The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/01/22 at 02:00 EST
Episode Date: January 22, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/01/22 at 02:00 EST...
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There is no shortage of scam artists and true crime.
But I'm guessing you've never heard of one quite like Caitlin Braun.
For over two years, Caitlin Braun conned more than 50 birth workers into thinking that she
was pregnant.
I'm Kathleen Goldtar, and this week on Crime Story, I sit down with Sarah Trelevin, the
host of the con, Caitlin's baby.
Find Crime Story wherever you get your podcasts.
From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Neil Herland.
President Donald Trump is blaming Canada for a large number of drug overdose deaths in the U.S.
This evening, Trump was asked once again about his plan for tariffs on Canada and Mexico.
Canada, very much so.
They've allowed millions and millions of people to come into our country that shouldn't be
here.
They could have stopped them, and they didn't.
And they've killed 300,000 people last year, my opinion, have been destroyed by drugs, by fentanyl.
The fentanyl coming through Canada is massive. The fentanyl coming through Mexico is massive.
And people are getting killed and families are being destroyed.
On his first day back in the White House, Trump said he's considering 25 percent tariffs against Canada
starting February 1st. Canadian officials are still plotting their next move if Trump goes ahead with
the tariffs. John Baird was Canada's foreign affairs minister under Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
I think you want to think of what is the most effective response, not necessarily what is the
most vindictive response. One of the concerns that I would have is that what if you brought in a five percent tariff
and that's that if you retaliate I'll bring it to ten percent.
We should probably be playing chess here and not checkers, but obviously there has to be
some sort of response.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is calling for diplomacy, not retaliation.
She says Canada has a short window to defend against Trump's tariff threat and she wants to keep the flow of oil going into the US.
As Donald Trump withdraws the United States from several international agreements
China is trying to fill that void, aiming to take a bigger role on the global stage.
Lisa Xing has more.
China's vice-premier Ding Xuexiang at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos,
Switzerland, saying the country is a staunch supporter of true multilateralism, the message
that it's a team player and it's echoed elsewhere.
By China's foreign ministry expressing concern over US President Donald Trump withdrawing
from the Paris agreement, and in a strategically timed meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin just hours
after Trump's inauguration, Chinese President Xi Jinping saying he will guide China-Russia
relations to a new height this year, a clear sign China is positioning itself as a world
leader, according to Gregory Chin, political economy professor at York University, as Trump threatens higher tariffs, China is
reducing them. Chin says that's one reason other nations may bolster
relations with the country while the US distances itself. Lisa Sheng, CBC News,
Toronto. Meantime, the new Trump administration is directing that all US
federal diversity, equity and inclusion staff be put on paid leave, and that agencies develop plans to
lay them off.
The decision comes in a memo from the U.S. government.
A First Nation in Northern Ontario is mourning the loss of a 10-year-old girl to suicide.
The community has never lost someone so young in this way.
But as Sarah Law reports, suicide rates across the region's First Nations are on the rise.
Very friendly, always smiling, always joking.
That's how Mishke Gogomane's chief Merle Loon describes Jenea Skunk.
Loon says the community has been open about the death of the 10-year-old in December.
Loon says Jenea was being bullied.
Since Jenea's death, more children have
come forward. There have been more than 600 suicides in the region's First Nations since
the mid-'80s. Across Canada, suicide rates are about six times higher for First Nations
youth compared to non-Indigenous youth. Janet Gordon, with the Sioux Lookout First Nations
Health Authority, says First Nations need help closer to home. Saul Mamoukwa, Kiwatanong's MPP, agrees.
He says taking people out of the community for care is a short-term fix.
And then when we send them back to the community, the same setting, we throw them back into
the river.
Loon wants the provincial and federal governments to help build a new land-based health and
treatment centre.
Ottawa says it's working on creating a funders table to help make that happen.
Sarah Law, CBC News, Thunder Bay, Ontario. And that is your World This Hour. For CBC News,
I'm Neal Herland.