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The US military says an Israeli airstrike that killed the Iranian Revolutionary Guard's naval commander, Alireza Tangsiri, "makes the region safer". Israel's defence minister says he was directly responsible for blocking the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has not confirmed his death. We look at how the Middle East conflict is affecting daily lives in countries as far apart as Kenya and the Philippines. In other news, a lavish welcome for the leader of Belarus in North Korea. And a sunscreen scandal in Australia prompts a rethink.
The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: [email protected]
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This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Celia Hatten and it's 1600 GMT on Thursday, the 26th of March.
These are our main stories.
Israel says it's killed an Iranian naval chief who was involved in operations to cut off
the Strait of Hormuz.
But will it make a difference?
Inside a run, people try to continue with their lives despite daily bombing attacks
from the United States and Israel.
I'm afraid that one day the war will end and something good will not have happened.
The problems I have are the same problems as all people.
Basic needs.
I cannot provide them.
And disruption to oil shipments is having an effect on people in countries
as far apart as Kenya and the Philippines.
Also in this podcast, the president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko,
is on his first official visit to North Korea.
Both countries are keen to show that they have friends in the world.
We begin with the latest from the war in Iran.
Israel says it's killed an Iranian navy chief Ali Razat Hangziri,
who was believed to be overseeing Iran's operations in the crucial Strait of Hormuz.
In a statement, the US military said his death makes the region safer.
If confirmed, this would be the latest assassination of an Iranian leader.
The death was announced by Israel's Defense Minister, Israel Katz.
Alayla Sakinsal, the Polar.
Last night, in a precise and lethal operation, the IDF
thwarted the commander of the revolutionary guard's navy, Tangziri,
along with several naval command officials,
the man who is directly responsible for the terrorist operation
of mining and blocking the Strait of Hormuz, was blown up and neutralized.
Despite suggestions from President Trump that the Iranians want to make a peace deal,
with Pakistan saying it's acting as an intermediary,
the war continues.
There have been further strikes on Iran,
with Tehran also targeting neighboring countries.
Our security correspondent, Frank Gardner, is in the Katari capital Doha.
I asked him about Ali Razat Hangziri.
Built into the Iranian system.
That's what the Revolutionary Guard's Corps have done.
In Iran, it's almost like you've got two parallel militaries.
You've got the conventional military,
and then you've got the IRGC, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard's Corps.
And some years ago, the IRGC kicked out their country's conventional navy from the Gulf
and said, we're taking over here.
You guys can go and do something else, but we are in charge here.
And they've spent the last few years practising and honing
unconventional operations.
So things like fast torpedo attack boats,
drone swans, and black ops sneaking up and attaching limpid mines to tankers,
things like that, as well as boarding and hijacking, essentially tankers.
So he will certainly have been involved in much of that,
but he's replaceable.
Malaysia says Iran has let one of its tankers pass through the straight-of-formers.
Are other ships getting through?
They are, yes, not most of them.
I mean, this is the problem.
Is that Iran is effectively acting like a maritime traffic policeman,
deciding who gets to go through and who doesn't.
And they are still exporting their own oil over a million barrels of oil a day
to customers in China, Pakistan, India,
but most of the other stuff isn't getting through.
And reportedly, Iran is charging $2 million a time for every tanker that goes through.
So this is clearly a far worse, a far less satisfactory situation
than the one that existed just a month ago when Iran had no say really
in who went through the straight-of-formers.
I mean, it's got a big long coastline,
but there was no question of it choosing who got through.
But after nearly a month of being battered by Israeli and US air strikes,
Iran has become defiant and is no more to compromise.
And they have quite cleverly and militantly played the strategic economic card,
knowing that even though they've got the weaker force militarily,
they've got geography and time on their side.
Frank, you're in the Gulf.
I mean, as the war continues,
are you seeing any shifts in the positions of the Gulf states
in terms of what they're willing to do,
either to reign in Iran or to end the war?
Yes, I am.
I mean, there's a definite hardening of views here in the Gulf,
particularly in the UAE, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Saudi Arabian Kuwait,
because those are the countries that are getting hit
nightly by drones and ballistic missiles.
And this is the attitude of all the Gulf Arab states.
They didn't support the war,
and they certainly didn't give any overt assistance
to the US or Israel for this war.
But the attitude of the Gulf Arab states
is that they have been unjustifiably attacked by their neighbor,
and they are very cross about it.
And some countries on this side of the Gulf
really are determined to see an end to the Islamic Republic regime,
because they're saying we can't live with this regime.
Frank Gardner in Doha.
The impact of the war in the Middle East,
which has been raging for almost four weeks now,
is being felt not just within the region, but far beyond.
Disrupted fuel shipments are beginning
to affect several countries on the African continent
that have close ties with the Gulf.
Earlier, I spoke to the BBC's Shingai Nyoka, who's in Zimbabwe.
I think this impact is being felt across the continent
in many of Africa's 50 plus countries.
So, for example, in Mauritius,
we've seen the government announce energy saving measures
where they are restricting the use of electricity
for non-essential equipment,
such as certain types of lights,
swimming pool pumps, as well as heating,
because they say that their supplies are running low.
And this is after a shipment that was expected
over the weekend has failed to arrive.
They say that they have less than a month of fuel in stock,
and that really is a picture across the continent.
I think a lot of countries were really caught napping
when it comes to this.
Many of them have lower than the recommended amount of stock in Sudan,
for example, in South Sudan, in the capital of Judah.
They've also begun rationing electricity across the capital.
But we've also seen in countries like Kenya,
these large economies,
as well as in South Africa reports of hoarding,
of panic buying, that have forced authorities to call for calm,
because at some fuel stations,
the stocks have run out completely.
And so, what's the situation where you are in Zimbabwe?
It's a very similar picture.
Zimbabwe has been one of the hardest-hit countries in terms of
an increase in fuel prices.
Just to give you an example over the last month,
the fuel petrol price has risen by over 40%.
And so, like in many other countries,
there's a scramble to try to find solutions.
And so, Zimbabwe was blending its petrol with ethanol at 5%.
And now they say that to try to reduce the price of fuel,
they're going to increase that blend to 20%.
And also, it's scrapped some of the taxes
that they'd attached to fuel imports,
because the impact of that increases that transport costs have risen by
almost double within some of their commuter routes.
And so, there really is a lot of concern
about what's going to happen if this war continues.
That's the question.
How bad might things get if the war continues to rumble on?
It's anybody's guess.
I think the examples that we have with the past experience
that we have is linked to the war in Russia and Ukraine,
where right at the beginning of that war,
the fuel prices went up here in Zimbabwe.
The price has breached the $2.00 elitermark,
then it had risen to $3.00 eliterm.
We've heard some experts,
including the oil tycoon Alekudangote,
warn that perhaps African youths will face
the prospects of working from home,
because the cost of going into the office
is just simply too expensive for businesses to sustain.
Shinghai Nyoka in Zimbabwe.
To Southeast Asia now and another country
that's been particularly hard hit by ripple effects
of the conflict in the Middle East,
transport workers in the Philippines
have launched a nationwide two-day strike
against surging oil prices.
Many of the demonstrators drive delivery trucks
and jeepneys, private minibuses
that city residents rely on for transport.
The Philippine government has introduced fuel subsidies
and free bus rides for affected commuters,
but protesters say they need a lot more financial support.
When gas prices are this high,
people are going to have a difficult time
getting from place to place.
People, no matter what sector they work in,
whether that be health, whether that be education.
Philippine families are already being deeply affected
by the rise in commodity prices,
such as for education, for food,
for housing, and for transportation.
Because of that, we're seeing our parents
bring home less money for our dinners at the dinner table,
as well as we're seeing the rise in the cost of education.
And we know that given the precarious situation
of Philippine families,
they definitely will not be able to absorb that cost.
So why is the Philippine so vulnerable
in this latest crisis?
The BBC's Steer and Janet Tawari was at the protests
in the capital, Manila.
These demonstrators have been out since 7 o'clock this morning.
We attended one protest in another part of Manila.
And they were very loud, they were very impassioned.
And what they're doing is they've got multiple locations
of these protests,
and they're all on busy roads because they're trying
to get their demands met by drawing attention
to the disruption caused by them striking.
These are jeep knee drivers,
they're small minivan drivers,
and other even right-hailing apps
were supposed to take part.
They're really suffering from the higher cost of fuel.
And they say that they're not getting enough government support.
Steer and Janet, a lot of people listening to this
might think, well, I'm also suffering,
you know, from higher energy costs.
But the Philippines was the first country
to declare an energy crisis.
Wasn't it?
Why is the Philippines so vulnerable?
Because it imports the majority of the oil it needs
from the Middle East,
and those supplies have been disrupted,
it doesn't really have another source.
Now, the government has said that it is working
to secure supplies from other sources.
That's one of the reasons that it implemented
emergency powers earlier this week
in order to have a bit more flexibility
to try and find new suppliers.
Having said that, though,
even if the Philippines had other suppliers,
it also has a problem of capacity.
It doesn't have the storage,
so it can buy the oil.
That oil will also take time to reach the country.
And on top of that,
it doesn't have the storage facilities
to be able to hold major reserves
like other countries like your Japan's
and your South Korea's.
Any discussions for fixing this problem
in the long term,
for example, investing in renewables
or investing in more public transit?
Yes.
The government has suggested a number of measures
in order to save electricity,
including moving to a four-day working week.
And it's even asked government employees
to take the stairs instead of the lift.
And also, yes, electrification.
But remember, electric cars, for example,
the charging infrastructure just isn't there.
It's nowhere near along that path
of having a very comprehensive charging infrastructure
in the country.
So there are challenges on that side,
and that's certainly not going to happen overnight.
What these demonstrators are calling for, though,
what their main demands are,
is things like fuel tax cuts,
as well as fair hikes,
because that's something that they say
the government can get involved and try and control.
They're also really unhappy
with how unregulated the oil market is.
It's completely left to private companies
to set the oil price.
And these demonstrators are saying
that the government could get more involved
and help with limiting those price hikes.
It's your end, Janet, to worry.
Let's get a sense now of what's happening
on the ground inside Iran.
Footage and interviews obtained by the BBC
give a rare insight into the experience
of Iranians living through the war.
We've protected the identities of the people
in this report from our special correspondent,
Furgle King.
A man feels the shock waves of missiles striking nearby.
From his balcony, he sees the tracer fire,
bright red against the dark blue of the night sky.
Another night under fire into Iran.
We've been able to obtain testimony
from several ordinary Iranians
in different parts of the country.
To protect them from official retaliation,
we've changed their names
and used other voices to speak their words.
I'm afraid that one day the war will end
and something good will not have happened.
Mariam is an artist who's long struggled
with the lack of freedom as a woman and a painter.
But she's decided to stay despite the dangers of war.
Some of my friends left Iran.
I stayed to see what will happen.
I didn't want to go far away.
I wanted to stay here, observe.
And if I can, build something can produce something.
The problems I have are the same problems as all people.
Basic needs.
I cannot provide them.
In another part of the city,
Asia was shopping in the market for food
to celebrate Nauru's,
the festival of the Iranian New Year,
the arrival of spring.
But the war has turned her local market
into a place of absences.
Faces she will never see again.
Everything is supposed to become new.
Happy, fresh.
I thought about how last year was.
At this exact time,
those people who have been killed came with us for
e-shopping and now they are gone.
There is war.
Everywhere is war.
There's a deepening economic crisis.
The price of foodstuffs has doubled.
Families struggle to put food on the table.
Iran feels very gloomy.
In the past, in every part of the market,
people sold things on the streets.
Flower pots,
higher synths,
vegetables,
they sold fish.
Now the streets have nothing.
They are all empty.
I think people's pockets are empty.
Our economy is ruined,
and the biggest reason for it is the war.
Each morning brings a ritual of grim transformation.
Not just security bases,
but homes, shops,
offices,
in rubble.
Streets filled with shards of steel.
Weary civilians cleaning up the mess made
in a war they did not choose.
Pro-regime demonstrations
portraying a united nation are the only ones allowed.
Any dissenters would be swiftly silenced.
But at home, with family,
with friends they trust,
those who oppose the regime
are willing to share their feelings.
My father,
who until 20 years ago
would have given his life a harmony.
After his death brought sweets home to celebrate.
This man,
we're calling him Mahmoud,
is furious with what's happening to his country.
They are a group of savages with masks,
chanting with loudspeakers,
guns and vehicles,
constantly moving through the streets,
shouting,
and everyone is at home,
worried, afraid.
With satellite signals full of noise and disruption
and no internet,
they blocked the roads,
they intimidate every car they see
and behave however they want.
The state has the repressive power,
military capability,
and a strong enough support base to continue fighting.
Any ceasefire will likely leave
the current rulers in place,
at least in the medium term.
An escalating war could unleash a far more
unpredictable dynamic for the regime
and the people of Iran.
Fargo Keen.
Still to come in this podcast,
a sunscreen scandal in Australia.
There were products that,
in one case,
said it had a 50-plus SPF.
When, in fact, it only had a SPF of four,
regulators are calling for big changes to the industry.
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Now to North Korea.
Where the president of Belarus,
Alexander Lukashenko,
has been warmly greeted at a colorful ceremony
hosted by the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un.
The two men signed a friendship and cooperation treaty,
but the visit also seemed to be about optics,
showing solidarity between nations
not aligned to the United States and the West.
The newsrooms Mickey Bristo told me more about the visit.
As you said, they signed a treaty.
These two leaders agreed to increase cooperation
in terms of education, culture, sport,
information sharing, increased trade as well.
At the moment, trade between these two countries
is virtually nonexistent, measured in the thousands.
And when you think the biggest countries in the world
have billions of dollars of trade
between each other, it's virtually nothing.
So there's great room for improvement there.
But I think it's about the optics, as you mentioned.
We heard a little bit of the ceremony there.
It was a really lavish ceremony.
Alexander Lukashenko swept into a square in Pyongyang
in a big black limousine.
The two leaders hugged each other.
There was a detachment of soldiers on white horses,
another group of soldiers, march, pass, goose step in.
It was all about showing, essentially,
that these two countries are in solidarity
with two of the larger nations, Russia and China.
And they really are aligned against the United States,
against the West.
And really to show that they have friends in the world.
So trade, diplomatic ties being built.
I mean, North Korea does seem to have more friends.
And to be in a better economic position
than it was just a few years ago.
Yeah, during the pandemic, North Korea
was really on its uppers.
The trade stopped with the outside world.
There was a series of natural disasters,
less food for people to eat across the country.
But essentially, since Russia invaded the full scale
invasion of Ukraine in 2022, that offered an opportunity
for North Korea.
Russia found itself without friends who
could supply it with things in North Korea stepped in.
It's given me niches, weapons, even sent soldiers,
hundreds of thoughts, who have died,
fighting the war with Ukraine.
And in return, North Korea was received.
Lots of things, military support, food, money.
So that's really boosted North Korea's economic position.
And also, given North Korea a bagging and chipping,
it's relations with China, China's now not its only friend.
So that's North Korea.
Just briefly, what does Belarus get out of all this?
Something similar, as I said, trade's version, non-existent.
I think the Belarusian leader got to show that he, too,
has friends in the world.
He's reached his wagon with President Putin, too.
So he needs to show that he has some friends as well as Kim Jong-un.
Mickey Bristo.
Now, let's go to Australia, which is dealing
with the effects of a public health scandal.
Regulators there are calling for big reforms
to the sunscreen industry.
Once after public outrage kicked off last year,
when an investigation found that many popular brands
of sun protection cream were not providing the protection
that they claimed, the proposed changes
will focus on improving the reliability and transparency
of what sunscreens promise to customers.
I spoke with our reporter, Lana Lam, who's in Sydney.
And she started by telling me about that initial investigation.
It was quite a shock to the consumers,
because I guess there's been, for decades,
this sort of inherent trust among Australians
that the sun cream just works.
And so to know that some of these popular
and quite expensive brands weren't providing the protection
that they claimed to be sort of sent shock waves
across the nation, really.
About 2,000 people died from skin cancer or melanoma
per year here.
We are like a skin cancer hotspot.
And so we really rely on sunscreen in our daily lives.
And what did those initial investigations reveal?
That some of these products, for instance,
if they're claiming on the packaging,
we have it like a SPF rating, a sun protection factor rating.
And so there were products that, in one case,
said it had a 50 plus SPF when, in fact,
it only had a SPF of four.
And so the sun protection of that product
is much lower than the person thinks it is.
And so your skin safety is obviously at risk.
So what are regulators saying now?
That, I guess, in light of the report
that found these sun creams weren't giving the protection
that they claimed to be in light of that report
and subsequent investigations
by the therapeutic administration.
They've decided that they need to overhaul
the regulations that are currently in place.
So they're looking at greater oversight, basically,
for the regulations that currently exist.
So having greater scrutiny of the laboratories,
that test the sun protection factor of these products
and also looking at simpler labeling for the products as well.
What's the effect of this sunscreen scandal overall?
I mean, the Australian government has spent so much money
and time with these huge public campaigns
to convince people to cover up and to wear sunscreen.
What have the findings of these investigations done?
Are people starting to question that a bit?
Yeah, I mean, it's a very challenging situation
for many Australians, you know, since childhood,
it's drilled into them that wearing sunscreen
is important, staying in the shade, wearing hats,
things like that.
So being sunscreen is part and parcel
of growing up in Australia.
And so then to have one very key part
of that sun awareness be sort of questioned,
it's really rattled a lot of people here.
Lena Lam in Sydney.
Now, around the world, people are living longer.
That's good news, but how do we view these extra years?
A new exhibition explores experiences and perceptions
of aging from adolescents to older age
through art, science, and popular culture.
It's called the coming of age
and it's on at the welcome collection in London.
My colleague, Jane Hill, was shown around
by its head curator, Shamita Sharma Charja.
They began by looking at some beautiful objects from Japan.
The very first objects when you enter the exhibition
are a pair of silver sake cups.
And they're a kind of object that are given to people
in Japan in the year that they turned 100.
Now, when this practice first started in 1963,
only 153 cups were given out that year.
But by 2014, over 29,000 cups were supposed
to be given out in that year alone
at the cost of about 1.2 million pounds
in the Japanese government.
Yeah.
So the scheme was stopped and there was a public outcry.
So then they reinstated it using a smaller, nickel alternative.
Let's walk around sadly.
We can't look at every single thing in a fairly sizable exhibition,
but explain what we're looking at here.
Because it looks to me like a very thin bone, almost like a cane.
So we're looking at Charles Darwin's walking stick.
And on the top is a skull with bright green eyes.
Charles Darwin used to call this his walking maturie
or memento mori, meaning it was a reminder
that one day we all must die.
This walking stick is next to a contemporary artwork
by an artist called Daphne Wright.
And it's of a Zimmer frame.
And the Zimmer frame is actually kind of paired
all the way back to its core and covered with unfair play.
So it looks incredibly vulnerable.
I just thought it was really interesting
that in the 19th century, Charles Darwin's walking stick
was like a symbol of erudition.
Whereas Zimmer frame today is not seen in the same way.
So we're looking at a very unusual artwork here.
So this is a ceramic series called Wild Apples
by the artist Serena Corda.
So we're walking into a circular space
and all around a scattered apples.
And in and amongst the apples, there are three, roughly
hune kind of tree trunks that are top of which
are three ceramic figures.
Serena, all women.
All women, yes.
So Serena really was looking at experiences of menopause.
Serena was very interested in the type of object
that we have in our collection here at Welcome
called the Anatomical Venusus, which
were the 16th century teaching tools
that were used to teach men about women's bodies.
And so Serena was really turning that medialized male gaze
on its head.
And her figures are standing up,
and they are bearing the lived experiences of their bodies.
Well, we started with the beautiful Japanese sarkeballs,
and as we come to the end of the exhibition, something else.
I can tell clearly from Japan, what is this?
That's right.
So we're looking at a display of objects
from the restaurant of mistaken orders,
which is a social enterprise in Japan,
where all of the floor stuff of this restaurant have dementia.
So I think the idea is about embracing imperfection.
So you can see in the logo of the restaurant,
this is the English version of it,
it says restaurant or mistaken orders,
and the K is on its side.
But the idea is that Japan is this country that is kind
of famed for its precision and attitudes towards work,
and actually thinking maybe not everything
has to be perfect, and it's about fostering understanding.
What would you like people to take away
at the end of this exhibition?
What are your thoughts about aging, how we all view older people?
Do we value older people in their experience enough?
Is it throwing up those sort of questions?
What I would really like from this exhibition is for people
to come away kind of just thinking about their own experiences
and reflections on aging throughout their life course
from kind of adolescence to middle age and becoming older,
but also kind of having a really realistic view of age
and seeing that there are challenges and benefits
to each stage of life.
Jane Hill, talking to Shemita Sharma
Charger from the Welcome Collection.
And that's all from us for now.
If you want to get in touch, you can email us
at globalpodcast.bbc.co.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag globalnewspod.
And don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story,
which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story.
This edition of The Global News Podcast was mixed by Sid Dunton.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Celia Hatton.
Until next time, goodbye.
Warning, the following Zippercruder radio spot
you are about to hear is going to be filled with F words.
When you're hiring, we at Zippercruder know you can feel frustrated.
For Lauren, even, like your efforts are futile.
And you can spend a fortune trying to find fabulous people
only to get flooded with candidates who are just fine.
F**k!
Fortunately, Zippercruder figured out how to fix all that.
And right now, you can try Zippercruder for free.
At zippercruder.com slash zipp.
With Zippercruder, you can forget your frustrations.
Because we find the right people for your roles fast,
which is our absolute favorite F word.
In fact, four out of five employers who post on Zippercruder
get a quality candidate within the first day.
Fantastic.
So whether you need to hire four, 40, or 400 people,
get ready to meet first rate talent.
Just go to zippercruder.com slash zipp to try Zippercruder for free.
Don't forget that zippercruder.com slash zipp.
Finally, that zippercruder.com slash zipp.



