The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/01/28 at 01:00 EST
Episode Date: January 28, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/01/28 at 01:00 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 Claude Fague.
We have leverage.
Melanie Jolie says Canada is working with the European Union
and Britain on countering US tariffs. The Foreign Affairs Minister says she is working with the European Union and Britain on countering
US tariffs.
The Foreign Affairs Minister says she's working to prevent them while also being ready for
them.
We are the biggest customer to the US.
We are the biggest customer in 36 countries, 36 states within the U.S. So there are lots of allies in the U.S.
and also in Washington.
And that's why we're doing the work.
Jolie says the U.S.
has a trade surplus with Canada.
If you don't take into account energy exports,
the U.S. chipmaker Nvidia has suffered the biggest
single day loss in U.S. market history,
almost 600 billion, as investors
respond to the development of a low-cost AI chat box by Chinese company DeepSeek.
President Trump said DeepSeek should be a wake-up call for the U.S. tech industry.
This is very unusual when you hear a DeepSeek, when you hear somebody come up with something.
We always have the ideas, we're always first.
So I would say that's a positive.
That could be very much a positive development.
So instead of spending billions and billions, you'll spend less and you'll come up with
hopefully the same solution.
Poland has hosted a day of somber ceremonies to mark 80 years since the liberation of the
Nazis' most notorious death camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau.
About 50 Holocaust survivors braved freezing temperatures to attend the commemorations.
One said she was still haunted by the desperate cries of those being dragged to the gas chambers,
where more than a million people, most of them Jewish, were killed.
Tens of thousands of Palestinians displaced by months of war are re-entering Gaza's bombed out north. The column of humanity
stretched kilometers as people hauled what little they had back to what is
left of their homes. Chris Brown has more from Jerusalem. In a significant
development in this tenuous ceasefire, Israel removed barricades from
a coastal road and hundreds of thousands of uprooted Palestinians streamed into Gaza's
north.
Most walked and pulled, carried or wore everything they owned.
Sara Radhi held a cat in her arms as she walked and told our CBC videographer she felt indescribable happiness mixed with sadness as she hopes for a new beginning.
Northern Gaza communities such as Jabalia and Gaza City suffered some of
the worst destruction. Three-quarters of the buildings are rubble. The path north
was unblocked after last-minute negotiations involving Qatar concerning
hostage Arbel
Yahud whose captors released a proof-of-life video. She and two others
will now be freed Thursday and three more hostages on Saturday.
Chris Brown, CBC News, Jerusalem.
Transport Canada is abandoning a plan to build an airport in Pickering, Ontario east of Toronto.
Instead, the government is handing over the land to enlarge the Rouge National Park. Michelle Song reports. The Pickering Lands will no
longer be used for future airport sites. A packed room stood up cheering for the
long-awaited announcement. Transport Canada will transfer the Pickering Lands
to Parks Canada after more than 50 years. It held about 3,500
hectares of the land in hopes to build an airport, a project advocates fought hard against.
It's so emotional for us on a very personal level.
Advocates like Mary Delaney with Land Over Landings. She campaigned to protect farmlands
in this area.
And so our main goal has always been to protect and prevent development of any kind,
an airport or urban sprawl of any kind on top of these class one farmlands.
The Pickering Lands is also a key part of wildlife conservation.
It is a significant corridor allowing species to move between habitats.
Michelle Song, CBC News, Pickering, Ontario.
And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.