The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/19 at 05:00 EST
Episode Date: February 19, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/19 at 05:00 EST...
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From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Neal Herland.
We begin with a deadly avalanche in British Columbia.
It happened near the Alberta border.
The CBC's Dan Burritt has details.
The RCMP says one person has been killed after an avalanche southeast of Golden on Monday.
Police say two people had been backcountry skiing.
One of the men returned home and confirmed his companion, a 42-year-old man from Golden,
died in an avalanche despite trying to save him.
Police say the survivor had to leave the victim to make sure he could get out himself.
Search and rescue crews later used a helicopter to retrieve the body.
The victim's name has not yet been released.
The CBC's Dan Burrritt in our Vancouver newsroom.
Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has been charged with attempting a coup
after his 2022 election loss.
The prosecutor general alleges he was part of a plan to stay in power,
despite losing to the current president Lula da Silva.
If Brazil's Supreme Court accepts the charges, Bolsonaro
will stand trial.
While Donald Trump and Elon Musk have developed quite the friendship, the president and his
adviser showered one another with compliments during an interview on Fox News, vowing to
push ahead with their plan to cut and restructure the U.S. government. Katie Simpson has more.
President Trump is a good man.
Elon Musk sat next to Donald Trump,
flattering his boss with a steady shower of compliments
during the hour-long interview on Fox News.
At this point, I spent a lot of time with the president,
and not once have I seen him do something
that was mean or cruel or wrong.
The president himself didn't miss a beat, returning the favor with compliments of his
own.
He's a very good person and he wants to see the country do well.
Both Musk and Trump defended the work of Doge, the Department of Government Efficiency.
Led by Musk, Doge is spearheading the federal government purge, dismantling agencies and
firing tens of thousands of workers in the name of cost
cutting.
I think he's going to find a trillion dollars.
If Trump and or Musk watched the live broadcast, there's a chance they saw the commercial paid
for by the province of Ontario promoting it as a steady trading partner.
Katie Simpson, CBC News, Washington.
An Australian billionaire is launching a Donald Trump inspired political party down under.
Clive Palmer says his party will be called Trumpet of Patriots.
Australia needs Trump policies. Australians want them. Trumpet of Patriots will put Australians
first and make Australia great again. Australia has had a left-leaning
Labour government since 2022. The flu vaccine gets updated every year to protect against the latest and more dangerous
strains of the virus.
But this year, a key player might not be part of the conversation.
The United States hasn't said if it will come to a critical meeting, deciding which strain
should go in next year's flu shot.
Jennifer Yoon reports.
For flu shots to get to Canadians arms, it takes a whole
lot of scientists from around the world working on it every year. They're supposed to meet next week
to come up with next year's flu vaccine, but there might be a key player missing. We are communicating
with them but we haven't heard anything back. Maria Van Kurkhove, who leads the World Health Organization's efforts to prevent epidemics,
doesn't know if American scientists will be there next week.
She says she's reached out to US agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and the
Food and Drug Administration to radio silence.
American epidemiologist Keiji Fukuda, who's been to several of these meetings, is alarmed.
He says it's crucial U.S. scientists are there.
These kinds of interactions are how we come up with the best formulations for vaccines.
While experts really want Americans to show up, the WHO says the meeting will go on with
or without the U.S.
Jennifer Yoon, CBC News, Toronto.
We've got an update now on the health of Pope Francis.
The Vatican says the leader of the Catholic Church slept well and ate breakfast this morning
after he developed pneumonia in both lungs.
The Pope is 88 years old.
And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Herland.