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Bill C-2, Immigration Raids, and the Trump-Inspired Threat to Human Rights in Canada
Why Canada’s new Strong Borders Act mirrors U.S. immigration crackdowns, and what we can do about it
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INC-5.2: World leaders fail again to secure a Global Plastics Treaty, but the fight for a strong treaty goes on
The sixth round of negotiations for a Global Plastics Treaty (INC-5.2) concluded without an agreement to end plastic pollution.
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Greenpeace Bearing Witness Under Fire: Honouring Anas al-Sharif and the Duty of Solidarity
On 10 August 2025, Anas al-Sharif, a prominent Al Jazeera Arabic correspondent, was assassinated in a deliberate Israeli airstrike on a media tent outside Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. The…
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From “Eradicating Hamas” to Erasing Gaza: The Logic of a Colonial War — and Canada’s Role
On August 7–8, 2025, Israel’s security cabinet approved a plan to take control of Gaza City — home to approximately 900,000 people — and forcibly relocate its population to camps…
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A Wild Ride Through the Lens — Final Hours to Enter!
As the sun sets on this year’s Greenpeace Canada Photo Contest, we want to take a moment to say thank you. 🌿
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INC-5.2: Inspiring action through art ahead of Global Plastics Treaty talks
Ahead of the Global Plastics Treaty talks in Geneva, Greenpeace is turning Toronto-Danforth into an open air art exhibition around the plastics crisis.
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“That’s Just War” — No, It’s Not. And Canada Is Complicit.
As the devastation in Gaza reaches unimaginable levels, we continue to hear the same hollow refrains: “It’s war — terrible things happen,” or “Yes, the Israeli military may be going…
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Why is it easier to believe conspiracy theories than climate science?
While we can't help but marvel—grimly—at the creativity of some of the conspiracy theories around wildfires and extreme weather, their role in obscuring the role played by climate change is going to get (more) people killed.
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From frustration to action: what comes after Suzuki’s climate wake-up call?
David Suzuki’s recent op-ed and interview got people talking. In some ways it's a relief to hear someone with his stature say plainly: this isn’t working, our leaders and the system are set up to tackle such a complex problem.
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Deep-sea mining isn’t innovation: it’s ecological theft
Right now, countries are gathering at the International Seabed Authority (ISA) in Jamaica to debate whether companies should be allowed to mine the deep ocean for profit. The frontliner? Canada-based…









