The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/08 at 11:00 EDT
Episode Date: September 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/09/08 at 11:00 EDT...
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Hugh is a rock climber, a white supremacist, a Jewish neo-Nazi, a spam king, a crypto-billionaire,
and then someone killed him.
It is truly a mystery. It is truly a case of who done it.
Dirtbag Climber, the story of the murder and the many lives of Jesse James.
Available now wherever you get your podcasts.
From CBC News, it's the world this hour.
I'm Joe Cummings.
Israeli security services say the deadly shooting attack in Jerusalem today
was carried out by two Palestinians from the West Bank.
Six people were killed when two gunmen opened fire at a bus stop.
Sasha Petrissik has the latest.
The shooting happened at this busy transportation hub at the north end of Jerusalem,
As people were waiting at bus stops toward the end of morning rush hour, two men pulled up in a car.
They were carrying automatic weapons and attacked a crowded bus at the curb.
More than a dozen were shot.
Many were injured severely.
Several died on the scene.
A soldier and a private citizen killed the attackers.
Their bullets and casings are littered on the ground even now.
The road here leads from Israel into the occupied West Bank,
where Jewish settlers and Palestinian villagers have clashed over the past two years,
even as the war in Gaza has raged.
Those tensions are likely to rise either further now.
Sasha Kachersake, CBC News, Drew Sala.
Now to Nepal, where at least 19 people have been killed in protests near the grounds of the country's parliament.
That's police using rubber ball.
Bullets, tear gas, and water cannons on thousands of people who are protesting the government's
decision to shut down social media sites. About two dozen sites are blocked, including Facebook
and YouTube. The government says it's part of their efforts to get tech companies to formally
register in the country. TikTok and other platforms have complied and are still operating.
New research is highlighting the significant gaps in policy and training that exist surrounding
sepsis. Sepsis is one of the leading causes of death worldwide.
It's the body's extreme response to infection and in the early stages can be hard to detect.
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. Callie 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.
An Australian woman who killed three of her relatives with poison mushrooms will spend the next three decades in prison.
The total effective sentence is life imprisonment, and I fix a non-parole period of 33 years.
That's a judge in the case delivering his sentence.
The convicted murderer, Aaron Patterson, will be in her early 80s by the.
the time she's eligible for parole.
She was found guilty in July on three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder
for serving her relatives a lunch of Beef Wellington, laced with deadly mushrooms.
It's a case that's been headline news in Australia for at least the last two years.
The co-founder of one of the most popular bands of the 1970s has died.
Rick Davies, co-freyed without a castle.
founded Super Tramp in London in 1970 with Roger Hodson.
Over the next decade, their albums, including Crime of the Century and Breakfast in America,
sold tens of millions of copies and put them at the forefront of the progressive rock movement.
Davies was diagnosed with cancer 10 years ago and died over the weekend at the age of 81.
And that is The World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummix.
Thank you.
