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Justin Trudeau speaks with EU president to salvage troubled Canada-EU trade deal

WATCH ABOVE: No agreement from Belgium as CETA deadline approaches – Oct 24, 2016

OTTAWA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has spoken to Martin Schulz, president of the European Parliament, in an attempt to salvage Canada’s free trade deal with Europe, sources say.

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A government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Trudeau and Schulz have spoken in recent days and that Thursday’s Canada-EU summit has not been cancelled.

Reuters reported today that Schulz has told a German radio station that he did not expect the deal to be signed this week.

READ MORE: Chrystia Freeland still hopeful Canada-EU trade deal will get done, says it’s up to Europe now

Thursday has been set for the signing of the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, or CETA, by Trudeau and EU leaders.

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But Trudeau has yet to commit to attending the summit in Brussels, which was scheduled months ago.

The EU has yet to persuade the tiny Belgian region of Wallonia to drop its opposition to the pact, which is preventing Belgium from joining its 27 EU partners in approving the deal.

VIDEO GALLERY: Canada-EU trade talks

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Canada appears to be discounting reports that the signing of its free trade agreement with the European Union might be delayed.

A spokesman for International Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canada is ready to sign the pact on Thursday.

“As the minister has said, if there is an agreement to sign, Canada is ready,” said spokesman Alex Lawrence. “The ball is in Europe’s court right now.”

On Monday, Freeland repeatedly refused to answer questions about whether Canada was prepared to sign the agreement after Thursday.

Freeland and Schulz met Saturday in Brussels before the minister left Europe, declaring that Canada was done working on the deal and that it was waiting on Europe to finish its part of the job.

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