2003 in Canada explained
Events from the year 2003 in Canada.
Incumbents
See main article: 2003 Canadian incumbents.
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Premiers
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Premiers
Events
January to March
April to June
July to September
- July 2 – The International Olympic Committee awards the 21st Olympic Winter Games to Vancouver.
- July 8 – British Columbia follows Ontario's lead and permits same-sex marriage.
- July 11 – Zahra Kazemi is beaten to death by Iranian security forces.
- August 5 – In the Nova Scotia election John Hamm's Conservatives are re-elected to a minority government.
- August 9 – The United States eases its ban on Canadian beef.
- August 14 – The United Church of Canada votes to approve same-sex marriages.
- August 14 – A massive blackout hits Ontario and the northeastern United States.
- August 18 – Zachary Turner murdered by his mother in Conception Bay South. She had controversially been bailed and granted custody of the toddler despite facing extradition and trial for the murder of Zachary's father. The case was documented in the film [3]
- August 30 – Canada becomes the first country to implement the World Trade Organization initiative to supply generic drugs to developing countries to help fight AIDS/HIV.
- September – Canada opens its embassy in Kabul.
- September 19 – The remnants of Hurricane Isabel cross over Lake Erie in Ontario, killing one indirectly and causing local power outages.
- September 23 – The 443 km2 Ward Hunt Ice Shelf fractures in the Arctic, releasing water within a contained freshwater lake.
- September 29 – Hurricane Juan makes landfall as a category 2 storm at Halifax, Nova Scotia. Four were killed directly and four indirectly.
October to December
- October 2 – Ontario Election. Dalton McGuinty's Liberals defeats Ernie Eves's Tories.
- October 5 – Maher Arar is freed from jail in Syria.
- October 8 – After serving 19 years of his life sentence, a jury finds Colin Thatcher eligible to apply for early parole.
- October 21 – Newfoundland and Labrador election: Premier Roger Grimes's Liberals are defeated by Danny Williams's Conservatives.
- October 21 – Marc Ouellet is elevated to the Cardinalate.
- October 23 – An El Al Jet is diverted twice, first to Montreal then to Hamilton, Ontario, after a threat is made against Toronto Pearson International Airport.
- October 23 – Dalton McGuinty becomes premier of Ontario.
- November 5 – In the Saskatchewan election Premier Lorne Calvert's NDP is re-elected to a thin majority.
- November 6 – Danny Williams becomes premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, replacing Roger Grimes.
- November 10 – Municipal elections occur across Ontario; In the Toronto election, David Miller is elected mayor.
- November 13 – The Canadian dollar value closes at a 10-year high of US$0.7695.
- November 18 – Canada offers Ontario $330 million in relief of the past summer's SARS virus impact.
- November 19 – An interim report on the cause of the August 14, blackout is released, which blames problems in Ohio.
- November 27 – Canadian Alliance party leader Stephen Harper fires CA Member of Parliament Larry Spencer as Family Values Critic after anti-gay remarks. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/11/27/alliance031127
- November 28 – Liberal Party Member John Manley announces his retirement from politics.[4]
- November 28 – Type A influenza kills a boy in southern Ontario, the third victim in the province killed by the same strain of the virus. Numerous influenza-related deaths also reported in the United States and United Kingdom.[5]
- November 30 – Abdurahman Khadr returns to Canada from Afghanistan after being imprisoned by the Americans at Guantanamo Bay.
- December 8 – In Edmonton, the United States awards Bronze Stars to 26 Canadian soldiers of 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry Battle Group who distinguished themselves serving alongside U.S. troops in Afghanistan in 2002. The four who were killed in the friendly-fire Tarnak Farm incident are awarded the medal posthumously. Canadian Chief of Staff, General Ray Henault gives a Commander-in-Chief Unit Commendation on behalf of Governor General Adrienne Clarkson.
- December 10 – A strike paralyzes BC Ferries.
- December 10 – Joe Handley becomes premier of the Northwest Territories, replacing Stephen Kakfwi.
- December 12 – Paul Martin is sworn in as Canada's 21st prime minister.
- December 14 – Pamela Holopainen, a 22-year-old Inuk woman, disappears after leaving a house party in Timmins, Ontario.
- December 24 – Canada's Department of Agriculture places a partial ban on imported beef from United States due to a single case of mad cow disease in Washington.
- December 30 – Governor General Adrienne Clarkson, with her husband John Ralston Saul, arrives in Afghanistan to meet with Canadian troops.
Date unknown
Arts and literature
Literary awards
Michel Basilières, Black Bird
M.G. Vassanji: The In-Between World of Vikram Lall
Joan Clark, The Word for Home
Kathy Mac, Nail Hunters Plan for Strength and Growth
Margaret Avison, Concrete and Wild Carrot
Dionne Brand, Thirsty
Elisabeth Harvor
Fred Bodsworth
Kevin Patterson, Country of Cold
Dan Needles, With Axe and Flask: A History of Persephone Township From Pre-Cambrian Times to the Present
Guy Vanderhaeghe
Roslyn Schwartz
Music
Television
Sport
Births
Deaths
January to June
- January 3 – Henry Botterell, World War I fighter pilot (born 1896)
- January 20 – Bill Werbeniuk, snooker player (born 1947)
- January 28 – Elsie Gibbons, politician, first women to be elected mayor of a municipality in Quebec (born 1903)[7]
- March 19 – Émile Genest, actor (born 1921)
- March 31 – Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter, geometer (born 1907)
- April 8 – Vatche Arslanian, Canadian Red Cross worker, killed in Iraq (born 1955)
- April 9 – Richard Doyle, journalist, editor and Senator (born 1923)
- April 26 – Rosemary Brown, politician (born 1930)
- May 13 – John Savage, politician and Premier of Nova Scotia (born 1932)
- May 18 – Barb Tarbox, anti-smoking activist (born 1961)
- June – Donald Jack, novelist and playwright (born 1924)
- June 14 – Jacob Froese, politician (born 1917)
- June 15 – Hume Cronyn, actor (born 1911)
- June 16 – Pierre Bourgault, politician and essayist (born 1934)
- June 21 – Roger Neilson, ice hockey coach (born 1934)
July to December
- July 11 – Zahra Kazemi, photographer, died in Iranian custody (born 1949)
- July 16 – Carol Shields, author (born 1935)
- August 9 – Daniel Ling, speech teacher and professor (1926–2003)
- August 18 – Zachary Turner, murder victim (born 2002)
- August 19 – Chris Klein-Beekman, aid worker killed in Iraq (born 1971)
- September 5 – Gisele MacKenzie, singer (born 1927)
- September 8 – Jaclyn Linetsky, actress (born 1986)
- September 20 – Vernon Singer, politician (born 1919)
- October 7 – Izzy Asper, tax lawyer and media magnate (born 1932)
- October 13 – Bertram Brockhouse, physicist, shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1994 (born 1918)
- October 16 – Stu Hart, wrestler, promoter and trainer (born 1915)
- October 20 – Clarence Dunlap, Chief of Air Staff, Royal Canadian Air Force (born 1908)
- November 15 – Ray Lewis, track and field athlete, Olympic bronze medalist, first Canadian-born black Olympic medalist (born 1910)
- November 24 – Hugh Kenner, literary scholar, critic and professor (born 1923)
- November 25 – Johnathon Robert Madden, murder victim (born 1991)
- December 16 – Robert Stanfield, politician and 24th Premier of Nova Scotia (born 1914)
- December 23 – John Newlove, poet (born 1938)
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Queen Elizabeth II The Canadian Encyclopedia . www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca . 4 December 2022.
- http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0303/S00228.htm War Pictures Cause Yellowtimes.Org To Be Shut Down
- https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/after-canadian-mother-killed-herself-and-their-only-grandchild-u-s-couple-started-10-year-fight-to-change-canadas-bail-laws After Canadian mother killed herself and their only grandchild, U.S. couple started 10-year fight to change Canada's bail laws | National Post
- Web site: CBC News:Manley leaving politics, says it's 'time to move on' . 2003-12-03 . 2004-04-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040406160222/http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/11/28/manley031128 . dead .
- Web site: CBC News:Ontario child dies of influenza . 2003-12-03 . 2004-04-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040423233402/http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/11/28/influenza031128 . dead .
- Web site: Natalie Garcia . Team Canada – Official Olympic Team Website . 27 May 2020 . 17 June 2019.
- Encyclopedia: Lambert. Maude-Emmanuelle. Elsie Gibbons. The Canadian Encyclopedia. December 5, 2014. October 13, 2021.