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January 16 - Prime MinisterPaul Martin begins a
nine-day trip to Asia in Indonesia surveying the aftermath of the
Indian Ocean tsunami damage. Martin also travelled to Sri Lanka, India, Japan and
China.
February 8 - Controversial Toronto police
chief Julian
Fantino is appointed Ontario's new commissioner of emergency
management.
February 8 - Edmonton police
chief Fred Rayner is fired after news of a police sting targeting a
journalist and the chair of the city's police board comes to
light.
February 10 - Wal-Mart
says it will close one of its stores in Jonquière, Quebec, just as its 200 workers are about to win
the first-ever union contract from the world's largest
retailer.
April 21 - Prime Minister Paul Martin and the leaders of the
opposition address the nation separately on television on the
subject of the sponsorship scandal and the
possibility of a general
election being called this spring.
May 10 - The House
passes a motion, which the opposition says should topple the
government. The governing Liberals refuse to resign
following this by claiming that this is a procedural matter and not
a vote of no confidence.
June 9 - The Supreme Court of Canada rules
against the Quebec Health Insurance Act and Quebec Hospital
Insurance Act sections that prohibit buying private health
insurance for medically necessary medical services.
July 8 - Adrienne Clarkson undergoes pacemaker surgery. Beverly McLachlin, as Chief Justice of Canada,
becomes administrator of the government during Clarkson's
convalescence.
August 13 - Ernest "Smoky" Smith receives a full military
funeral.
August 15 - The Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation enters a labour dispute with its staff,
significantly affecting programming on all of the CBC radio and
television networks. Only staff in Quebec and Moncton, New Brunswick are unaffected, due to
membership in a different union.
June 29 - The Rooms,
a new cultural facility in St. John's,
Newfoundland and Labrador housing the province's art gallery,
provincial historical museum and provincial archives, is officially
opened.
September 12: Peter C. Newman's controversial book
The Secret Mulroney Tapes: Unguarded Confessions of a Prime
Minister is released.
September 20 - Canadian rocker J.D. Fortune is named
the winner of the television reality showRock
Star: INXS, becoming the new lead singer of popular Australian
rock band INXS.
Sport
January 4 - The Canadian junior men's hockey team wins the IIHF
World Junior Championship, defeating Russia 6–1. The team, which
went undefeated over the course of the tournament, was touted as
the "Greatest Team" to ever play in the junior men's tournament.
They won Canada's first gold medal at the tournament since
1997.