The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/01/26 at 09:00 EST
Episode Date: January 26, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/01/26 at 09:00 EST...
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What does a mummified Egyptian child, the Parthenon marbles of Greece and an Irish
giant all have in common? They are all stuff the British stole. Maybe. Join me,
Mark Fennell, as I travel around the globe uncovering the shocking stories
of how some, let's call them ill-gotten, artifacts made it to faraway institutions.
Spoiler, it was probably the British. Don't miss a brand new season of Stuff the British Style.
Watch it free on CBC Gem.
From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Gina Louise Phillips.
Canada's insurers are casting a wary eye south
after a record-setting year for insurance claims.
The nation's insurance
bureau says fires and floods in California, Louisiana and Florida are a hint of what's
to come. Laura Lynch of CBC Radio's What on Earth has the story.
Naomi Cook admits to getting nervous when the rain starts falling on her street in Sackville,
Nova Scotia. That's because it reminds her of the storm water that flooded her home in
July of 2023.
It was running so fast by my basement door. It was up at least two feet.
Cook paid several thousand dollars for repairs because insurers say her home is at too great a
risk for floods. The industry and its overseers call them insurance deserts, places that have
become too hazardous for coverage. And the Insurance Bureau of Canada's Craig Stewart says when he looks at what's happening
in the U.S., he sees Canada's future in a changing climate.
So in Louisiana, Florida and now California, what we're seeing is you're seeing insurers
pull out.
They're reducing their exposure.
Stewart says Canada needs to follow the lead of those states and other nations by establishing a government-backed insurance program. Ottawa has been
negotiating with the provinces and plans to have the program set up this year.
Laura Lynch, CBC News Vancouver. US President Donald Trump says he's talking
to many potential purchasers of the popular app TikTok.
I've spoken to many people about TikTok, and there's great interest in TikTok.
And as you know, I have the right to sell it or close it,
depending on what I think is best for the country.
So we'll make a decision over the next 90 days or so.
I mean, I have a warm spot in my heart for TikTok,
because I went on TikTok and I ended up winning by a lot, young people.
Trump gave the app a reprieve shortly after taking office.
TikTok was banned in the US because of security concerns.
China-based ByteDance currently owns the app.
To India next.
Where the country is celebrating Republic Day,
to mark 76 years since it adopted its own constitution
after breaking free from British rule. But the main focus for Indian policymakers right
now is still the US and what to expect from the Trump administration. Our South
Asia correspondent Salima Shivji has more.
Secretary, how do you see US-India relations under President Trump?
The question went unanswered by Secretary of State Marco Rubio ahead of his very first
bilateral meeting.
It was with India's foreign minister.
A clear and welcome sign for India, says Minister Subramaniam Jayashankar.
Both countries desperately want to contain an aggressive China.
But there are obvious points of friction between India and the U.S.
Illegal immigration is one, with the third highest number of America's undocumented
migrants coming from India.
Trade is another.
India's protectionism angers Donald Trump.
The Indian government has been very proactive to try to get on Trump's good side.
Mila Navasinav is the head of the South Asia program at DC's Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace.
He says unconfirmed media reports that
New Delhi not only plans to repatriate thousands of Indians living illegally in the U.S., but
also is mulling over reducing tariffs to show how seriously they've thought about how to
deal with Trump. Salima Shivji, CBC News, Mumbai.
Singer-songwriter Paul McCartney is urging the U.K. government to stop an incoming change
to copyright law.
He says it could let artificial intelligence companies rip off artists, giving BBC this
example.
You get young guys, girls coming up and they write a beautiful song and they don't own
it and they don't have anything to do with it and anyone who wants can just rip it off.
I mean, the truth is the money's going somewhere, you know, and it gets on the
streaming platforms, somebody's getting it and it should be the person who
created it.
The government is consulting on whether to let tech firms use copyrighted
material to help train AI models.
Creators would have the option to opt out.
And that is all for the World This Hour.
Thank you so much for listening. My name is Gina Louise Phillips.