The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/10/08 at 04:00 EDT
Episode Date: October 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/10/08 at 04:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Hurland.
We begin in New York and a tough loss for Canadian baseball fans.
Diving stop at third by Carriero.
He will fall out and that's the ball game.
The New York Yankees beat the Toronto Blue Jays last night 9-6 in game three of the American League Division series.
The Jays were ahead 6-1 at the start of the night, but the Yankees roared back.
Toronto leads the best of five series two to one.
Game four is tonight in New York.
Russia is using new tactics in its war against Ukraine.
Improvised explosive devices, a hallmark of the war in Afghanistan,
are now found in Ukraine.
Covert assassinations, railway sabotage,
and mysterious arsins far from the front lines,
are bringing a whole new dimension to Vladimir Putin's fight.
The CBC's Ben Makou reports from Ukraine.
At a Kiev training facility with Ukrainian soldiers preparing for a war that isn't just being fought on the front lines.
An officer, who CPC cannot name per Ukrainian protocol, warns me about Kremlin spies inside his country.
The number of agents that Russia constantly maintains in Ukraine is excessively high.
Using the secrecy of the telegram app, Russia's FSB spy agency has recruited desperate civilians in need of money
or duped them into assassination plots and planting IEDs.
In May, Ukrainian authorities,
40s folded a plot involving a teen given an ID that Russia directed him to hide at a busy military
recruitment center. Stephen Ray is a counterterrorism analyst at the U.S.-based Institute for Strategic
Dialogue. Russia is basically exploiting vulnerable individuals who are desperate for some sort of money
to carry out these attacks. As the war in Ukraine nears its fourth birthday, so too does the
shadow war. Ben Maku, CBC News, Kiev. The conflict between Via Rail and
and Canadian Nationalists costing the Crown Corporation.
Via has offered millions of dollars in travel credits to passengers
affected by speed limits imposed at CN crossing since last year.
Gabriel Le Markan-Perreau reports.
VARL has been paying the price for its dispute with CN
since the fall of 2024.
CBC has learned that the conflict related to CN's decision
to impose speed limits at railroad crossings
has cost nearly $31 million in travel credits in nine months.
Travel credits of up to 100% of the price paid
are offered to passengers whenever a train is more than an hour late.
Jacques Gua is a retired professor
specializing in transportation and logistic management.
It adds to the frustration of the VRL users
who are facing an unreliable schedule service.
For the past few weeks, train have been able to run
at a constant, albeit reduced, speed over longer segments.
Both VRL and CN insist they will not compromise on safety,
but the two cannot agree and the measures that should be put in place
to protect all passengers.
Gabriel Le Markampereau, CBC News, Ottawa.
A career fair for people with autism in downtown Ottawa drew hundreds of job seekers.
Jody Applewaith spoke with some of the candidates looking for work.
Dozens of job seekers lined up at boots, resumes in hand.
waiting to speak to prospective employers.
It's been years, maybe since 2009, that I've been looking for work and no luck.
Hager Kasab says she's losing hope after years spent looking for a job.
She says her disability has made the search harder.
Often, employers treat her differently than her peers,
or can't meet the accommodation she needs.
For me, it's been degrading.
For many others living with autism, it's a similar story.
The Spectrum Works Career Fair is meant to change that.
Co-founder, Neil Forster.
We have been very successful in finding a lot of people employment,
and I think that's what really kind of pushes us to keep doing this event.
Kasab again.
There is a little bit of hope left from being here.
The job fair moves to downtown Toronto next Friday.
Jodi Applewaith, CBC News, Ottawa.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Hurland.
Thank you.