The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/05/25 at 09:00 EDT
Episode Date: May 25, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/05/25 at 09:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Gina Louise Phillips. Canada's joint declaration
on Israel and Gaza is getting a nuanced response from the families of Hamas hostages. On Monday,
Prime Minister Mark Carney joined the leaders of Franceas hostages. On Monday, Prime Minister Mark Carney
joined the leaders of France and the UK, urging Israel to end its military campaign in Gaza.
CBC's Tom Perry reports from Jerusalem.
We know they are alive and we know time is running out.
At their weekly rally in Tel Aviv, the families of Israeli hostages make their plea yet again
in front of thousands of supporters, urging an end to the war and for their loved ones
to finally come home. Yehuda Cohen's son Nimrod was taken on October 7th and remains in captivity.
He supports the joint declaration by Canada, France and the UK, urging Israel to step back
from its assault on Gaza.
Israel is not an island. It cannot survive by itself. It needs, especially in connection
with the Western world.
Dalia Kusnir, whose brother-in-law, Etan Horn, is still in Gaza, is more critical.
I think it's a misunderstanding of priorities. First release the hostages, then you can take
care of Gaza.
Tom Perry, CBC News, Jerusalem.
King Charles will be arriving in Canada to open a new session of Parliament on Tuesday
when he delivers his speech from the throne. CBC's chief political correspondent, Rosemary
Barton, tees it up for us.
Well, first remember, Parliament hasn't even sat in 2025. It hasn't sat in more than five
months since well before the election. So the first thing that has to happen tomorrow
is the election of a new speaker for the House of Commons. Then attention will turn immediately
to the arrival of King Charles III tomorrow and then of course, the throne speech on Tuesday
morning. It will be the King's 20th visit to Canada, but his first one as King. And
he comes at the request of the Prime Minister to deliver the speech from the throne, something that Queen Elizabeth II did twice most recently
in 1977. And the presence of the king and the demonstration of our democracy and parliamentary
system is really meant to send a message that even in the face of threats, Canada remains
a sovereign nation. The speech itself, of course, is to outline the government's priorities
for the months ahead. And we'll focus on some of the things that
the Prime Minister outlined in his one-mandate letter to cabinet, growing
the Canadian economy, bringing down costs for Canadians, building more homes and
getting a new economic and security pact with the United States.
Rosemary Barton in Ottawa. In southeastern Australia, residents are
cleaning up after the worst flood in decades.
Boy, where's your dad?
Okay, we found the little boy calf. We thought we'd lost one in the water.
We thought he might have drowned, but apparently he's there.
She had twins in the water, in the mud.
Dan Patch is surveying his mudlogged farm some 300 kilometres north of Sydney.
Days of incessant rain turned streams
into rivers, destroyed homes and swept away livestock. The floods are being
blamed for at least eight deaths. Visitors flocked to Newfoundland and
Labrador at this time of year to take in the massive icebergs moving down the
coast and the thousands of whales just offshore. Now the province's tourism
department is adding to the experience.
Leanne Power reports.
Welcome to the humpback capital of the world.
In Newfoundland and Labrador these days, you can not only watch humpbacks, you can also
get to know them. Every humpback's tail or fluke is like a human fingerprint, unique
to the animal. With the tourism department's new app, Hello Humpback, you can take a photo of the whale
you see and find out more about it.
The app uses AI to generate a story about the individual whale you've seen.
The information comes from a database run by the group Happy Whale, which has been tracking
humpback sightings around the world for a decade.
The group uses the data to follow individual whales and keep tabs on their health and environment.
Ted Cheeseman is co-founder of Happy Whale.
It's just proving to be a very, very powerful tool.
The part that ultimately is probably the most meaningful is to get people engaged in knowing
their whale.
So far, visitors are loving the new app.
Leanne Power, CBC News, Gander. And that is The World This Hour.
You can listen to us anytime on voice-activated devices
like Google Home.
For CBC News, I'm Gina Louise Phillips.