The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/08 at 20:00 EDT
Episode Date: September 9, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/09/08 at 20:00 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 Stephanie Scandaris.
The federal government is allocating $80 million to businesses in Atlantic Canada
as part of its regional tariff response initiative.
That initiative, now worth a billion dollars, was first announced in March.
Its aim is to support small and medium-sized businesses affected by U.S. tariffs.
Prime Minister Mark Carney says this funding will maintain the strength of Canada's ocean economy.
This region is a giant in fishing, manufacturing, forestry, IT, energy, shipbuilding, and its overseas trade corridor sitting in St. John's Harbor, connect Canada with the rest of the world.
Ottawa announced a series of measures last week to protect, build, and transform Canada's strategic industries.
The Alberta government is making changes to its controversial book ban, now only removing books that contain explicit images of sexual.
acts from school libraries. The band no longer includes books with written descriptions of those
acts. This rewrite comes after the original order faced widespread criticism for resulting in the
removal of well-known in classic titles like The Handmaid's Tale, The Color Purple, and I Know
Why the Caged Bird Sings. Books containing graphic images of bodies for a non-sexual purpose
and religious texts are exempt from the ban. Israel says a deadly attack at a Jerusalem bus
was carried out by two Palestinians from the West Bank.
Attackers opened fire during rush hour, killing six people.
Israeli forces are now raiding West Bank villages in search for more suspects.
Sasha Petrissik has more.
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,
You do further now.
Sasha Kachrasek, CBC News, Drew Salon.
France's prime minister has lost a vote of confidence.
The premier minister
must remit to the president of the republic,
the demission of the government.
Francois Beiru is the third French prime minister
to be ousted in the past year.
The vote is a blow to President Emmanuel Macron's
fragile minority government.
He's now tasked with appointing a new prime minister,
Members of a left-wing alliance, which emerged as the largest winning block in last year's legislative elections, are urging Macron to pick a member from their coalition.
Right-wing politicians want Macron to call snap elections, but the president has ruled out that possibility.
Clashes at protests in Nepal have killed at least 19 people and injured dozens more.
Violence broke out after thousands of young demonstrators rallied against the government's recent social media ban and alleged police.
political corruption. Rebecca Bundin reports.
Cajotic scenes broke out in the capital, Kathmandu.
Protesters set cars on fire, and some managed to scale the walls of the parliament building.
Security forces used rubber bullets and water cannons against the demonstrators,
who are calling themselves Generation Z.
There are people dying in the streets, being shot. There is not enough ambulances.
A ban on several social media platforms seems to be the main trigger for the protests,
but there also seem to be wider concerns.
Every corruption in the country, from the local level to federal level,
all the Nepal's citizens are fed up of corruption.
Nepal's government insists it is trying to regulate social media
to tackle fraud and hate speech.
Social media networks that complied with the government's registration requirements
continue to operate in the country.
Rebecca Bundin for CBC News, Mumbai.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Stephanie Skanderas.
Thank you.
