The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/01/26 at 10:00 EST
Episode Date: January 26, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/01/26 at 10:00 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.
It's literally a demolition site right now.
Almost everything's demolished.
Donald Trump assessing the situation on the ground in Gaza
and speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One. He says the answer is to send
Palestinians to Egypt and Jordan. The CBC's Sasha Petrusic is in Jerusalem
and explains why this solution is controversial because of the region's
history. Many Palestinians and in fact other Arabs in the region remember what
happened 75 years ago
when some 750,000 Palestinians were displaced from here in order for Israel to be set up.
It is called the great catastrophe, the Nakba and still talked about today as part of what's
happened to the Palestinian people.
Trump says he has already spoken with Jordan's king on the matter and he will be meeting with Egypt's president. It's literally a demolition site right now. Almost everything's
demolished. The CIA believes the COVID-19 pandemic started with a leak from a laboratory
in China. That assessment was made public Saturday with the disclaimer the spy agency
has low confidence in that conclusion. The report was ordered released by Donald Trump's newly
appointed director of the CIA, John Ratcliffe, who says the agency should end its neutral
stance on COVID's origins.
A change in Alberta's coal mining policy is getting a lot of pushback. Earlier this
month, the provincial government lifted a ban on coal exploration in parts of the Rocky
Mountains, allowing suspended projects to
resume. Sam Sampson has more.
This crowd of about 200 does not want coal mining in the Rocky Mountains eastern slopes.
In 2020, Alberta tried to scrap the original coal exploration ban from the 70s. That angered
ranchers, First Nations and environmentalists. So the province reinstated the policy. Alberta's government says the move was housekeeping,
aligning with the previously announced modernized coal policy.
That's a fundamentally dishonest characterization of what happened.
Nigel Banks, professor emeritus of law at the University of Calgary,
says the province made an immediate policy shift without debate in the legislature.
He also says this move could lessen the blow of lawsuits against Alberta.
When asked recently how those court cases factored into the decision, Alberta Premier
Danielle Smith said,
It's $16 billion with the potential liability.
We have to make sure that the taxpayers are protected.
At the same time, a metallurgical coal is incredibly valuable.
Sam Sampson, CBC News, Edmonton.
After three days a
frozen Canadian freighter has been freed. The manatouin had delivered a load of
wheat near Buffalo, New York when it got trapped Wednesday in meter-thick ice.
It's broken through and is now en route to Sarnia, Ontario. The 17 people on board
are likely very relieved. Well it's known as the world's biggest annual migration, the travel rush during Lunar New
Year.
We're just a few days away from the Year of the Snake and millions of people have already
started traveling to different parts of China.
Authorities are estimating 90 million plane trips over the next month.
But the country's economic slowdown has already downgraded many people's travel plans as
Yanoli reports.
At Shanghai's main railway station, throngs of people are clutching suitcases, queuing
up to leave the country's economic capital and return to their hometowns.
For Chang Huan Huan, home is some 650 kilometers away in Anhui province.
Her 36-year-old works for an air conditioning company.
She has some concerns about the future.
Every year, it's becoming harder and harder to earn money, she says.
So far the government's stimulus measures in the past
have done little to remedy the economy's troubles.
Alicia Garcia, chief economist for Asia Pacific at Natasix Bank,
says a Donald Trump presidency creates even more challenges for Beijing.
What really drives the Chinese economy now is just exports.
So of course, tariffs from Trump would massively impact the Chinese economy.
The US president is threatening China with a 10% tariff starting next month.
Yen-A-Li for CBC News, Beijing.
And that is The World This Hour.
For any time, go to our website, cbcnews.ca, or listen to us wherever you get your podcasts. For CBC News, I'm Gina Louise Phillips.