The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/10/10 at 11:00 EDT

Episode Date: October 10, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/10/10 at 11:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 A new season of Love Me is here. Real stories of real, complicated relationships. It's not even like a gender. I mean, it's wrapped up in gender, but it's just a really deep self-hate. I think I cried almost every day. I just stole myself on the floor. It's coming on really straight.
Starting point is 00:00:21 It's like he's trying to date you all of the sudden. Yeah, and I do look like my mother. Love Me, available now wherever you get your podcasts. From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Mike Miles. Israel's military says its troops have withdrawn to the positions agreed upon under the newly signed peace plan. Mass now has 72 hostages, excuse me, hours to return the hostages. With the ceasefire now in effect in Gaza, thousands of Palestinians have started returning north and a significant humanitarian operation can begin.
Starting point is 00:00:56 Crystal Demancing has more from Jerusalem. We will scale up the provision of food across Gaza to reach 2.1 million people who need food aid. Tom Fletcher, the UN's emergency relief coordinator, says the goal for the first 60 days of the ceasefire is to have hundreds of trucks moving into Gaza daily. Text of the deal, brokered by the U.S., Qatar, and Egypt was made public last night after the Israeli government ratified it. We were at a tremendous development in the last two years. fought doing these two years to achieve our warings. Text of the peace plan says Israeli forces are to pull back to agreed lines and not return
Starting point is 00:01:37 as long as Hamas adheres to the agreement. And Israeli spokesperson says the IDF will still control 53% of the Gaza Strip. A multinational force, including military personnel from Qatar, Egypt, Turkey, and the U.S. will oversee the plan. Crystal Gamanssing, CBC News, Jerusalem. Canada's economy is rebounding from August job losses. Statistics Canada has released numbers for September, showing a net gain of 60,000 jobs,
Starting point is 00:02:09 making up for most of the 66,000 shed in the previous month. But the unemployment rate remains at 7.1%. CBC senior business correspondent Peter Armstrong has more. The Canadian labor market got rolling again in September. The headline is good. The details are even better. We added 60,000 jobs, but Statkan says the breakdown was actually 106,000 full-time jobs added, well, 46,000 part-time jobs were lost.
Starting point is 00:02:37 And you look at the sectors that are showing signs of life. Agriculture is up 13,000, health care and social assistance, that's up 14,000. But the surprising one here is manufacturing. From January to August, nearly 60,000 manufacturing jobs were lost. In September, a whopping 28,000. jobs were added. His report just sort of adds to the sense that just maybe the worst of the trade war's impact is behind us. The bank Canada expects to see economic growth pick up through the second half of this year. And if that's the case, you'd expect to see that show up in the jobs
Starting point is 00:03:14 data first. And here we are. Peter Armstrong, CBC News, Toronto. Mail will soon start moving across the country again. Canada Post employees are switching to rotating strikes beginning tomorrow morning. and Canada Post will continue contract negotiations. Employees began a nationwide strike last month, just hours after the federal government announced plans to overhaul operations, including cuts to services like door-to-door delivery. It's not clear yet how long it will take Canadians to see letters and bills in their mailboxes.
Starting point is 00:03:46 In the Philippines, at least seven people are dead after a strong 7.4 magnitude earthquake. The screams of terrified off. office workers in Davao as the quake hit. It was followed hours later by a second earthquake nearly as strong, estimated as a 6.8 magnitude, both hitting the same southern region. They came weeks after another quake that leased at least at least 74 people dead. In Ukraine, Russian attacks on energy facilities across the country cut power to more than a million customers. Ukraine's Air Force says it got most of the 465 drones and 32 missiles fired by Russia. The barrage also cut off water supplies.
Starting point is 00:04:31 President Vladimir Zelensky is warning there will be more attacks aimed at infrastructure as winter approaches. Kiev's mayor says 12 people were injured, while in the southeastern city of Zaporasia, there are reports a 7-year-old boy was killed. That is your world this hour. For news anytime, go to our website, cbcnews.ca.ca. For CBC News, I'm Mike Miles.

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