Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 72 days 17 hours 10 minutes
An about-face, in more ways than one. As peace talks resume in Geneva, Vladimir Putin makes a surprise announcement: it's mission accomplished in Syria, so he'll begin withdrawing Russian forces.
Wrongs of passage. A couple drove a family of Syrian refugees to the Copenhagen train station, and paid for their tickets -- and under Danish law, that makes them human traffickers.
On their bestie behaviour. Prime Minister Trudeau is getting a warm reception from Barack Obama, but Atlantic editor David Frum warns that the outgoing President isn't the one Canada really needs to befriend
Hoping against hopelessness. After six suicides in their community since mid-December, the Pimicikamak Cree Nation in northern Manitoba seeks support, by declaring a state of emergency.
What will come north after he goes south. Canada's Ambassador to Washington tells us what the Prime Minister is hoping to walk away with after this week's White House dinner with Barack Obama.
Restart the presses. A week ago, Turkey's Zaman was independent and critical of the president -- but after a police raid and a change of oversight, it's suddenly a pro-government cheerleader.
Silenced. Police say Honduran environmental and human-rights activist Berta Cáceres was killed during a robbery yesterday -- but our guest is one of many who say she was assassinated for her courageous work.
What she didn't know about the man she knew. Writer Susan Musgrave explains her conflicted feelings, after learning her friend -- the poet Al Purdy -- died by assisted suicide.
She could no longer control her body -- but she was of sound mind. And yesterday, at a clinic in Vancouver, a woman in the final stages of ALS died with the help of two doctors
Giving up the ghosts. Moments after assisted-suicide advocate John Hofsess dies in a Swiss clinic, Toronto Life magazine publishes an article in which he reveals he helped end the lives of eight Canadians.