The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/14 at 01:00 EST
Episode Date: February 14, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/14 at 01:00 EST...
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Claude Fague.
Donald Trump's finger pointing over fentanyl
has put Canada on the defensive,
even though the facts don't support his claims.
New data from Canada's Border Services Agency put Canada on the defensive, even though the facts don't support his claims.
New data from Canada's Border Services Agency actually shows a spike in drugs and guns coming
here from the US.
JP Tasker takes us through that report.
The amount of drugs seized has doubled since 2022, spiking from roughly 4,000 kilograms
to 8,000 in 2024.
Cannabis, hashish, heroin, cocaine and crack, it's all up.
And there's a lot more than the 5,000 grams of drugs the Americans nabbed on
their side of the 49th parallel last year.
We live next door to the largest weapons market in the world.
Christian Luprecht is a professor at
the Royal Military College and an expert on border security. He says Mexican drug cartels moved some of their production to the U.S. during the pandemic.
Now it's easier than ever to smuggle illicit goods over the border into Canada.
It's worked really well for transnational organized crime.
And it's not just drugs. CBSA pulled in 839 firearms at the border last year,
a 30 percent increase over the year
before.
The CBSA says it hasn't lost focus on Canadian priorities.
It just got a $1.3 billion cash infusion to take on the flow of fentanyl.
But it promises some of that money will be set aside to rein in the flood of American
drugs and guns.
JP Tasker, CBC News, Ottawa.
Canada's northern premiers continue their anti-tariff tour of Washington.
They've been telling influential figures that Canada's north has a lot to offer in a trade
relationship like strong Arctic defense and critical minerals.
Kate McKenna reports from Washington.
There's so much potential in the north.
That's the message Canada's three territorial premier shared speaking to American academics
and policy experts.
Northwest Territories Premier R.J. Simpson says the Arctic has what the U.S. needs, critical
minerals.
If companies don't want to get them from the Northwest Territories, from the Yukon, from
Nunavut, they're going to have to get them from China.
The Northern Premier's continued their anti-tariff push in Washington, holding a panel at an influential think tank, the Wilson Centre, talking about
Arctic minerals and defense. Nunavut Premier PJ Akiyaguk says people in the
Arctic are key to protecting Canada's interests. The people of the North are
the ones actually asserting Canada's sovereignty. The Premiers told Americans
they want Ottawa to increase military spending and hit the 2% NATO defense spending target ASAP
as Donald Trump continues to criticize Canada's armed forces.
They don't have any military protection. You have Russian ships, you have Chinese ships.
You know people are endangered. They need our protection, yes.
Simpson told the American audience they want to get more mining projects going
and build up Arctic defense. Kate McKenna, CBC News, Washington.
The Trump administration's promise to slash federal jobs has begun. The U.S. government
fired hundreds of people at multiple agencies today. Termination emails were sent to government
workers in the past 48 hours. All of the employees affected were reportedly recently hired probationary
workers. The departments affected included the Department of Education, the Small Business Administration, the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, and the General Services Administration, which
manages many federal buildings. A Chilean man has spoken on how he thought he was
dead after being swallowed whole by a whale before being spat out. Adrian
Simancas was kayaking off Chile's southern coast with his father,
who managed to capture the entire incident on camera.
His son and his kayak can be seen suddenly engulfed by the humpback whale
before reappearing terrified seconds later.
Adrian described his experience.
Yes, at first, when I thought I had died it was like of course
a lot of terror because I thought no no there's nothing I could do. When I got
out and started to float I was really afraid that something would happen to my
dad too, that we wouldn't have reached the shore in time and I would get
hypothermia. Despite the scare both men returned to shore uninjured.
And that is your World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.