The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/08 at 02:00 EDT
Episode Date: September 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/09/08 at 02:00 EDT...
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Some stories don't knock.
They kick the door in.
They move fast.
Break rules and haunt you.
See the stories that don't ask permission.
They demand to be seen.
This fall on APTN,
they're coming for you.
From CBC News, The World This Hour, I'm Neil Hurland.
An Australian woman who killed three of her relatives with death cap mushrooms will spend the next three decades in prison.
Judge Christopher Beale delivered his sentence in Melbourne.
The total effective sentence is life imprisonment, and I fix a non-parole period.
of 33 years. The convicted killer Aaron Patterson will be in her early 80s by the time she's
eligible for parole. Patterson served a lunch of beef Wellington pastries laced with the deadly
mushrooms. The case riveted Australia for the last two years. Police in New Zealand say
they've shot and killed a man who was on the run for nearly four years and living in the wilderness.
Jill Rogers is the New Zealand Deputy Police Commissioner. The formal identification of this
male is yet to take place, but we believe him to be Tom Phillips.
Phillips vanished in 2021 with his three children. A police officer was also shot during a confrontation
with Phillips. The Prime Minister of Japan is resigning after less than a year in the job.
Shigeru Ishiba was facing a leadership vote on Monday that could have pushed him out. The Liberal
Democratic Party has been in power for seven decades, but lost control of the upper and lower
House of Parliament. Tobias Harris is an analyst with Japan foresight. I think until there's a
clearer picture of who's actually running what the likely outcome of the leadership election is
going to be, I think the markets might bounce around a little bit, trying to just figure out
what exactly the government is going to look like in a few weeks' time, because I think right
now there's just a lot of uncertainty. The outgoing Prime Minister of Japan will stay in power
until his party picks a replacement next month. Investigators are trying to figure out what
caused a West Jet plane to make a hard landing in the Caribbean. It happened Sunday at the main
airport in St. Martin. Luckily, no one was hurt. Sarah Reid reports.
Sounds on board the West Jet flight after one of the plane's landing gear collapsed at Princess
Juliana International Airport in St. Martin. The hard landing saw the right wing of the plane
hit the runway, leading emergency crews to immediately evacuate all 164 passengers, none of who
were injured.
going to get the cockpit voice recorder tape. It could be piloted error and it could be
totally mechanical error. Keith Mackie is an aviation safety consultant and says it's hard to say
what caused the incident. Well, we don't know whether it was a hard landing or it could have been
a mechanical issue with a gear, but at any rate, the right landing year collapsed and dropped
the wingtip to the ground. So consequently, they had to use the emergency slides to evacuate the airplane.
With the damaged plane now sitting on the runway, the airport says it will remain closed until Monday
afternoon. The incident will now be investigated by the Dutch
Safety Board, and experts say Canada's Transportation Safety Board
will also be involved. Sarah Reid, CBC News, Edmonton.
Sepsis is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, including here in
Canada. It's the body's extreme response to an infection. It can be
hard to detect and fast action is crucial. Sarah McMillan
has more. Their inaction caused us, our whole family, everything.
Garinder Sidu's life was turned upside down when his wife died in June from septic shock
days after giving birth at a Mississauga, Ontario hospital.
Sidu believes his wife's death could have been prevented if hospital staff had recognized
early signs of sepsis.
Now I learned that nothing was normal about those symptoms.
The hospital hasn't commented on this case citing patient privacy but says it has a thorough
review process.
Since his wife's death, Sidu has been advocating for new sepsis
policies in hospitals across Ontario.
The province doesn't have specific sepsis guidelines and new research highlights that it's not
alone.
We found that there were pretty serious gaps.
Dr. Kelly Barrett is one of the researchers who looked at policies and training across
the country.
Some provinces like BC and Saskatchewan do have sepsis policies, but most do not.
Sarah McMillan, CBC News, Toronto.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil.
Herland.
