The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/02 at 23:00 EDT
Episode Date: September 3, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/09/02 at 23:00 EDT...
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Book club on Monday.
Gym on Tuesday.
Date night on Wednesday.
Out on the town on Thursday.
Quiet night in on Friday.
It's good to have a routine.
And it's good for your eyes too.
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you'll know just how healthy they are.
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From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Neil Hurland.
We begin in Beijing, where the Chinese government is flexing its military muscles.
Tonight, President Xi Jinping held a military parade with 26 world leaders,
including some of the biggest enemies of the West.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, North Korean leader,
Kim Jong-un and Chinese President Xi Jinping strolled side by side down a red carpet.
The image of the three leaders and the display of military might is seen as a signal to the
U.S. and the world of a powerful new alliance.
And in a major speech, she spoke.
History cautions us that humanity rises and falls together.
Only when our countries and nations
treat each other as equals.
U.S. President Donald Trump
accused the Chinese leader of conspiring
against the United States.
President Trump wants more
National Guard troops in some major
American cities. He wants them
to help drive down crime. Paul Hunter
has more.
Chicago is a hellhole right now.
As U.S. President Donald Trump frames
it, Chicago is in desperate
need for the U.S. National Guard
to go into that city and, in a sense,
save it from itself.
You can go to Afghanistan.
You can go to places that you would think of.
They don't even come close to this.
Many take issue with that suggestion.
Underlining Chicago's crime rate broadly is dropping.
But this past weekend, dozens of shootings left multiple people killed and wounded.
And so, says Trump.
Well, we're going in.
I didn't say when.
We're going in.
And here's Illinois Democrat, Governor J.B. Pritzker.
None of this is about fighting crime or making.
Chicago safer? The real question for many, how far will Trump go? Suggesting again after Chicago,
he may well send troops into Baltimore. Hinting also, this kind of thing may be in place for the
long haul. Paul Hunter's CBC News, Washington. The federal NDP has officially launched the race to
find its next leader. Former leader, Jugmeet Singh, resigned after he lost his seat in April's
federal election. The party says there is strong interest in the contest. NDP members
will vote for Singh's successor at a national convention in March.
The Alberta government is pausing its order to remove books with explicit sexual content
from school libraries.
The order comes after a draft list of books to be removed from Edmonton schools was leaked
online last week.
It contained more than 200 titles, including Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.
Premier Daniel Smith says the Edmonton School Division was too heavy-handed in crafting its list,
and that the government is rewriting the directive to make sure classic books remain on the shelf.
There are desperate pleas tonight in Sudan's Darfur region, torrential rains triggered a massive landslide.
At least 1,000 people are dead.
Ithelmusa reports.
Video posted to social media shows people frantically digging away at mounds of mud,
likely looking for survivors of a deadly landslide in central Darfur's Mara Mountains,
located in the epicenter of fighting between the rapid support forces paramilitary or RSF and the country's army.
The two factions have been locked in a civil war for more than two years.
These families who had taken refuge in the Maram Mountains, they had been displaced by the conflict and now this natural disaster.
Arjaman Hussein is with Plan International.
The charity is trying to get aid to those affected by the landslide.
but the conditions are making it impossible.
Most of the humanitarian transportation activities are on hold.
And once it gets moving, it will need the approval of both the RSF and the Army to reach the area.
Idlemusa, CBC News, Toronto.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Hurland.
Thank you.
