The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/02 at 10:00 EDT

Episode Date: September 2, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/09/02 at 10:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 All right, look, I am not going to lie to you. I love when an album drops, and it just, I know it's going to define my entire summer. And that is how I'm feeling about this new Lord album. My name is Alameen Abdul-Mahmood. I host a show called Commotion, and that is where we talk about the biggest stories in entertainment and pop culture, like this new Lord album or the Haim album or whatever great new music is defining our soundtrack for the summer. Come hang with us. Follow Commotion wherever you get your podcast. From CBC News, it's the world this hour.
Starting point is 00:00:36 I'm Joe Cummings. As students across the country return to school, a new report is suggesting that bullying, poverty, and mental illness are on the rise among Canadian youth. The Raising Canada report says more than 70% of Canadian teenagers say they experienced some form of bullying in the previous school year. As well, the report says at least 13% of Canadian children are currently living in poverty. The charity organization Children First Canada says the findings highlight, quote, an entire generation at risk. The Afghan Red Crescent Society says at least 1,400 people are dead following this weekend's devastating earthquake. And here in Canada, the Afghan community has launched an emergency campaign to get aid into the country
Starting point is 00:01:25 without it ending up in the hands of the Taliban. Paula Dian Perez has more. Oh, my God. It's hard to, it's hard, you know. Makai Harif watches devastating images of Afghanistan on her phone. Their photos of the rubble and people in hospital. The founder of the Afghan Women's Center of Montreal has seen this before. Two deadly earthquakes struck the country in 2022 and 2023.
Starting point is 00:01:53 Executive Director Victoria Jahesh says one of the challenges is keeping that money out of the hands of the Taliban, listed by the Canadian government as a terrorist group. So the center has been using its contacts, mainly family members, and trusted organizations to distribute donations to those in need. So this time, again, we have, you know, some relatives in that particular part, and also we know some very, like, research organizations in Afghanistan on the ground. Jahesh says it's not enough. She wants the Canadian government to help us well.
Starting point is 00:02:23 In a statement, Global Affairs Canada says, is providing support to partners on the ground, Paula Diane Perez, CBC News, Montreal. Now to Sudan's Darfur region where at least 1,000 people have been killed after a landslide wiped out an entire village. This is right in the middle of the conflict and the rainy season and the corridor breaks. That is Antoine Gerard, the UN's deputy humanitarian coordinator for Sudan. The rebel group in control of the village says it was leveled to the ground after days of torrential rain. Gerard says this area of Darfur has been hosting thousands of people displaced by the war. BC emergency officials expect a new round of wildfires will be detected in the coming days
Starting point is 00:03:07 following thousands of lightning strikes over the Labor Day weekend. There are currently more than 160 blazes burning in BC, with the majority believed to have been started by lightning. Meanwhile, winds have increased the intensity of Nova Scotia's largest wildfire in the Annapolis Valley. it's now 85 square kilometers in size and continues to burn out of control. And in the Northwest Territories and out-of-control fire on the out-of-control fire on the out-skirts of Fort Providence was estimated over the weekend to be less than a kilometer from the community. A federal judge has ruled U.S. President Donald Trump's deployment of the National Guard in Los Angeles was illegal.
Starting point is 00:03:44 However, the judge has stopped short of demanding the withdrawal of the troops that are still in the city. Trump sent the National Guard into L.A. in June after protests broke out, over immigration arrests. Last month, his administration sent thousands of troops into Washington, D.C., and Trump continues to suggest that Chicago will be next. Actor Graham Green has died. For Tonka. Buffalo. Buffalo. Buffalo. Buffalo. That's Green in the 1990, Kevin Costner film Dances with Wolves. It was a performance that earned Green an Oscar nomination. Born on the Six Nations Reserve in Ontario, Green's career both on stage and in the screen here in Canada and in Hollywood, dates back to the mid-1970s.
Starting point is 00:04:29 His manager confirms Green died yesterday in Stratford, Ontario, at the age of 73. And that is the World This Hour. You can listen to us wherever you get your podcast. The World This Hour is updated every hour seven days a week. And for news anytime, go to our website, cbcnews.ca. For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings. We'll see.

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