.ca


Old Man Winter is doling out a spring wallop to parts of southwestern British Columbia.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

Heavy snowfall has triggered a temporary shutdown of the Coquihalla Highway Thursday morning, between Hope and Merritt.

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Environment Canada has issued a snowfall warning, forecasting roughly 15 cm of snow in the region, with reduced visibility possible at times.

The weather agency notes that the situation in the mountains can change suddenly, resulting in hazardous driving conditions.


As of 10:45  p.m. Wednesday, DriveBC was reporting several traffic incidents due to the weather.

Conditions in the area are not expected to improve until later Thursday morning.

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Multiple milk brands in Canada recalled over risk of ‘pieces of glass’ – National | Globalnews.ca


Select milk products sold through the Farmers, Natrel and Québon brands are being recalled due to a “possible presence of pieces of glass.”

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

The recalls were initially triggered by Agropur, Canada’s largest dairy co-operative, on Wednesday.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) is currently conducting a “food safety investigation.”

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The CFIA is also “verifying that industry is removing recalled products from the marketplace.”

The affected products include:

  • Farmers 1% chocolate partly skimmed milk (2 L), sold in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island
  • Farmers 1% partly skimmed milk (2 L), sold in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island
  • Farmers 2% partly skimmed milk (2 L), sold in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island
  • Farmers 3.25% homogenized milk (2 L), sold in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island
  • Natrel 1% lactose-free chocolate partly skimmed milk (2 L), sold nationally
  • Québon 2% chocolate partly skimmed milk (2 L), sold in Quebec


The recall warns consumers not to “consume, use, sell, serve or distribute recalled products,” and says they should be “thrown out or returned to the location where they were purchased.”


4 European nations begin quest to play Canada in Toronto World Cup match | Globalnews.ca


Four-time champion Italy hosts Northern Ireland in the standout semifinal of the World Cup playoffs in Europe on Thursday.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

The Azzurri are under pressure to avoid failing to qualify for soccer’s biggest event for a third consecutive time after being eliminated by Sweden in 2017 and North Macedonia in 2022.

The winner of Italy and Northern Ireland, and the winner of Wales vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina will face off in the qualifying finals Tuesday. The victor will play Canada at Toronto Stadium on June 12.

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In all, 16 teams are competing for four spots at the World Cup in North America.

Eight one-off semifinals are followed by four finals next week. The winners of the finals secure qualification.


Path A: Italy vs. Northern Ireland, Wales vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Path B: Ukraine vs. Sweden, Poland vs. Albania.

Path C: Turkey vs. Romania, Slovakia vs. Kosovo.

Path D: Denmark vs. North Macedonia, Czech Republic vs. Ireland

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Air Canada CEO apologizes for inability to express himself adequately in French | Globalnews.ca


The chief executive of Air Canada is apologizing for not being able to express himself adequately in French in a video message of condolence he released after the deadly plane crash in New York on Sunday.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

Michael Rousseau has been criticized for the four-minute video posted online that only included two French words — “bonjour” and “merci.”

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Prime Minister Mark Carney said the decision to release the video message only in English showed a “lack of judgment and lack of compassion.”

Rousseau has also been summoned to testify at the House of Commons official languages ​​committee.


The Air Canada chief executive says he is “deeply saddened” that his inability to speak French has diverted attention from the deep grievance of the families of the pilots killed in the crash.

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He apologized that despite many lessons over several years he is still unable to express himself adequately in French, but added he is continuing his efforts to improve.

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Ford government to table 2026 budget with warning of ‘tougher times’ ahead | Globalnews.ca


The Ford government will table its budget on Thursday afternoon, a financial blueprint expected to be printed with its fair share of red ink as the finance minister tells Ontarians to prepare for “tougher times” ahead.

‘We are coming for you’: Toronto police urge fatal stabbing suspect to come forward  | Globalnews.ca

The annual financial plan will outline the government’s expectations for economic growth and debt, as well as offer insights into the cost of its policies, the housing market and how Crown corporations like the LCBO are managing.

In a few brief comments as he bought the tie he will wear to present the budget, Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy acknowledged his plan comes as people struggle.

“It’s tough times for people,” he said. “People are hurting, the cost of everything is very high. That’s why we’ve been focused on affordability, putting more money back into people’s pockets.”

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Bethlenfalvy’s comments echoed those he made earlier this month in a speech revealing the date of the budget.

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“The world has changed, and Ontario must be ready for what change may bring, even if that means being prepared for tougher times,” he said during that event.

“As a government, we cannot eliminate uncertainty, but we can mitigate risks with a responsible, balanced fiscal approach that supports public services and infrastructure while maintaining flexibility.”

In that speech, he twice mentioned delivering government programs “efficiently and sustainably,” words that are sometimes used by politicians to signal belt tightening.


The province’s deficit, in the most recent fiscal update earlier this year, stood at $13.4 billion. Bethlenfalvy has been silent on whether the path to balance remains the same as his plan in last year’s budget to get into the black in 2027-28.

As it normally does in the run-up to the budget, the government has already pre-announced several major policies.

A one-year cut to the sales tax on all new homes was unveiled Wednesday, while a cap on the resale price of tickets to concerts and sports games will also be included in the document.

There’s also going to be $325 million for primary care in a budget that will be passed through legislation that also clamps down on transparency rules.

The budget will be tabled in the house around 4 p.m.

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with files from The Canadian Press

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