The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/19 at 03:00 EST
Episode Date: November 19, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/19 at 03:00 EST...
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This ascent isn't for everyone.
You need grit to climb this high this often.
You've got to be an underdog that always over-delivers.
You've got to be 6,500 hospital staff, 1,000 doctors,
all doing so much with so little.
You've got to be Scarborough.
Defined by our uphill battle and always striving towards new heights.
And you can help us keep climbing.
Donate at lovescarbro.cairbo.
bro.ca.
From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Hurland.
Prime Minister Mark Carney is trying to drum up
more trade for Canada.
Today he lands in the United Arab Emirates,
hoping to attract cash for Canadian projects,
despite the concern of some human rights activists.
Diamond Isinger was a trade advisor
to former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
There's no such thing as a perfect partner
ally out there for Canada to be doing business with.
The United Arab Emirates faces allegations that it's financially supporting a paramilitary
group committing atrocities in Sudan.
It's a claim the UAE denies.
Nunavut has a new premier this morning.
Congratulations, Mr. Main.
Members of the legislature elected John Main in a secret ballot yesterday.
Nunavut operates under a consensus.
census government, which means there's no political parties, all the territorial politicians
are independent. Maine was most recently the territory's health minister. He also was once a CBC
journalist. He's the first non-inuk premier in Nunavut's history, though he was raised in the
north and he speaks fluent inuktitut. The survivor in one of Ottawa's worst mass killings is
speaking publicly for the first time, since the man who murdered his entire family was sentenced. In March
of 2024, six people were killed in a family home, including the man's wife and four children.
David Fraser reports.
Inside an Ottawa temple, Danishka Likramsinger, bowing his head in prayer, his Buddhist faith,
the reason he says he's standing after losing his wife and four children in one of the
city's deadliest homicides.
Fabio de Suiza pleaded guilty earlier this month to killing the family and another friend in
2024.
He also attacked Likramsinger, stabbing him six times.
He was sentenced to life without parole for 25 years.
I always wanted to justice.
Wickramsinger had welcomed DeSueza, a young man from Sri Lanka, to live in his Ottawa home,
supporting someone he shared a faith and home country with.
Destroy my everything, my family, my life.
Immigration struggles are adding to the trauma.
Wickramsinga's brother rushed to Canada after the killings, but he can't bring his own wife and daughter here.
The family's immigration lawyer says it could take a decade for the family to be
United in Canada unless the federal government steps in. David Fraser, CBC News, Ottawa.
Millions of Canadians rely on ultra-processed foods like ready-to-made meals and mass-produced bread,
but doctors around the world have a fresh warning about how bad those foods can be for your health.
Jennifer Yunne explains why it's so hard for Canadians to cut these foods out of their diet
and what other countries have tried.
At the Parkdale Community Food Bank in Toronto, Executive Director Kitty
Raman Costa wants to make sure her clients have access to whole food, even though many have
no choice but to reach for ultra-processed options.
They're not just more convenient.
They're the only option for people depending on their circumstance.
In Canada, more than half the foods we buy are ultra-process, say researchers, meaning they
have additives, high amounts of sugars, flavors, or emulsifiers.
Experts around the world are warning in a series of studies published by The Lancet,
The rise in ultra-processed foods poses a major public health threat.
John Claude Mubarak is one of the co-authors and the professor at the University of Montreal.
We have a great opportunity to address the chronic diseases that we're facing in this country by changing the food system.
He says Canada could learn from other countries, like Brazil, which has a free school lunch program,
focused on whole foods and limiting ultra-processed foods.
Jennifer Yun, CBC News, Toronto.
Astronomy lovers are buzzing today because NASA will release.
new images this afternoon of a giant comet that's flying through our solar system.
It's called 3-Eye Atlas.
It's a chunk of ice more than one kilometer wide, but it also contains unusual amounts of nickel,
and at least one Harvard astronomer says we might be seeing a piece of alien technology,
but most scientists are skeptical about that theory.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Hurland.
Thank you.
