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Trudeau tells UN Canada has failed its indigenous people
by Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) Sept 21, 2017


Declaring that Canada is "no land of wonders," Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the United Nations on Thursday that his country was working to address failures in the treatment of its indigenous people.

Trudeau told the UN General Assembly that Canada's 1.2 million indigenous people had mostly known "humiliation, neglect and abuse" in a country often held up as shining example of diversity.

"We know that the world expects Canada to strictly adhere to international human rights standards," said Trudeau, who has put reconciliation with first nations at the top of his reform agenda.

"That is what we expect of ourselves, too."

Trudeau drew applause when he pledged Canada's "unwavering" support to global efforts to combat global warming which he said was affecting the lifestyles of Inuit communities in the north.

Canada's permafrost is melting in the Arctic and "huge pieces of tundra" are eroding into the ocean, he said.

Trudeau also took an implicit swipe at the United States over its withdrawal from the Paris agreement on climate change.

"There is no country on this planet that can walk away from the reality of climate change," said Trudeau, alternating between French and English in his remarks.

It was Trudeau's second address to the world body following his 2015 election.

"Canada is no land of wonders where hardships that you know do not exist," said the prime minister, whose country consistently ranks among the world's highest in living standards.

"Canada remains a work in progress," he declared.

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Cell phone data coupled with sewage testing show drug use patterns
Washington DC (SPX) Sep 21, 2017
The drugs people inhale, inject or ingest ultimately end up in some form down the toilet. So scientists have started monitoring drug use through sewage-based epidemiology. But this approach hasn't taken into account the variation in number of people who add to wastewater in a given area at a given time. Now one team reports in ACS' Environmental Science and Technology a way to account for ... read more

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