Politics
Southern Alberta Mustangs host memorial game for 3 players killed in collision TenX News
An Alberta junior hockey team returned to the ice on Sunday night for the first time since the loss of their teammates in a fatal collision on Feb. 2.
The Southern Alberta Mustangs hosted a memorial game against the Stavely Spurs Alumni team in honour of JJ Wright and Cameron Casorso, both 18, from Kamloops, B.C., and Caden Fine, 17, from Alabama.
The three hockey players were on their way to practice last Monday morning when the vehicle they were travelling in collided with a semi-truck pulling gravel at the intersection of Highway 2 and 55th Avenue, the north entrance of Stavely. The three teenagers died on scene.
“We honour our boys by doing what they loved, and before we even asked the question, our players were begging to go back on the ice,” Mustangs owner Lisa May said.
“This is going to be a rough one for them, but the most important to me is that I need to get them on the ice because if I don’t, my fear is that they will never go back on the ice.”
The memorial game was the first of several fundraisers to be held in honour of the players, with proceeds going towards the cost of funerals and support for their teammates and families.
“We’re going to be travelling to all the funerals, including Alabama,” May said. “We will be holding our memorial here, so covering the cost for that. And making sure our players get time to grieve, as well as not having to worry about paying their fees next season.”
Ahead of Sunday night’s game, the Mustangs reflected fondly upon the teens, sharing some insight into their very different personalities.
Forward Tyson Tozer was a billet brother to all three. He describes Casorso as the “light of the team.”
“He brought joy, he brought motivation, he brought energy to every game,” Tozer said. “I shared a room with Caden and there wasn’t a day that went by where I didn’t have a smile on my face because of that kid.”

Defenceman Taydon Perkins says Casorso was soft-spoken and smart.
“He’s very well-educated, you needed him to do something, he did it, like he was an amazing kid, and I’ll always remember him for that,” Perkins said.
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Defenceman Kayne Anderson remembers Wright as the quieter of the three.
“JJ was more of a shy type of guy in the room, but when he wanted to be heard, he was heard,” Anderson said.
The return to the ice may have been difficult for the Mustangs, but the team was met with an outpouring of support at the Stavely arena, with hundreds in attendance at Sunday night’s game.
“It’s definitely not going to be easy, but I think we’re all going to decide to stick it out for the three because they were brothers,” Perkins said. “We’re close and it really hurts when we’re not out there, so we’re going to stick it out.”
“I’m excited to go represent them and show that we’re going to go play hockey for them,” Tozer said.

The families of Wright and Fine were present at the game and echoed the players’ sentiments.
“I’m astounded by the support and thoughts and prayers of so many people, but especially the hockey community and especially this Mustangs team and the communities of Stavely and Nanton,” said Wright’s father, Chris Wright.
“It has been amazing. It feels like a warm hug to be here during an awful, awful time.”
Chris Wright says he and his family travelled to Stavely from Kamloops the day after the collision and haven’t returned home since.
“Part of me can’t wait to get home and part of me is honestly afraid to go home because we can feel him here and I know we will at home too, but it would be hard to drive away from this, quite honestly,” Wright said.
Fine’s father, Daniel Fine, travelled to Stavely from Birmingham, Ala.
“Everybody out there, the love and support have just been overwhelming. It’s just amazing. It’s a good overwhelming, but it’s amazing. Everybody that we’ve come in contact with is so nice and very supportive,” Daniel Fine said.
“I’m going to miss seeing my son on the ice.”
The game kicked off with a memorial service for the three players. Their teammates laid their jerseys, gloves and helmets in their respective positions on the ice.
Wright and Fine’s fathers stood in their sons’ places during the ceremonial puck drop following a moment of silence in the arena.
The memorial game ended in victory for the Mustangs, who defeated the Spurs 9-6.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Politics
Olympic medallist wins bronze, confesses on live tv to cheating on girlfriend – National TenX News
Norwegian biathlete Sturla Holm Laegreid admitted live on television to cheating on his now ex-girlfriend, shortly after winning a bronze medal at the Winter Olympics, in the hopes of regaining her affection.
The 28-year-old said an affair he had three months ago was his “biggest mistake.”
He said it had been the worst week of his life since telling his ex-girlfriend, who he dated for six months about his infidelity, and that he hoped admitting to his mistake on television would show her how sorry he is.
“There’s someone I wanted to share it with who might not be watching,” he told Norway’s state broadcaster, NRK.
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“Six months ago, I met the love of my life — the most beautiful and kindest person in the world. Three months ago, I made my biggest mistake and cheated on her,” he said.
“I had the gold medal in life, and I am sure there are many people who will see things differently, but I only have eyes for her,” he continued.
“Sport has come second these last few days. Yes, I wish I could share this with her,” Laegreid added.
Sturla Holm Laegreid, of Norway, gets the bronze medal for the men’s 20-kilometer individual biathlon race at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Anterselva, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026.
AP Photo/Andrew Medichini
In a later interview, he told Norwegian newspaper VG that the “only way to solve it is to tell everything and put everything on the table, and hope that she can still love me.”
“I’ve done that for her, and now for the whole world. I have nothing to lose,” he said. “I want to be a good role model, but I have to admit when I make mistakes.”
Laegreid is a seven-time world champion biathlete, a sport that combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting. His bronze medal win follows a gold in the relay at the 2022 Games.
During a press conference after his admission, he told reporters he hoped he hadn’t ruined fellow teammate and gold medallist Johan-Olav Botn’s day.
“I don’t know if it was the right choice or not, but it was the choice I made,” he said.
“I made the choice to tell the world what I did so maybe there’s a chance she will see what she really means to me — maybe not, but I don’t want to think I didn’t try everything to get her back,” he told reporters.
“I don’t want to steal the show. I hope this is just like a day-or-two thing. Then you are an Olympic gold medallist forever.”
Five-time Olympic champion Johannes Thingnes Bøe, a former teammate of Laegreid and now an expert correspondent at NRK, questioned the timing of Laegreid’s admission.
“It came as a complete surprise. His action was wrong — we saw a repentant lad standing there. Unfortunately, the time, place and timing are all wrong,” Boe said.
It’s unclear if Laegreid’s ex-girlfriend heard his on-screen mea culpa.
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Politics
Parents condemn $176 fines for hostel staff after daughters died from tainted alcohol – National TenX News
The families of two Melbourne teenagers who died after drinking tainted alcohol in Laos have criticized the AU$185 (approximately $176 CAD) fines received by staff members who served the deadly drinks.
Holly Bowles and Bianca Jones, 19, died after they were served tainted alcohol laced with methanol at the Nana Backpacker Hostel in November 2024, part of a mass poisoning that also killed two Danish women, a U.S. tourist and a British woman.
The two 19-year-old Australian women fell ill following a night out drinking with a group and failed to check out from the Nana Backpacker Hostel as planned. The women were found sick in their room and then taken to Thailand for emergency treatment, where both died in hospital.
Thai authorities confirmed that Jones had died by “brain swelling due to high levels of methanol found in her system.”

The women’s fathers, Shaun Bowles and Mark Jones, said they were uninformed about the court case involving the hostel staff, which took place at the People’s Court of Vang Vieng in Laos.
They were part of a group chat with the families of the victims that provided them with updates and that’s how they learned 10 people connected to the hostel faced a judge in late January.
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Those 10 people were fined the AU$185 each and given a suspended sentence for destroying evidence, 9News reports.
“We were shocked by the absolute injustice for our girls and the others,” Jones said. “We have had no correspondence with anyone from the Laos government. We had no idea the court case was going ahead.
“To think that the Laos authorities believe that those who were involved in killing our daughters is worth $185 is absolutely disgraceful.”
The fathers initially thought the court case was linked to the deaths of their daughters, but the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed that the charge for destruction of evidence was linked to the death of the American tourist.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the Department of Foreign Affairs has been in communication with the Bowles and Jones families.
“I have made it clear to my Lao counterpart that Australia expects full accountability,” Wong said in a statement. “I have also made it clear that charges should reflect the seriousness of the tragedy which left six people dead, including Holly and Bianca.”
“The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is aware that the Vang Vieng District Court sentenced individuals over the destruction of evidence in relation to the death of a US citizen,” Wong said. “We continue to press Lao authorities on the cases relating to Holly and Bianca’s deaths, and we will continue to support Holly and Bianca’s families at this distressing time.”
Bowles and Jones called on the Australian government to step in and help get justice for the death of their daughters.
“As citizens of this country we expect the government to look after their people and get justice for their citizens when they go travelling,” Jones said.
“We can’t get into the country. There’s nothing more we can do. We need the government to do something because we are out of options,” Bowles added.
The Australian prime minister said the federal government would do everything it could to support the families of Bowles and Jones.
“The foreign minister has made it clear to her counterpart in Laos that Australia expects full accountability and the charges should reflect the devastating seriousness of this incident. We will continue to engage Laos authorities on these cases,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said during question time in a daily parliamentary session with members of Parliament on Monday.
In November 2024, Canada issued a travel advisory after the six tourists, mostly aged 19 to 20, died from methanol poisoning in the popular backpacker town in northern Laos.
“Several foreigners in Vang Vieng have been victims of suspected methanol-adulterated alcohol poisoning,” the warning read. “Be vigilant if you choose to drink alcohol. Avoid accepting free or extremely low-priced drinks. Only buy alcohol in sealed bottles and cans from reputable shops. Seek medical assistance if you begin to feel sick.”
Methanol is a clear, colourless alcohol used in all kinds of everyday products like industrial cleaners, solvents, paint, cosmetics and anti-freeze. Methanol is toxic and deadly when consumed.
Methanol is sometimes added to mixed drinks at disreputable bars as a cheaper alternative to ethanol, but can cause severe poisoning or death. It is also a byproduct of poorly distilled homebrew liquor and could have found its way into bar drinks inadvertently.
— With files from The Associated Press
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Politics
Cuba is reaching ‘breaking point’ as fuel shortage worsens. What to know – National TenX News
The suspension of Air Canada flights to Cuba after the country warned airlines of a fuel shortage marks the latest blow for the island’s economy amid increased pressure from the Trump administration.
Cuba had been weathering economic hardship before U.S. President Donald Trump effectively cut off oil shipments to the island by blockading its chief supplier, Venezuela, and threatening tariffs on any country that stepped in to fill the void.
After the U.S. captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in early January, Trump predicted Cuba’s government was “ready to fall” next.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told senators at a hearing late last month that “we would love to see a change” in the regime, but added the U.S. wouldn’t “make” that change.

The White House has labelled Cuba “an unusual and extraordinary threat” to the U.S. due to the communist nation’s alliances with Russia, China and Iran.
Last week, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said his government is willing to enter negotiations with the Trump administration that could ease some of the economic pain. Whether that means the fall of the Cuban government is an open question.
“We may be reaching a breaking point,” said Max Cameron, a political science professor at the University of British Columbia who studies Latin America.
Cuba has been facing fuel shortages for years, and particularly since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, as Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA has reduced exports in order to avoid fuel scarcity at home.
Other suppliers like Russia and Mexico have also reduced oil shipments, which the Cuban government has blamed on new U.S. sanctions imposed during Trump’s first term and later by former U.S. president Joe Biden.
The shortages have led to blackouts of the island’s fuel-powered electrical grid. In 2024, the entire population of over 10 million people was plunged into darkness when the grid ran out of fuel.

Cubans have also faced food and medicine shortages in recent years that have been exacerbated by hurricanes disrupting shipments of essential goods.
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Trump’s Venezuelan oil blockade, and his Jan. 29 order that countries will face tariffs if they supply oil to Cuba, has further compounded the pain the country is facing.
Diaz-Canel has imposed emergency measures including shorter workweeks and school days, limited transport between provinces and fuel rationing for essential services.
“I know we are going to live through difficult times. But we will overcome them together, with creative resilience,” he said during a rare press conference on Feb. 5 where he told residents they must “sacrifice” and “resist.”
Mark Entwistle, who served as Canada’s ambassador to Cuba from 1993 to 1997, said Trump’s pressure campaign on Cuba also puts countries like Canada in a “vice grip.”
“The reality is that we need to manage and renegotiate (the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on free trade),” he said in an interview.
“The Canadian government … needs to manage the U.S. relationship in a smart-minded way, (but at the same time) nobody wants to see a fellow country of the Americas be bullied and crushed and potentially fall into chaos.”
Entwistle said the federal government will also need to ensure the safety and security of thousands of Canadians in Cuba.
Global Affairs Canada says it is aware of more than 7,200 Canadians in Cuba and is providing consular assistance to anyone who requests it.
It also pointed to the government’s travel advisory for Cuba, which was upgraded Feb. 3 to warn travellers to “exercise a high degree of caution,” citing worsening power outages and shortages of basic necessities.
Canadians have long been the top market for Cuba’s lucrative tourism industry, which once generated $3 billion annually but has struggled to return to pre-pandemic levels. Many resorts have been forced to close or reduce their bookings because of the fuel and supply shortages.
Last year, around 754,000 Canadians visited the island, a 12-per cent drop from the year before and well below the 1.3 million pre-pandemic annual average, according to Cuba’s national statistics agency ONEI.
The number still outpaces other top markets like Russia and even Cuban nationals visiting from the U.S., and even exceeds the combined number of visitors from several other countries.
Pedro Monreal, a Cuban economist, said on X this week that Cuba’s tourism industry has become increasingly reliant on Canadian visitors, and that the recent drop-off has created a “pneumonia” across the sector.
The question of who’s to blame for Cuba’s economic crisis has led to finger-pointing between the Cuban government and the United States.
The U.S. has had an economic embargo on Cuba since the early 1960s, shortly after Fidel Castro’s socialist revolution in 1959. That embargo was codified into law in the 1990s, and has been relaxed and strengthened at various points since then.
A period of renewed U.S.-Cuba relations under the Obama administration came to an end when Trump took over the White House in 2017, an approach that continued under Biden.

Díaz-Canel said last week that U.S. sanctions have cost the country over $7.5 billion between March 2024 and February 2025, and called the “energy blockade” enacted by Trump a “psychological war.”
Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants with deep ties to Miami’s Cuban community, told the U.S. Senate foreign relations committee on Jan. 28 that Cuba’s economic problems are the fault of the government’s decades of mismanagement.
“The suffering in the rural areas of Cuba are acute and they’re deep, and it’s not because of the embargo. It’s because they don’t know how to run an economy,” he said.
“How is it the fault of the U.S. embargo that Cuba, one of the world’s largest sugar producers, now imports sugar? Because no sector of their society works. It’s frozen and it’s broken.”
Entwistle and Cameron said both sides are partially responsible for the current situation. They said Cuba’s investments in health care and social services, while laudable, came at the expense of infrastructure that has been failing for decades.
The U.S. embargo, meanwhile, has blocked foreign investment and made sourcing goods difficult, though countries unfriendly to the U.S. like Russia, China and Venezuela have often stepped in to help.
The embargo has also, in the eyes of many experts and researchers, aimed to provoke regime change and force Cuba away from communism.
Although Entwistle said Cubans are “exhausted” by the worsening economic crisis and “would love to see a change in government,” he added the pressure from the U.S. is fueling Cuban nationalism and “anti-Americanism.”
“If there is a view in Washington that all Cubans on the island are waiting for them to come, or that Cubans will endure all suffering so that there can be a change in government — suffering even provoked by the U.S. government itself — that is an incorrect assessment,” he said.
Cameron added that a fall of the regime in Cuba could spark a power vacuum and civil strife that may create a new security crisis for the U.S. and the wider region.
“You don’t want to turn Cuba into another Haiti,” he said.
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