Global News Podcast - BBC follows journey of Gazan child
Episode Date: December 23, 2025A Palestinian baby who was evacuated for medical treatment has returned to Gaza and is back in hospital. The BBC has discussed Siwar Ashour's case with the Jordanian and Israeli governments. Also: Pre...sident Trump announces new US navy battleships named after himself; Nigeria designates kidnappers as terrorists; Call of Duty creator Vince Zampella dies; Amazon warns of North Korean agents applying for remote IT jobs; and a Spanish town turns its luck around with huge "El Gordo" lottery win. 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.uk
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
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 Paul Moss and in the early hours of Tuesday, December 23rd,
we hear about a desperately ill one-year-old child who was evacuated from Gaza but is now back in the Palestinian territory.
Donald Trump suspends all U.S. offshore wind power projects,
claiming their national security risk.
Amazon says it's blocked North Koreans trying to sign up as tech company employees.
Also in this podcast, the 19th century slave who escaped from the US
and the letter she wrote to her mother back home.
It's a really poignant story about how her daughter is okay.
Her daughter made it and now she's free.
Back in June, the BBC reported on a one-year-old girl from Gaza with severe
nutritional problems. After that broadcast, Siwa Ashur was evacuated to Jordan for medical treatment.
She's now back in the Palestinian territory, but she's also back in hospital. Our correspondent
Fergal Keen has been following her story. She arrived in Jordan last June, frail and frightened
looking. Siwa Ashur has a medical condition that stops her absorbing enough nutrition, and which
doctors in Gaza said threatened her life.
Five months later, this is her first birthday party in a man,
surrounded by her mother, father, grandmother, and Jordanian health workers.
Medical treatment had improved her condition.
But Siwar is now back in Gaza and back in hospital.
Siwar returned from Jordan approximately 10 days ago.
She changed for the worst.
Around I mean the third day, she started having diarrhea and vomiting,
and her situation keeps getting worse.
It's Jordan's official policy that patients must return when their treatment is finished.
Siwar was among 45 children sent back this month.
I spoke about her case with Jordan's Minister for Communications, Dr. Mohamed al-Mamani.
Do you understand how people might find it hard to accept that a child in such a vulnerable state,
would be sent back to Gaza and the current conditions there?
No patient is sent back before they finish their medical treatment.
Upon the conclusion of the treatment, they are asked to go back for two reasons.
The first reason is that this will allow us to bring more patients from Gaza.
We cannot take all of them at once.
We have to take them in batches.
The second reason, honestly, we don't want to contribute in any shape or form
to the displacement of Palestinians from their left.
For Seward's family, the journey back to Gaza was traumatic.
They'd been given 12 cans of special milk formula essential to Seward,
only to have many of them confiscated by Israeli officials,
as her mother, Najwa explained.
They kept saying, it is forbidden for you to take them.
I had 12 cans with me.
They took nine from me and left me three cans.
But three cans don't suffice siwar at all.
I asked the Israeli authorities why this happened.
This was their response.
Due to security restrictions, the return of the families
was approved subject to their arrival at the crossing with minimal luggage,
including baby food and clothing.
In cases where the luggage exceeded the approved scope,
its entry was denied.
After 90% of the population,
was displaced during the war, infections and disease are hitting hard.
Here's Dr. Khalil al-Dakran from Al-AXA hospital where Siwar is being treated.
Since the ceasefire was announced, the number of child patients arriving at Gaza Strip hospitals
is three times the capacity. The situation at Alaksa Marta's Hospital is no different
from other hospitals in the Gaza Strip. It suffers from a severe
shortage of medicines and medical supplies, and a major shortage regarding electric generators,
which are the main artery to keep hospital going.
Siwaar's family now has some supplies of milk formula and money donations, including from Jordan.
But they're working to evacuate her again from a place the UN calls a wasteland.
Fergal Keen and the story of Siwa ashore in Gaza.
Since the ceasefire in Gaza was agreed in October, at least 400 Palestinians,
have been killed by Israeli fire, which does rather put the very meaning of the term
truce in question. Meanwhile, Palestinians there continue to live in camps and shattered homes
amidst flooding, low temperatures and food shortages. Abir is a teacher whose home in Gaza City was
destroyed. During the conflict, she spoke regularly to the BBC. My colleague Krupa Padi asked her
whether she feels that war in the territory has truly ended. It didn't stop, first of all. To the media,
It has stopped, but still danger exists on the areas that are called the buffer zones or near the so-called yellow zone.
So we still hear bombardment on daily basis.
What we are seeing is chronic collective PTSD due to the previous aggressions and to this war.
So this is not a single traumatic event people are recovering from, but years of repeated trauma, bombardments, and displacement, loss of loved ones.
hunger, fear, and uncertainty. We need to deal with all of that. We are all tired. We all need
psychological attention. And I have seen children showing signs of severe anxiety. They have
sleep disorders, aggression and withdrawal. Believe it or not, the rates of divorce have
raised during this war and after it. And the mental health services are extremely limited.
Considering the unimaginable challenges that you are facing right now from so many angles,
how hopeful are you that this ceasefire will reach the next stage?
Well, if you ask me or anyone else in Gaza, we will answer you the same response.
We still have hope.
Part of our belief in God is to have hope.
So we have hope for the future.
But we are disappointed from the current pace that this season.
his fire is moving on or the stages of the deal is moving on.
We hope that we could see the next stage where everything will be going to go to normal,
when the rebuilding starts, with opening the crossings will start,
when everything really starts like building schools again, building hospitals, etc.
So we have hope for the future, but the signs on the ground are not very promising.
Abir, a teacher from Gaza City, describing,
the situation on the ground and her hopes for the future.
The US has a habit of naming Navy ships after its presidents.
There's been a Franklin D. Roosevelt aircraft carrier and one called John F. Kennedy.
There was even a Thomas Jefferson submarine.
But what these all had in common is that the ships were given these names after those presidents had died.
Donald Trump, though, has decided to break with this tradition.
It's less than a week since the Kennedy Arts Center, his chairman of,
announced that it would in future be called the Trump Kennedy Center.
And now the president has decided to extend his brand to Matters Maritime,
with a decision to build the Trump class of battleships.
There's never been anything like these ships.
These have been under design consideration for a long time.
And it started with me in my first term,
because I said, why aren't we doing battleships like we used to?
The announcement came in a wide-ranging news conference
at his Mar-a-Lago residents in Florida.
And there was another significant policy announcement
from his administration
that it was suspending all offshore wind farm projects.
Now, the president has never been a fan of renewable energy,
certainly not for its green credentials,
as he's repeatedly suggested that climate change is a hoax.
There were five large-scale windmill projects underway,
all of them now on hold.
I talked about this with our White House reporter,
Byrne de Boosman, who's at Mar-a-Lago.
According to the administration, these wind projects present national security concerns.
Specifically, they said that the towers and the blades of the windmills themselves caused what is called radar clutter
in which certain items might not be caught on radar or there might be false positives on radar, which they say could be a concern going forward.
Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burtum, specifically gave the example of drone warfare between Ukraine and Russia as an example of.
of why this is a concern to them, given the potential threat of drones from other states
or from non-state actors as well.
Is there any scientific evidence that wind farms interfere with radar?
Well, if there is any scientific evidence, they certainly didn't present it.
They based this finding purely on national security memorandum, which isn't available to
the public about this.
There was one public document that they cited, which did say that there could be false positives.
And even if adjustments were made to radar systems, that again could cause false positives.
And perhaps radar operators would see a target that isn't actually there or misinterpret that target.
But they presented very little scientific detail in today's announcement.
I guess we should mention Donald Trump's general antipathy towards renewable energy.
Indeed. Actually, since the first day of his administration, getting rid of these wind projects is something he's wanted to do. He signed a memorandum on the first day in office halting permits and new leases until a federal review could be undertaken. And a few months later, five months later after that, 17 U.S. states led by New York, sued the administration saying that that that memorandum posed an existential threat to the U.S. wind industry. Donald Trump also had other concerns about wind that he says it's expected.
and unreliable, and he generally doesn't like the aesthetic of it.
Many listeners in the UK, for example, will remember he was quite opposed to Scottish wind farms
being anywhere near his property in Scotland.
It's been quite a busy day for Donald Trump.
He gave this wide-ranging speech in Mar-a-Lago, which you watched.
What did he have to say?
Well, the main purpose of the speech was to unveil something they've dubbed the Trump-class battleship.
Now, this is a new heavily armored, heavily armed ship that will form part of what the administration is calling a golden fleet, kind of a revamped U.S. Navy.
They've said with some evidence behind it that the U.S. is lagging far, far behind China in terms of shipbuilding capacity and output, which in any future conflict or any future tensions in the Pacific, for example, could pose a problem to the U.S. Navy.
and that's something that President Trump has wanted to address for a very long time stretching back to his first administration.
But he also did speak about the ongoing tensions with Venezuela.
He expressed that the strikes on boats alleged to be carrying drugs would continue and could expand to land targets.
And not necessarily just in Venezuela.
He had some quite harsh remarks about Colombia's government as well.
He certainly didn't take any steps to de-escalate those tensions, and he certainly seems intent.
on Nicholas Maduro's government either bending or falling in the long term.
Bern de Boosman.
She was a slave in the United States, escaped to Britain in the 1830s,
and ended up living in a small fishing town just outside Newcastle in the north of England.
Now historians have discovered a letter from Mary Ann Mackham.
It was buried in the archives of a Virginia museum,
and her words have been written down by a local vicar.
Joe Lonsdale has been looking at her remarkable story.
Maya Macham endured years of brutality before escaping from a plantation in Virginia and stowing away on a ship.
On arrival in Britain, she was taken in by a Quaker family and lived to the age of 92.
Her story was largely forgotten until a local historian in North Shields stumbled across it in 2016.
An exhibition followed and last month a statue was unveiled to her.
The resurgence of interest in her story led the Virginia Museum of History and Culture to check their archives,
where they discovered a letter written in 1831 from Marianne.
She'd asked a local vicar to pen it
to try to send word to her still-inslave mother of her survival.
In the letter, Marian admitted she knew she'd never see her mother again,
but wanted to send assurances of her warmest love.
Joe Lonsdale.
Still to come in this podcast.
El Gordo lottery winners are announced
A Whole Village Celebrates.
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.
North Korea has found all sorts of illicit ways of earning foreign currency,
despite being subjected to extensive United Nations sanctions.
It stands accused of involvement in cyber hacking, printing counterfeit cash,
not to mention being paid millions to send its soldiers to fight for Russia in its war against Ukraine.
Now, the head of security at the technology giant Amazon has revealed
that the companies detected a growing number of North Korean job applicants.
Stephen Schmidt offered assurances that Amazon had managed to block all but one of these applications.
But he warned they weren't the only firm being targeted.
Our Asia business correspondent, Surinjana Tuari, has been following the story.
This came through in a LinkedIn post from Amazon's chief security officer
and he said that the technology giant has blocked more than 1,800 job applications
from suspected North Korean agents.
He added in the post that North Koreans tried to apply for remote working IT jobs
using stolen or fake identities and then they typically get hired, get paid
and funnel those wages back to Pyongyang to fund the region.
regime's weapons programs. That were his, those were his words, rather. How exactly do these
applicants disguise themselves? I mean, presumably they don't apply for a job at Amazon with an
address in Pyongyang. Yeah, it seems that these kinds of operatives typically work with people
managing what's called laptop farms, which refer to computers based in the US that are run remotely
from outside of the country. Now, then they use a combination of artificial intelligence, tools and
verification by its staff to screen job applications. And the strategies used by such fraudsters
have become more sophisticated. That's according to Mr. Schmidt's LinkedIn post as well.
How important is it for the North Korean economy to make foreign currency by these various
illicit means? Yeah, well, North Korea is possibly the most reclusive country in the world.
As you can imagine, it can't trade normally with other countries. It can't trade. It can
pay wages. It doesn't really have much of an economy to speak of for its citizens, and therefore
it has to make money through other means, often illicit. And actually, back in July, a woman
from Arizona was sentenced to more than eight years in jail for running a similar laptop
firm, and it was found that she was helping North Korean IT workers secure these kinds of remote
jobs at more than 300 US companies. And at the time, the DOJ, that's the Department of Justice
in the US said that the scheme generated more than $17 million in illicit gains for her and
Pyongyang. So you can see the kinds of numbers and figures that can be generated from
these types of schemes. Surinjana Tuari. Has Nigeria come up with a new way to tackle the
scourge of kidnapping? Massive ductions have become so common there, they sometimes don't even
make the news. Only last month, hundreds of children were taken from a Catholic school.
though they have now been rescued.
And what the government has done is to redesignate kidnappers as terrorists.
It's not clear what practical difference that will make.
But as our reporter, Richard Kugoy, told Anka Desai,
they're putting them in the same category as a host of other hostile actors.
It's a designation because previously acts such as kidnapping
were widely regarded as just ordinary criminal acts.
But now this now signals the intention by the government to address
this problem which, you know, has been described by analysts as one of the things that do pose
existential threat to the country. So President Bolatino will last week say that these measures
were sort of like a resetting, you know, the country's security architecture, and it now
will be able to help them tackle banditry, kidnapping and a terrorism. And do we know why this
has been happening or who's behind it? Well, we've witnessed a surge of kidnapping incidents from
March 2014. This is when we had the Chibok girls who were abducted close to about 250 of them.
That really got global attention. But we've seen that over the years, this has been taken up
by groups that are locally known as a bandit. So these are armed men who normally target schools,
they target churches, you know, those are soft targets. And they basically seize people,
particularly for ransom. But then, you know, payment of ransom in Nigeria,
is outlawed. And that's why the government
said that those who have been released
especially in the past couple of days
has been as a result of military
police-led intelligence
operations. Okay, and as you mentioned
this does come on the day that 130 school
children and teachers have been released. Has there been
relief, I guess, in the country?
Absolutely. I mean, this is a huge,
huge relief. I mean, 130
children who had been
held up, the last batch
according to the authorities there.
The parents are really delighted. A lot
of them who spoke to the BBC's aid, they're really looking forward to be reunited with their children who've been away for close to about a month.
I mean, so this ending a month-long ordeal for these children who have been held in captivity.
So just seeing this is really quite positive progress and to see them now coming back and possibly being reunited with the families,
it's a relief not just for their relatives, but even for the entire country.
I mean, this whole issue has really captured the imagination of the nation.
Even if you don't play video games, you'll probably at least have heard of Call of Duty.
It was one of the most popular games created by Vince Zampella,
who's died in a car crash at the age of 55.
Kesea McDonald is video games editor for the Guardian newspaper here in the UK
and interviewed Zampella multiple times.
She told Kruper Pardy that his death had sent shockwaves through the gaming industry.
He was a very outspoken game creator.
He was a really strong creative voice,
and he was someone that a lot of players knew of
and was aware of as well.
So the person behind the game was,
he was quite well known as game developers go.
I think I met Vance a couple of times,
maybe three times.
He was always someone you looked forward to interviewing
at games industry events and someone you look forward to speaking to
because he spoke very energetically
and with a great deal of excitement around video games
and around what they mean to people and what they can do for people.
He was well liked and he really cared about the player experience.
about making games. He cared about how people felt when they played. And that really came across
whenever he spoke to him. For those who aren't familiar with the franchise, tell us more about
Call of Duty and what's unique about it. So Call of Duty has been going since the early 2000s. And
it was one of the first shooting games that really felt like war stories. They felt more like
war movies than the kind of more simplistic military shooters that have come before. It also
really set the template for multiplayer games. These are games that really
emphasize playing with your friends, playing in a squad, and there's a sense of camaraderie
and kind of shared experience that really Call of Duty set a template for in the earlier days
of online gaming. There's really no, there's no online game and no shooter that does not
have some of Call of Duty's DNA in it really now. It became a huge cultural phenomenon,
didn't it? It wasn't just a game? No, I mean, so more than 500 million Call of Duty games
have been sold now in total.
And every single year, it has been
enormous, enormous deal when a new
college duty comes out. It's something that people get together
for. And, you know, people reunite friends
that have maybe been playing since high school,
we're playing since university, and who are, you know,
in their late 30s now, they'll still get together
when a new Call of Duty installment comes out
and they'll still play as a squad. So it's something
that people do feel very strongly about.
I think Call of Duty will be his, it was
one of the most famous games in the world.
It will be the thing that he's best known for.
But, you know, players in his other games, such as Titan
which is an incredibly brilliant first-person shooter that came out later in his career.
Basically, everything that he touched was quite a special game.
And I think that lots of people, especially fans of shooters, will have a less well-known
favorite game.
If his mind is definitely Titanfall, I think that was Titanfall 2, particularly was a brilliant
testament to his talent and to the talent of his studio.
Kesea McDonald, on the legacy left by Call of Duty creator, Vince Sampella.
If you were listening to this podcast yesterday, you'll remember us telling you
about El Gordo, literally the fat one. That's the name given to Spain's annual Christmas
lottery, one of the biggest in the world for total prize money. As we explained, it's a cherished
tradition, more than 200 years old. But what we didn't know yesterday was that this year's
lottery might just make the history books. The winning numbers were announced today,
and one group of victorious ticket holders comes from a part of Spain which had previously
suffered great loss. Carla Conti has that story.
People across Spain spent the morning of December 22
glued to their TV screens,
watching the annual tradition of school children
singing out the winning numbers
in the country's famous Christmas lottery, El Gordo.
This year, the top prize went to number 79,432,
and a huge share of the winning tickets
were sold in the Northwestern Province,
of Leone. The biggest winners were residents of the town of La Banneza, where locals
assured out around $468 million or $550 million. Not surprisingly, celebrations spilled
out onto the streets with local football club players among those holding winning tickets.
It's an especially poignant win for the people in Leone. Many towns are the people in Leone.
they are still recovering from a brutal year.
The summer's wildfires were especially destructive
and that jackpot win has been described by locals
as an injection of hope.
The best thing is the joy in the village,
in a village that is emptying and where young people are fighting for it.
Nearby Villabino also took a major share,
around 200 million euros,
with many of the tickets sold through a local alt-euvre,
Limer's Association. For some winners, it still hasn't sunk in, including one man who says he's
already planning to mark the moment permanently. Yes, yes, I'm going to tattoo it. I'm going to
tattoo it big. Besides, I like tattoos. The number, the ticket. I'm going to tattoo the whole thing.
In a draw where tickets are often shared between neighbors, friends and colleagues, this year's
El Gordo win belongs to the whole community.
Carla Conti
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.uk.
You can also find us on X
at BBC World Service
use the hashtag
Hash Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Pat Sissons
and the producer was Buzzafa Shakir.
The editor is Karen Martin.
Paul Moss. 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.
