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ReutersPakistan says trade talks with US to conclude next week

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Analysis   来源:Transportation  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Bilo Chemnitz, 23, holds his rifle after hunting ptarmigan birds near the Nuuk fjord in Greenland, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

Bilo Chemnitz, 23, holds his rifle after hunting ptarmigan birds near the Nuuk fjord in Greenland, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

“We are anticipating that there could be a slowdown,” Mark Galardo, Air Canada’s executive vice president for revenue and network planning, said on a company quarterly earnings call last week.WestJet, Canada’s second biggest airlines, said in the first few weeks of this year it has noticed an approximate 25% drop in demand for flights to the U.S. compared to last year.

ReutersPakistan says trade talks with US to conclude next week

“We believe this change is at least partially linked to the differences in currency exchange rates; however, we are actively reviewing and working with the Government of Canada on the potential impacts of tariffs, and we will continue to fly where there is demand,” the airline said in an email.McMillan said the cruise industry may also feel an impact as Canadians may decide not to take trips that leave out of Los Angeles, Houston or Miami.He has seen a shift to Canadians booking trips to Mexico, Europe, Iceland and Asia.

ReutersPakistan says trade talks with US to conclude next week

Mulholland said he and his wife haven’t decided where they will holiday this year.“We probably will do a road trip of some sort and just explore parts of British Columbia that we haven’t been to before,” he said.

ReutersPakistan says trade talks with US to conclude next week

NUUK, Greenland (AP) — On a boat, surrounded by snow-covered mountains and icebergs in shades of blue, Qooqu Berthelsen points to the breaking sea ice as a worrisome sign.

Now, though, something is worrying him and many Greenlanders as much as the retreating ice that endangers their livelihood.Khan Suri said he was arrested just after he taught his weekly class on minority rights and the majority. Masked police in plain clothes pulled up in an unmarked car outside his suburban Washington home.

They showed no documents, he said. Other than saying his visa was being revoked, they refused to explain the reason for his arrest, which he described it as a “kidnapping.”“This is not some authoritarian regime,” Khan Suri said. “I was not in Russia or North Korea. I was in the best place in the world. So, I was shocked.”

As police whisked him away, Khan Suri realized they wanted to deport him.The “dehumanizing procedures” came next: A finger scan, a DNA cotton swab and chains binding his wrists, waist and ankles, he said. They also said he could talk to his wife at a detention center in Virginia, but “that never happened.”

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