As It Happens: Monday Edition
Part One
Passenger rights
Ottawa says its air passengers' bill of rights will ensure airlines treat Canadians with respect — but advocate Gabor Lukacs says it's a "slap in the face" instead of a nice hot towel.
India rights conviction
In India, a top politician is found guilty of inciting violence against Sikhs in 1984 — and a professor who survived that violence says the verdict comes too late.
P.E.I. newsmakers of the year
A horse that got a haircut; a woman with a snowball in her freezer; and a man who peed in a barn: the annual list of Prince Edward Island's newsmakers of the year is hot off the presses. Well, tepid, really.
Part Two
Climate goals
On the weekend, 196 countries signed a new set of rules outlining their mutual goals for the fight against climate change. But the Campaigns Director for Friends of the Earth says we're past the point where a "vision board" is going to help: we need international action. Now.
ISIS alias
It's obvious that our guest, 90 year-old academic David Mayer, is not "David Mayer" the one-armed terrorist — but U.S. authorities can't seem to tell the difference.
Part Three
Dino prints
A "treasure trove" of well-preserved dinosaur footprints from 100 million years ago has been unearthed in the cliffs near Hastings, England. And they're so detailed you can see the scales, and the nails.
Reading: Who Has Seen The Wind?
Tonight's holiday reading — by former "AIH" co-host Barbara Budd — concerns a boy who puts skates on his list. And, nothing else. But still, Christmas doesn't work out for him quite the way he'd assumed it would.