The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/16 at 09:00 EST
Episode Date: February 16, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/16 at 09:00 EST...
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From CBC News, The World is Sour.
I'm Neil Kumar.
European leaders are set to meet in Paris
as soon as Monday for an emergency summit
on the warm Ukraine.
That follows today's conclusion of the Munich Security Conference.
There are concerns that Europe is being frozen out of President Donald Trump's plans for
peace talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
CBC's Anna Cunningham reports from London.
Europe is deeply concerned.
Leaders now scrambling to present a united front against a backdrop of thawing relations
between the US and Russia, a country that has been a pariah state in the West for three years
since Vladimir Putin's large-scale invasion of Ukraine. Washington says a delegation from
Russia is set to meet US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Saudi Arabia for peace talks. But this is a war on European soil and
Europe is not at the table, seemingly frozen out by the US. As this 61st Munich
Security Conference concludes, it will go down in history as the moment the US
under President Trump moved away from the transatlantic alliance, a
relationship in place since the end of World War Two, ensuring
a partnership and reliance for security between Europe and the US that many believed kept the
world a stable place. Anna Cunningham, CBC News, London. At least 18 people are dead after stampede
at a train station in India. It happened in the capital New Delhi as Hindu pilgrims were making their way to a festival in the country's north. Salima Shivji has
the details.
The chaos broke out on two New Delhi platforms Saturday night. The crowds
rushing forward, scrambling to board a train when people started falling and screaming.
It was a nightmare, one witness said.
Everyone was pushing and people were falling all over us, this man says.
My wife died right there in front of me.
Outside the hospital where victims were taken, one woman collapsed in grief,
tears in her eyes.
Another man spoke to reporters in a daze.
My mother, she just got crushed and died, he says.
Most of the victims were women.
The cause is under investigation.
But survivors of the stampede say several train departures were delayed, leading to overcrowding.
Salima Shivji, CBC News, Mumbai.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is in Israel today.
Rubio is on a tour of the Middle East, beginning with a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
It comes as anger grows among Arab leaders who are pushing back against President Donald Trump's proposal to move Palestinians out of Gaza.
The meeting also comes one day after Israel and Hamas completed a hostage-prisoner exchange.
Saturday Night Live will mark its 50th anniversary with a three-hour special tonight.
The comedy show aired for the first time on October 11, 1975.
Steve Futterman has more from Los Angeles.
When it first came on the air in 1975. Steve Futterman has more from Los Angeles. When it first came on the air in 1975,
Live from New York, it's Saturday night!
no one knew what to expect.
50 years later it's become part of North American culture.
From the beginning there has been a strong Canadian connection,
starting with the man who came up with the concept, Lauren Michaels.
I was hired in April 1st, 1975, and I used the first three months to sort of find the
people that I wanted, and I hired everyone.
The Canadian connection has included some of the show's most popular performers, Dan
Ackroyd, Martin Short, Jim Carrey, and Mike Myers.
Alright, welcome to Wayne's World, here's your host, Wayne Campbell.
Wayne's World went from SNL to a feature film. Fifty years later, the show remains popular.
Last night, NBC ran the first episode. And tonight, a three-hour live special, which
will include appearances by many of those who have starred for the last half century.
Steve Futterman for CBC News, Los Angeles. And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kubar.