The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/06/01 at 18:00 EDT
Episode Date: June 1, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/06/01 at 18:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Gina Louise Phillips. We begin with the development in the postal dispute. Canada Post is rejecting the postal Union's request for binding arbitration. It says the process would drag out uncertainty for both customers and workers,
noting the union has rejected binding arbitration in the past.
Canada Post says it is waiting on its request to the Industrial Relations Board
to set up a vote on its final offer.
The two sides have been in contract negotiations for 18 months.
In Boulder, Colorado, the local police department says they're responding to a report of an attack The two sides have been in contract negotiations for 18 months.
In Boulder, Colorado, the local police department says they're responding to a report of an
attack with several victims.
FBI Director Cash Patel posted on social media platform X saying the FBI is aware of and
fully investigating a targeted terror attack.
We'll continue to follow that story.
To the wildfires
ravaging the western part of the country, a First Nations community in
northern Manitoba is hoping to get everyone out by the end of today. Josh
Crabb has this update. Evacuation efforts continue by the Royal Canadian Air Force
and the Canadian military to move people out of northern First Nations
communities like Pukatawagan and Pimichikamak.
Now people from Pukatawagan are being flown out
using helicopters.
Well, now we're told by the chief that the airport
has been able to reopen there.
There are still hundreds of people waiting for help there
and those aircraft and helicopters,
they're not going to Pukatawagan empty handed.
They're actually carrying supplies, we're told,
like food and water for people who are waiting to be taken out
because the community is without power and people are just hunkering down.
The Armed Forces said so far it has moved around 1,500 people from Northern First Nations communities,
but hundreds of people still need help.
The Red Cross has said that it has registered 8,900 evacuees
from 3,500 households.
That's the CBC's Josh Crabbe in the Paw, Manitoba. And in Saskatchewan, an evacuation
order has been issued for the hamlet of Timber Bay, 230 kilometers north of Saskatoon. Alexander
Silberman updates the wildfire situation in that province.
Hot, dry weather and gusty winds are continuing to push fires closer to Saskatchewan communities.
Timber Bay, now the latest community forced to evacuate.
Residents of the small hamlet have been told to leave immediately, with a fast-moving fire approaching homes.
More than 8,000 people have now left their homes in Saskatchewan,
many of the evacuees from remote First Nations in the far north.
And there are growing concerns those numbers will continue to rise in the coming days.
Premier Scott Moe says if weather conditions don't improve,
housing evacuees will be a challenge.
Hotels in Prince Albert and Saskatoon are
full, sending evacuees as far south as Regina in search of shelter.
Alexander Silberman, CBC News, near Montreal Lake, Saskatchewan.
Blasts at an aid distribution depot in Gaza have killed at least 31 people. Israel is
denying accusations that it shot at civilians. Spokesperson Effie Deffran is accusing Hamas. He's spreading rumors, fake news.
He's trying bluntly and violently to stop the people of Gaza from reaching
those distribution centers. Tom Perry has more on the incident. We heard reports
from Gaza, from Hamas, from Palestinian sources there, saying blaming the Israeli
military for this,
saying it was Israeli ground troops who had fired
on Palestinians as they gathered
at a distribution center for aid.
Now we did hear some witnesses, some people who were there.
There's no place to get food except that dangerous point.
It's not a humanitarian point, it's a death trap.
The gunfire was intense. Someone next to me was
shot in the shoulder. And when people die there, no one carries them away. Bodies are
piled up on top of each other.
We've heard from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, this Israeli and American backed aid group
that's been distributing some aid in southern Gaza, saying that there was no incident at
its aid distribution centers.
The CBC's Tom Perry reporting from Jerusalem. And that's the World This Hour. For news
anytime visit our website cbcnews.ca. Thanks for listening, I'm Gina Louise Phillips.
