Global News Podcast - BNP set to win election in Bangladesh

Episode Date: February 13, 2026

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party is claiming a "sweeping victory" after indications that it's heading for a landslide election win. It's the first poll since an uprising in 2024 that toppled the autho...ritarian leader, Sheikh Hasina. Also: President Trump has revoked an Obama-era law that underpinned US regulations on greenhouse gas emissions. Mr Trump said the move was the biggest act of deregulation in the country's history. The CIA has released a video designed to recruit disaffected Chinese military personnel, scientists, and other professionals as spies for the US. Jim Ratcliffe, who co-owns Manchester United Football Club, has apologised if his "choice of language" caused offence. He suggested the UK had been "colonised" by immigrants. And at the Berlin Film Festival, the world premiere of No Good Men, a romantic comedy set in a newsroom in Afghanistan.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

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Starting point is 00:01:02 The interview from the BBC World Service. Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts. This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Alex Ritson, and in the early hours of Friday the 13th of February, these are our main stories. The centre-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, looks to be on course for a landslide election win. Donald Trump repeals a landmark climate ruling in what critics say is a gift to billionaire polluters. America's CIA spy agency targets potential sources in China's military with a new recruitment video. Also in this podcast.
Starting point is 00:01:51 Everything is going down slowly in the country and the daily life is complicated. I see no future. The only future is a change. The U.S. blockade on Cuba, bites hard for residents of Havana. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, is projected to be heading for a landslide victory in the first election since a student-led uprising deposed the authoritarian leader, Sheikh Asina.
Starting point is 00:02:21 The Prime Minister in Waiting, Tariq Raman, has been congratulated by the US Embassy in Dhaka and by the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Shekhasina Zawami League was banned from taking part and an Islamist party says it has serious questions about the integrity of the election. Our correspondent, Azadamishiri, is in DACA for us, so can we say the BNP has definitely won?
Starting point is 00:02:47 So far that hasn't been officially announced by the Election Commission, but the BNP has told the BBC that they're confident of forming a new government. The papers are certainly running with it, even if they are unofficial results. One newspaper, the DACA Tribune, has a major headline on the front page. BNP wins absolute majority. Now, that hasn't been declared yet, but people will be waking up here and seeing Terry Grapman, the leader of the BNP, as the next Prime Minister of Bangladesh. And it's a huge reversal in his fortunes because in the last elections, the BNP boycotted those polls altogether. Thousands of their members and their supporters were jailed under Sheikh Qasina's increasingly authoritarian rule.
Starting point is 00:03:31 And on top of that, Dei Kravman himself was in self-imposed exhumored. for 17 years. So this is a very different morning for him. And yesterday, when I spoke to him moments before he cast his own vote, he said he'd been waiting a very long time for this day, the country had been waiting a long time, and he said he was feeling confident. He's going to be feeling a lot more confident this morning. Yeah, and messages of congratulations already from India and Pakistan. Yes, and there was a big question over the future of the India-Bangladesh relationship. and that future depends heavily on who will lead the next government. And the BNP was seen to potentially have an easier relationship with India
Starting point is 00:04:17 than Jamata Islami would have had. It's a complicated one because it's very important to people here. These elections wouldn't have happened without the student uprising that overthrew Shea Kisina. And yet, when you speak to voters, and I've been traveling in the country for the past few weeks, speaking to people, most people still associate India with the Awami League, the party of the former government. And the fact that Sheikh Asina is in exile in India and that the country has so far refused any extradition requests.
Starting point is 00:04:50 She has been sentenced to death here in absentia in the International Crimes Tribunal on DECA. The fact they haven't responded to those requests means that there's a lot of resentment and a lot of anger here about that. So even though the two countries have had a very good relationship in the past, and that's benefited them in both ways, most people you speak to want to make sure that the future government keeps India's influence in check, and that's a tightrope that Tariq Rahman will have to walk should he be the next prime minister, which seems very likely right now.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Yeah, and after Sheikh Khashina's administration, her rule, is going to take people in Bangladesh some time to trust any government, isn't it? That's true. also the BNP, because they do have a history of reputation. This isn't a new party. They have been around since the 70s. Of course, they did suffer from politically motivated arrests. Independent human rights groups have tracked that, and so they suffered under Sheikasina's rule. But they were in government at 1.2 in the early 2000s, and their tenure was marred by allegations of corruption, human rights abuses, and so they were never considered.
Starting point is 00:06:01 considered a party of change before. Taru Krahman and his fellow candidates have worked very hard to rebrand as a secular, liberal party that can bring change to the country now. Azaday Mashiri in Dhaka. President Trump has revoked the 2009 endangerment finding on public health that underpins U.S. regulations on greenhouse gas emissions. The White House called the decision the large. Act of deregulation in U.S. history and claimed it would end what Mr. Trump has described as the Green scam. We are officially terminating the so-called endangerment finding, a disastrous Obama-era policy that severely damaged the American auto industry and massively drove up prices for American
Starting point is 00:06:51 consumers. Prices went up incredibly for a worse product. This action will eliminate over $1.3 trillion of regulatory costs and help bring car prices tumbling down dramatically. The former President Barack Obama says this action will leave Americans less safe and less healthy. That is a view shared by many scientists and environmental groups, who also accused President Trump of siding with fossil fuel interests against overwhelming scientific evidence. The former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry served as a climate envoy in the Biden administration. There's a reason that we had an endangerment rule. The pollution, which is creating the crisis of climate, is dangerous.
Starting point is 00:07:40 It's a killer. You know, this decision to just do away with it really takes Orwellian governance to a new height and it invites enormous damage to people and property all around the world. Our climate correspondent Matt McGraw told Oliver Conway about the significance of the announcement. The reversal of the endangerment finding, I suppose it can be seen as the boldest step taken by the Trump administration so far in dismantling the apparatus of tackling climate change in the United States. I think you have to see this in the light that the US Congress has been unable to pass any legislation because the political divides on this question have been so great for 20 or 30 years now.
Starting point is 00:08:24 So the endangerment finding has become the bedrock of almost all action taken by the United States government, the federal government, to tackle climate change. So it not only deals with directly with emissions from tailpipes and from cars, but it also allowed the government to regulate power plants to stop methane emissions from oil and gas and a whole range of other regulations that they were put in place. So the removal of this, it's not just symbolic. I think it has real world implications and it has significant implications for US automakers and for industry, and President Trump is selling it as an ability to cut red tape and reduce costs for the American consumer. That will be seen, I think, in the months and years to come. Yeah, tell us more about what it means in practice for American businesses and people's health there.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Yes, I think it's going to mean, I think, on the car front, no one's quite certain what it will mean, because while it will remove all restrictions on carmakers and particularly their necessity to sell large numbers of electric cars, It doesn't necessarily mean that the standards that California applies will be washed away as well. That will still need to be tested in the courts. And it poses a big question, I think, for carmakers. Are they going to make cars for a newly liberated American market where they don't need to make EVs or other cleaner cars? But what about the rest of the world? Would they be able to sell those cars in the rest of the world?
Starting point is 00:09:49 So that I think remains one of the big questions. And I think the other big question is whether states will take legal action to try to overturn this overturning and whether or not we'll see a patchwork of regulations develop across the United States, some in, some out, some against, this reversal of this underpinning act on which all the climate action in the United States up to now is really rested. I guess it could also be reinstated by a future president. I think there's a move from the Trump administration to ensure that doesn't happen. They want to get into the Supreme Court very quickly.
Starting point is 00:10:20 They want the Supreme Court to rule on this before the end of President Trump's term. If they rule in his favor, they believe it will mean, Any future president will not be able to overturn this change. Matt McGraw. Can the US and Iran reach a nuclear deal? The head of the UN's nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, is Rafael Grossi, and he says such a deal is possible and urgently needed. He's called on negotiators from Tehran and Washington to seize the moment.
Starting point is 00:10:50 President Trump has threatened once again to take military action if the talks fail and has sent warships to the Arabian Gulf. Mr. Grosse spoke to our security correspondent, Frank Gardner. There are certain things that need to happen, of course, understanding, concessions, bit of flexibility, imagination, but it is absolutely possible to envisage a deal. How is this going to be any better than the 2015 JCPOA, the Vienna nuclear deal? Quite clearly it must, because whichever opinion you may have on the JCPOA, it is very clear that President Trump, he was very unhappy with it,
Starting point is 00:11:25 he considered that the agreement had fundamental flows. So obviously you need a different kind of arrangement that will get two things. One is credible assurances that whatever happens in Iran with regards to the nuclear program stays in peaceful uses. That's very important. Secondly, that Iran can legitimately claim that they are developing something in this area, which is squarely within the parameters. of a directivity that is for peaceful uses. So making those points or those lines converge is the key
Starting point is 00:12:03 to a good deal. Do you have a view on what could happen if America hits Iran again, if this deal doesn't happen? I think it's very important that the president of the United States is saying that he wants a deal. It has a powerful meaning that he prefers that a second episode of this kind, would be much wider and with more consequences. So we want to spare the Iranian population and others who could be affected this possibility. My sense is that we have a window of opportunity, but windows of opportunity have a tendency to shut quite abruptly. So we need to seize the moment.
Starting point is 00:12:47 IA.E.H.E.H. Raphael Grossey speaking to Frank Gardner. The U.S. spy agency, the CIA, has stepped up its efforts to recruit Chinese spies. It's released a Chinese language video directed at disillusioned personnel working for China's military, known as the PLA. It also targets Chinese scientists and other professionals to try to get them to spy for Washington. Beijing has called previous recruitment videos naked provocation. With more, here's Pete Ross. The US intelligence video titled Save the Future opens with footage of a fictional military officer taking part in what appears to be a kind of intelligence briefing
Starting point is 00:13:33 while expressing to the viewer his dissatisfaction with the country's top brass complaining that the only thing our party leaders are interested in defending is their own pockets. Released on Thursday on YouTube and other social media, the CIA says it hopes the video will strike a chord and encourage actual military personnel and other Chinese citizens to, in the words of CIA director John Ratcliffe, improve their lives and change their country for the better. The move comes just two weeks after it was revealed
Starting point is 00:14:04 that China's President Xi Jinping purged two of the country's most powerful generals, following similar moves against high-ranking members of the PLA in recent years. And it's not the first time the CIA has released videos hoping to recruit Chinese citizens to Washington, cause. Last year it posted three videos that collectively racked up almost 100 million views, aimed at Chinese Communist Party officials and instructing them on how to contact the agency. It's all part of a CIA attempt to rebuild its spy network in China after it was decimated over a
Starting point is 00:14:46 decade ago. Beijing is well aware of Washington's efforts. year China's Ministry of State Security issued a warning on social media to be wary of foreigners baring smiles and sweet talk, as they might be spies. Pete Ross Still to come in this podcast. This woman, she is someone who believes because of her reality that she lives. She believes there is no good man in Afghanistan until she meets this journalist. So there are good men.
Starting point is 00:15:15 A romantic comedy set in Afghanistan has its world premiere. This is the Global News Podcast. The port of Havana has received some rare cargo, two ships carrying humanitarian aid sent by Cuba's ally Mexico. Cuba is struggling with an acute fuel crisis. The Trump administration has imposed a virtual oil blockade on the island by threatening tariffs on any country that supplies it with oil. Cuba lost its biggest energy provider Venezuela after its president, Nicholas Maduro, was seized by U.S. troops, and now Washington is threatening Havana. Mexico is reluctant to send oil because of the US threats,
Starting point is 00:16:03 but Thursday's shipment brought powdered milk and beans. Daily life in Cuba is tough. The BBC's Alethea Trujillo has been speaking to a resident of Havana who's asked that we do not disclose his name. My day-to-day life has been reduced as the life of everybody else to the survival between cycles of blackouts. That is now the situation. So it is very difficult to do anything else
Starting point is 00:16:32 or then perform simple tasks in the house trying to do something when the electricity is already connected. And how long does it last? How long does the blackouts last? It depends. 10, 12, 14 hours, 16 hours in a row. How are people just managing? on a day-to-day basis?
Starting point is 00:16:54 Surviving. People try to survive. Depending on the amount of money people have, they try to access to the services or the goods they need to the day-to-day life. You cannot accumulate too much food, for example, because of the lack of refrigeration capacity in the houses. And even if you have a good refrigerated storage, it depends of the availability of electricity. So food starts to rot.
Starting point is 00:17:22 It reduces life to try to obtain the things you need for the day. Are schools open? How are hospitals functioning? Are those things functioning? I don't know. They publish some indications coming from the Ministry of Public Health. No surgical maneuvers will be performed. Only those for immediate savings of a life. And, I mean, I see tourism isn't coming, so there is no money coming into the country. To use them now, it is not feasible. Nobody wants to be a tourist in a country in the middle of this situation. Lack of sanitation, serious problem of public health, nothing.
Starting point is 00:18:05 You can see that in Havana. The buildings with electricity, those are the hotels. But you don't go to a country to visit a hotel. You go to a country to a country to a social situation is deteriorating rapidly also. You have now a situation of different nature of violence. In the night, you cannot walk in the street because they are all black. What kind of future people thinking there is? Because this seems like a long-term situation, no oil,
Starting point is 00:18:36 and the Americans seem to be putting a lot of pressure on the Cuban government. Everything is going down slowly in the country and the daily life is complicated. I see no future. The only future is a change. There is no other exit situation cannot continue like this. Can I continue like this. A resident of Havana speaking to the BBC.
Starting point is 00:19:01 The co-owner of Manchester United Football Club, Jim Ratcliffe, has apologised that his choice of language had caused defence after he suggested the UK had been colonised by immigrants. In a TV interview, the billionaire criticised what he... he had described as the huge level of immigrants coming in and gave incorrect population numbers. The British Prime Minister Kirstama described the claims as offensive
Starting point is 00:19:28 and wrong and had called on him to apologise. Our correspondent Rob Watson has been following the story. The background to this is Sir Jim Rackleff, who has an interesting character in Britain. He was a big backer of Brexit. He's the co-owner of Manchester United, of course, now living in a sort of tax exile in Monaco. But he's essentially sort of exploded this bomb by making these remarks about immigration.
Starting point is 00:19:53 And the original remarks claiming that Britain had been colonized by immigrants had brought a sort of massive backlash from some of the supporters of Man United, as you explained, from some British politicians. I mean, he hasn't apologised as such for interfering in the debate. All he said is that he was sorry that if the kind of language he used offended people, But as you would imagine, it's opened up this huge question, not that it's one that ever goes away, Charlotte, about immigration and social cohesion in this country.
Starting point is 00:20:25 Because immigration is something that voters, many voters, are concerned about in the UK. But it seems that a lot of politicians and public figures really struggle to talk about it in a measured way. That is true. I mean, the Prime Minister got into trouble when he was talking about this danger of being a country of strangers. and he withdrew those remarks in May of last year. I mean, you have politicians from reform, the sort of centre-right party, a bit less reluctant to do so. But I think it's certainly true that polling suggests
Starting point is 00:20:59 that this is a massively important issue for voters. It's the second most important issue behind the economy. And I've really been struck by a recent survey that suggests 84% of people in this country feel that the country is divided. 86% feel there is tension between immigrants and people born here. And then the last bit of the survey for King's College that struck me was 50% of people think UK culture is changing too fast. So I think the public are concerned about this issue massively, and some might say reasonably given the figures involved, but the sort of politicians are struggling, as it were, to get the right tone that somehow means that there can be a debate that everybody can join in.
Starting point is 00:21:42 Rob Watson speaking to Charlotte Gallagher. The Trump administration has declared an end to the surge of ICE immigration officers to Minnesota. The senior border official Tom Homan said a significant reduction in the number of agents had already begun and would finish next week. State officials and protesters have called for ICE to leave Minneapolis after more than 3,000 armed officers were deployed there last month. And two American citizens, René Goet and Alex Pretti, were concerned. killed by federal agents. Here's our North America correspondent, Ned Atorfic. Many will see this announcement as the Trump administration trying to save face. The president's borders are Tom Homan declared victory in Minnesota, despite the outrage caused when armed
Starting point is 00:22:29 mass immigration agents killed two U.S. citizens there. The incidents sparked angry protests and widespread condemnation at home and abroad. Mr. Homan was sent in afterwards to calm the situation, as calls ramped up for the Secretary of Homeland Security Christy Noem to resign. She led the surge of thousands of ICE officers whose aggressive tactics were filmed by local residents. Mr. Homan claimed he had secured unprecedented coordination with local law enforcement agencies and vowed to carry on the president's immigration promises. For those that say we are backing down from immigration enforcement or the promise of mass deportations, you are simply wrong.
Starting point is 00:23:11 Look at the data. record number of arrests and deportations under President Trump's first year, and we'll continue that effort. However, Minnesota's Democratic governor, Tim Walls, said no concession had been made to ice. He called the surge of federal officers an unconstitutional assault on the state that had severely damaged its economy and people's sense of safety. Governor Walls said no one in Minnesota disagreed with targeted immigration enforcement, but that people were entitled to do process and to be treated humanely. The Berlin Film Festival has got underway with an unusual world premiere,
Starting point is 00:23:49 a romantic comedy set in an Afghan newsroom. It's called No Good Men, and the main character, a woman, is convinced there are no good men in Afghanistan. The writer, director, and star is Sharbanu Sadat, and she's been speaking to James Menendez. When I had the idea, I thought it's a brilliant idea, but then we started to do the financing, I realized that a lot of funders, they are completely against it because they cannot imagine that a rom-com is going to happen in Afghanistan, you know, because there are all these many international films about Afghanistan
Starting point is 00:24:23 that they are kind of misrepresenting Afghanistan. And they always tell the Afghan stories through war drama. So I thought, I don't want to tell war drama because as a person living in Afghanistan at the time, I was interested to tell an insider perspective. And as an insider, you don't leave a sad life to a sad life to a person. 24 by 7, there are also a lot of humor and comedy going on in your everyday life. I wanted to capture the real everyday life of an Afghan. So was it hard work, getting the funding you needed to make it?
Starting point is 00:24:53 Well, you tell me, it took six years. Right. Yeah, it was really difficult. It was really difficult because not only the financing it, but also logistic-wise, it was very difficult because even though at a time when I was living in Afghanistan, I was working with this European company that they did, want to take risk for European crew. So shooting in Afghanistan
Starting point is 00:25:13 was not an option. And then, politically, the situation of Afghanistan changed. I was evacuated to Germany and then it was, again, one more time, the big question, we had to shoot the film. Then I was looking, like locking all locations in Jordan and then in Greece. And so we just,
Starting point is 00:25:30 you know, take the challenge and shoot the film in Germany. And it has been shot and it's been made and it's at the Berlin Film Festival. So just give us a summary of how the romance in the film works, how the comedy works. It's all said in a newsroom, isn't it? Yeah, it's happening in a newsroom.
Starting point is 00:25:46 And because this protagonist, she's a camera woman and the male living role, he's a journalist and they work together. And this woman, she's someone who believes because of her reality, because of the reality that she leaves, she believes there is no good man in Afghanistan until she meets this journalist. And little by little, you know, they fall in love.
Starting point is 00:26:08 So they are good men. if I'm 100% honest with you, I have all the reason to believe that there are no good man in Afghanistan because of my reality, but also because it's not only my opinion, it's the fact it's like a collective experience of so many women living in such deeply patriarchal society like Afghanistan, you know? And unfortunately, this is not only the story of Afghanistan, patriarchy, is the universal problem.
Starting point is 00:26:31 I'm just telling the Afghan version of it, you know? And obviously no chance that the film will be seen in Afghanistan. I mean, I guess perhaps bootlegged versions, No, I actually think the opposite. I actually think that they're asking audience, they're going to watch the film earlier than people in Europe going to watch it in the cinema. How? How, though? Because, I tell you, because in Afghanistan, we don't have a cinema industry, but it's a technology time and everyone are, you know, having a smartphone and connecting to internet. And for some reason, for, I mean, don't ask me how, because I don't know, but they are like stealing the film and suddenly your film is end up in YouTube or they chop. the film and they're going to watch it in TikTok, you know?
Starting point is 00:27:12 Right, her, director and star of no good men, Shabano, Sadat. And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at global podcast at BBC.co.com. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag Global NewsPod. And don't forget our sister podcast, the global story, which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story,
Starting point is 00:27:43 available wherever you get your podcasts. This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Derek Clark. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Alex Ritson. Until next time, goodbye. When you're car shopping on your phone, you need to see all the information. With the Car Guru's app, you can. Powerful search tools let you see deal ratings, price history and dealer reviews on listings, all in one place, and you can turn on real-time price drop alerts, so you'll never miss a great deal.
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