The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/01 at 03:00 EST
Episode Date: February 1, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/01 at 03:00 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.
The Canadian government is watching closely
to see what Donald Trump will do next.
No official word from the US President
or his administration so far this morning.
Yesterday, he reiterated his commitment
to slap Steve tariffs, Steve tariffs
on Canadian products starting today.
Kate McKenna has the latest in Ottawa.
Should there be tariffs, we will be ready.
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Jolie says
Canada won't take this threat lying
down, but at the same time, nothing is official yet.
We have yet seen any form of specific details coming from the White
House regarding these comments.
Donald Trump repeated his threat on Friday that 25% tariffs on Canadian
goods will come into effect today.
He told reporters he expects the tariffs will include oil and gas, but at a lower rate and
in mid-February.
Some provinces have estimated Trump's tariff threat could affect hundreds of thousands
of Canadian jobs.
Three cabinet ministers, including Jolie, were in Washington.
They've been lobbying U.S. lawmakers hard, saying tariffs will hurt Americans too.
So far, Trump doesn't appear to be
listening. Kate McKenna, CBC News, Ottawa.
Israel and Hamas have begun another exchange of hostages for detainees today.
Two of three male hostages were handed over to the International Red Cross and
Khan Yunus and have since been returned to Israel. The third hostage is due to be
handed over in Gaza City. In return, Israel will turn over a reported 183 Palestinian detainees.
Israel says it has received information from Hamas that eight of the total 33 hostages
they will receive over the next few weeks were either killed in the initial Hamas attack
on October the 7th of 2023, or have died in captivity.
To Philadelphia.
I just see the plane is getting lower and lower and lower.
They nipped the house, they hit a couple cars, boom!
And they took the plaza.
I've never seen nothing like that a day in my life.
A witness describes what he saw
after a Lear jet crashed into a mall
in a North Philadelphia neighborhood Friday night.
Authorities confirm a medevac jet carrying a pediatric patient, her mother, and a crew of four
crashed about 30 seconds after takeoff, setting some homes and vehicles on fire. The child,
a Mexican national, had been in Philadelphia for medical care at a local hospital and was headed
home. Shay Gold represents the air ambulance
company which operates the plane.
This flight was a repatriation flight of a patient who recovered and was headed home.
She was fit to fly, clear to go back home, and we were contracted by a third party charitable
organization to transport her back to Mexico. So the final destination was to Biti Juana International Airport.
Authorities can't confirm any survivors from the plane.
Local reports, though, say that several people on the ground were injured and there were
some fatalities, but those reports have not been confirmed.
Officials in D.C. say there are still bodies in the wreckage of Wednesday night's fatal
mid-air collision. 67 people died when a U.S. Army helicopter flew into a commercial airliner.
Paul Hunter reports.
The Potomac was again the site of divers continuing their grisly task of trying to retrieve bodies,
body parts, and as well remnants of the plane and military helicopter as they rest in the
shallow but ice-co cold waters of the river.
We're working as fast as we can.
Washington, D.C. Emergency Services Chief John Donnelly.
I believe for us to recover the rest of the remains
that we are going to need to get the fuselage out of the water.
That, he expects, will be sometime next week.
Meanwhile, investigators are going through the so-called
black boxes retrieved from both
the plane and the helicopter with their cockpit voice recordings and flight data.
Reports now signal a potential key finding.
Multiple U.S. news outlets say there's evidence that when it struck the plane, the helicopter
was flying well above the allowed altitude for that part of the river.
Paul Hunter, CBC News, Washington.
And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.