The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/12/19 at 06:00 EST
Episode Date: December 19, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/12/19 at 06:00 EST...
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from cbc news the world is sour i'm neil kumar australia is launching the biggest gun buyback program
in almost 30 years following the bondi beach massacre prime minister anthony albinisi also announced a crackdown
on hate speech georgie smite has the story from sydney for decades australians believed their gun laws
were strong enough to keep people safe
until 15 people were gunned down
while celebrating Hanukkah on Bondi Beach.
The Australian government will now provide funding
to buy back guns from the public.
Here's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on the plan.
To purchase surplus, newly banned and illegal firearms.
The largest buyback since the Howard government
initiated one in 1996.
That buyback followed Australia's worst mass shooting
where 35 people were gunned down at a tourist spot.
The reforms come on the heels of proposed new federal laws
to crack down on hate speech,
as well as state laws to restrict the types of guns people can own
as the tragedy at Bondi forces a policy catch-up for governments.
Georgie Smyth, CBC News, Sydney.
Turning to another mass shooting investigation,
the Brown University case.
Now with the prime suspect dead,
the focus this morning has turned to finding a motive.
Waterman reports. The suspect in the mass shooting, 48-year-old Claudio Nevis Valente, a Portuguese
national and former Brown University graduate student, was found dead in a storage unit. The break in
the case came from a tip that led law enforcement to his vehicle, Rhode Island Attorney General
Peter Nerona. He ran in a car in Boston. We were able to find that car in New Hampshire.
After the University Killings authorities say Valente drove to the Boston suburb of Brookline,
where he allegedly killed an MIT physics professor, Nuno Larero, also Portuguese.
Valenti and the professor attended the same school in Portugal in the late 1990s.
Last night in Providence, Brown University students were glad the ordeal has ended.
I mean, I definitely think there's a sense of relief in the community, having found the person.
Officials say Valenti tried various methods to evade police, including changing license plates.
Steve Futterman, CBC News, Los Angeles.
Today is the deadline for the U.S. Justice Department to release its files on financier and sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
Since becoming president, Donald Trump had sought to keep them secret, even though before that,
he and other mega mouthpieces had demanded they'd be made public.
On Thursday, Democrats on the House Oversight Committee released more images of Epstein along with Tech Titan Bill Gates,
philosopher Nome Shomsky, and other notables, but they did not provide any evidence of wrongdoing.
New Brunswick's local government's commissioner is warning minister.
municipalities that they've been violating provincial laws.
The commission issued an advisory last month asking councils to stop handling complaints about
their mayors and counselors privately.
As Erica Butler reports elected officials support the move towards transparency.
Everything was done behind closed doors.
Andy McGregor says he couldn't believe it when he went to a closed meeting shortly after
being elected, only to find out the meeting was called to discuss a complaint against him.
The local governance commission later determined that the complaint was not handled.
properly, the commission says many municipalities have been incorrectly treating their elected
mayors and counselors as employees and citing HR confidentiality in handling complaints against them.
Jeff Martin teaches politics at Mount Allison University. He calls the advisory disruptive and
almost courageous in light of a trend away from openness and transparency in municipal
politics. It's refreshing that someone says very clearly municipal counselors are not employees.
The city of Moncton is one of many local governments.
governments in New Brunswick that has been holding code of conduct proceedings in private.
This week, the city started the process to change its bylaw, citing the advice of the commission.
Erica Butler, CBC News, Moncton.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.
Thank you.
