Your morning briefing from CTVNews.ca
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GOOD MORNING Details of the planning that went into the U.S. operation to kill al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri, a B.C. senior who can't find a doctor takes out a newspaper ad, and an Ontario woman gets a surprise about her family when she takes a DNA test. Here's what you need to know to start your day. | | | | Months of planning The U.S. operation that ended with the killing of al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri took months of preparation. |
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| | | Long-sought 'justice' U.S. President Joe Biden says he hopes the killing of Ayman al-Zawahri delivers "one more measure of closure" to families of the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. |
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| | | Griner’s trial resumes American basketball player Brittney Griner returns to court for her cannabis possession trial as the Biden administration faces public pressure to get her released. |
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| | | 'Urgent! Please?' In a stark example of B.C. residents' desperation to find a family doctor, one senior recently placed a newspaper ad in search of someone to refill her husband's prescriptions. |
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| | | Family surprise After taking an ancestry DNA test to learn more about her father’s side of the family, one Ontario woman was shocked to discover she also has a sister. |
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| | MUST-SEE VIDEO | CTV News Senior Political Correspondent Glen McGregor looks back on the 'Freedom Convoy' demonstrations that paralyzed Ottawa for weeks. | |
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| | ONE MORE THING | Canada started the week with three gold medals at the Commonwealth Games, including one won by Maude Charron of Sainte-Luce, Que. | |
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