Halifax police charge youth over alleged participation in online violent extremist group | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Lindsay Jones, Colin Freeze
Publication Date: October 28, 2025 - 18:40

Halifax police charge youth over alleged participation in online violent extremist group

October 28, 2025

A youth in Halifax is facing child pornography charges that police say are connected to a transnational online violent extremist group that targets children and teens playing popular online video games such as Roblox and Minecraft.

RCMP have been warning Canadian parents for months about the group, known as the Com network, because of its insidious online recruitment tactics, which involve grooming youth and then threatening and coercing them to engage in explicit acts and self-harm, sexually exploit other kids and kill family pets. Videos of victims are often then used by predators as blackmail to gain more control over them, police say.

“Many of us can’t imagine our children being pulled into a world like this, but children and youth are vulnerable, especially those who struggle with isolation and social connections in the real world, which many do at that age,” Halifax Regional Police Chief Don MacLean told reporters Tuesday.



Unpublished Newswire

 
As I get older, my parents begin to show me glimpses of their secret dreams. “Dad wants to move back to Vietnam when we retire,” Mum tells me. “We can live like kings and queens over there!” Dad hollers in the background. My mother hasn’t returned since 1978. For one, she couldn’t travel without a passport, and she didn’t get her Canadian citizenship until after she turned fifty-five and was no longer required to take the citizenship test. Second, she’s in no rush to go back to a land still soaked in blood and mired in misery. But then she surprises me one day. “I think I want to go...
November 1, 2025 - 06:30 | Rachel Phan | Walrus
The people of a small town on the southeastern tip of Newfoundland have had their prayers answered.The leaders of Portugal Cove South, a fishing town two hours from St. John’s, made headlines last year, including in this newspaper, for seizing their own church after learning the archdiocese was selling the building to help pay for a settlement in a historical sexual abuse scandal. Parishioners, hell-bent on keeping their church, changed the locks, posted no trespassing signs, banned the archbishop, thwarted a real estate sale and were eventually ordered by a court to stand down.
November 1, 2025 - 06:15 | Lindsay Jones | The Globe and Mail
This year’s Canadian wildfires and their impact American air quality have been a hot topic between the countries’ governments, with the Trump administration urging Canada to emphasize “forest management” as an antidote, the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said Friday. But the two nations don’t necessarily agree on the role of such measures, EPA chief Lee Zeldin suggested during a meeting of G7 environment and energy ministers in Toronto. Climate scientists and data indicate that a warming planet has made forest fires wilder and bigger, something even the U.S....
November 1, 2025 - 06:00 | Tom Blackwell | National Post