The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/06 at 01:00 EST
Episode Date: February 6, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/06 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 Neil Herland.
One man is dead and 15 are in custody
after a series of illegal border crossings
in Alberta and
Manitoba in recent days. Canadian officials are trying to demonstrate
that Canada is more than capable of tackling problems at the border.
Terry Reed has more.
You can obviously see the clear image.
Video from an RCMP airplane shows six people crossing the border near Emerson, Manitoba.
It was January and freezing cold.
Then Monday, Mounties stopped nine people crossing near Coutts, Alberta,
dragging their suitcases into Canada.
The next day, an individual drove across the border,
leading police on a high-speed chase.
It ended with a suspect dying in a field from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. This event speaks to the dangers our officers and CBSA officers
face at the border. Lisa Moreland, assistant commissioner of the RCMP, says
it also demonstrates that Mounties are doing their part to secure the border.
Canada Border Services Agency says it can't say
what happened to the 15 people that were arrested citing privacy. Terry Reath, CBC News, Edmonton.
The RCMP are treating four deaths on a Saskatchewan First Nation as murders.
The bodies of two women and two men were found Tuesday in a home on the Carry the Kettle, Nakoda First Nation, east of Regina.
Inspector Ashley St. Germain says investigators believe
the home was targeted.
The Saskatchewan RCMP continues to investigate
this quadruple homicide as well as another serious firearms
related offense that occurred in close time and proximity.
Investigators have been working diligently to determine
the circumstances around both of the incidents and whether or not they are
related. A 29 year old suspect is now under arrest. Well it was a stunning
comment from US President Donald Trump. The idea to relocate Palestinians and
make way for a US takeover in Gaza. As Paul Hunter reports, reaction is ranging
from horror to nods of approval.
President Trump is in charge and America is back. At the White House press briefing the day after
U.S. President Donald Trump stunned the world by proposing the U.S. take ownership of the Gaza Strip,
send all displaced Palestinians to other countries and develop Gaza into, quote,
the Riviera of the Middle East, a defense of the plan from White House press secretary
Caroline Levitt.
President Trump is an outside of the box thinker and a visionary leader.
And she added a clarification, though Trump had seemed to suggest it would be a permanent
relocation for the nearly two million displaced Palestinians said Levitt.
The president has made it clear that they need to be temporarily relocated out of Gaza
for the rebuilding of this effort.
Reaction to Trump's proposal globally was swift.
A number of world leaders rejected the idea, some suggesting it would be an international
crime.
Paul Hunter, CBC News, Washington.
Donald Trump's threat of tariffs on Canadian goods has changed the political conversation in this country,
and it could become the focus of a federal election.
As Tom Perry reports, candidates hoping to win the next election are already unveiling their policies.
President Trump has threatened to tariff Canada.
Conservative leader Pierre Pauliev focusing not on the federal carbon tax but on the threat posed by Donald Trump.
Trump accuses Canada of allowing fentanyl to flow into the U.S. Pauliev is pledging a crackdown.
It should not take a foreign leader to get the Liberals to wake up to the drug crisis that they have caused here at home.
Liberal leadership hopeful Mark Carney is also watching the U.S. administration, promising
to diversify Canada's export markets and boost defense spending.
My government would work to reach 2 percent of GDP in defense spending by the end of this
decade.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will sit down with business and labor leaders in Toronto
Friday to focus on what now dominates this country's politics, tariffs, trade and
Trump. Tom Perry, CBC News, Ottawa. And that is your World This Hour. I'm Neil
Herland.