Nearly 10 years ago, the Star and its readers helped a teenage Roya escape to pursue an education and her dreams.
But as the Taliban surged in recent months to regain control of Afghanistan, she found herself trying to save the family she left behind. torstar.co/zp6f50GkKSm
In July, with the U.S. withdrawal only weeks away and the Taliban advancing with ferocious speed, Roya, now a graduate student at the University of Ottawa, wrote to two friends, asking if they could help her. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Roya engaged some of the same people who had helped her come to Canada in the first place.
Her friends thought they could help four or five relatives — she sent a list of 27 names. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
“I know it is a lot,” she wrote in an email. “But they are my family and they are at risk just for being part of the family.”
She sent emails, pleading for help, and filed 297 pages of immigration documents, sleeping only a few hours a night for weeks. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Unrelenting in her optimism, she knit together a network of military veterans, politicians, journalists, friends and donors.
Together, Roya and her team of supporters pushed through the layers of bureaucracy. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Her loved ones navigated the heartbreak of near misses at the airport in Kabul, the Taliban fighters who roamed past their safe house, and treacherous checkpoints they faced en route to escaping their country. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Finally, this week, the family arrived: Some came Wednesday, and more late Friday — ending for Roya years of living without her mother, sisters and brothers, the people who knew her best. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Now in Toronto, the family will stay in a quarantine hotel near the airport for the next two weeks. Each of them arrived bringing only the smallest of carry-on luggage. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
“Imagine,” Roya said, marvelling at what has happened, “someone living in Canada making somebody else’s family a priority.” thestar.com/news/canada/20…
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The majority of economists surveyed by the Star forecast that Toronto’s home prices are set to decline by 30 per cent or more from the February peak to spring 2023.
This is a drop many economists would define as a housing crash — as the Bank of Canada continues to push interest rates upward to curb inflation.
And at least another three-quarter percentage point rate hike is coming next week.
If history is any guide, there is a chance prices could drop even more, as the crash takes on a life of its own and investors abandon a tanking market, propelling house prices down longer and further than many expect.
Swift rifles through the pages of her personal life like a scrapbook, giggling at inside jokes and revelling in the creative choices that propelled her to stardom over a decade ago, says Murphy. thestar.com/entertainment/…
Though “Midnights” was officially released at 12 a.m. on Oct. 21, the “3AM” B-side was, you guessed it, released to the hounds just three hours later. thestar.com/entertainment/…
#Breaking: The freeze is part of a swath of new measures announced by the government earlier this year, including a proposed new law to make it harder for certain people to own any firearms at all. torstar.co/QPOn50LhGLz
The law would also increase penalties for certain firearms-related crimes and is currently being studied by a parliamentary committee. thestar.com/politics/feder…
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino are expected to speak to the details of the freeze in British Columbia later Friday. thestar.com/politics/feder…
#BREAKING: Doug Ford will override municipal zoning to allow more housing across Ontario, confidential document reveals. thestar.com/politics/provi…
The Progressive Conservatives want to “remove rules that prevent missing middle” housing — multi-dwelling units curbed by local zoning laws favouring single-family homes, the Star has learned.
In legislation to be tabled when the house resumes Tuesday, the Tories will “accelerate planning” in a number of potentially controversial ways. thestar.com/politics/provi…
#Breaking: Ontario to provide parents $200 per child for students struggling with math trib.al/Ya7KPtb
The money is to cover private tutoring or supplies for their children — although parents aren’t expected to submit any proof of how it is spent — and applications are now being accepted online. thestar.com/politics/provi…
Education Minister Stephen Lecce also provided details of the province’s payout to parents, a $365-million fund that will provide $200 per child up to age 18, and $250 for those with special needs up to age 21. thestar.com/politics/provi…