Relatives found the body of a six-year-old girl who had begged Gaza rescuers to send help after being trapped by Israeli military fire, along with the bodies of five of her family members and two ambulance workers. The Israeli military did not offer immediate comment on reports alleging an ambulance sent to help her was targeted.
Sparse snowpack and ongoing drought are starting to impact summer events across the province, with some organizers making changes to scheduling or cancelling their events outright.
Experts say it's no coincidence that recent cases involving teens dying by suicide after being extorted: the perpetrators are literally working from the same playbook, the details of which are posted in elaborately worded scripts online.
The bidding on a box of rare hockey cards recently discovered by a Saskatchewan family has topped $2 million.
Drew Mancini was in Calgary when he got the news the baby would be arriving a little earlier than expected.
At the intersection of martial arts and sci-fi fantasy, you’ll find Terra Nova School of Swords. Owner and headmaster Phil Swift says they teach historical sword fighting, with real clanging metal weapons. But they also practise with glowing plastic lightsabers.
A federal private member's bill to restrict fossil-fuel advertising earns bipartisan scorn out West.
Challenges cited allegations of racism and hatred, as well as supposedly inaccurate or age-inappropriate content, but all were rejected.
Montreal's Rêve, who won a Juno last year and is heading back to compete at this year's awards show, talks to CBC News about what her return means, how she found her love of dance music — and where she learned to make a hit track.
Virtual care became a convenient way to access health care during the COVID-19 pandemic. But a new study has raised concerns that patients' private health data isn't always being adequately protected from pharmaceutical companies and other third parties.
Widely publicized research from 2010 said income doesn’t boost happiness past $75,000. But happiness may increase with a bigger paycheque more than economists previously believed.
For the first time, Mike Holmes has spoken publicly about a lawsuit that alleges houses in a “Holmes Approved Homes” housing development in Meaford, Ont. were built with defects, saying his company had no access to the houses during construction and was unable to help spot potential problems.