The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/10/15 at 09:00 EDT
Episode Date: October 15, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/10/15 at 09:00 EDT...
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from cbc news the world this hour i'm claude fay the province of newfoundland and labrador has a new
premier designate this morning progressive conservative leader tony wakom won a majority government
breaking nearly a decade of liberal rule in the province wakem says despite the shift in
political tides he's here to represent everyone and if you didn't vote p c
that's okay, too, because we're also going to work hard for you.
Because it doesn't matter to me if you are blue or red or orange.
At the end of the day, all of us are Newfounders and Labradorians first.
Liberal leader John Hogan did secure his seat in Windsor Lake riding.
Tension is rising over Hamas's failure to return all the bodies of deceased Israeli hostages.
Of the 28, only eight have been sent back.
Israel's military says one body returned yesterday is not the remains of a hostage.
In return, Israel is restricting the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
Breyer Stewart reports from Jerusalem.
Aid trucks move towards the raffa crossing between Egypt and Gaza.
But Israeli officials say they will not be allowed into the strip
and that the border will only reopen to permit the movement of Gazis.
As part of the ceasefire agreement, 600 trucks are supported.
host to be allowed in every day. But Israel announced that it was going to curtail aid in an attempt
to put pressure on Hamas to return more of the remains of the deceased hostages. Under the deal
for every body of an Israeli hostage that's returned, Israel will return the bodies of 15 Gazans.
In Gaza, Tess Ingram with UNICEF says, while aid hasn't been flooding in, the ceasefire means that
they are able to distribute the supplies they do have more widely. We really do continue to
the Israeli authorities to keep the crossings open.
There's also internal tension.
Hamas has been fighting with local gangs
and carrying out public executions.
Prior Stewart, CBC News, Jerusalem.
CBC News is bringing new details to light
in a small town murder that gripped a community and the country.
In the summer of 2023,
Sharif Ramon died following an altercation outside of his Ontario restaurant.
Police remained tight lip for a year
until announcing they had arrested and charged three men in Scotland.
The CBC's Jonathan Gatehouse has more.
Richard Thomas stands by a memorial tree in Owen Sound,
fondly remembering Sharif Raman.
The restaurant owner was killed in the summer of 2023
as he tried to stop three men from dining and dashing on a $150 bill.
This is a story that touched people all over Canada.
It was a big mystery for the small southwestern Ontario City,
with police saying nothing about the case
until more than a year later.
We can now state that three individuals, all citizens of the United Kingdom,
have been arrested and charged with criminal code offenses.
Robert Evans is charged with manslaughter,
while his father and uncle have been charged as accessories after the fact.
CBC News gained exclusive access to Scottish court records.
The files show Evans and his father entered Canada on falsified UK passports.
Police alleged that Evans threw the punch that killed Rahman.
A full extradition hearing is expected to begin next week.
that any Canadian trial may still be months away.
Jonathan Gatehouse, CBC News, Owen Sound, Ontario.
A new ad from Ontario's government is hoping to reach American consumers.
When someone says, let's impose tariffs on foreign imports,
it looks like they're doing the patriotic thing by protecting American products and jobs.
That's the voice of former U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1987.
Now it's part of a $75 million commercial campaign to stress the effects of,
tariffs on American households.
But over the long run, such trade barriers hurt every American worker and consumer.
The commercial will be rolling out on U.S. networks this week.
It's commissioned by Ontario Premier Doug Ford.
He says he hopes the message hits home for Republicans in particular, and adds tariffs
will end up hurting all Americans.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Claude Fagg.
Thank you.
