Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Montreal is Canada's second most populous city, the largest city in Quebec, and the eighth most populous city in North America. Montreal confirmed its first case of COVID-19 on February 27, 2020. The patient was a 41-year-old woman who had returned from Iran three days earlier on a flight from Doha, Qatar. [5] [6]
This is a list of people who died in the last 5 days with an article at the English Wikipedia. For people without an English Wikipedia page see: Wikipedia:Database reports/Recent deaths (red links). Generally updated at least daily, last time: 15:44, 05 March 2025 (UTC).
Montreal, Quebec: 5: 18: A steam plug blow out on the Boston express led to the train smashing through the granite wall of the station building. The locomotive engineer and four people in the waiting room died. [40] [41] Marathon derailment: 10 July 1910: near Marathon, Ontario: 3: 0: CP 694 derailed and fell into Lake Superior, killing its ...
Died of "sudden death associated with excited delirium and prone restraint" after being restrained and handcuffed by police. An SIU investigation found no wrongdoing by the officers. [169] Excited delirium is not recognized as a medical condition by the AMA, APA, or WHO. 2013-07-13 Levesque, Daniel New Brunswick
The following is a list of unsolved murders in Canada.Hundreds of homicides occur across Canada each year, many of which end up as cold cases. [1] In 2021, the country's intentional homicide rate stood at around 2.06 per 100,000 individuals, [2] increasing for the third consecutive year. [3]
This is a list of notable people reported as having died either from coronavirus disease 2019 or post COVID-19 , as a result of infection by the virus SARS-CoV-2 during the COVID-19 pandemic and post-COVID-19 pandemic.
The City of Montreal announces a grant of $5 million to help local merchants, cultural enterprises, and social economy businesses. In their second report on the evolution of the pandemic in Quebec, epidemiologists predict that the current deconfinement plan for the Greater Montreal region could result in 150 deaths per day by July 2020. [76] [77]
Four days later, 15 people died in two CHSLDs in Ahuntsic-Cartierville; ninety-nine residents and 94 staff members had been infected. [3] On April 14, six percent of cases in greater Montreal were in the borough. [4] The Laurendeau CHSLD reported 142 positive cases and 21 deaths the following day, an increase of 81 cases in three days. [5]