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BBC Correspondent
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Alex Ritson
This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
Gonshay Habibi
Alex
Alex Ritson
I'm Alex ritson and at 16 hours GMT on Monday 23rd February. These are our main stories. Donald Trump says he's postponing strikes on Iranian power plants after what he calls productive talks on ending the war. Oil and gas prices fall substantially on the news, but a key Iranian news agency questions whether the negotiations have even taken place. An arson attack on ambulances owned by a Jewish charity in London. Also in this podcast, two pilots are killed as a plane collides with a fire truck at a New York airport and the AI smart glasses that could be used to support people with dementia.
Professor Julia Simner
It's getting you to think in a multi sensory way. If you stimulate the senses, then it's a way to scaffold and maintain the cognition and the memory of the person.
Alex Ritson
President Trump has said there have been major points of agreement between the US and Iran in discussions aimed at ending current hostilities. Earlier, he called off American strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure, but Israel has continued striking what it says are targets in Tehran. Earlier, Iran fired missiles at Israel, which said it intercepted them, preventing casualties. Mr. Trump claimed Iran had made contact with the United States and had agreed to not pursue nuclear weapons, adding that the US would continue its bombing if talks failed. Mr. Trump said his envoys, Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, had been speaking to a top person in Iran who was not the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei. US Media is reporting that this is the speaker of the Iranian Parliament, Mohammad Baghr Ghalibaf, Florida. Before boarding Air Force One, Mr. Trump spoke to the press.
Donald Trump
We have had very, very strong talks. We'll see where they lead. We have major points of agreement. I would say almost all points of agreement. Perhaps that hasn't been conveyed. The communication, as you know, has been blown to pieces. They're unable to talk to each other. But we've had very strong talks. Mr. Witkoff and Mr. Kushner had them. They went, I would say, perfectly. I would say that if they carry through with that, it'll end that, that problem, that conflict, and I think it'll end it very, very substantially. So the discussions took place yesterday. They went into yesterday evening. They want very much to make a deal. We'd like to make a deal, too. We're going to get together today by probably phone because it's very hard to find a country. It's very hard for them to get out, I guess. But we'll at some point very, very soon meet. We're doing a five day period. We'll see how that goes. And if it goes well, we're going to end up with settling this. Otherwise, we'll just keep bombing our little hearts out.
Alex Ritson
President Trump earlier wrote on his Truth Social website that he'd ordered the US Military to pause its planned strikes on Iranian power plants. For five days. It threatened to obliterate, his words, Iran's power plants, if it didn't end its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz, the crucial waterway that allows the passage of oil tankers. Iran had warned that it would respond by attacking power plants in Israel and those supplying US Military bases in the Gulf. Financial markets have reacted positively. Oil prices fell sharply with the benchmark Brent crude price dropping by more than 10% as we record this podcast. It's now trading at under $100 a barrel. Our security correspondent Frank Gardner is in Doha in Qatar and explained why he thought Mr. Trump had changed course.
Frank Gardner / Hugh Schofield
I think he's spooked by the markets, yes. I mean, that is the generally perceived explanation for this because, you know, there's no question that the US has overwhelming military superiority over Iran. It can hit targets at will, wherever it wants. But the one Thing it can't control is geography. And Iran has got geography on its side. And despite the absolute hammering it has taken, Iran is still able to fire missiles and drones at targets at this side of the Gulf and it's able to threaten the Strait of Hormuz. And that clearly is having a huge effect on the global economy, on the price of gasoline, as the Americans call petrol at the pump. And it's affecting stock markets. So you've only got to look at the reaction from the oil price and stock markets since this 11th hour reprieve has been announced to show that it is very susceptible to what is going on in this part of the world. The Iranians have effectively got a chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz. Now, we don't know what exactly was discussed at these negotiations that have been announced by the Americans, denied by sources on Iranian media. And yet there are reports on Fox Business News, for example, that Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump's go to negotiators of choice that he sends to trouble spots around the world that they've been involved in hammering out a deal last night. There's another report that Egypt, Pakistan and Turkey have been mediating this. Previously it was Oman. Clearly, you know, a number of countries in this part of the world have been trying to de escalate and defuse this. The Iranian regime, despite all the hits it's taken, losing its supreme leader, losing Ali La Rajani, the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, despite all the destruction of its military, it's still standing, it's still intact and it's defiant, it's unrepentant. And as far as they're concerned, they're winning.
Alex Ritson
Frank Gardiner, Iran, though, has denied there is any dialogue with the United States. A Foreign Ministry statement accused President Trump of trying to reduce global energy prices to gain time for his military plans. But it did acknowledge initiatives from regional countries to reduce tensions. A news agency affiliated to the powerful revolutionary guards said Mr. Trump had backed down in the face of Iranian threats against power infrastructure in Gulf countries. I heard more from BBC version's Gonshay Habibi.
Gonshay Habibi
The issue is we haven't seen any named officials coming out and saying that Iran has not been involved in negotiations with Donald Trump. All we have seen so far, as you said, is by Fast News Agency, another agency affiliated with the IRGC Tasnim News Agency has been quoting another unnamed official. And also SNN Student News Network, which is also affiliated with Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps paramilitary Besieged Student Organization, has quoted an informed source in Iran's Foreign Ministry as saying that they deny negotiations and Strait of Hormuz is close to aggressors as what they have been saying. We are yet to see anyone coming out explicitly from Iranian government or officials, anyone saying that they deny the negotiations.
Alex Ritson
The president didn't say he would order an end to strikes on military targets. And the Israeli military is still hitting Tehran. So the war far from over?
Gonshay Habibi
Yes, it seems far from over. And the issue right now with Iran is that it's under almost near total Internet blackout. We don't see much photos or videos coming out of Iran and especially in remote parts of Iran, we don't see much reports coming out. And Iran state TV when we watch it, they don't report much on strikes on Iran. They usually show missiles coming out of the country and trying to like show that they have been tracking other places. But what we are seeing from Iran is limited. But at the same time from Israel and also from those contacts that I have in Tehran, we have been hearing reports that there are still strikes ongoing.
Alex Ritson
Yeah, you work for BBC Persia, BBC Pershing. You and your colleagues have been working tirelessly to reach Iranians. Have any been reacting to this latest news?
Gonshay Habibi
Actually, I didn't even see Donald Trump's post before a man in Tehran sent it to me and I had to go and double check if that was true or not on Truth Social. And he's connected via Starlink, which is Elon Musk's satellite Internet in Iran. Authorities have been trying to crack down on it recently. They said they have confiscated hundreds of Starlink devices. So he told me that the end of this will be very costly for the of Iran, whatever the outcome is. And another one, a woman in her 20s in Tehran, told me that Donald Trump is so unpredictable, I have no idea what's going to happen. So it seems like from the people that I'm talking to that they're very limited people. Very much of them are in Tehran and their main concern is the Internet. But they are just very much perplexed and they don't know what's going to happen next.
Alex Ritson
Gonshay Habibi Azad from BBC Persian. And there'll be more on President Trump's military and political options in Iran on our sister podcast, the Global Story to New York now where two pilots have died after an Air Canada plane collided with a firefighting vehicle at LaGuardia Airport. The plane was carrying 72 passengers and four crew. Some 41 passengers and crew were taken to hospital. Two fire truck offices are in a stable condition in Hospital. The BBC's Neda Torfik is in New York and told us what happened.
Neda Torfik
Just before midnight, the Air Canada Express flight had actually safely landed at New York's LaGuardia Airport. But what happened was that a fire truck that was responding to a separate incident where the Port Authority said that there had been an odor emanating from another plane on a different Runway. Now, as that fire truck was kind of making its way across the runways, and I should add, it actually got clearance to do so from air traffic controllers. Then we actually have audio of air traffic control trying to stop the fire truck crossing the Runway saying stop, stop, stop. But clearly they were unable to get the fire truck to do that. And so then the plane collided with the fire truck. And we can see, see in the photos just the way the front of the plane is completely destroyed and mangled. And we do know from the Port Authority that the two pilots have died. Luckily though, all of the passengers were actually able to get off from the stairs of the plane and many walked away. Ultimately, 41 went to the hospital and several did have more severe injuries and are still being treated. The airport is actually going to be closed at least until 2pm New York time so that the National Transportation Safety Board can begin that investigation. I mean, there has been a very large emergency presence there on the Runway on LaGuardia. But you know, as you can imagine, this is a massive airport that serves this area and the region. Mostly local flights coming out of LaGuardia, no international flights beyond Canada and nearby countries. But we have seen more than 500 flights canceled as investigators try to piece together exactly what happened.
Alex Ritson
Neda Torfik. The former French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin has died at the age of 88. Mr. Jospin was a socialist head of government from 1997 to 2002. He served five years as Prime Minister under Conservative President Jacques Chirac. In addition to his achievements as head of government, he'll be remembered as a two time presidential candidate who in 2002 suffered a stunning first round humiliation defeat from the far right's Jean Marie Le Pen. During his premiership, Lionel Jospin introduced a 35 hour limit to the working week as well as civil partnerships for gay couples. President Emmanuel Macron described the former Prime Minister as a towering figure in French politics. Our Paris correspondent Hugh Scofield looks back at his career.
Frank Gardner / Hugh Schofield
He was twice presidential candidate but failed both times, but then got his revenge on Jack Shirogu and he became his prime minister for several years. At the end of the last century and enacted a lot of reforms which are still with us, such as the 35 hour week. A long standing socialist henchman of Francois Mitterrand, before that Minister of Education. But his most famous moment came at the very end of his career when he came down, crashing down in 2002 in the presidential election, beaten in the first round by Jean Marie Le Pen of the far right. Heralding this new era of politics in which the far right plays such a big part.
Alex Ritson
Hugh Schofield. Could artificial intelligence help people with dementia? That is the promise of a newly designed pair of smart glasses that offers wearers a real time guide and companion to everyday tasks in the form of a chatty assistant called Wispy. The software from The British company CrossSense has just won a major prize for the development of technology for sufferers of dementia and a condition affecting tens of millions of people around the world. Professor Julia Simner is science lead at CrossSense.
Professor Julia Simner
They look pretty much like a regular pair of glasses, really. You wouldn't particularly notice anything different about them unless you look very closely and then you might see a camera embedded in the front of the glasses on the ridge of the nose. So the idea is that this technology can sit quite discreetly in the background, but then step forward when needed. So they've got a camera, they've got
Lucy Manning
a microphone and they have speakers all in built.
Alex Ritson
That essentially allows the software to see what you are seeing if you're wearing
Lucy Manning
them and then give you feedback in real time.
Professor Julia Simner
Yeah, that's right. So the glasses see what you see, they hear what you hear and they can talk with you. So they take in the visual world through the camera and then they interpret that with AI. And that AI can then do a number of things. So it can, for example, superimpose words or shapes or colors into the visual field. For example, it can superimpose a warning triangle over a hot hob. They can also talk very gently into the ear. So they have a soft spoken AI assistant. We call her Wispy. She's got, she's got a very nice gentle, lilting voice and she can speak reassuringly into your ear. And they can help with daily living. So they can tell you how to complete tasks like making cup of tea. They can read handwriting, so they might be able to read a note that says Haircut Tuesday. And then they could remind you, they can remind you what objects are called and what they're for. And they can also engage in a kind of talk therapy called cognitive stimulation therapy. And that's a way that we know can boost cognition in people living with dementia. The way the talk therapy works is very friendly, very warm, wispy talks to you gently about reminiscences, but it does it in a very subtle scientific way. That means what, what wisp is actually doing is getting you to think in a multi sensory way. It will say things like, think about that place you loved going to as a child. What would you have seen there? What would you have heard there? What would you have smelled there? And we know from the science that if you stimulate the senses, then it's a way to scaffold and maintain the cognition and the memory of the person. So there are lots of things that it can offer as a benefit, and one of those is not having to rely on human therapists to give this support. But you do have to be careful, of course, when you're on the frontier of a new technology, there is a responsibility on your shoulders to make sure that you're using it right. And that's definitely one of the things that we keep with us going forwards.
Alex Ritson
Professor Julia Simner from Cross Sense. Still to come, in this podcast, never before seen reptiles and mollusks found deep in limestone caves in Cambodia, we found
Pablo Sinovas
a new species of pit viper, a beautiful snake, green with some red in it and amber eyes. And so that was really, really exciting. It's not every day that you find a new species of snake.
Alex Ritson
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Alex Ritson
A deeply shocking anti Semitic arson attack. That is how Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer has described an overnight incident targeting London's Jewish community. Four ambulances belonging to a Jewish ambulance service were set alight in the attack. 34 residents were evacuated from nearby homes as a precaution, but were able to return relatively quickly and no injuries have been reported. CCTV footage appears to show three people in hoods pouring accelerant, probably otherwise known as petrol, on the vehicles before setting them on fire and fleeing. No arrests have yet been made. One of the community members spoke to the BBC. He didn't want to give his name. Many Jewish people would have woken up this morning eating their breakfast, wondering if this is a country that they wanted to continue to live in. Many questioned that after Manchester, after the anti Semitic terrorist attack there, and many after this attack on our doorsteps this morning, including myself, will question, is this a country that I want to raise my family? And when I eventually raise a family, I can tell you that many of them, my friends and perhaps even myself, have concluded that this isn't the country that they want to live in going forward because they don't feel that it's safe. Our correspondent Lucy Manning is at the scene and told us what had happened.
Lucy Manning
There was a big explosion. Residents at the nearby block of flats talk about smoke filling the building. They had to be evacuated. And these four ambulances from the Hat Sola Ambulance Service, it's a volunteer led Jewish ambulance service, but they help other people as well, non Jews and Jews alike in the community. Four ambulances in the grounds of a synagogue were set on fire. The police believe it was an arson attack, investigating it as an anti Semitic hate crime. And there has been a smell of smoke in the air this morning. Certainly the block of flats that we went into next door, there was a smell of smoke. And those who represent the synagogue have told me that some of the stained glass windows were blown out, the roof was damaged and they believe there was smoke damage here as well. We have heard from politicians backing the Jewish community saying this is unacceptable, saying this can't happen. But there are many, most within the Jewish community who have faced anti Semitism, who just feel this has to stop, that this has gone on for too long.
Alex Ritson
Lucy Manning the Earth's climate is more out of balance than at any time in recorded history. Those are the findings of a new report published by the UN's weather agency. Increasing concentrations of heat trapping greenhouse gases, which are at their highest level in at least 800,000 years, have upset the Earth's equilibrium, with our planet gaining more energy than it can release. While the world is now seeing cooler conditions under what's known as the La Nina effect, forecasters have recently warned that another warmer El Nino peak could be seen towards the end of 2026. Celeste Salo is the Secretary General of the World Meteorological Organization which published the report.
Celeste Saulo
The last 11 years were the warmest on record. Of course, immerse in this trend, you have natural variability and as you can remember, possibly 2025 was La Nina year. So we expect on La Nina years not so warm temperatures as we expect in El Nino. But still the trend is very clear. And the trend is the one that is alarming us. The ocean heat content that is increasing. That means that the 2000 meters, the upper layer in the ocean, are warmer and warm. And that will bring impacts in timescales around centennials or even millennials. I think that that is the one that worries me the most. Together, of course, with melting glaciers. We also are aware that the change to renewables is a change that has also been established. Maybe this work helps people and countries that were already running into green energy to accelerate their decision for green energies. But if you, for example, look at the trend in carbon dioxide, it is increasing and it is increasing faster than any other year. So I think that we need not only an abrupt decision in terms of how we use energy, what energy we use, we also need some other policies in place. But what we can highlight from this report is that the concentration of greenhouse gases is increasing and it's continuously increasing and it has been continuously increasing. So we need a strong decision making there.
Alex Ritson
Celeste Saulo of the World Meteorological Organization. Power supplies have been restored in Cuba a day after a nationwide blackout, the second in less than a week. The country's problems with an aging infrastructure are being made worse by a US imposed oil blockade. Our correspondent Will Grant, who's in Havana, spoke to Anne Soy about the situation there and how people were managing.
BBC Correspondent
I think it's really a question for most Cubans, a sense of, well, for now, no, I mean until the next one. They're simply aware that while the grid might have been brought back online for the time being, that it won't be long before it collapses again. Probably that has been the case before for the US imposed fuel blockade on the island, but certainly since US elite troops removed Nicolas Maduro from power in Venezuela. Venezuela, being Cuba's closest energy ally in recent years, has made the situation in Cuba almost unbearable for ordinary people. The rolling blackouts were already very, very bad. This nation was already going through its biggest energy crisis since the end of the Cold War. And since Nicolas Maduro was removed from power in Venezuela, Washington has imposed an almost total oil blockade on the island. So while the grid might be Back up and running again for now. I think most Cubans are simply expecting it to go down again very soon.
Alex Ritson
How has it affected daily lives of
BBC Correspondent
people there in all different ways that you could imagine? I mean, on the very, very basic ways, obviously, with having no power, that means when it comes back on whether or not that's two in the morning, three in the morning, four in the morning, people have to immediately get up and start to cook, because if they don't cook when they have power, if they have electric hobs or electric stoves, then they may not get another chance again that day, because power can come back for maybe three, maybe five hours and then not be on again for another 20. So it is very, very exhausting for people to be waking at all hours trying to do the very basic things of life. Charge their phones, be back in communication with their family members abroad. And of course, for children, it can mean schools being shuttered, or it's very, very difficult to do schoolwork from home with no power. Workplaces are closed, you on and on. There's no fuel with which to fill car tanks. There's no fuel with which to run generators. Everything is being rationed to the most extreme degree. And people who have to turn to the black market to find fuel are having to pay extremely high rates. We're talking US$100 for 10 liters of fuel to run your generator. So it's becoming very difficult, particularly for those who don't have access to foreign currency.
Alex Ritson
Will Grant in Havana. Researchers in Cambodia have discovered several new animal species living in a unique ecosystem within caves in the west of the country. The area, which is highly protected, is made up of limestone hills and caverns. It's known as a karst landscape, where species are able to evolve separately in habitats which remain isolated from each other. Pablo Sinovas, an expedition leader working with the charity Fauna and Flora, spoke to the BBC about what they found in the caves and what it was like to explore them.
Pablo Sinovas
We had to actually get to those places with torches in hand at night, looking for some of the creatures that we were hoping to find. These are quite remote areas in western Cambodia, and essentially it is limestone terrain with sinkholes and caves. So it's quite silent at night, except for the insects when you are outside. And then as you enter the caves, you mostly hear the chirping of the bats and also the dripping that comes out of the walls and the ceilings of the caves. Karst ecosystems are incredibly diverse and special in terms of species that occur nowhere else. And so we had an expectation that we might find some new species. And in fact we did. We have already described three new species of gecko, which was really exciting. And there is another that we're in the process of describing as well. Very interestingly, we found a new species of pit viper, a beautiful, beautiful snake, green with some red in it and amber eyes. And so that was really, really exciting. It's not every day that you find a new piece of snake. And then also really quite interesting, a couple of micro snails. And these are tiny, tiny snails about the size of a grain of sand, which turn out to be new species as well, and probably endemic to these very, very restricted areas. And two new millipede species, black and red millipedes, that live in some of these caves. These caves are quite unique environments. You've got in some of them thousands, even hundreds of thousands of bats that produce lots of guano. And that guano creates a specific ecosystem where invertebrates feed on it and then other invertebrates feed on those invertebrates. And so you've got species that are adapted to those particular conditions and often don't live anywhere else. And therefore they evolve in isolation, becoming over time, different species. And that's what we found. But it wasn't just new species. We also found the area to be very important for, obviously for bats, but also above ground for quite rare species like pangolins, for example, or silver langur, green peafowl, etc.
Alex Ritson
Pablo Sinovas from the charity Fauna and Flora. 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. This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Derek Clarke and the producer was Adrienne White. The editor is Karen Martin in. I'm Alex Ritson. Until next time. Goodbye. With Vrbal's last minute deals, you can save over $50 on your spring getaway. So whether it's a mountain escape with
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Episode Theme:
A fast-evolving day in world affairs: Donald Trump announces points of agreement with Iran regarding the ongoing US-Israel-Iran war, as the oil market reacts and Iranian sources cast doubt on contacts. The episode covers the broader Middle East situation, an anti-Semitic attack in London, a major air crash in New York, innovative dementia technology, threats to Cuba’s infrastructure, new climate warnings, and species discovery in Cambodia.
“If they carry through with that, it'll end that problem, that conflict, and I think it'll end it very, very substantially... Otherwise, we'll just keep bombing our little hearts out.”
—Donald Trump, President of the United States (03:52 & 04:21)
“Donald Trump is so unpredictable, I have no idea what's going to happen.”
—Woman in her 20s, Tehran (09:45)
“…many after this attack on our doorsteps this morning, including myself, will question, is this a country that I want to raise my family?” (22:44)
“They look pretty much like a regular pair of glasses... The idea is that this technology can sit quite discreetly in the background, but then step forward when needed.” (15:21) “What Wispy is actually doing is getting you to think in a multi sensory way... if you stimulate the senses, then it's a way to scaffold and maintain the cognition and the memory of the person.” (16:32)
“For most Cubans, a sense of, well, for now, no, I mean until the next one... it won't be long before [the grid] collapses again.” (27:32)
“The last 11 years were the warmest on record... The trend is the one that is alarming us.” (25:16)
“We need a strong decision making” to curb emissions. (26:44)
“Karst ecosystems are incredibly diverse and special... we had an expectation that we might find some new species. And in fact, we did…” (31:33) “A beautiful snake, green with some red in it and amber eyes. And so that was really, really exciting. It's not every day that you find a new species of snake.” (18:06 & 32:05)
A day of momentous developments: President Trump touts US-Iran progress and pauses military escalation, with markets breathing a sigh of relief but uncertainty lingering. On the ground, violence and tragedy strike London’s Jewish community and a New York runway. Meanwhile, innovation emerges in dementia care tech, warnings mount about the climate crisis, Cuban daily life is upended by energy woes, and biodiversity surprises await in Cambodian caves. The tone throughout the coverage is urgent, detailed, and insightful—offering a comprehensive snapshot of an unsettled world.