The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/04/08 at 18:00 EDT
Episode Date: April 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/04/08 at 18:00 EDT...
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When a body is discovered 10 miles out to sea, it sparks a mind-blowing police investigation.
There's a man living in this address in the name of a deceased.
He's one of the most wanted men in the world.
This isn't really happening.
Officers are finding large sums of money.
It's a tale of murder, skullduggery and international intrigue.
So who really is he?
I'm Sam Mullins and this is Sea of Lies from CBC's Uncovered, available now.
From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Angie Seth.
The money is pouring in at a level that we've never seen before.
Donald Trump insists his plan to implement global tariffs are good for American business.
His announcement has sent North American stock markets into a tailspin,
with trading today once again sliding into the red.
Trump defended the measures as being necessary for the U.S. economy.
Sometimes you have to mix it up a little bit, but we've had great, great consideration.
We've had talks with many, many countries, over 70.
They all want to come in.
Our problem is, can't see that many that fast.
But we don't have to because, as you know, the tariffs are on.
The updated policy, which enacts sweeping tariffs on all imports to the United States,
kicks in tomorrow.
Quebec is seeing a surge in asylum seekers following a change in U.S. immigration policy.
Hundreds of thousands of Haitian migrants in the United States are facing deportation.
And as Matt Demours reports, that's causing strain at the Canadian border.
At the Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle border crossing, just north of New York State, there were 560
asylum seekers in January.
That number jumped to more than 1,300 last month.
François André, with the Action Committee for People Without Status, says he's overwhelmed
with calls from people asking how to get into Canada.
Most of them would be rejected.
They would be sent back to the States.
More than half a million Haitian migrants in the U.S. have been told they'll have to
leave because they'll lose their temporary legal status.
The Trump administration revoked the status as part of its immigration crackdown.
The first group has until the end of this month to leave, while the second has until
August.
Quebec's immigration minister Jean-Francois Roberge says the province doesn't have capacity
to take in more people.
I think it's really important, of course, to keep our humanity, but we can't take more
and more and more.
With the number of asylum seekers rising at Saint- de la Colle, the Canada Border Services Agency
says it's brought in more resources to manage the border.
Matamor CBC News Montreal. Conservative leader Pierre Pauliev is promising to
lower taxes for Canadians by cracking down on offshore tax havens. On a stop in
Edmonton, he says he plans to rewrite tax rules and expose corporations
that dodge their taxes.
But as Olivia Stefanovich reports, it's all part of a plan that takes aim at his main
political rival.
Mark Carney, like all liberals, is a high-tax hypocrite.
Conservative leader Pierre Poliev accusing the liberal leader of personally stashing
his taxes abroad, when in fact,arney co-chaired two investment
funds for asset manager Brookfield worth a total of 25 billion dollars registered in Bermuda to give
pensioners tax advantages. You can't avoid your taxes global elites should not be able to either.
While tax havens are not illegal Poliev is is trying to undermine Carney's credibility and appeal to working Canadians,
promising to crack down on tax havens, rewrite tax rules, and close offshore banking loopholes.
Poliev also says he wants to name and shame wealthy corporations that dodge taxes like Brookfield,
a company that Poliev indirectly held investments in.
Olivia Stefanovic, CBC News, Edmonton. Meanwhile, Liberal leader Mark Carney was
in Delta, British Columbia. He was selling his plan to double the pace of
home building in Canada. Build Canada Homes will provide billions of dollars in
financing for affordable home builders and above all Build Canada
Homes will catalyze an entirely new housing industry with Canadian lumber at
the center of it. Carney also promised support for British Columbia's lumber
industry. The US recently announced its plans to double the duty it collects
from Canadian softwood lumber to 35.45 percent.
At least 58 people are dead after the roof of a nightclub collapsed in the Dominican
Republic.
It happened early today in the capital of Santo Domingo.
Officials say the governor of Monte Cristo, a province in the northwest, is among the
dead and more than 160 people were injured.
It remains unclear what triggered the collapse
as the investigation continues.
And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Angie Seth.