Counterfeit goods, tempting danger

Christmas shoppers, often desperate for designer goods and must-have gifts, are easy targets for fraudsters offloading imitation items. And the problem is getting worse. 

New research from the Centre for Economic and Business Research, conducted with online brand specialist NetNames, reveals that UK consumers are now twice as likely to see fakes online as they were a year ago.

It’s not just designer gear and gifts: electrical items, cigarettes, food and alcohol are all among the fake goods that have entered the UK. This can cause a multitude of problems both economically and for the individual consumers. The economic consequences are serious, the Cebr report shows that counterfeit goods cost the UK economy £17.3bn in 2016 alone, destroying 72,000 jobs in the process.

But something that is even more likely to make the individual shopper hesitate is that counterfeit items are likely to be poorly made, poorly finished and statistically more likely to burst into flames. 

Up in flames

Counterfeit items do not go through the rigorous safety and compliance testing that legitimate products are subject to. That means there is no one checking whether they are safe to use: putting consumers at risk, especially unsuspecting gift recipients who may have no idea their present was suspiciously cheap.

Take counterfeit Apple chargers as just one example. Recently the Chartered Trading Standards Institute tested 400 counterfeit Apple chargers purchased from online sellers around the world and 397 of them failed a basic safety test, meaning 99 per cent of the cheaper knock-off chargers are unsafe.

Leon Livermore, the chief executive of the Chartered Trading Standards Institute, urged shoppers to only buy electrical goods from trusted suppliers, especially online. “It might cost a few pounds more but counterfeit and second-hand goods are an unknown entity that could cost you your home or even your life, or the life of a loved-one.

He says: “It has never been easier for counterfeit products to enter the UK marketplace, with internet based sales portals, social media marketplaces and the ability for anyone with a bank account and internet access to import products from anywhere in the world. At the same time, those agencies tasked with tackling the counterfeiting menace are having the resources available to them spread ever thinner.”

Worryingly, the number of house fires caused by poor quality chargers is on the rise and insurers have started to speak out about the dangers. 

Jonathan Guy, the head of claims at the Co-op Insurance, says: “In the last year alone we’ve seen a surge in fire claims caused by electrical faults, with a correlation to counterfeit phone chargers. We’d like to warn people about the dangers of using these items, as the poor quality components can lead to not only electrocution and burns but serious house fires, with tragic circumstances.”

Vicky Hasty, 33, from Birmingham contacted the charity Electrical Safety First (ESF) after she had a dangerous experience with a counterfeit purchase.

She explains: “Last month I bought a new pair of GHD hair straighteners from eBay, which when switched on became extremely hot and burst into flames. Before I could drop the straighteners onto the floor, the flames burnt my hand leaving a terrible mark that lasted for weeks. The incident has really shocked me, I didn’t realise how easy it was to be fooled by counterfeits online.”

The seller refused to respond to her complaints and Vicky was forced to apply to PayPal for a refund.

There are very few crimes where would-be victims seek out the fraudsters but this is one. While many buyers are unsuspecting bargain hunters, a sizable few are seeking out fake goods for the cheap prices but designer prestige.

One in six buyers surveyed by ESF said they would consider buying a product that was cheaper than the original, even if they suspected it was fake.

Yet the dangers surrounding these untested, unregulated, uncertified products means that customers are left at risk and with little or no legal recourse.

How to avoid a fake

Spotting the fake products online can be difficult, especially for buyers who want to search out the best price. ESF has the following five tips for spotting bargains that are just too risky to trust: 

The price is almost right. Fraudsters know that if the price is ridiculously low then buyers will question it, so they offer their counterfeits for sake at just below high street prices.

The reviews are glowing. Don’t trust reviews that are not verified purchases and avoid buying from websites that do not cross-reference user reviews with their buyer database.

Check the seller’s address. Look on the website for an address and do not simply trust that a ‘co.uk’ web address means they are based in the UK and thus subject to British safety laws.

Worry if the seller states it is ‘genuine’. Calvin Klein doesn’t advertise as ‘genuine Calvin Klein’, so if the seller feels a need to make such a claim then it is worth double-checking.

Check the website is safe. Before you make a payment look for a padlock symbol on your browser window (not the website page) as this shows you can pay safely. Don’t enter your details if you can’t spot this symbol.

When the item arrives, inspect it carefully for tell-tale signs of flimsy packaging and typos, and look for a legitimate safety certification label. If you are concerned that the item is not genuine then move fast and ask for a refund, leave feedback to warn other shoppers and report your purchase to Trading Standards.

Fake goods are not a cheap way to get designer labels: at best they can be poorly made and at worst they can be a real danger. Some sellers have been linked to more serious organised crime. Christmas may be expensive but it is better to go without than buy a dangerous alternative to the real thing.

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The real cost of Christmas

The financial world is full of headline figures that put our everyday spending habits, mistakes and opportunities into pounds and pence – how cutting out that takeaway coffee everyday could save you enough for a fourth-hand Bugatti Veyron in a couple of thousand years, you know the kind of thing. 

Some of the stats are laughable, others tragic. But nowhere else are they as disconcerting for the old bank balance as they are at Christmas. 

In fact, we’ll spend an average of almost £54,000 each on Christmas over the course of our lives, with one in three relying on credit cards to do it this year, amounting to almost £11bn of spending.

Here’s a round-up of just how much you have or will fork out in the space of a few frantic festive weeks celebrating Christmas 2016. 

Food and drink

The average household expects to spend £174 on food and drink for 25 December alone, covering all the must-haves including the turkey (£22.50 per person) and the sprouts nobody likes at £11.60 per big day (or a staggering £713 over an adult lifetime), according to data from Coople and Quidco combined. Setting out the sherry, a box of mince pies and a bag of carrots for Father Christmas and his entourage will add another £12 to the bill. 

And then there’s the at-home booze to consider. Last year, Sainsbury’s shoppers alone spent £5,000 every minute on sparkling wine on the busiest trading day for food – the 23rd December. That day they also spent £1m on gin – four times more than they had just 10 days earlier. 

Overall, each adult will spend more than £45 each on beers, wines and spirits for their own consumption just at home. Add in the work’s Christmas dinner with all the trimmings at the pub, plus a few drinks and that’s another £72, (it’s still £50 even if you’re the designated driver.) 

It’s little wonder the British Heart Foundation warns that Brits will collectively put on over 19.5m stone by New Year, the equivalent of 9,874 London double decker buses.

Parties and transport

Forgetting the booze and food, the average Christmas party outfit will set you back around £66 and even getting home could cost more than you bargained for. 

More than one in ten of us have fallen asleep on public transport after their Christmas party (rising to a quarter of Londoners) says insurer Back Me Up, and they’ll lose an average of £101 worth of items as a result of over-indulging adds insurance broker Towergate. 

Meanwhile, the average family car will travel 608 miles over the festive period, demanding an extra 1.5 tanks of fuel, according to Click Mechanic. Plus there's the 1.3m Brits attempting to escape the madness by heading away for the festive period who will collectively spend £1.03bn – around £760 per person – by going overseas says Direct Line.

Gifts

And all that’s before we even start on the main focal point of our spending. Almost half of us will overspend in the pursuit of the perfect Christmas for family and friends says TSB, with a third borrowing to meet the season’s costs. Almost one in ten would rather get into debt than consider reducing our festive spend, the bank says. 

Nor are adults aren’t the only ones feeling the pressure to buy. Sadly, despite having an average budget of £37 to buy their friends and family Christmas presents even children as young as 7 are overspending by an average of £20 on festive treats, according to NatWest.

Their parents will splash out £71 on each child's Christmas stocking alone, peaking at £119 for the average 15-year-old, says Netmums and Barclaycard, with more gifts under the tree.

Last minute dashes to the shops in the days before 25 December alone will set the average Brit back £66, or £1.5bn, says Amex. And yet when the turkey has been gobbled, the last cracker pulled and the Sinatra loop silenced, we’ll return £355m worth of unwanted presents, says Gocompare.com. 

All in all, with different surveys suggesting the total cost could be anywhere between £750 and more than £1,500 per adult, perhaps the most compelling stat is that more than 11 million of us could still be paying off last Christmas by the time this year's big day rolls around once more.

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The truth about your inheritance

It’s a misconception echoed around the world. We expect to receive significantly more in inheritance than we’ll ever get and assume it’ll set us on the right track money-wise. It probably won’t. 

With one in five adults of all ages relying on getting one, and hoping for an average of £147,000, UK family members will actually be bequeathed around £119,000. And we’ll blow more than £21,000 of it. 

The latest figures from SunLife show that we plan to spend the cash we do receive on holidays, home improvements, a new car, the kids and whatever ‘large item’ we’ve been eye-ing up in the showroom.  

Around eight in ten Brits would clear £16,000 off their mortgages and four in ten would pay off £6,000 worth of other debts. 

More than one in four under 34s would put some, but not all, the cash towards buying a property and the over 55s are twice as likely than Millenials to save the lot. 

But the figures come amid turbulent times for family __money and expectation. Recent data from Co-op shows more than 40 per cent of UK adults have already mentally spent their inheritance but the same proportion of over 50s plan to put themselves first and ‘have a good time’ spending their cash with many admitting there is less in the pot to hand on than they’d hoped. 

Travelling, buying a classic car, home improvements, shopping and patronising expensive restaurants were some of the most popular ways the over 50s were spending their offspring’s inheritance. However, the gap was also partly due to early retirement and setting aside __money for care costs. 

Half, understandably felt they’d worked hard all their lives and wanted to enjoy the money, and a fifth thought their loved ones should earn their own cash, with two fifths expecting their family not to need it. However one in ten would prefer to give the money to charity than their children. 

The backlash would be significant though, with a quarter of inheritors saying that their parents would have made a bad decision by ‘wasting’ their expected windfall if it was spent and more than one in ten being upset and angry that they had done it out of spite. 

And yet a separate report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies suggests there is a lot more money in the inheritance pot – but not for everyone. 

Younger generations are likely to inherit much more wealth than their predecessors did, both in absolute terms and relative to their other sources of wealth, their research has found. But within each generation, those who are already well off tend to inherit the most – with implications for inequality and social mobility.

Ranking current pensioners by total lifetime income (excluding inheritance), those in the top 20 per cent have inherited four times as much as the bottom 20 per cent on average. Among younger generations, those with higher incomes are significantly more likely to expect an inheritance than those with lower incomes.

Even excluding the super-rich, the richest half of elderly households (aged over 80) hold 90 per cent of the wealth. In fact, the richest 10 per cent hold 40 per cent of the wealth. Hence a ‘lucky half’ of younger generations look likely to get the vast majority of inherited wealth.

 “The wealth of younger generations looks set to depend more on who their parents are than was the case for older generations. Today’s elderly have much more wealth to leave to their children than their predecessors did, primarily as the result of higher homeownership rates and rising house prices,” says Andrew Hood, Senior Research Economist at IFS.

“At the same time, today’s young adults will find it harder to accumulate wealth of their own than previous generations did, due to the sharp fall in homeownership for that group, the dramatic decline of defined benefit pensions in the private sector and the stagnation in their incomes.”

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“I feel sub-human”: The faces of Donald Trump’s travel ban

UPDATE: Contrary to previous statements from the U.S. State Department, the Canadian Prime Minister’s Office says holders of Canadian passports with dual citizenship will not be affected by this travel ban.

There’s no way yet of knowing how many people living in British Columbia are affected by President Donald Trump’s executive order preventing citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the U.S., but it’s likely in the tens of thousands.

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The order signed on Friday and effective immediately halts travel into the United States for anyone who holds a passport in Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, Syria and Yemen – and that includes Canadians with dual citizenship.

Airlines and airports around the world are already turning away passengers hoping to travel into the U.S. while thousands more are having to cancel future trips to the U.S. for business, leisure or to visit loved ones.

READ MORE: Trump refugee ban causes chaos, panic, anger worldwide

A substantial proportion of Iranian-Canadians live in Metro Vancouver – a population estimated to be over 36,000. Thousands more hold passports from the other six countries.

Global News spoke with several locals who are now affected by the travel ban, some whom have lived in Vancouver since age four and others who will now be unable to visit sick loved ones in the U.S. All of them are scared for the future.

Murtadha Al-Tameemi can no longer see his family, who made it out of Iraq as refugees to be close to him

Murtadha Al-Tameemi

Murtadha Al-Tameemi left war-torn Iraq as a teenager when he was given the opportunity to complete his final year of high school in Minnesotta. Living with an American host family, Al-Tameemi was greatly encouraged by the community to attend post-secondary school and ended up at UBC where he studied computer engineering. That skill eventually led him to work for Facebook in Seattle. Meanwhile, his family in Iraq fled the country in 2013 and arrived in Vancouver to settle two years later.

Now finally living only 200 kilometres apart, Al-Tameemi has been virtually locked into the U.S. under Trump’s executive order, and his family’s been locked out.

“One of the first impacts of this executive order is that I can’t see my family,” he told Global News through tears.

Al-Tameemi was in Vancouver earlier in the week to see his younger brother perform in a play. It was at that moment when he received a call from his lawyer warning him that Trump was about to sign an immigration ban that would lock him out of the U.S.

“The lawyer said ‘you might not be able to come back if you don’t come back right now,’ and that would mean I might lose my job, and my status in the U.S. and lose my life in the U.S. It wasn’t a decision I took lightly.”

Having missed so much of his brother’s life due to their separation, he took the risk to stay for the play and made it back through U.S. immigration just two days before the order was signed. Now he’s had to cancel all future travel plans out of the country, including a trip to Africa he was supposed to take for work next week.

As an Iraqi, Al-Tameemi says he’s always felt “sub-human” when it comes to crossing borders. He’s constantly been pulled aside in airports, questioned extensively and searched because of his Iraqi passport. He’s gone from tighter and tighter border controls to now being banned altogether.

But miraculously, that hasn’t swayed how he feels about the American people. He says he’s been flooded with messages of support from friends, colleagues and strangers since the executive order was signed on Friday. He still considers the U.S. home

“I consider myself part of this country. I consider it home. I take an interest in the well-being and safety of it as well.”

For now, Al-Tameemi and his family will remain separated by nothing but a signature on a piece of paper.

EXTENDED INTERVIEW: Now finally living only 200 kilometres from his family, Murtadha Al-Tameemi has been virtually locked into the U.S. under Trump’s executive order, and his family’s been locked out. Hear his story.

READ MORE: Iran bans US citizens in retaliation to Donald Trump move

Sana Shahram isn’t “the scary image you see on the news”

Sana Shahram

Born and raised in B.C., Sana Shahram is now facing consequences of holding an Iranian passport. A postdoctoral research fellow for Centre for Addictions Research of B.C., she is now having to cancel a trip to Las Vegas she had planned with old friends.

“I’m in shock to wake up this morning and find out I’m considered a public enemy,” she told Global News.

Her airline, WestJet, will be refunding her flight, and she’s not sure about the hotel booking. But those are just the material costs of Donald Trump’s new policy, she says. Her larger worry is the sudden discrimination she’s burdened with just because of her ethnicity.

“It has just struck me to my core to be singled out and discriminated in this way. I’m overwhelmed with sadness, anger, shame, outrage,” Shahram said.

Her husband, who is Caucasian and of Scottish descent, is also outraged at how his wife has been targeted.

She says her problems in the face of this news are minute compared to many others’, including family she has in Iran.

“My heart is truly breaking for the people dealing with much worse harms and hardships than me. The refugees and immigrants who’ve waited years, who’ve jumped through countless hoops, who’ve put their lives on hold for this one purpose and to have that taken away from them in an instant under the guise of American security is so devastating.

As a citizen and resident of B.C., Shahram has spent her adult life promoting and protecting the rights of marginalized people in Canada. She’s civically engaged, volunteers in the community, helps people with addictions and works to support health equity in the public health system.

“I’m not some scary image you see on the news. I’m your friend, your neighbour, your co-worker, your peer – and I’m being banned from entering a country for no logical reason.”

She says sharing her story is one of the only things she can actively do to reject this policy. Adding her face to the dialogue on the issue, she maintains, is one way to show why policies and discrimination based on religion, race and sexuality are “completely wrong.”

“I think it’s important for people like me to speak out.”

Bana Nourkeyhani has lived in Canada for 20 years, but is still banned from entering the U.S. just due to her ethnicity

Bana Nourkeyhani

Nourkeyhani was born in Tehran, Iran but moved to North Vancouver when she was four years old. Now at age 24, with no criminal record, she is banned from entering the United States due to her race.

“I fear that history is repeating itself in the most horrific way possible, one day at a time,” she told Global News.

Nourkeyhani holds both a Canadian and Iranian passport, but even her 20 years living in Canada won’t make a difference when it comes to Trump’s executive order.

“I was aware that Trump mentioned many times that he would put a ban on Muslims and register them,” she said. “I just thought that maybe he would do his research before going through with it to realize that what he is doing is inhumane. I didn’t expect it to be this severe, this horrific, this despicable.”

Nourkeyhani was planning on going to Seattle in April, but will have to cancel those plans now. She also fears how her many family and friends will be negatively affected.

READ MORE: Harvard-bound Iranian scientist working on diabetes cure barred from entering US

Behbod Negahban, a Yale student, can’t visit his sick father at home in Coquitlam without walking away from his education

Behbod Negahban

Behbod Negahban, a Yale University political science student, wants nothing more than to make a trip back to his native Coquitlam to visit his father who was recently diagnosed with bladder cancer.

But he fears he won’t be allowed back into the U.S. to continue his studies.  His only crime – being born in Iran.

He left Iran when he was just two years old and settled in Coquitlam, a place he calls home. He hasn’t even visited in Iran in the past 10 years.

“I feel a lot of guilt,” says Negahban. “I want ask [my father] how he’s doing in person.”

“I’d like to see [my family] in person as soon as possible, but for fear of not being able to re-enter the country, I’m not sure if I can do that.”

The 20- year-old Canadian-Iranian is anxious about his future. He says he’s poured so much of himself into getting into Yale and now he doesn’t know what else “Trump’s America might have in store” for him.

He feels like he’s being forced to choose between his family and continuing his studies in the United States.

“I’m angry for the people I know here, Iranian and otherwise, visiting students and permanent residents who’ve been separated from their families or livelihoods or both.”

Negahban, who is on a student visa, says there’s a lot of uncertainty right now and that makes him feel “powerless.”

He never thought leaving Canada to pursue higher education in the U.S. would prevent him from seeing his family, especially at a time when his family needs him the most.

INTERVIEW: Behbod Negahban, a Yale University political student, wants nothing more than to make a trip back to his native Coquitlam to visit his father who was recently diagnosed with bladder cancer. But Donald Trump’s executive order is trapping him in the U.S.

Sahar Salehi feels like lesser of a human being

Sahar Salehi

Sahar Salehi fled Iran with her family when she was just one year old. Because of the situation in the country at the time, they had to walk from a city in Iran all the way to Turkey in the snow, fearful that their footprints would leave behind a trail and lead their ultimate capture. After arriving in Canada as refugees, her family became citizens and have lived here ever since.

Now at 21 years old, Salehi dreams of moving to the U.S. after she graduates from nursing school to work and live with her close cousin and relatives. But Trump’s travel ban as potentially shattered that dream.

While the ban has been set at 90 days initially, there is no telling whether or not it will be extended indefinitely. Salehi says the executive order has broken her heart.

“I would do anything to be able to go and visit my cousin and all of my family in San Diego. Trumps actions have in a way ruined my plans for the future.”

It’s also changed how she sees humanity.

“The ban has made me feel lesser of a human being. Before this, I felt just the same as all of my friends who are Canadian citizens and born here, but now I feel like an outsider.”

Salehi was supposed to vacation in the U.S. in February with another Canadian friend, but will now have to cancel the trip. Her more permanent plans to move down south are now on hold.

Nilie Mobini’s long-distance relationship just got a lot harder

Nilie Mobini

“Not for the life of me, I thought as a Canadian, that I wouldn’t be allowed back in.”

Nilie Mobini arrived in Los Angeles just before the ban officially went into effect to visit her boyfriend, Daniel Klein, an American currently in his third year of medical school.

Now she fears this trip could be her last.

“I’m in utter shock,” she says.

Mobini, an optometrist, left Iran at a young age with her family in hopes of a better life in Canada.

Klein and Mobini met by chance when they were staying at the same hostel in Northern Chile two years ago. They started their first conversation just minutes before an 8.2-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Chile.

Klein jokingly says Mobini “rocked his world” when they met.

“I thought long distance is hard. I thought everything we were doing was beyond imagination to make something so difficult work,” Mobini says. “And little did I know that it was only going to get more horrific beyond anything that I would ever even known to have fear about.”

Like many others in her situation, Mobini doesn’t understand why this is even happening.

“Why am I as a Canadian not allowed to come visit the U.S.?” she asks.

The TSX came just shy of reaching an all-time high on Wednesday

Canada’s main stock index edged toward an all-time high on Wednesday, boosted by financial stocks as bond yields rose and by energy stocks in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump’s move to advance two major pipeline projects.

The Toronto Stock Exchange‘s S&P/TSX composite index closed up 33.15 points, or 0.21 percent, at 15,643.84, just off its September 2014 record peak of 15,685.13.

READ MORE: Toronto stock market hits 19-month high thanks to energy gains

The move towards that record came as the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 20,000 for the first time, helped by solid earnings and as optimism over Trump’s pro-growth initiatives revitalized a post-election rally.

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“Canada will benefit from a better U.S. economic environment,” said Kevin Headland, senior investment strategist at Manulife Investments.

“The pro-pipeline stance is just another benefit that I think Trump and the Republican Party is going to provide to Canada.”

TransCanada Corp rose 0.4 percent to $64.47, adding to an all-time high the stock hit on Tuesday, when Trump’s executive order put its Keystone XL pipeline back into play.

The pipeline would help Canadian oil sands producers tap the world’s largest refining market for their oil and boost the price they get for their crude.

The broader energy group also rose 0.4 percent, even as oil prices slipped on signs that growing U.S. shale production would reduce the impact of cuts by OPEC and other major exporters.

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Trump adviser Stephen Schwarzman says administration holds Canada in ‘high regard’
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The most influential gainers on the index included some of its biggest banks and insurers, with Royal Bank of Canada up 0.7 percent to $93.99 and Manulife Financial Corp advancing 1.5 percent to $25.38.

“Most insurance companies in Canada typically trade off the U.S. Treasury curve,” Headland said. “We saw the 10-year move up higher, that helps the Canadian insurers.”

The Toronto Stock Exchange fell sharply Wednesday amid falling oil prices.

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Benchmark U.S. yields hit a four-week high as Wall Street’s key indexes posted record highs amid investor optimism about the economy and the policies of the administration of President Donald Trump.

The financials group, which accounts for more than a third of the index’s weight, gained 0.7 percent.

Gold miners held the Canadian index back, as investors shunned bullion, typically seen as a safe haven.

READ MORE: Canadian dollar stable as U.S. voters head to the polls on Election Day

Shares in Canadian National Railway Co fell 2.5 percent to C$91.38, as the country’s largest railway company reported earnings that beat expectations but pointed to moderate volume growth in 2017.

Six of the TSX‘s 10 main groups rose, with two advancers for every decliner and 22 stocks posting new 52-week highs.

Vancouver-based Shoes.com and ShoeMe.ca shut down

Vancouver-based Shoes.com has announced the company has shut down all operations for its e-commerce businesses, including ShoeMe.ca and OnlineShoes.com.

The abrupt move also includes the shuttering of its two brick-and-mortar stores in Vancouver and Toronto. As of Friday, all company websites were offline.

ShoeMe.ca acquired OnlineShoes.com and Shoes.com in 2014 and had plans to quickly expand. The company was named as a top performing Canadian-owned ecommerce company in Internet Retailer’s 2016 Top 500 Guide and won the 2016 Ecommerce Experience Award.

It reportedly served eight __million customers in Canada and the U.S.

A release on the closure said employees of Shoes.com were made aware of the decision Friday and have been paid through to the end of January. It is now working to liquidate assets and plans to file bankruptcy for some or all of its group companies.

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Interview with Canadian-Iranian student trapped in U.S.

Harvard-bound Iranian scientist working on diabetes cure barred from entering US

An Iranian scientist who tried to fly into Boston on Saturday to begin a research project at Harvard Medical School was barred from entering the United States because of her nationality.

Samira Asgari was due to take up a research position at the lab of Soumya Raychaudhuri, associate professor of medicine and biomedical informatics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, which is affiliated with Harvard Medical School.

I was pretty excited to join @soumya_boston's lab but denied boarding due to my Iranian nationality. Feeling safer?

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— Samira Asgari (@samsam_86) January 28, 2017

However, she was told she wouldn’t be able to board her flight because she holds an Iranian passport — Iran is one of seven Muslim-majority countries whose passport-holders are banned from entering the U.S. following President Donald Trump‘s executive order.

Asgari’s LinkedIn profile states that she is a computational biologist, and was most recently a post-doctoral researcher at the prestigious École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland.

WATCH: President Trump’s travel ban sparks panic abroad, lawsuits

She is one of many academics who will now be unable to study, work or carry out research in the United States under Trump’s ban on people holding Iranian, Iraqi, Syrian, Libyan, Somali, Sudanese and Yemeni passports.

In Baghdad, Bayan Adil, a doctor working in the Iraqi Health Ministry who applied for a U.S. visa to attend a medical seminar, said Iraqi academics should visit Europe instead of the United States, where they were no longer welcome.

“Trump’s decision is unfortunately a humiliating insult not only for us as academics but for all Iraqis,” she said.

READ MORE: Canadians who are dual citizens of countries affected by Trump immigration order can’t go to US

Her comments were echoed by Abd Al-Jafar, a 43-year-old university professor in Sudan’s capital Khartoum, who said he had sought to go to the United States for doctoral studies.

“This decision, if implemented, will be a disaster,” he said. “I have work in Sudan and have no desire to emigrate to the U.S., just to study there. This decision is illogical.”

— With files from Reuters

Man missing in Alberta after collision on Highway 1

Facebook video from Alberta driver ticketed for cracked licence goes viral

Canadians with dual citizenship won’t be affected by Donald Trump travel ban

Canadian passport holders won’t be affected by a American ban that has barred citizens of seven countries from entering the United States.

An email from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau‘s office late Saturday said that the U.S. has given assurances that Canadians with dual citizenship will not be turned away at the border.

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READ MORE: Air Canada, WestJet waive cancellation fees for travellers affected by Trump travel ban

Earlier the U.S. State Department said that Canadians with dual citizenship from Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Somalia, Syria, Yemen and Libya would be denied entry for the next three months.

But Kate Purchase, Trudeau’s director of communications, said in an email that Trump’s National Security Adviser Michael Flynn has given assurances that Canadian passports will be dealt with normally by American border officials.

READ MORE: Justin Trudeau tweets messages of welcome to refugees as Trump travel ban sets in

The federal government has been low key in its response to the American ban, with Trudeau only offering a tweet that Canada would welcome those fleeing persecution, terror and war regardless of their faith.

Some Canadian groups representing people from the countries affected have condemned the American ban.

Ikea Canada to buy second Alberta wind farm in $119M deal

Ikea Canada has signed a deal to buy an Alberta wind farm from TransAlta and Teck Resources for a total of $119.6 million.

TransAlta (TSX:TA) said Thursday it will receive about $61 __million for its 51 per cent interest in the 88-megawatt Wintering Hills wind farm near Drumheller, Alta.

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Teck (TSX:TECK.B) said separately that it will receive $58.6 __million for its 49 per cent stake.

Ikea said the 55 turbines at Wintering Hills generate enough electricity to power 54 Ikea stores or nearly 26,000 Canadian households.

It is the second Canadian wind farm for the furniture retailer which has 12 stores across the country. It already has a 46MW wind firm in Pincher Creek, Alta., that it acquired in 2013.

Together, the two wind farms can produce more than four times the energy consumed by Ikea’s Canadian operations.

The global furniture and furnishings company has set a goal of generating more renewable energy than it uses by 2020.

Watch below from November 2013: Ikea buys wind farm near Pincher Creek

TransCanada boss talking to shippers to determine support for Keystone XL pipeline

The CEO of TransCanada Corp. says the company will be talking with shippers to determine if they still support the Keystone XL pipeline project after it was given a new lease on life by U.S. President Donald Trump earlier this week.

In his first comments since Trump invited the company to reapply to build the conduit to bring Canadian oil to the U.S. Gulf Coast, Russ Girling said he thinks the economic case for it can still be made.

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READ MORE: Will Keystone XL be built now that Donald Trump has approved the project?

“I believe this still makes sense but we haven’t engaged in direct conversation (with shippers) on that issue,” he said during a webcast presentation from a CIBC Capital Markets investor conference in Whistler, B.C. on Wednesday.

“I can tell you this wasn’t in our planning horizon in the middle of last year so we’ve only just re-engaged with our shippers again.”

He added he expects access to the “biggest heavy oil refining market in the world in the U.S. Gulf Coast” will remain attractive for TransCanada’s customers.

The $8-billion Keystone XL project would move oil 1,900 kilometres through a 36-inch-diameter crude oil pipeline beginning in Hardisty, Alta., and extending south to Steele City, Neb., where it would link with other lines already leading to refineries along the Gulf Coast.

WATCH: A closer look at the Alberta politics behind the Keystone XL pipeline

TransCanada said in a statement on Tuesday it was preparing its application for a presidential permit after Trump endorsed the project.

Trump directed the State Department and other agencies to make a decision within 60 days of a final application and declared that a 2014 State Department environmental study satisfies required reviews under environmental and endangered species laws.

Miles Pittman, a partner in the energy group for Calgary law firm Borden Ladner Gervais, said the pipeline must still obtain a permit for construction through Nebraska.

“Assuming that regulatory hurdle can be overcome, it becomes a question now of economics for TransCanada and whether or not the pipeline can be shown to generate the kind of returns that TransCanada would expect,” he said.

He pointed out that Keystone XL made economic sense when it was proposed in 2008 but crude oil markets have changed since then.

WATCH: Trump approves Keystone XL but uncertainty over project lingers

In a note to investors, RBC Dominion Securities analyst Robert Kwan said Nebraska permits could take seven to 12 months to obtain, suggesting construction would be delayed until 2018, putting the pipeline in service by late 2019 or early 2020.

He said unknowns include Trump’s demands for better terms from the company, changes in capital costs, changes in contracting and whether there will be any court challenges.

READ MORE: Donald Trump signs orders approving Keystone XL, Dakota pipelines

Girling said he thinks the economic benefits of spending $8 billion on the line will be sufficient to win support.

TransCanada still faces bitter opposition from environmentalists, landowners and native Americans who are determined to block Keystone XL.

Former president Barack Obama rejected Keystone XL in late 2015, declaring it would undercut U.S. efforts to clinch a global climate change deal that was a centrepiece of his environmental agenda.

In response, TransCanada filed notice to launch a $15-billion claim under the North American Free Trade Agreement. It also filed a lawsuit in the U.S. Federal Court in Texas alleging that Obama exceeded his power under the U.S. Constitution by denying construction of the project.

Canadians who are dual citizens of countries affected by Trump immigration order can go to US

Correction: A previous version of this story stated that Canadian dual citizens would be affected by the travel ban. This has been changed following an email from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office confirming that Canadian passport holders won’t be affected by the ban.

Canadians who are dual citizens of Iraq, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Libya and Yemen will be allowed to enter the United States, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office clarified on Saturday.

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An email from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau‘s office late Saturday said that the U.S. has given assurances that Canadians with dual citizenship will not be turned away at the border.

Earlier, the U.S. State Department told Global News that dual citizens who hold Canadian passports as well as a passport from any of those countries would be covered by the executive order issued by U.S. President Donald Trump Friday.

READ MORE: Trump refugee ban causes chaos, panic, anger worldwide

“Travelers who have nationality or dual nationality of one of these countries will not be permitted for 90 days to enter the United States or be issued an immigrant or nonimmigrant visa,” a U.S. State Department official said in an emailed statement earlier on Saturday.

“Those nationals or dual nationals holding valid immigrant or nonimmigrant visas will not be permitted to enter the United States during this period.  Visa interviews will generally not be scheduled for nationals of these countries during this period.”

“This Executive Order should not affect dual-nationality Americans at all.”

WestJet Airlines said it turned back a passenger bound for the United States Saturday in order to comply with the executive order.

WATCH: Trump’s border wall first step in process to strengthen immigration

WestJet spokeswoman Lauren Stewart said the airline would give full refunds to anyone affected by the U.S. executive order. It did not say which country the passenger had come from.

Stewart said WestJet had been informed by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) that the ban did not apply to dual citizens who had passports from countries other than those covered by the ban: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

Guests w/ Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Somalia, Syria, Yemen or Libya passport prohibited from entering or transiting the US. https://t.co/K8CxmjncAN pic.twitter.com/8RK1JqEwaQ

— WestJet (@WestJet) January 28, 2017

“U.S. CBP has confirmed it is the citizenship document they present to enter the country, not the country of where they were born,” Stewart wrote in an email.

READ MORE: Trump signs order barring many refugees, but Syrian Christians may receive priority

Air Canada, the country’s other major airline, said it was complying with the order but did not comment on whether it had yet denied travel to any passengers.

“We are required to ensure passengers have the required documents for entry into, or transit the countries they are traveling to,” said spokeswoman Isabelle Arthur. “In the case of these nationalities, they are not permitted to enter the U.S.”

With files from Reuters

Should Monday after Super Bowl be a holiday? Millions expected to call in sick the day after

Millions of people around the world will sit down and watch the New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons face-off in Super Bowl 51 next Sunday. And millions of Americans will, apparently, call in sick the day after the big game.

That’s why Kraft Heinz Co. has decided to give its salaried workers the day off following the big game.

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So should the Monday after the National Football League’s championship game be a holiday?

In a Super Bowl marketing stunt, the Ketchup-maker says “over 16 __million people are expected to call in ‘sick’ or plan to miss work on the day after” the Super Bowl.

READ MORE: Kraft Heinz to close 7 factories in U.S., Canada, cut 2,600 jobs

The company also noted that for those who do show up at work, are not doing much and “productivity plummets so far that the country loses on average around $1 billion.”

According to a 2016 survey by employment think tank Workforce Institute, which was released ahead of Super Bowl 50, nearly 16.5 __million Americans may miss work the day after the Super Bowl. The survey also went on to suggest that another 7.5 million will show up late for work.

In addition to giving its employees that day off, Kraft Heinz launched a tongue-in-cheek campaign to make “Smunday” a national holiday in the U.S. The company started a Change.org petition “to make the day after the Big Game a National Holiday.”

“We can all agree that going to work the Monday after the “Big Game” on Sunday is awful. So as far as we’re concerned at Heinz, we as a nation should stop settling for it being the worst work day of the year,” the petition reads. “We don’t settle for that awesome football Sunday to be just like every other day of the year. No. We eat. We drink. And we be merry, having the tastiest times of our lives. But then the very next day we settle for that Monday being a terrible work day.”

As of Friday morning, the petition has nearly 30,000 of the 100,000 signatures needed to be presented to U.S. Congress.

MORE: Kraft Heinz layoffs in Canada join long list of casualties 

Kraft Heinz, which has head offices in Pittsburgh and Chicago, has opted out of airing a Super Bowl commercial this year, the Chicago Tribune points out. Speaking with the newspaper, the head of Heinz brands said the company is rallying to make the holiday a reality.

“We hope other brands and companies join us and get behind this effort. … What we really want to do is make this a reality,” Nicole Kulwicki said. “We’ve been talking about this for years and decided it was finally time to rally behind this for the American people.”

According to Variety, a 30-second commercial spot during the Super Bowl costs upwards to $5.5 million.

5 Montreal stories you must read this week: January 27

From freezing rain to a condo fit for a “cat lady,” here are the top five stories Global News covered in Montreal this week:

A heritage site

“Most of the people in the world now live in metropolitan areas so where is the heritage of that? The mountain is one of the most iconic things we can share.”

Mount Royal, a Montreal landmark, could soon gain international recognition as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

READ THE STORY: Montreal wants Mount Royal designated a UNESCO heritage site

Brrr, it’s cold in here

Freezing rain, ice pellets and snow across Greater Montreal caused treacherous conditions for pedestrians.

Several accidents and road closures increased traffic and delays for commuters.

READ THE STORY: Freezing rain, icy streets cause accidents, delays and school closures

Cat ladies welcome

“My condo is great for cat ladies because it’s small enough for you to clean it up in no time.”

Marie-Eve Martel, a self-proclaimed cat lady was saved from a life of solitude when she met her Prince Charming.

READ THE STORY: Cat ladies welcome: Montrealer sells condo with unique Kijiji ad, attracts thousands

Dirty apartment

“I’ve already had the ceiling and the wall tested for asbestos and mould and it came out positive.”

A Quebec real-estate mogul is in hot water after his tenant and former employee claims his apartment is infested with mold and asbestos.

READ THE STORY: LaSalle landlord in hot water over claims of unsanitary conditions in apartment

A helping hand

Montrealer Cealy Tetley posted a video on Facebook showing STM bus drivers pushing each other up Côte-des-Neiges Road during the freezing rain and snow.

READ THE STORY: STM bus pushes another bus up Côte-des-Neiges during freezing rain, snow in Montreal

rachel.lau@globalnews.ca
Follow @rachel_lau

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Canada’s fastest-growing earnings can be found in its smallest province

Prince Edward Island (P.E.I.): it may be Canada’s smallest province, but it stands tall when it comes to the growth of weekly average earnings, according to data released Thursday by Statistics Canada.

The federal data agency released the Survey of Employment, Payrolls and Hours (SEPH) for November 2016. It showed that P.E.I.’s average weekly earnings grew by 2.3 per cent year-over-year, more than any other province.

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READ MORE: Canada’s best cities for full-time jobs

P.E.I. didn’t have the highest average weekly earnings — that was Alberta’s $1,114.21, which represented a 0.6 per cent decline from November 2015 — but it saw stronger annual growth than anyone else.

Quebec came in second with growth of 2.1 per cent, followed by New Brunswick with 1.8 per cent.

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SEPH is a monthly survey that provides a snapshot of weekly earnings, occupied jobs and hours worked in most industries at the provincial and national levels.

It’s distinct from the Labour Force Survey (LFS), which offers estimates of employment and unemployment rates across Canada.

And it’s a more “proper signal” for how employment is faring because it “culls data from actual payrolls” in the provinces, BMO senior economist Robert Kavcic wrote in a note released Thursday.

For example, the LFS showed that Alberta kept “chugging along” during the oil price shock, while “SEPH was reporting deteriorating conditions,” he wrote.

READ MORE: Canada’s worst cities for full-time jobs

Average weekly earnings in P.E.I. stood at $824.26 in November, which provides an annualized rate of $42,861.52. And that’s up from an annualized wage of $41,892.76 year-over-year.

The results came in a month when average weekly earnings grew in five of the 10 biggest industrial sectors.

The information and cultural industries sector, which includes businesses such as telecommunications, film production and publishing, saw the strongest growth in average weekly earnings at 7.2 per cent.

It was followed by mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction, which grew by 5.9 per cent, and finance and insurance, which jumped by 5.2 per cent.

Here’s how provinces stacked up when it came to average weekly earnings growth:

10) Alberta: -0.6 per cent

Downtown Calgary skyline.

Dani Lantela, Global News

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $1,114.21

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $57,938.92

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $1,132.07

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $58,867.64

9) Saskatchewan: 0.7 per cent

Jan. 14: This Your Saskatchewan photo was taken by Kathleen Kirchhofer in Saskatoon.

Kathleen Kirchhofer / Supplied

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $988.81

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $51,418.12

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $981.97

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $51,062.44

8) Ontario: 1.0 per cent

Steam rises from Lake Ontario in front of the skyline during extreme cold weather in Toronto on Saturday, February 13, 2016. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Mark Blinch

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Mark Blinch

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $978.24

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $50,869

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $968.12

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $50,342.24

7) Newfoundland and Labrador: 1.2 per cent

A couple walk along a boardwalk on their way to Western Brook Pond in Gros Morne, N.L., on August 14, 2007.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $1,035.18

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $53,829.36

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $1,023.10

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $53,201.20

5) (tie) British Columbia: 1.5 per cent

Peter Lonergan stops part way down the newly opened Top of the World Mountain alpine trail to take in the view July 28, 2012 at the peak of Whistler Mountain.

John Lehmann/The Globe and Mail via CP

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $924.46

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $48,071.92

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $910.40

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $47,340.80

5) (tie) Nova Scotia: 1.5 per cent

The Halifax skyline is seen from Dartmouth, N.S. on Saturday, August 15, 2009.

Adrian Wyld/TCPI/The Canadian Press

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $847.27

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $44,058.04

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $834.97

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $43,418.44

4) Manitoba: 1.6 per cent

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg in September 2014.

Brent Williamson / Global News

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $898.14

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $46,703.28

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $883.63

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $45,948.76

3) New Brunswick: 1.8 per cent

Visitors take in Hopewell Rocks in New Brunswick on Thursday, Aug. 20, 2015.

Alex Abdelwahab/Global News

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $878.82

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $45,698.64

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $863.20

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $44,886.40

2) Quebec: 2.1 per cent

The Chateau Frontenac in old historic Quebec City on Monday, December 23, 2013.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $878.82

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $45,698.64

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $860.42

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $44,741.84

1) Prince Edward Island: 2.3 per cent

The Roman Catholic Saint Dunstan’s Basilica dominates the Charlottetown, P.E.I. skyline from this vantage point on the historic city’s waterfront. The waterfront is where the Fathers of Confederation landed for the 1864 Charlottetown Conference. The area is now home to crafts shops, boutiques and restaurants.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Brian McInnis

Average weekly earnings (November 2016): $824.26

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2016): $42,861.52

Average weekly earnings (November 2015): $805.63

Annualized weekly earnings (November 2015): $41,892.76