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Will Grant
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Pete Ross
Visit your nearby Lowes. This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Pete Ross and in the early hours of Thursday 30th April, these are our main stories. An Australian inquiry has said a Jewish group warned of a terrorist attack before last year's anti Semitic mass shooting at Bondi beach and has called for an overhaul of counterterrorism. The price of oil has briefly risen above $120 over fears that the U S Israeli war with Iran could continue for months. And there are heated exchanges in the US Congress as it's revealed the war in Iran has cost $25 billion so far. Also in this podcast, the U.S. justice Department charges a Mexican state governor for alleged links to large scale drug trafficking by the Sinaloa cartel.
Marion Straughan
It was extremely exciting. I mean, I think everyone who works in this field dreams of finding a new bit of Old English.
Pete Ross
A rare copy of a 7th century English poem turns up in a library in Rome. We start in Australia, where a Royal commission into anti Semitism has released its first report on the attack last year on Bondi beach in Sydney. Fifteen people were killed when two gunmen attacked Jews celebrating Hanukkah in December. One of the gunmen, Sajid Akram, was shot dead by police. His son Navid is awaiting trial on terrorism and murder charges. The Australian Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese says major changes have been made since the
Anthony Albanese
attack took place in the wake of the Bondi Attack. My government took immediate action to bolster the resources of our security agencies, tackle anti Semitism, crack down on hate preachers and deliver tougher gun laws. That's why we brought the Parliament back in January. We weren't able to get the support across the Parliament of everything we wanted to achieve, but we did make substantial progress.
Pete Ross
Our correspondent, Katie Watson has been looking at the Royal Commission's findings.
Katie Watson
This is an interim report. The final report has to be made by 14 December, a year on from the shooting. But the interim report has 14 recommendations, five of which are classified because of sensitive information. But I think the key points are that there's a recommendation there needs to be more policing at high risk Jewish events. And there's also a recommendation for a review of joint counterterrorism teams across the country. There's a request for an urgent report to be submitted to police commissioners. There's also two recommendations to speed up or certainly prioritise a national firearms registry and a gun buyback scheme. These were schemes that were proposed in the wake of the Bondi shooting, but so far, several states have been kind of really dragging on this and only I think New South Wales and Canberra have actually passed any legislation. So there's been a recommendation that that also needs to be prioritized.
Pete Ross
An interim report, as you say. What happens next?
Katie Watson
From May the fourth until May 15th, there will be a first series of public hearings. So people with firsthand experience of anti Semitism are expected to speak. And then there will still be a lot of work by Commissioner Virginia Bow. Well, at the moment, this report is preceding any public hearings, so there will be, you know, further meetings around table sessions, meetings with other people from organizations. So this is still very much kind of in the throes of working out the detail of that final report that we will get in December.
Pete Ross
And briefly, Katie, one of the gunmen, Navid Akram, is awaiting trial on terrorism and murder charges. What can you tell us about that?
Katie Watson
Yeah, that's right. There's only been some kind of illegal hearings. There was an attempt to suppress the names of members of his family for their security. That was denied, but yet he's still awaiting trial for murder and terrorism offenses. And his father, Sajid Akram, was shot dead by police at Bondi beach at the scene. So that's very much also in the process, and that's something that Commissioner Bell said as well, is that it needs to be very carefully dealt with, this report, because obviously there is a legal case going on around the attack as well as this Report with recommendations.
Pete Ross
Katie Watson There is more evidence of the growing impact of the conflict in the Middle east on the global economy. The price of oil briefly rose above $120 a barrel on Wednesday. It's the highest figure since 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine. In recent weeks, following the ceasefire between the US And Iran, the price for a barrel of oil had generally been going down amid hopes that a permanent deal to stop the fighting was imminent. But following reports that President Trump intends to extend the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz poss for months, the price has soared again. I spoke with our economics editor Faisal Islam, who explained why this was a significant moment.
Faisal Islam
It is the highest we have seen for the Brent crude benchmark since the Russia invasion of Ukraine. But I think the context here is the markets had breathed a massive sigh of relief and fallen back down to 90 just a couple of weeks ago when the ceasefire was announced and then extended. And there was a sort of presumption underlining that, that there would be a glide path towards some sort of normalization. And instead what it appears that we have is a kind of equilibrium stasis. What triggered this was some reporting from well connected sources that the Trump administration is talking about their blockade on Iran would last for months. There was a regular meeting with oil executives at the White House today where that sort of language was discussed. And all of this is part of, of a strategy which has avoided escalation of the bombing, but doesn't see a route to normalization and instead seeks to pressure using economic means. Something called Operation Economic Fury pressurizes the Iranian government into conceding in some way. It's quite a move that in two weeks, 90 to 120. But it's almost like the jitters that it would give to any market to have had the relief rally. And then bang, we're back up to as high a level as we have seen.
Pete Ross
And what's likely to be the immediate impact of this high price and who's going to be worse affected?
Faisal Islam
I think around the time that the oil price seemed to have come down, say below $100 a barrel, two, three weeks ago, you had started to see petrol prices in Europe. The presumption was that they would have peaked. Maybe they weren't going to come down sharply, they'd stopped going up. This throws that back up in the air again. And that's, you know, not just in Europe. Gasoline prices in America are well above $4 now, highest levels since 2022. But you ask a very important question. Lots of comparisons are done between what's happened now and what happened when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, we're seeing price impacts everywhere. We're seeing less of a price impact in terms of gas, even though the Gulf matters for transited gas, especially from Qatar. And so it's less of a shock, which was centered on Europe, which is what we got with Russia, Ukraine instead, quite logically, this is one centered on Asia. Obviously, that will flow through most logically to petrol and diesel prices, jet fuel as well. But you've got ancillary petrochemical derivatives, things like urea for fertilizer. You know, I was told by the World bank president, if the situation lasts till July, which now looks more likely than not, then you have an impact on the Southern hemisphere's sowing season as well. And that would then impact on food prices.
Pete Ross
Lots of uncertainty. That's going to have impact on markets as well, of course. Is there any room for optimism?
Faisal Islam
The only point of relative optimism is that economic pain may be more thinly spread around the world, whereas it was very concentrated on Europe four years ago. That isn't really relief, it's maybe just context. But I do think now you're going to start to see companies acting on these sorts of probabilities. And whereas they were taking a glass half full type of perspective, given what happened a couple of weeks ago, they're now going to have to put in place the contingency plans which assume that the Gulf stays shut at least until the summer.
Pete Ross
Faisal Islam. Meanwhile, the US Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, has been quizzed for over six hours on the Iran war by the Armed Services Committee. It's the first time he's been questioned in such a manner under oath. And he told lawmakers that about $25 billion had been spent on Operation Epic Fury. The Pentagon is requesting an unprecedented $1.5 trillion from Congress, which Mr. Hegse says reflects the urgency of the moment. There were strong exchanges. One Democrat, John Garamandi, said Trump was stuck in a quagmire, while Mr. Hegseth replied, Your hatred for Mr. Trump blinds you. This exchange begins with the Democratic leader of the Armed Services Committee, Adam Smith.
Anthony Albanese
We had to start this war, you
Jonathan Beale
just said 60 days ago, because the nuclear weapon was an imminent threat.
Anthony Albanese
Now you're saying that it was completely obliterated.
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They had not given up their nuclear
Pete Ross
ambitions and they had a conventional shield of thousands.
Jonathan Beale
So Operation Midnight Hammer accomplished nothing of substance.
Pete Ross
It left us at exactly the point
Jonathan Beale
place we were before.
Pete Ross
So are we any clearer about what has been achieved so far in this war in Iran. Tom Bateman is our State Department correspondent.
Tom Bateman
I think we heard a very robust defense of it from the Defense Secretary. Very combative at times, particularly with opposition lawmakers. I mean, the fundamental reality for Mr. Hegseth remains that he believes that they have effectively dealt with Iran's nuclear threat for now, despite the fact that these negotiations are not taking place and they haven't got a deal done, and that the blockade, the naval blockade at the moment is adding pressure on Iran to try and force them to the negotiating table. I mean, Democrats was just simply not buying that and suggested that this had basically been a monumental waste of money and the lives of American soldiers who have died. And also put to him the fact that as far as they were concerned, the US was in no better position whatsoever when it came to Iran's nuclear threat, given that it was under Mr. Trump that the US violated the 2015 nuclear deal and pulled out of that, only to have this sort of zigzagging between diplomatic outreach and then military force with the Iranians that they believe has simply not succeeded. So it was a pretty feisty, quite heated set of exchanges at times. And I think, you know, we'll see Mr. Hegseth appear in front of senators tomorrow. But what, what the defense sector is trying to do here was get an unprecedented rise in the US military budget by 50% to 1 1/2 trillion dollars for next year. Clearly, as far as the Democrats were concerned there, he did nothing to sort of assuage their concerns.
Pete Ross
Tom Bateman. Donald Trump has repeatedly said that the UK hasn't helped the US in its war with Iran. But British forces at just one military base in the Middle east have shot down more than 100 drones since the conflict began. Before the ceasefire, they and US forces at the base were being targeted by dozens of drones and missiles a day. The BBC's defence correspondent, Jonathan Beale, is the first reporter to visit the base since America and Israel's war with Iran started. With tensions still running high, he was given access to the young RAF regiment gunners who've helped save both British and American lives.
Faisal Islam
Iran is left.
Jonathan Beale
This military flight is on its way to a coalition base in the Middle east which houses both US and British forces. It has been one of the most heavily targeted bases in the region since this conflict began. We can't say exactly where it is, other than it's somewhere in Iraq. Coming despite a ceasefire, it's soon clear the threat hasn't gone away.
Faisal Islam
Fireworks, two o'.
Gabriel Muthuma
Clock.
Jonathan Beale
Ground explosions Just before landing, a drone's been spotted, followed by explosions, obviously.
Faisal Islam
Be ready for bunker calls when we're on the deck.
Marion Straughan
Roger that.
Jonathan Beale
This time it's aimed at Iraqi forces nearby.
Faisal Islam
Yeah, there's the crate just to the left.
Jonathan Beale
But on the ground, there's evidence this base has been hit too.
Faisal Islam
It's been cleared quite a bit since I was last here.
Jonathan Beale
Air Specialist Robinson of the RAF Regiment describes life before the ceasefire.
Faisal Islam
You are lying face down flat with these sirens going off, with these noises overhead and you hear impacts, you hear weapons of destruction going off around you.
Pete Ross
It's bloody difficult.
Jonathan Beale
At the height of the conflict, the base was targeted by up to 28 drones and missiles in a day. Just to give you a sense of the threat year, just the British side of the base, not the US. They've shot down more than 100 drones in just over a month using this system called Rapid Sentry.
RAF Gunner
It's a great feeling. It's a proper adrenaline buzz.
Jonathan Beale
The young RAF gunners who operate the system, which looks like Robocop with missiles for arms, have less than a minute to detect, track and destroy the drones.
RAF Gunner
We had 14 drones in one night. That was consistent engagement of just getting in, put missile on the tube, whack out again, fire back in. But the tempo, even during the day, when you expect them to attack at night, is still high.
Jonathan Beale
Have you had any close shaves?
RAF Gunner
I can't really go into specifics, but we've had a few close encounters here. Us and the Americans have. There was one after the other and there was no break. So this ceasefire is a nice break for us.
Jonathan Beale
This brief visit was only possible because of the ceasefire, an opportunity for the Defence Minister and RAF chief to pass on their praise.
Al Khan
I would argue this place would be a smouldering wreck if it wasn't for you guys.
Jonathan Beale
And to counter President Trump's claim, the UK's been missing in action. Al Khan's is the Armed Forces Minister.
Al Khan
We've helped move Americans out of harm's way. We've helped protect them and they've helped protect us. This is a defensive posture from our perspective. We'll stay in that defensive posture, but the relationship is strong.
Jonathan Beale
The US and UK were here working together long before this war started. But their primary mission, the fight against isis, is now focused on survival.
Pete Ross
Jonathan Beale, with that report still to come in this podcast, I think I
Reporter/Interviewer
caught a glimpse of him wearing a cap. That was. Was he wearing a cap?
Pete Ross
Chaotic scenes as Sebastian Sawi is welcomed back in Kenya following his record breaking London marathon.
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Pete Ross
This is the global News podcast the United States is charged as serving governor of the Mexican state of Sinaloa with alleged drug trafficking. It's requesting the arrest and extradition of Governor Ruben Rocha Moya, accusing him of having ties to the powerful Sinaloa drug cartel. Nine other current and former officials have also been indicted. The Mexican government says there's not enough evidence to support the allegations. Our Mexico correspondent, Will Grant told me more about Mr. Rocha and what the US is accusing him of.
Will Grant
Well, Mr. Rocha has been the governor of Sinaloa since November 2021. He's from the governing party of Morena, which is the same party as President Claudia Sheinbaum. And in essence, at the heart of this indictment from the Trump administration is the suggestion that Mr. Rocha was using one faction of the Sinaloa cartel to get himself elected, that he was using state forces to protect them, to tip them off from US Backed law enforcement operations, in essence, bringing his power as governor to protect one, if you like, favored cartel in the state, a very powerful cartel that's linked with much of the fentanyl traffic that goes into the United States. United States. And he did that both for obviously his own personal gain and to strengthen his position as governor. That is something, of course, he has denied any time there's been a suggestion of drug trafficking links against him.
Pete Ross
And how's this request gone down with the authorities or the government in Mexico? Mexican President Claudia Schambaum, is she likely to refuse this request for extradition?
Will Grant
I think it's a huge political bombshell, really, for Claudia Scheinbaum. I mean, it's not just Mr. Rocha. There's also a senator in there, the mayor of the capital of Sinaloa, Culiacan, the Deputy Attorney General for Sinaloa is in there. Other officials, including police officials. It's very, very difficult for her politically. What's been interesting is that the Foreign Ministry has come out quite quickly with the suggestion that what is in the paperwork from the US Embassy requesting their arrest towards their eventual extradition is lacking the necessary evidence. The way they put it was that it did not include the elements of proof against those whose arrest has been requested, and that the final decision would of course, lie with the Attorney General's office. But I think that shows us that this is extremely difficult and going to be a new point of contention between the Shane Baum administration and the Trump administration will grant.
Pete Ross
In Mexico City, Sebastian Saue has returned home to joyous scenes in Kenya after becoming the first man to run a marathon in under two hours in competitive race conditions. His Kenyan Airways plane was given a water cannon salute following his historic London marathon. Win. He was greeted by government officials and is also expected to meet President William Ruto. Our Africa correspondent, Barbara Pet Ussher was there to witness the chaotic scenes at Kenyatta Airport.
Gabriel Muthuma
My name is Gabriel Muthuma. I'm the deputy government spokesperson. Yes. And we are here. As you can see, it's pomp and color waiting for. For the. For the man who did it, the SAP2, Sebastian Sawi. He's, you know, it's. It's a big day for Kenya.
Reporter/Interviewer
How big a day is it?
Pete Ross
It is huge. It is huge.
Gabriel Muthuma
This is what we've been, we've been waiting for.
Reporter/Interviewer
And what will you say to Sebastian when you meet him?
Gabriel Muthuma
Oh, man. A lot of congratulations. We never thought we could see this year because we knew people are still trying to train on it, but he has surprised everyone.
Reporter/Interviewer
It's a whole row of airport workers standing, watching and waiting to see as well.
Gabriel Muthuma
We are very excited since this is our own son. So now we are very enjoyable.
Reporter/Interviewer
Do you feel lucky that you were working tonight?
Pete Ross
Yes, I'm lucky.
Reporter/Interviewer
There he is. That's him. I think that was him. The camera crash is intense. I think I caught a glimpse of him wearing a cap. That was. Was he wearing a cap?
Gabriel Muthuma
Yeah.
James Gallagher
Okay.
Reporter/Interviewer
There was such a crush of cameras, people and officials around him that I could barely see him. And then they put him into a vehicle and he's driven. There are traditional dancers and singers performing outside the building to which Sebastian was taken, the VIP lounge. So I think he is going to come out and speak to us. And I just bumped into some of Sebastian's relatives. His grandmother and his mother and his father are inside, so have met him already. So he's saying that he's very happy and grateful. He never expected this to happen and he didn't do it alone. This record belongs to all of us, he says, and let's support all of Kenya's sports people so we can continue lifting the country up. What a couple of days it's been for him. I suspect he'll start training again very soon. He's already been talking about his next competition and he says he thinks it's possible to run an even faster marathon.
Pete Ross
Barbara Plett, usher at Kenyatta Airport 11 cancers are becoming more common in young people in England, according to a major analysis. But a full explanation for why remains elusive. It's rare to ever know why one person develops cancer. But a team of scientists work worked through national trends in both cancer and lifestyles to see if they could find a pattern. They showed bowel cancer Thyroid, multiple melanoma, liver, kidney, gallbladder, pancreatic, womb lining, mouth, breast and ovarian cancers were increasing. Our health correspondent James Gallacher gave the BBC's James Reynolds an update on how scientists came to these conclusions.
James Gallagher
They've looked at data from England and they've tracked what's happened to all of these different cancers over time and they've looked at all the things that we know cause cancer, so things like smoke, smoking, drinking too much alcohol, red and processed meat, not being physically active enough, all those different things. And they've looked at what has happened to those trends over time and they've gone, wait a minute, none of these are explaining what's happening with these young people and their cancer. However, one thing was linked and they showed in the data that excess weight, so being overweight or obese was increasing, roughly in line with the increase in cancers in young people. However, even then, it doesn't really explain the whole of the story. So if I can give you one statistic, they said for every hundred people, extra hundred people that were now getting bowel cancer under the age of 50, 20 of those might be down to differences in weight. The other 80. We still don't know why. People look at this long list of other things and everybody around the world who has their own personal hobby horse topic will go, oh, well, clearly this is ultra processed food, clearly this is forever chemicals, clearly this is air pollution. And the simple answer is we don't have any evidence that definitively pins those things down to being the explanation for what's going on in young people at all.
Faisal Islam
Of course, we're a global programme with audiences listening around the world. What might other countries learn from this study which is exclusively focused on England?
James Gallagher
There will be many countries that are in a similar position to England, say the United States, but also large parts of Europe, where they're seeing similar trends and will learn roughly the same as what people in the UK have done. Whereas if you're in a country where HPV vaccines are only just being rolled out and cervical cancer is actually one of the biggest issues in terms of preventable cancers, where you live, what you learn from this is almost not irrelevant, but it's much smaller than it is. If you're, in a way, when you've got other, bigger problems, if you have sky high smoking rates, then that's actually the thing that you should be fixated on if you're trying to bring down the numbers of cancers in that country.
Faisal Islam
How does England then tackle weight?
James Gallagher
It's a challenge, isn't it? Our, our bodies evolved millions of years ago. We live in an environment, large parts of the world now live in an environment where food is not necessarily just food, but calorie dense food is so plentiful that there's just that mismatch there. And some people would say, oh, we'll just medicate our way out of this solution. You know, you've got all of those weight loss drugs, we'll do something like that. That's the solution. Other people would say, well, we need to reform our diets at the same time as people could never quite imagine us going back to what people were e 1970s. You know, you've got to take away all those nice things out of the supermarkets and go back to, back to another era. But it's not just a western country type problem. I mean, we see obesity rates climbing around the world as countries become more economically developed and food becomes more available. It's just, it's sadly the state of the world.
Pete Ross
James Gallagher Back in the seventh century ad, there was an illiterate cattle herder in northeast England. He's said to have come up with a nine line poem praising God as the creat of heaven and earth. It's known as Cadman's Hymn and has a claim to being the oldest surviving English poem. Now, a previously unknown copy of the work has been found in the National Central Library of Rome. It's thought to be one of the earliest in existence and is written in the poem's original Northumbrian dialect. Marion Strown has this report.
Marion Straughan
It was extremely exciting. I mean, I think everyone who works in this field dreams of finding a new bit of Old English.
Mark Faulkner
That's Professor Mark Faulkner of Trinity College, Dublin, one of the researchers who discovered the manuscript of CDMUN's hymn, which praises God as the guardian of mankind. The poem is well known because it was included in one of the most important works of Anglo Saxon history, the Ecclesiastical History of the English People by the theologian Bede in the 8th century. But this version of it is believed to have been transcribed in the following century by a monk in northern Italy. It's significant because the main body of the text is in its original Northumbrian dialect rather than Latin or in Southern English dialect. So how did Cabnam, an illiterate man, get his poem into this important tome? Professor Mark Faulkner explains.
Marion Straughan
Admine tells us was at a feast and they were passing round a harp and every guest at the feast was expected to perform a song. Cadman felt he didn't have any songs. So he went off to bed, but he had this miraculous vision which gave him the song to sing and he went back and performed it. He sung it to the the abbess at Whitby and she arranged for it to be written down.
Mark Faulkner
The pronunciation is quite different from present day English, with the first word in old English being new, which in present day is now, and the second word way in present day English being we take it away. Professor Mark Faulkner sadly, without the harp or singing.
Marion Straughan
Nwe schulen herge hefen riches ward metudes mechti on his mode ye think werk wuldorfede sway hie wundre je hoa.
Mark Faulkner
One Italian academic has described the discovery as a ray of light in dark times. And Elisabetta Magnanti, the scholar who prompted the poem's discovery, says it's a testament to the power of libraries to facilitate new research by digitising their collections, making them freely available online.
Pete Ross
Now there are just six weeks left until the World cup kicks off in Mexico City. The tournament, taking place across three countries, will be the biggest World cup ever, with 48 teams competing. But it's not only the tournament that has expanded. Sticker collectors are also facing what could be their biggest challenge yet as the decades old Panini sticker book expands to accommodate the extra teams and players. This year's edition will require nearly 1,1000 stickers to complete. Our sports correspondent Natalie Perks was at the launch event earlier this week.
Natalie Perks
Back in 1960, the Panini brothers owned a newsstand in Modena in Italy and decided to sell packs of leftover football cards. And a decade later they expanded their empire to their first World cup offering. There were just 270 stickers to collect then. By 1990 it was just John Barnes's rap being repeated in playgrounds and pubs across England. The mercurial midfielder was a coveted sticker then and it seems now it gives
Footballer
you lots of kudos with the youngsters. I met an American kid not long ago and had a picture with him and he went, oh, he's that guy from that sticker book. So people remember me. I said, well, I'm a footballer as well, so I think it kind of like immortalizes you, doesn't it?
Natalie Perks
This time it's the biggest it's ever been with an unprecedented 48 teams taking part.
Katie Watson
Start.
Natalie Perks
The album is now 112 pages long with 980 stickers. Packets of five used to cost around six cents in the late 70s in the UK, but this year a packet of seven will cost around a $70 meaning it could cost around 1750 to finish the album.
Al Khan
Why would you collect this album and not do swapping unless you've got endless money and to just buy packets or boxes after box, it's not feasible.
Natalie Perks
That's collector Greg Lansdowne. He's written three books about the sticker album phenomenon.
Al Khan
For the last Panini World cup album there was a North American version and they did one of one stickers for every player, so obviously there was only one of that sticker. If you got it then you were quids in. If they were a big player, the Lionel Messi sticker after Argentina won the World cup, went to auction and went for 250 000.
Natalie Perks
The moral of the story then is look after your album and one day it might look after you.
Pete Ross
Natalie Perks and that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us@globalpodcastbc.co.uk you can also find us on X@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 Nick Randall and the producer was Marion Straughan. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Pete Ross. Until next time.
Faisal Islam
Goodbye.
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Date: April 30, 2026
Host: Pete Ross, BBC World Service
Episode Title: Bondi inquiry calls for better policing of Jewish events
This episode covers breaking global news with key focuses on:
[02:22 – 05:49]
[05:49 – 09:53]
[09:53 – 12:46]
[12:46 – 16:21]
[19:27 – 22:02]
[22:02 – 25:01]
[25:01 – 28:39]
[28:39 – 31:18]
[31:18 – 33:45]
| Topic | Start | End | |-------------------------------------------|------------|------------| | Main Headlines & Bondi Inquiry | 01:22 | 05:49 | | Oil Prices / US-Iran War | 05:49 | 09:53 | | US Congress/Defense Secretary Iran Debate | 09:53 | 12:46 | | UK-US Military in the Middle East | 12:46 | 16:21 | | Mexican Governor Drug Allegations | 19:27 | 22:02 | | Sebastian Saue’s Marathon Homecoming | 22:02 | 25:01 | | Cancer in Young People in England | 25:01 | 28:39 | | Cadman’s Hymn Rediscovered | 28:39 | 31:18 | | World Cup Sticker Craze | 31:18 | 33:45 |
This episode delivers comprehensive coverage of urgent global developments, from counterterrorism recommendations in Australia to geopolitical shocks in the oil market, gritty on-the-ground military reporting, public health revelations, cultural discoveries, and global sporting fever. The tone is brisk, urgent, and analytical, with direct contributions from frontline correspondents, political figures, and experts—offering listeners a multi-faceted, relevant, and engaging snapshot of world affairs.