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February 20 - The Canadian
government, along with American billionaire Bill Gates, announce the
Canadian HIV Vaccine Initiative, a $139 million dollar plan to fight the
AIDS virus.
March 13 - Canada 2006 Census data is released;
the population of Canada in 2006 was 31,612,897. Notably, the
census also indicates that for the first time in Canadian history,
the three territories (Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut) have a combined
population of over 100,000.
May 3 - Fixed election dates introduced. The Prime Minister can
no longer advise the Governor General to call an election unless a
non-confidence motion is passed.
November 1 - A provincewide Amber Alert is issued
in Ontario after a newborn baby is abducted from the Sudbury Regional Hospital in
Greater
Sudbury. A Kirkland Lake resident, Brenda Batisse,
is arrested later the same evening; the baby is recovered
safely.
January 15 - James Hillier, scientist and inventor,
jointly designed and built first electron microscope (b.1915)
January 15 - Percy Saltzman, meteorologist and
television personality, first weatherman in Canadian television
history (b.1915)[2]
January 18 - Julie Winnefred Bertrand,
supercentenarian, oldest living Canadian and oldest verified living
recognized woman at the time of her death (b.1891)