Global News Podcast - At least 12 dead in Spanish wildfires
Episode Date: July 10, 2026Fire crews in Almeria battle one of Spain's deadliest blazes where several tourists, unable to flee from the rapidly spreading fire, have been among the victims. Hot conditions in Southern Europe are ...making the situation worse. Also, Japan is running out of male heirs to the Imperial throne, a woman clings to her husband to stop him being sucked out of the window of a Ryanair plane, and the 900-year-old Bayeux Tapestry, depicting one of the most defining moments in English history, returns to the UK from France.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: globalpodcast@bbc.co.ukPhoto: Wildfire near Los Gallardos, Almeria, Spain. Credit: Reuters
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Is on-again, off-again conflict the new normal between Iran and the United States?
I'm Tristan Redmond, host of the Global Story podcast from the BBC. Iran has buried its former
supreme leader after a six-day funeral procession, while still exchanging strikes with the US.
The ceasefire is fragile at best, at worst, it's over. Could anything bring peace?
Listen to The Global Story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
Hello, I'm Ankara to site and at 15 hours GMT on Friday the 10th of July.
These are our main stories.
Wildfires in Spain kill at least 12 people as the heat wave continues across much of Europe.
One of Europe's biggest airlines, Raina, confirms that a passenger on one of its flights
needed medical attention after he was partially sucked out of a window.
And Japan's lower house of Parliament passes a bill aimed at averting a succession crisis in the imperial family.
Also, in this podcast, how high-powered sound waves can help save identical twins affected by a rare pregnancy condition.
And back in Britain for the first time in nearly a thousand years.
I did well off a little bit, seeing it take.
taken off the lorry, so I imagine I'll probably be in floods of tears when I actually see it.
The Bayo Tapestry arrives in London for an exhibition at the British Museum.
At least 12 people have died in a wildfire in southern Spain,
where fire crews are working to bring one of the country's deadliest blazes under control.
The authorities have said most of the victims appear to be foreign tourists.
The fire spread rapidly in a wooded area around the town of Los Calaros in the province of Almaria.
Its mayor Francisco Reyes said the authorities were working hard
to get people in areas still at risk to safety.
The fire started and has spread very quickly.
We have had to evacuate residents from Al-Mu-Kayser and residents from Beda,
and now we are heading towards the campsite
because the wind is blowing from the west and it's going to reach the campsite
where we also have 400 to 500 people.
We are very concerned.
because houses are burning.
Our correspondent Guy Hedgeco gave us this update.
As we heard there, that firefighters are struggling to deal with this fire
in what are very hot and dry conditions and also with high winds as well,
which make it extremely difficult.
But there are concerns that the death toll could increase further,
potentially quite substantially further,
because there are still 19 people unaccounted for, we're told, by the authorities.
Of those who've been confirmed to have died in the fire, four are believed to be British, people who are travelling in a British car and seemed to have been trapped by the flames last night.
There were another seven who died when they were trying to escape the flames on foot.
So there are concerns that the death toll might increase further.
But several hundred people have been evacuated, taken to local sports halls.
and the firefighters are battling the flames alongside members of the military as well.
Do we know much about the cause of this?
I know there's a lot of consequences regarding the heat waves which are blazing across Europe at the moment.
Well, yes, I mean, of course the very hot dry conditions that we've been seeing across southern Europe,
particularly across Spain over the last few days, will have contributed to this.
And there has been a heat wave over the last few days.
We're told by eyewitnesses and the authorities
who believe that the cause of this may have been a power cable
that fell near a road
and then that sparked a fire next to a forested area
and then with the high winds and the dry conditions
it just spread extremely quickly.
That was yesterday afternoon.
So that's the theory at the moment as to the cause of the fire.
And what's the reaction been as well?
We heard just briefly there from the mayor, anybody else?
We've heard from officials,
we've heard from Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and the king and queen of Spain,
who they've all expressed condolences and their sadness at this tragedy.
I think across Spain there is shock because Spain is very used to wildfires at this time of year.
I mean, last year we saw a record-breaking year in terms of the amount of land that was burned.
But what people are not used to seeing here in the summer is people dying because of fires.
That's relatively unusual, certainly in these kinds of numbers, you know, 11 people dead.
That has really stunned people here, I think, not just in the south of the country, but right across Spain.
As we've been here in conditions in southern Europe have been particularly hot so far this summer.
Chris Fawkes from BBC weather says there were particular conditions that made the spread of this wildfire so fast.
I was looking at the satellite picture and you can pick up thermal anomalies.
You can pick up a heat source on these.
And what I see is that we start to see a wildfire erupting across this part.
of Spain at about 240 Spanish time, about 340 British summertime.
And we had southeastern the winds gusting at about 25 odd miles an hour.
So that's just been fanning the flames.
Now, where that wildfire started, you had hills to the west.
And so those southeasterly winds would have not only fanned the flames,
but actually were still pushed the wildfires up the hills,
which would have burnt things a lot more quickly.
So we see a very, very rapid spread of this fire.
and we see into the evening time that thermal anomaly, that heat signal that picked upon
satellite pictures becoming much more extensive and much stronger.
It shows that this wildfire not only spread very rapidly, but it also became much, much
more intense as we headed into the evening time yesterday.
Chris Forks of BBC Weather
It's been over two weeks since two consecutive earthquakes struck Venezuela's capital Caracas
and the northern coastal town of Lagoira.
killing more than 3,800 people.
Tens of thousands of people are still unaccounted for,
and responders are continuing to dig bodies out from beneath the rubble.
Health officials have warned that displaced survivors are at risk
from overcrowding, a lack of drinking water, and disruptions to health care.
Salas Saead is CEO of the Disaster's Emergency Committee
and spoke to Tim Franks from the Venezuelan capital, Caracas.
The level of destruction is just immense.
It's catastrophic.
People are having to live in the streets.
I've witnessed myself an informal shelter of a very small camping tents that were camped outside apartment buildings that were simply just not safe for people to return to.
And these families, in order to keep dry from the rains, were putting their tiny mattresses on pallets.
They just lost absolutely everything.
They weren't allowed even to go back in.
to their buildings to collect their belongings.
So they're reliant on humanitarian assistance, the very basics.
We're talking about access to clean water in order to prevent disease.
Hygiene kits are the simple things like soap and toothpaste, sanitary towels and the like.
And also, of course, shelter.
The tents may be okay to keep them in the shade and so forth,
but this is no way for anybody here to live.
And then finally, mental health support, in particular for the children,
they've gone through unbearable trauma.
Many, of course, lost family,
and there are tens of thousands of people still missing.
And many still have hope that they will find their loved ones.
But we all know that the search and rescue is more or less effectively over
and it won't be long now before.
that's called to an end.
So the focus right now is clearly about ensuring
that those thousands of families that have been made homeless
get the urgent humanitarian support they need.
There has been a lot of criticism.
I mean, right from the get-go about the level of response from the state,
it's always a challenge for states to, you know,
ensure that somehow they meet the tremendous need in such short order.
But there has been real criticism for the state
in terms of how much it's been able to muster.
What's your impression of the sort of job they've been doing?
This is a hugely immense earthquake that's impacted tens of thousands of people
and 2 million people in the worst affected areas.
So for any government, any state, this is always going to be a mammoth task.
But really what I want to acknowledge is the first responders, the people,
the communities here.
Just incredible spirit,
incredible resilience.
Despite obviously
that many of their families
and their friends,
some are still buried
under the rubble
and hopefully they will be
able to evacuate those corpses.
But it's just really hard
for people just to now
survive the current conditions
and that's where the focus lies.
Not just for organisations
like the Disasters and Mercy Committee,
but the first
responders here, the national organizations, the local charities and so forth. And that's where
we want to focus our attention to ensure they have the resources to help these people survive.
But are you hearing some expressions of that frustration? We're certainly here seeing people who
are clearly very upset, not just as a consequence of the conditions they find themselves in
and the loss they've experienced, but the needs are immense. Charities alone and national
organizations or international organizations alone cannot simply meet the immense needs out there.
And that's why it's important for us as the Disasterous Amids Committee to raise as much
money as possible in order to try to fill that gap and meet as much of those needs as possible.
Salasayid in Caracas. Next to a story that must have been pretty terrifying for a passenger on
a Ryan Air Flight. The man was reportedly partially sucked out of a window and needed medical attention.
I've got more details from our transport correspondent Theo Leggett.
We mainly know what we know from local media reports.
Ryanair has confirmed that a window on an aircraft that was travelling from Thessaloniki in Greece to Memmingham in Germany
had an incident early in the flight and one of the windows became detached.
Now, that's as much as the rather dry statement from Ryanair will tell us.
But local media have been speaking to people who are on the plane
and their reports are that there was a loud bang shortly after takeoff when the plane was travelling
At about 15,000 feet, 5,000 metres, the oxygen masks came down, and a man sitting near the window was, as they put it, partially sucked out of the plane. His head and shoulders were out.
Now, this was what would happen when the plane depressurises because the air pressure inside the plane would be higher than the pressure outside.
So effectively, it's all that outrushing air pushing him out. Fortunately, he doesn't appear to have been seriously injured.
Reports state that he's in hospital with friction burns. Ryanair says that he requested.
and was given medical attention.
But it does seem to be a very worrying incident.
We don't know why the window was broken.
Local reports again suggest that there was an engine failure on the aircraft,
that it was hit by debris from the engine, which caused it to break.
And there are precedents for that having happened in the past.
Have it had a response from Ryanair?
Well, Ryanair has simply confirmed the facts that there was an incident,
a window became detached.
The plane returned to Thessaloniki.
A passenger was given medical treatment.
There are images circulating on social media of the aftermath, a broken window, oxygen devices coming down from the ceiling, and so on.
It's worth bearing in mind that these incidents are rare, but it has happened before.
There was an incident, for example, with a Boeing 737 operated by Southwest Airlines in the United States in 2018.
There was what was called an uncontained engine failure on that aircraft.
That's where the engine not only fails, but bits of it escape from the shrouding and can penetrate.
the aircraft or bits of the aircraft.
On that occasion it broke a window and unfortunately a woman was partially sucked out and she died.
This seems to have been a much more positive outcome and I think that the fact had occurred
early in the flight, about six minutes into the flight it looks like.
The plane was not higher so the passenger was still wearing his seat belt.
The air pressure differential wasn't so great.
So he survived, it must have been tremendously shocking, quite a horrible experience,
but fortunately nobody seems to have been seriously injured.
Leggett. A special piece of artwork has come back to Britain for the first time since it is believed to have
been created here nearly 1,000 years ago. The Bayo tapestry depicting the moment in 1066 when William the
Conqueror from France conquered England at the Battle of Hastings and has arrived now back on British
soil. It was embroidered in the southern city of Canterbury, or so it's believed, and then taken
to Bayo in northern France. It's being loaned to Britain in a historical history.
agreement signed by the British and the French governments.
The tapestry, all 70 metres of it, will be on display at the British Museum from September to July.
The museum expects a million visitors during a 10-month run, which would make this one of its most popular exhibitions ever.
A culture and media editor, Katie Razl, spoke to us from outside the British Museum,
where she saw the lorry with a tapestry arrive overnight.
It's here for nine months. The reason, the practical reason why it's come here,
this point is because the Bayer Museum, where it is housed, well, that is being renovated. So it shut
down. The tapestry had to come down and it had to go somewhere. But actually, this idea of a loan
was first mooted when Theresa May was our Prime Minister back in 2018, then COVID hit. Then after
Theresa May, during the Boris Johnson years, relationships between Britain and France weren't perhaps
as cordial as they are now. And so finally, all these years on,
It has happened, but there was some disquiet in France, in parts of France, amongst certain people, about it moving.
But they made absolute care of this item and all the security protocols and all the dry runs that they did to make sure it was going to be here safely.
But, you know, they've taken it inside there. It's going to sit there for a few days.
Then they're going to open it out and take a look at it.
And obviously, I think after that, once they discover there is no damage, if they do, that is when people will really be able to relax.
Dr Millie Horton Inch is the project curator for the Bayo Tapestry exhibition.
She was also there.
It probably sounds a bit strange to be that excited about just seeing a lorry
reverse into a loading bay and a box removed.
But when you consider the object within it, how old it was,
how close to the events it depicts it was made,
and by people who live through those events, it's really profound.
I did well up a little bit, seeing it taken off the lorry.
So I imagine I'll probably be in floods of tears when I actually see it.
Lord Peter Ricketts is the British envoy for the loan of the Bayo Tapestry
and a former British ambassador to France.
He thinks it's an important moment in the sometimes difficult relationship
between Britain and France.
This reminds us that we are two old nations
who have come together to share a history together that binds us together.
And it's a more iconic object in the UK than it is in France
because for us it's the sort of, it's the foundation story of our modern history.
You know, the Normans arrived, they changed our language, our food, our architecture, our sovereign.
In France, it wasn't the same impact at all.
So I think Emmanuel Macron understood that by lending it to the UK, it would be very, very powerful here.
Thousands and thousands of children would learn, which they probably don't now, about the history of that period.
And therefore, it's a way of expanding the relationship beyond the ups and downs of the day to day.
Didier Reikner, who's the editor of an online magazine about art and heritage,
is totally against the whole project.
I am against this decision, you know.
We are gambling with a work of art, which is 1,000 years old,
and there is no equivalent anywhere in the world.
So it's a gambling, and I don't think you can gamble with such a work.
The point is they don't know how the tapestry, which is an embroidery, actually.
They don't know what will happen when they unpack it
and after one there is a return back
and they did all they could
but they didn't study the way the tapestry
react with the vibrations.
They don't know at all.
So they did what they could
but I repeat it's a grumbling.
And just a reminder if you're passing through London
you have from September until July
to go and check it out.
Still to come in this podcast.
Soccer is my therapy. I've always played soccer since I was a kid in the streets of
Kinshasa. Because when I come here, I see people like me, I see people from my country.
I feel home. I feel that instant connection.
The football pitch in Maine in the US that welcomes immigrants and refugees from around the world.
Is on-again-off-again conflict the new normal between Iran and the United States?
I'm Tristan Redmond, host of the Global Story podcast from the BBC. Iran has buried its former supreme leader
after a six-day funeral procession,
while still exchanging strikes with the US.
The ceasefire is fragile at best.
At worst, it's over.
Could anything bring peace?
Listen to the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News Podcast.
Japan's imperial family is in crisis.
It's running out of male heirs currently.
There are only three,
the emperor's younger brother and his son,
and the emperor's uncle, who is 19,
years old. And women aren't allowed to accede to the chrysanthemum throne, which is why Parliament
has been debating a reform of the law. So why the crisis? I asked our Japan correspondent Karumi-Mori.
The crisis really stems from the lack of male heirs. This really speaks to the broader
demographic picture of Japan. We're having a crisis of the Asian population with a shrinking
population. And it's being reflected here also with the imperial family. Under Japan,
hands 1947 Imperial Household law. Only men in the male bloodline can inherit the throne and take
over. But as you said, there's only one young heir, which is Prince Hisahito. He's 19 years old.
So this bill, they're hoping to try to widen, who may be able to join as a member of the
imperial family, not necessarily to take the throne, but to help perform some of the duties. There
are a lot of duties that the Imperial family have to perform a lot of attendances, a lot of public
events. And so this is their way of hopefully kind of expanding the number of people who could
take on a role as a representative of the Imperial family. Who could be eligible for that then?
Yeah. So this bill, hopefully, they want to make two important changes. First, to allow the
imperial family to adopt men from former Imperial Branch families. There's about 11 Imperial Branch
families, and that would really help widen this pool. It also would allow female members of the
Imperial family to stay royals and keep their title after marrying a commoner instead of automatically
leaving the family. We saw a few years ago, a princess leave the Imperial family after she married
a lawyer, a commoner, and moved to New York City. So we lost her entirely after she got married,
and they're hoping that this bill will help keep more members in the family. We have a woman
Prime Minister in Japan. So is it inconceivable that could be a woman emperor one day? Why is they
not that confidence? Never say never. I would think it's entirely possible, but politically it's very
difficult. We've had about eight female emperors historically. But now that we're seeing a female
prime minister elected, there's a lot of hope that we could have a female emperor, but there's a lot
of conservatives, especially within the ruling LDP party. They're saying the male line is essential to
the monarchies tradition, which makes it very hard to have a,
woman emperor at the moment. Karumi Mori reporting from Tokyo. Scientists in Britain have developed a new
non-invasive procedure to treat a serious condition which can affect identical twins during pregnancy.
Twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome can happen when babies share a placenta, with one receiving more
nutrients than the other, putting the life of both at risk. With the potential new treatment,
high-powered ultrasound waves are fired into the placenta to see.
sealed the blood vessels instead of laser surgery.
Brani Garrett's identical girls were saved during this treatment.
She told us how she felt when she was first given the diagnosis of her twins' condition.
It was devastating. It was awful. It was the worst moment of my life, to be honest with you.
And being diagnosed, I was only at 12 weeks, and they were already at stage 3.
So it was very dire.
And the conversations were really directed towards elective abortion and all these things that just to me sounded horrific
and just not something that I was really wanting to go through at all.
And the laser treatment was also unavailable to me.
And I was very blessed that the consultant I saw in Bristol
was aware of Dr. Lees and the trial and put me forward.
And thank God that he did.
You know, the risks were low.
The worst risk was that nothing was going to work.
And I was already in that place.
So for me, there was nothing to lose.
Professor Christof Lees, who Brian E mentioned there is the head of fetal medicine
at Imperial College.
We've shown that we can target the blood vessels in the placenta that cause the condition,
and we can do that safely.
We haven't yet shown that in all cases it's a treatment that can work, so that's the next phase.
This was a very early phase treatment, and in Brani's case, as she said,
there were clear signs that it worked after we were able to use it,
but we need to do a much bigger study to see that it is clinically effective.
The other treatment is a laser treatment, which of course is invasive.
So it's a little telescope that pierces into the mother's womb into the amniotic sac.
But fortunately with this treatment, we don't have to do that.
So it's very, very high-power-focused sound waves, ultra-sound waves, rather,
that can manage to stop blood flow in a little blood vessel.
Professor Christoph Lees.
As the FIFA World Cup brings together nations from across the world,
one football pitch in New England is proving how the game can change lives far away.
from the spotlight.
For the immigrants and refugees
who make up the Kennedy Park team
in Portland and Maine,
football is the common bond.
But that bond has been tested recently,
as BBC Sport Africa's Celestine Caroni reports.
On an asphalt court in Kennedy Park in Portland, Maine,
the sound of an evening kickabout fills the air.
To most, it's just another game,
but for the immigrants who gather here every day,
It's much more than football.
George Lusolo arrived from the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2018.
He says football was the only familiar thing in a country that wasn't.
I really didn't know the language. I didn't know the people.
I was still a kid.
So everything was really difficult for me and my mom.
Soccer is my therapy.
I've always played soccer since I was a kid in the streets of Kinshasa.
Because when I come here, I see people like me.
I see people from my country.
I feel home.
I feel that instant.
After spending time in a detention center in Texas and later a shelter in New York,
George and his mother arrived in Portland while their asylum claim was being processed.
It was here that he discovered football at Kennedy Park through social media.
So what was really exciting to me was like, wow, there's people like me playing in this field.
I have to go check it out.
When I was like, Mom, today I will not go to church.
It was Sunday, I remember that day.
And then she was, no, you have to come to church.
I say, no, I'll not go to church.
Then I came here, I played.
It was really fun.
What began as an informal gathering in Kennedy Park in 2021
has grown into a community where people from dozens of countries share a love of the game.
And according to Daegi, another Congolese emigrant who arrived the U.S. via Angola,
they find their feet through the international language of football.
Everybody does not need to speak in one language.
Just point to your feet at, like, somewhere apart in your body and, like, ask for the ball.
It's a really, like, a really cool thing.
These players have taken different parts.
to get here. Some arrived seeking safety, others' opportunity. But the connections built on this
pitch extend well beyond the beautiful game. That sense of community was put to the test last year,
when immigrant communities across Maine were shaken by raids carried out by U.S. immigration
and customs enforcement, better known as ICE. Since President Trump returned to office in 2025,
immigration enforcement has increased across the United States,
prompting protests in several cities.
The Department of Homeland Security which oversees ICE
told the BBC that people in the country legally have nothing to worry about.
But Anthony Fiore, who organizes the Kennedy Park football games,
says many players and their families felt otherwise.
ICE just created a lot of fear.
They were doing a lot of harm here to the community.
And a lot of people were just too afraid to leave their home.
so a lot of students, they missed a couple weeks of school because of it.
And so in terms of support that we provided is we organized 71 different grocery deliveries
to players and their families who were too afraid to leave their homes
because of the danger that ICE created for them.
When 17-year-old, Joel Andrez suddenly stopped attending school
and his friends could no longer reach him by phone.
The community discovered he and his family had been detained
and helped lead a campaign for their release.
Joel's lawyer, Todd Pomello, says the family were held in poor conditions
and that the experience has had a lasting impact on the aspiring footballer.
They're in a facility where the food is inadequate.
Some of the rooms are ice cold.
Joel was a soccer star.
He has a lot of hope for his future.
But you can tell, he'll never be the same.
I don't think anyone that goes through this is ever the same.
Joel was released after four months in detention.
His family's initial asylum application from DRC was denied by the U.S.
The case is currently with the federal appeals court.
Back at Kennedy Park, teammates have rallied around him,
something Deji believes is changing how Portland sees its immigrant communities.
Some people just, like, see immigrants as these kind of people that have nowhere else to be
and, like, don't do anything.
People that watch us, like, here, people just passing by
and then seeing, like, immigrants that are talking, being happy.
I feel like it just, like, paints the different pictures about immigrants in their mind.
The American dream might not be.
exactly as they hoped.
But with the World Cup being held here,
some are still allowing themselves to dream big.
I never experienced something like this before,
and then just like fire in me, like just burning.
That's why one of my dreams is to be on a war stage.
The World Cup may be about finding the world's best football team.
But here in Portland, the game's greatest victory is measured differently,
in friendships, belonging, and the chance to build a new life.
Celestine Caroni.
And if you want more on football and the World Cup,
do listen to the latest episode of the BBC World Services Sports Podcast.
It's called More Than the Score.
In it, Manny Jasmy looks at the effect a good World Cup can have
on a player's transfer value
and how an influencer made New Zealand's Tim Payne famous.
And that's all from us for now.
If you want to get in touch, you can.
Just email us at global podcast at BBC.com.com.
You can also find us on X at BBC World.
service, use the hashtag global news pod. 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 Jonathan Greer, and the producers were Judy Frankel and Oliver Berlough.
The editor is Karen Martin, and I'm Uncritusai. Until next time, goodbye.
Is on-again-off-again conflict the new normal between Iran and the United States?
I'm Tristan Redmond, host of the Global Story podcast from the BBC.
Iran has buried its former supreme leader after a six-day funeral procession,
while still exchanging strikes with the US.
The ceasefire is fragile at best.
At worst, it's over.
Could anything bring peace?
Listen to the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
