Canada

Governor General strips two Order of Canada appointees of honours

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Former CEO of SNC-Lavalin Jacques Lamarre was found guilty of corruption and Street Kids International founder Peter Daglish was found guilty of sexual assault.

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Gov. Gen. Mary Simon announced Friday she approved the termination of two Order of Canada members after they were found guilty in separate cases.

The move was announced in the Canada Gazette, the federal government newspaper.

Peter Dalglish, founder of the charity Street Kids International and brought into the order in 2016, was found guilty in Nepal of sexually assaulting two boys, aged 11 and 14.

Former SNC-Lavalin CEO Jaques Lamarre, who was made a member in 2005,was found guilty of collusion and corruption in relation to the firm’s work in Libya with Saadi Gadhafi, son of former dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

Peter Dalglish Peter Dalglish, a high-profile Canadian humanitarian worker with connections to Halifax, was arrested in Nepal in connection with a child sex investigation. (File photo)

Dalglish, originally from London, Ont., was sentenced to a total of 16 years jailtime in a Nepalese court after police raided his home in Nepal where they found the two young boys.

A Nepalese law enforcement official accused Dalglish of luring the boys away from their poor families with things like education, jobs, or trips and then sexually abusing them.

Jacques Lammare Former SNC Lavalin CEO Jacques Lamarre talks during a ceremony near Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Thursday May 31, 2007. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)

As for Lamarre, who served as CEO for SNC-Lavalin between 2001 and 2009, a Quebec disciplinary council pulled Lamarre’s licence and fined him $75,000 last January for his involvement with the SNC-Lavalin-Libya scandal.

The engineer organization found Lamarre had paid $2 million to the Gadhafi family.

Previous Order of Canada terminations

Other expelled order members include National Post founder Conrad Black, singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie and theatre mogul Garth Drabinsky.

Black, a former media baron and writer, was removed in 2014 by former Gov. Gen. David Johnston. He served just over three years in a Florida prison after being convicted of fraud offences connected to his running of the Hollinger newspaper business.

He had been inducted to the Order of Canada in 1990 and renounced his Canadian citizenship in 2001 to accept a peerage in the British House of Lords.

Buffy Sainte-Marie Buffy Sainte-Marie performs at the Toronto International Film Festival's kick off event in Toronto on Thursday, September 8, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Alex Lupul

Saint-Marie, a Juno Award-winning artist, was removed from the Order of Canada after family members in the U.S. said she had no Indigenous heritage, nor was she adopted from an Indigenous family.

According to The Canadian Press, her official website had alleged that she was born on a Saskatchewan reserve and taken from her blood parents. A Cree family adopted her through an oral history connection.

Saine-Marie has since said she never lied about her Indigenous roots.

As for Drabinsky, who was brought into the order in 1995, was sentenced to five years in prison for fraud in 2009 and had his Order of Canada stripped while serving time.

Drabinsky and his business partner Myron Gottlieb were found to have lied about funds in a scheme that led to the demise of Livent Inc, the company behind Broadway hits like “Phantom of the Opera” and “Ragtime.”

With files from The Canadian Press

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