Global News Podcast - Australian state passes gun control laws after Bondi attacks
Episode Date: December 24, 2025The Australian state of New South Wales has passed gun control laws ten days after the Hanukkah attack in which 15 people were killed. There are also strict limits on how many firearms people can have... and the police will have more powers to ban demonstrations. Also: four Palestine Action prisoners in Britain continue a prolonged hunger strike; Libya’s army chief, General Muhammad Ali Ahmad al-Haddad, is killed in a plane crash shortly after take-off from the Turkish capital of Ankara; in Egypt, specialists are restoring a nearly 4,000 year old ceremonial boat from the reign of the Pharaoh Khufu; and a theatre company in Rome trains actors with psychiatric problems and learning disabilities to perform classic Italian plays.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.ukImage credit: Dean Lewins EPA Shutterstock
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Hello, Greg Jenner here, host of Your Dead to Me.
In my new family-friendly podcast series, Dead Funny History,
historical figures come back to life for just about long enough to argue with me,
tell us their life stories, and sometimes get on my nerves.
There's 15 lovely episodes to unwrap,
including the life of Ramsey's the Great, Josephine Baker,
and the history of football, plus much, much more.
So, this Christmas, give your ears, a treat with Dead Funny History.
You can find it in the Your Dead to Me feed on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson, and in the early hours of Wednesday the 24th of December, these are our main stories.
New laws on gun ownership in Australia's New South Wales after the deadly Bondi Beach attacks.
We're not going to be done until we've done everything.
possible to keep the people of this state safe. And we're prepared to take action and steps
to keep the community safe. Pressure on the UK government grows as hunger strikers from the band
group Palestine action continue their protest. Our loved ones are deteriorating in their health and it is
vital that the government responds. They have chosen to ignore us and continue to decline any
meeting with us. In Bethlehem, Palestinians celebrate Christmas for the first time.
since the beginning of the war in Gaza.
Also in this podcast, the Italian theatre company
transforming the lives of people with mental disabilities.
Very often we are forced to be not ourselves.
Maybe you are a bit weird, you show your fragilities.
It's the best thing.
Ten days after,
After the Bondi Beach Hanukkah attack in New South Wales,
the Australian state has passed new laws on gun ownership and protests.
Among the measures are limiting the number of guns anyone can own to four,
though for farmers it's 10.
Officials are claiming that the new laws are the toughest of their kind in Australia.
The New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said the state government would bring in more reforms.
We're not going to be done until we've done everything possible
to keep the people of this state safe.
and there's a recognition from this government that hate speech leads to hateful actions.
That's what happens in even civilised communities like ours,
and we're prepared to take action and steps to keep the community safe.
Police powers to curb public protests will also be strengthened.
A pro-Palestine group and other activist groups have said that they will mount a legal challenge.
Fifteen people were killed in the shooting in Sydney where Jewish people had gathered.
The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he had requested that a special honours list be drawn up for the heroes of the 14th of December.
The attack did show us the worst of humanity, hatred, anti-Semitism, violence.
It also showed us the best of humanity, extraordinary acts of bravery and courage, acts of kindness for fellow Australians.
These special honours lists have been used previously to recognise individuals,
for other significant events like the Bali bombings and MH17.
And these awards would be announced in 2006.
Police believe the gunmen who carried out the attack were inspired by the Islamic State Group.
My colleague Vantner Barn heard more from the BBC's Phil Mercer in Sydney.
Well, the state government here says these new laws are the toughest gun reforms Australia has ever seen.
There will be a limit on the number of firearms and individuals.
can own. There'll also be a raft of other restrictions, including far more stringent screening
and licensing regulations for firearms owners. There was also an amendment made that will make
it very difficult, if not impossible, for anyone who has associations with people suspected of
terrorism from ever owning a firearm. So all of this brought in, of course, after the attacks
at Bondi Beach just over a week ago.
The New South Wales State Premier is a man called Chris Mims.
He's also brought in these protest laws.
Essentially, they give the police more powers
to crack down on protesters and shut them down.
And also they ban any protests in the months after a terrorist incident.
And the state government here has been worried
that mass pro-Palestinian rallies may well have fermented anti-Semitism in this country.
So some broad reforms being brought in by the New South Wales state government.
But as you say, a broad alliance of activists, political and community groups are mounting or are likely to mount a constitutional challenge saying that the laws are unfair and undemocratic.
And as far as the gun reforms are concerned, there are politicians in the New South Wales State Parliament who say that they won't do anything to protect against future atrocities and targets simply law.
abiding firearms owners.
Phil, I also want to talk about this new award that will be created to honour the heroes from
the Bondi attack.
What more do we know about that?
I think the atrocity 10 days ago really showed, of course, the worst and the best in humanity,
the savagery and the brutality of the attack was countered to some degree from the immense
heroism we saw.
There were at least four people who risked their lives to try to do.
disarm and wrestle with the gunmen. And we know that two of the victims, Boris and Sophia
German, died after trying to wrestle the firearm from one of the attackers. So it's these sorts
of heroic acts that the Australian government really has at the forefront as it creates a new
award. It will also include heroism from bystanders who rushed to give first aid to people
who were literally under fire at the time, medical staff, the police, many, many,
heroic actions, big and small, being considered by the government,
and we are expected to find out the recipients of these bravery awards in the new year.
Phil Mercer.
Not since the hunger strike in Northern Ireland in 1981,
which led to the deaths of 10 Republican prisoners, including the MP Bobby Sands,
have so many prisoners in UK jails put their lives at risk.
Four people facing trials related to break-ins or criminal damage
by the group Palestine Action
continue to refuse food
with two prisoners reaching their
52nd day of hunger
on Tuesday. Palestine Action
has become prominent in demonstrations
against Israel's military operations in Gaza.
The UK government prescribed Palestine Action
as a terrorist organisation
in July this year, making any
demonstration of support for it
a criminal offence. So far,
more than 2,000 people
have been arrested for this,
Among them was the Swedish activist Greta Toonberg, who on Tuesday was arrested for holding up a sign, reading, I support the Palestine Action Prisoners. I oppose genocide. Cameron Ahmed is one of the hunger strikers. His sister Sharmina Alam sent the BBC this voice note about his condition. Cameron is on day 44 of his hunger strike. Since the start of his hunger strike, he has been hospitalized four times with the last two hospitalizations occurring in the last three days.
His health has deteriorated to the point that the prison have moved him closer down to cells which are near the nurse's station
to ensure he's able to have his vitals manage and respond to any emergency situations that can occur now
as he is past day 30 of his hunger strike.
Being past this point means that there can be sudden changes to the health as the body starts to eat away at the organs as it tries to sustain itself.
are deteriorating in their health and it is vital that the government responds. They have chosen
to ignore us and continue to decline any meeting with us. This could be resolved very quickly
and ensure the health and well-being of all of our loved ones. They are not asking for any
exceptional treatment. They are asking for their basic rights as British citizens in this country.
Lawyers representing Palestine action have called on the British government to meet them
and hear their concerns about their treatment in custody.
But so far, no meeting has taken place.
So just how dangerous are hunger strikes?
Dr Mike Stroud is a professor of medicine and nutrition
and a specialist on treating prisoners who are refusing food.
My colleague Evan Davis asked him how long the human body can survive not eating.
As long as you're getting liquids, you can withstand usually a minimum of 40 days.
You might die then if you have started.
started off very thin. Perhaps more usually it's 50 to 60 days and occasionally long growth
you started off overweight, although being overweight doesn't protect you quite as much as you
might think. And what is happening in those, let's say, 40, 50, 60 days as the body adapts to
having no nutritional intake? The body struggles to survive by shutting systems down and it starts
doing that within three or four days actually, but only at a slow rate and sort of choosing things
that aren't essential. But all systems are affected. So your liver will stop processing things
properly. Your kidneys will begin to fail slowly. Your heart will weaken. Your immune system
weakens so that you become increasingly vulnerable to getting infections. And we kind of all
carry infections around with us all the time so that they can get you in the end.
And your brain begins to shut down too, and you progress towards becoming, well, you may be delirious or confused or actually lapse into a coma.
Yeah, right. But Mike, what do they do in prisons? Because they have, I mean, we've got these well-publicized hunger strikes underwear at the moment.
But there are quite a number of hunger strikes in any year.
What's the general approach? Are they force-feeding people? Are people put onto drips?
are those nutritional drips or just liquid drips?
What's the normal practice?
You first establish that the striker understands what they are doing
and you want them to know that they are putting their lives at risk.
And assuming that they are competent,
which most certainly will be at the outset of hunger strike,
you can't actually overrule their desire and put up a drip
or force feed them with a tube,
put into their stomach, because that would be considered a salt and against their human
right. Now, some, you know, might accept some measure of a drip or force feeding, but in
general, if they're serious about their cause and their strike, they're not going to accept that,
and there's very little that you can do. Dr. Mike Strude speaking to Evan Davis.
Bethlehem is marking Christmas for the first time since the beginning of the war in Gaza. Public celebrations
had been cancelled for two years.
But after a ceasefire was announced on October the 10th,
the Holy City, where Christians believe Jesus was born,
decided to bring them back,
starting with the lighting of its traditional Christmas tree
outside the Church of the Nativity a few weeks ago.
Bethlehem's economy, which is heavily reliant on tourism,
has been battered by two years of war.
While festivities return in the occupied West Bank,
suffering continues in Gaza,
including for its tiny Christian community.
According to Ewan reports, citing the Gaza Ministry of Health,
more than 400 Palestinians were killed by the Israeli forces in the Gaza Strip
since the October ceasefire came into effect.
Shima Khalil sent us this report from Bethlehem.
I've been here in Bethlehem for the past two Christmases,
and for those two years, Manger Square felt empty, felt quiet,
almost hollow, to be honest.
it's different.
I'm standing near Santa who's ringing his bell
and their children gathered around him for toys
and it's so nice to see the smiles on their faces.
One of the biggest things that was missing
was the city's famous giant Christmas tree
which I'm looking at right now for the first time.
It stands proudly at the center
with its golden and red ornaments
and the nativity scene at the bottom.
A group of tourists are taking selfies
in the courtyard outside the nativity.
church ready to go in. And yet, despite the buzz and the limited presence of pilgrims and visitors,
the shadow of the war lingers heavily over the holy city.
The city is a different vibe. It's better. Last year there was nothing, no people, no movement.
Now there's more of a festive atmosphere. The city is blossoming a bit, where happy people
have started to come back again. When I come here, there is a war and that makes me,
I feel sad about what happened to Palestine.
We cannot forget our people in Gaza.
And we hope we see a different situation for them.
And this war will, inshallah, end as soon as possible for them.
An hour's drive from Mangers Square, the sound of drones hover above the Holy Family Church in Gaza.
Outside the church, a man finishes off the wire framing of the Christmas street.
the first in more than two years.
The only space that I have
that I sleep in the night,
there is no privacy.
Inside, almost 300 people have sought refuge
in what was once only their place of worship.
Even after the ceasefire,
death is always near.
We can hear the sounds of pumping,
the sounds of shills.
I can see the pompings are very, very close and near to us.
Hilda Joseph Ayad is a 20-year-old Christian Palestinian,
sheltering in the church school with her parents and two siblings.
She used to be able to go to Bethlehem and describes Christmas before the war.
We used to decorate the tree inside our home, to put an activity since under the tree also.
What do you miss most about Christmas before the war?
My home, to be honest, my home, my memories with my family inside our home.
All of us joined the table of the dinner, our meals, the gifts we used to.
give to each other. Do you miss Bethlehem? For sure, that's right. We used to go to Bethlehem and
celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ. They're on the land church, but now we can't go anywhere.
If you have one wish this Christmas or one message for the world, what would that be?
We asked them to keep us and their prayers. What do you wish for yourself? There's no personal
thing. The only thing we need is the love and peace in Gaza and all the world. That's
the only thing we are really, really need.
Back in Bethlehem, Reverend Jack Sara,
president of the Bible College here,
explains why celebrating Christmas is so important.
I think this is more about hope. It's more about resilience
and more about telling we exist, we are here.
Christians and Muslims and everyone who lives here
wants to declare that we are people who love life.
Every tree lighting Gaza was present,
whether it is in the prayers or the mentioning.
What is your message?
to Christians around the world, and what is your personal wish this Christmas?
We want peace for our people. Our people need their dignity.
This is my prayer for my people. I want them to live life and life in its abundance.
The refleating moments of joy here is light fills Bethlehem,
a fragile hope resting on a fragile ceasefire, and a Christmas still being shaped by loss and grief.
Shyamah Khalil.
Still to come in this podcast, Egypt starts the process of restoring a boat buried 4,000 years ago near the Great Pyramid of Giza.
In a unique first for the Grand Egyptian Museum, visitors will have a live experience of the ship's assembly.
Hello, Greg Jenner here, host of Your Dead to Me. In my new family-friendly podcast,
series, Dead Funny History, historical figures come back to life for just about long enough to
argue with me, tell us their life stories and sometimes get on my nerves. There's 15 lovely
episodes to unwrap, including the life of Ramsey's the Great, Josephine Baker, and the history
of football plus much, much more. So this Christmas give your ears a treat with dead funny history.
You can find it in the You're Dead to Me feed on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the global news podcast.
Libya's army chief has been killed after his plane crashed shortly after taking off from the Turkish capital, Ankara.
General Mohammed Ali Ahmed al-Hadad was in Turkey for talks aimed at further strengthening military and security cooperation between the two countries.
My colleague Anko Dissai heard from our Middle East analyst Sebastian Usher.
There was a message, a tweet from the Turkish Interior Minister saying,
that radio contact had been lost with this business jet,
which was carrying the Libyan chief of staff,
Mohamed Ali Ahmed al-Hadad,
and several other officials that had left Ankara.
And he said that about 40 minutes after it had left,
on the way back to Tripoli, the Libyan capital,
it had requested an emergency landing,
but then there was radio silence after that.
For some time after that,
there wasn't any direct confirmation of what had happened,
but then the interior minister, Turkish interior minister again, said that wreckage of the flight
had been found about 70 kilometres from Ankara.
And what more do we know in terms of the ties and the relationship between the two countries
and possibly the nature of these talks as well?
With talks were between the military staff, the other Libyan officials with him.
Now, they're representing one part of a political scene which remains fractured in Libya.
That's the internationally recognised government in Tripoli.
You still have other forces that are very much at play there.
And they were discussing closer military cooperation,
also the extension of Libya's military presence in the country.
That had also happened just as these talks were taking place.
And really, I think it's all about Turkey in the sense that it has built up
a more and more kind of dominant position in Libya,
particularly since its intervention in 2019.
Back then, there was a major turning.
point. Forces from the east had essentially laid siege to Tripoli. And this internationally
recognized government was really only in control of perhaps a few streets in Tripoli. It was the
military intervention by Turkey, which turned the tables on that. And this strong man, Hafta,
who had been leading what he called the Libyan National Army, which was originally based
in Benghazi, without getting too deep into the complications, but he was seen as a versus.
strong man in Libya. It looked like he was about to take over. That was stopped. Since then,
Libya has used that to build closer military, of course, political and economic ties,
but not just with the international-regulated government in Tripoli, but also with Hafta and with
the eastern powers to try and really square that circle. And also, you know, one doesn't know
where this is leading and how much this is in good faith, but to try to bring those sides together
and to finally have a formal end
to what's been a continuing low rumbling conflict
despite the fact that that moment of greatest danger
for the government in Tripoli has passed
and General Hafter's moment as the absolute key player
with a lot of backing from regional powers has also faded.
Sebastian Usher
In Egypt, specialists have begun restoring an ancient ceremonial boat
built nearly 4,000 years ago.
The vessel dates back to the reign of one of
ancient Egypt's greatest pharaohs, Kufu. It was discovered nearly 60 years ago in a sealed
pitch near the famous Pyramids of Giza. Excavation was delayed for decades due to the fragile
condition of the wood. The restoration is taking place at the Grand Egyptian Museum, where Dr Issa
Zaydan is leading efforts.
We have a plan to take four years to assemble the ship. In a unique first for the Grand
Egyptian Museum, visitors will have a live experience of
the ship's assembly, seeing the first ship assembled and, during their visit, witnessing Egyptian
and Japanese restorers assembling the second ship.
Richard Kegoy told us more.
It's not every day museum visitors get to watch history being put back together.
At Egypt's newly open Grand Egyptian Museum, crowds gathered as a small crane carefully lifted
centuries-old wooden planks onto a metal frame inside the solar boats hall.
Tourism minister Sherrifate has described the work as one of the most important
and restoration projects this century.
Archaeologists say the boat's fragile structure, made up of hundreds of wooden pieces,
meant its excavation and preservation had to be handled with extreme care.
The restoration is taking place in full view of the public
and is expected to take up to five years.
Mystery surrounds the appearance of hundreds of Victorian shoes
which have washed ashore on two beaches in South Wales.
The black leather boots appear to be more than a century old
and no one is quite sure how they ended up there.
The BBC's Thomas Morgan went to take a look.
I mean, even though they're quite old, they're still...
In very good condition.
Yeah, really good condition.
But that'll be the salts in the sea.
That'll be preserving the leather.
Last Thursday on the cobbled shores of L'antwit Major and Ogmoor by the sea,
these appeared.
A shawl of shoes, hundreds of them,
found as a beach clean-up team were restoring the rock pools.
It's not unusual to see a shoe.
But when there's so many, it does make you, it's quite unnerving.
It's a little, it's a little bit strange to reaffair
because you just don't know where they've come from.
So you're trying to figure out the story behind them
and how long they've been there.
We're finding so many marine litters that have been there for hundreds of years already.
The overwhelming majority are men's and children's.
So the question now is how did these black leather shoes from yesterday arrive in 2025?
One of the most likely scenarios probably linked to Tesco Rock.
that 500 metre stretch of land in the distance
about three kilometres west of the beach here.
It's also known as a graveyard of ships
having claimed a number of vessels over the years.
Many years ago, that rock out there was a true hazard for ships.
There's definitely a shipwreck out there
that these shoes have come from.
If that is the case, attention will not doubt in
to who actually made the mysterious footwear.
Some are suggesting online
the source may be an Italian ship.
Shoemaker, linked possibly to a downship from the 19th century.
Thomas Morgan.
In 1978, Italy passed a radical law to close state-run asylums,
making it the first country in the world to do so.
The law made way for community-based treatment of people with mental disorders and learning difficulties,
rather than the social segregation that they'd faced beforehand.
More than 50 years on, a theatre company in Rome is continuing to embrace that ethos.
training actors with psychiatric problems and learning disabilities
to perform classic Italian plays.
The BBC's Isabella Jewel went to see one of their performances in London.
There is dark.
In a dark room lit only by candles in London's Italian embassy,
a medieval poet stumbles into a terrifying hellscape.
His name is Dante, and this is a performance of his Divine Comedy,
one of Italy's most famous works of literature.
The piece originally written in the 1300s is an imagined vision of the afterlife
and traces a man's journey through hell to purgatory and then to paradise.
But the theatre company on stage is far from a traditional one.
It's called the Teatro Patological, literally the pathological theatre,
and all the actors have learning difficulties or mental health problems,
ranging from depression to anorexia.
Just after the play, I caught up with Dante himself, played by Paolo Vacelli.
He's been part of Teatro Patelogico since 2012 and told me about his experience.
because it represents the possibility of people with disability to be happy,
to improve their lives and with theatre and with art
and be part of a great project.
Dario Dambrosi is the mastermind behind the project, which has been going since 1992.
Everyone, most of them, is autistic.
and borderline, so they have really serious psychiatric problem.
I hope Tida therapy can be a therapy for a psychiatric case
because I think when the mental illness feels sick,
it's like they have not the control of the emotional.
And Tira helps you to put in the right play your emotional.
In many places, there are still.
a stigma attached to people with mental disorders and learning difficulties.
But by putting these actors on stage, the audience is encouraged to celebrate their talent.
And they've taken their plays across the world.
We went in Tokyo, we went in Johannesburg, we went in Toronto, in Chile, South America.
So they can see how they feel these people, how they connect with the audience.
So it's like to go again this.
In recent years, the theatre company has even created a university course for people with
mental illnesses, a point of pride for Dario Dambrosi, who hopes this project could inspire
theatre groups in other countries. He tells me that the impact of helping just one person
who's struggling has huge ripple effects in their community.
When one boy, one girl, mental illness feels good, doesn't feel good one person, but feel
thousand new people, the mother, the father, the brothers, the grandfather, the people in the
building. The Teatro Pathologico have taken on many classics, from Pinocchio to Medea,
but this play, a journey from darkness to light, has particular resonance for its lead actor,
Paolo Vaselli. It's a journey that is very personal, the search for hope, some sort of
light in our lives, you know, to be happy and to be ourselves, you know, because in the
society, very often we are forced to be not ourselves. Maybe you are a bit weird, you
show your fragilities, but you are yourself and it's the best thing.
That report by Isabella Jewel.
And that's all from us for now, but there'll be a new edition of the Global News podcast later.
If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can send us an email.
The address is Global Podcast at BBC.co.com.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Rebecca Miller and the producer was Muzzafa Shakir, the editor
is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson.
Until next time, goodbye.
Hello, Greg Jenner here,
host of Your Dead to Me.
In my new family-friendly podcast series,
Dead Funny History,
historical figures come back to life
for just about long enough to argue with me,
tell us their life stories,
and sometimes get on my nerves.
There's 15 lovely episodes to unwrap,
including the life of Ramsey's the Great,
Josephine Baker and the history of football
plus much, much more.
So this Christmas give your ears a treat
with dead funny history.
You can find it in the Your Dead to Me feed
on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
