The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/01 at 21:00 EDT

Episode Date: September 2, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/09/01 at 21:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:26 Certain conditions apply. from cbc news the world this hour i'm neil hurland we begin in afghanistan where a powerful magnitude six earthquake shook the country's east the taliban government says 800 people are dead another 2,700 are injured and many are still missing chris brown reports the quake hit in kunar province near the border with Pakistan overnight, reducing entire villages to dried mud brick rubble as people slept. Many of the homes in the area were built on the side of mountains, some almost on top of each other, and fell easily. So even a relatively moderate quake like this one caused maximum damage. The remoteness of the area meant helicopters were the only way to get survivors to hospital
Starting point is 00:01:21 in Jalalabad 20 kilometers away. The Taliban, a regime internationally shunned for its horrible treatment of women and for human rights abuses, put out a plea for help, and UN agencies did their best to respond. The widespread fear is that as rescue teams penetrate deeper into the disaster area, they'll find more people trapped or buried in their homes, and the number of victims will increase likely dramatically. Chris Brown, CBC News, London.
Starting point is 00:01:52 The town of Hay River in the Northwest Territories is known as the hub of the north. Tonight it's a gathering place for hundreds of people trying to escape the threat of wildfires. One of the worst blazes is on the doorstep of Fort Providence, a community southwest of Yellowknife. And evacuees worry it's just a matter of time before the flames reach their homes. Oneida Taylor has reaction from residents. So emotional. Ruby Minosa tears up as she eats breakfast at the evacuation center in Hay River Northwest Territories with her young granddaughter.
Starting point is 00:02:25 She can't help but worry about her son who stayed behind in Fort Providence about 180 kilometers away by road to help fight the wildfire over 80,000 hectares in size. I was thinking, am I going to go home? Is my house still going to be standing up when I get home? On Sunday, fire officials said there was a possibility it would reach people's homes that night. After an evacuation order was issued,
Starting point is 00:02:50 forcing the hamlet of about 700 people to flee the area. But it hasn't. The fire is now just a kilometer away. Back in Fort Providence, only first responders and firefighters remain in the hamlet, working around the clock fighting a fire that isn't showing any signs of slowing down. Juanita Taylor CBC News, Hay River, Northwest Territories. As of today, most of Canada's counter-tariffs on U.S. goods are gone. In August, Prime Minister Mark Carney said the tariffs
Starting point is 00:03:20 on 60 billion dollars of U.S. goods would be lifted September 1st, arguing they were blocking progress on talks with Washington. Retaliatory tariffs on non-Kuzma compliant goods and on sectors such as steel and aluminum remain in place. More than 34,000 public sector workers in British Columbia could walk off the job as early as tomorrow. Last week, the BC General Employees Union members voted overwhelmingly in favor of a strike to back their contract demand. Wages are one of their key issues. The union says it will be moving forward with the job action, but it hasn't released details. Union members of the public sector workers include government admin staff, firefighters, and social workers.
Starting point is 00:04:05 And finally, Canadian actor Graham Green is dead. Green became one of the most famous indigenous actors in the world after he appeared on the big screen opposite Kevin Costner. Buffalo for Dunker. His breakthrough performance came in the 1990 movie Dances with Wolves, which earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Born on the Six Nations Reserve in Ontario and part of the Oneida tribe,
Starting point is 00:04:34 Green performed in film, television, and on the top stages of this country. Green's manager confirms he died today in Stratford, Ontario, of natural causes, actor Graham Green dead at the age of 73. And that is your world this act. For CBC News, I'm Neil Hurlent.

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