Chrystia Freeland visits Sask. to get ‘fingertip feel’ for potash
Canada’s deputy prime minister had plenty of good things to say about potash Wednesday.
During Chrystia Freeland’s tour around the Mosaic Potash mine in Colonsay — part of her unexpected mid-week stop in the province — she spoke highly of Saskatchewan, the province’s resources, and its warm welcome to displaced Ukrainians.
Noting Wednesday was Ukrainian Independence Day, Freeland said the first thing she saw after getting off the plane Tuesday night in Saskatchewan was a blue and yellow Ukrainian flag. She said she found it encouraging and welcoming.
After making a joke about her height – five-foot-two – as she stepped onto a box to address Saskatchewan media while clad in an orange hardhat and yellow safety jumpsuit early Wednesday afternoon, Freeland connected the importance of potash to Ukraine, commending the province for filling a global need with the resource as Russia and Belarus are “quite rightly” being shut out of the global economy.