Global News Podcast - Deadly train crash in Spain
Episode Date: January 19, 2026At least twenty-one people are killed in Spain after two high-speed trains collide. The accident occurred when a train travelling from Malaga to Madrid derailed near Adamuz in Andalusia, crossing on t...o another track. Also: the dispute between European countries and the United States - over Donald Trump's determination to annex Greenland - continues to escalate; Senegal wins the Africa Cup of Nations in men's football for the second time after an enthralling - and sometimes chaotic - final; China meets its economic growth target - but there are problems ahead; and a bumper fruit crop in New Zealand means they're preparing for a stellar breeding season for the world's fattest parrot - the Kakapo.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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This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson,
and in the early hours of Monday the 19th of January,
these are our main stories.
At least 21 people are killed in a lot of.
a high-speed train crash in Spain. Europe weighs up retaliatory measures against the United States,
as their dispute over Greenland continues, and the Syrian government agrees a ceasefire with Kurdish-led forces.
Also in this podcast.
The BBC joins a police raid in Sierra Leone on a suspected people trafficking network.
And there's a dramatic end in men's football to the Africa-Kirons.
Cup of Nations. As we record this podcast, at least 21 people have been killed and dozens injured
after two high-speed trains collided in Spain. One survivor described the moment of impact as
feeling like an earthquake. Emergency workers were trying to rescue those trapped inside
carriages. Footage shows people being pulled through smashed train windows. The Prime Minister
Pedro Sanchez said the country was enduring a night of pain. Our Madrid correspondent, Guy
Hedgeco, is following developments.
We know that one of these trains which crashed was heading from the city of Malaga and the south of Spain up towards Madrid, where I am in the centre of the country.
And about an hour into its journey, it derailed, or some of its carriages derailed, crashing into another oncoming train that was heading in the opposite direction down to the south of the country.
Now we've been told that there were victims on both of those trains
and we understand that the emergency workers have managed to pull all the survivors out of one of the trains
but they're still working to pull survivors out of the other one
and the military has been deployed to help them.
Because these were both high-speed trains and they go at an incredible rate, don't they?
Yes, both high-speed trains and Spain has a very high-speed trains.
and Spain has a vast high-speed rail network,
one of the largest in the world.
The strange thing about the accident seems to be,
the thing that seems to be mystifying the authorities
is that the train that derailed did not seem to be going around a corner,
or going around a bend, or certainly a steep bend,
when the accident happens.
So there's not been a sort of an obvious reason
for the derailment to happen.
We haven't had an accident like this,
the high-speed rail network since 2013, when 80 people were killed up in the northwest of the
country. And the king and queen speaking out? Yes. King Felipe is following events very closely.
After the news came out, we heard that the royal household was following this closely. Obviously,
the government is following this. We've heard from the transport minister who has said that
it's too early to know about causes, and we're not going to know more, certainly for several
weeks. Someone else we have heard from was the mayor of Adamuth, which is the town right next to where
the accident happened down in the region of Andalusia in the south of the country. Rafael Moreno,
he was one of the very first people on the scene after the accident happened. And he said there was
twisted metal all over the place, these two trains sort of intertwined. And he described it as
being like a nightmare. Guy Hedgecoe. The dispute between
European countries and the United States over Donald Trump's determination to annex Greenland continues to escalate.
A full EU summit will be convened on Thursday to consider a collective response.
That, after an emergency summit of European ambassadors on Sunday,
they decided it would be best to continue to pursue a diplomatic solution with the US.
They don't want to get involved in a trade war with Washington.
President Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on European allies from February 1st,
to force Denmark to hand over Greenland.
The foreign ministers of Denmark and Norway
have also held talks in Oslo to discuss the crisis.
Afterwards, the Norwegian foreign minister, Espen, Bath, Ida,
was anxious to stress European unity.
Norway, like all other Nordic countries, European countries and Canada,
stands fully behind the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Denmark.
But we are also communicating very clearly
that if there are security concerns in the...
Greenland or anywhere else in the Arctic, we stand ready to work together in the NATO alliance
to deal with those issues. Some European voices want tougher action. One German lawmaker
even raised the possibility of boycotting the Football World Cup finals later this year in the
United States. Despite all this, the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Scott Besant, told NBC
news he remained confident President Trump would get his way.
The European leaders will come around and they will understand that they need to be under the U.S. security umbrella.
What would happen in Ukraine if the U.S. pulled its support out? The whole thing would collapse.
And that's regardless of what people think in Greenland itself.
Here are the thoughts of some people in the capital nuke.
I think he has lost his mind.
I hope that there soon will be some clever people in the states who will tell him, no, no, no, it's not going to work.
can't scare Greenlanders. We're not scared. We'll fight them to the end. We'll never give in.
And we are so happy we have so good allies.
I think the man is out of reach. It's ridiculous. We have a lot of allies. And now they are stepping up.
There's no doubt that President Trump's threats have given European leaders a huge headache.
reflects on the febrile mood in Brussels and how the collective leadership should respond.
They're so concerned that EU leaders have announced this evening
they're going to be holding an emergency summit here in Brussels on Thursday.
There's all sorts of back-channel conversations going on
about what action to take or not to take,
because there's a feeling in Europe that they're damned if they take action,
they're damned if they don't.
If they get more confrontational with Donald Trump over the proposed Greenland tariffs,
France wants to do that. Other member states of the EU have said,
and I know we want to hold fire for now, because what they worry is,
that could alienate the United States even further.
And the brutal truth is Europe needs Donald Trump for now.
They need him to get a sustainable peace deal in Ukraine.
They need the United States for their own security.
But if Europe continues to play it softly, softly to try and manage Donald Trump,
as it has done pretty much since he returned to the White House,
then it risks looking extremely.
week with the sovereignty of an EU member state, a NATO member state, and in this case Denmark,
and being threatened. And watching, of course, from the sidelines, Russia and China, probably
with a big box of popcorn, because in their eyes, that concept of the West that's dominated global
politics for decades, with Europe and the United States tightly knitted its call, they think that's
crumbling. This is the biggest crisis in the Defence Alliance NATO's history. What you have here is
the biggest, most powerful member of NATO going up against so many of the other member states.
The UK, France, Germany, Western Europe has relied on NATO since the Second World War for
its security here. What you're looking at is potentially the whole thing crumbling. That's why
European leaders don't want to jump to any action. What else are we looking at? We're looking
at potentially a full-blown transatlantic trade war. That would affect all of us. And that will happen
if Donald Trump goes ahead with his Greenland tariff
and if the EU, for example, retaliates strongly against the United States.
So with so much at stake, that's why you're hearing strong pronouncements from European leaders,
but they're really worrying about what action should they take.
That's why there's going to be this emergency summit of EU leaders here on Thursday.
Our Europe editor, Katya Abla.
The Syrian government has agreed an immediate ceasefire
with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic forces.
It follows nearly two weeks of fighting that have seen the military advance into Kurdish-held areas.
The peace agreement would also see Kurdish troops integrated into the National Army
and the government take responsibility for prisons where Islamic State militants are held.
My colleague Paul Henley spoke to Amberin Zaman,
whose chief correspondent for the Arab American news website Al-Monitor
and has recently returned from Syria.
She said the president has now gained more control of the country.
It's a huge win for Ahmed al-Shara as he seeks to consolidate his rule over Syria,
because you know he got off to a very shaky start back in December 2024 when he first took charge
and ran into quite a bit of trouble with various ethnic minorities,
notably the Druze and the Alawites,
and his forces have been accused of committing huge massacres of both those ethnic groups,
and for a long time it seemed like he,
he wouldn't last, and there was a lot of international outrage and all of that. But now what
we're witnessing is something quite extraordinary, because the group with which he assigned this
ceasefire, and I would qualify this as more of a capitulation, are the Syrian Kurds, who
were the longest time were the biggest allies of the United States in the fight against
the Islamic State. And what we've witnessed now is a lot of U.S. pressure being brought.
brought to bear on the Kurds to basically just cave to all of Ashara's demands, and that's what they did.
Is this the end of the Kurds as an influential force inside Syria?
I think it would be premature to say that, but what we can say is that it appears to be an end
to their autonomous administration, to their independent military entity, which is now going to be collapsed
And a big success, as you say, for the president, how does he capitalize on that going forward finally?
Well, obviously, if he can market this as a very, you know, peaceful, good agreement with the Kurds,
and he was very clever. On Friday, he signed this decree under which the Kurdish language is now recognized,
not as an official language, but a national one, saying that it can be taught in government and private.
schools, that the Kurdish new year that's celebrated on March 21st is now an official holiday,
a lot of sort of cosmetic stuff that really falls way short of the Kurds real demands,
which is for a decentralized form of government, which they say is the only formula for Syria,
where you have not just the Kurds, but as I mentioned previously, many other ethnic groups
who are also calling for autonomy.
Amberin Zaman. Senegal have won the Africa Cup of Nations in men's football for the second time after an amazing, and sometimes chaotic, final.
They beat Morocco 1-0 in extra time, but not before the match was interrupted when the Senegalese players walked off in protest at two decisions in favour of the host nation.
For Morocco, the defeat couldn't have been more bitter after so much money had been invested in staging.
the tournament. Lee James from the BBC World Services Sports World program was at the game
and spoke to me just after the final whistle. Plenty of controversy, one of the most controversial
finals in African Cup of Nations history. The reason we got to that situation with the Senegal
players leaving the field, encouraged to do so by their coach, Papsiao, is because of the
controversy late on in this game. Senegal had a goal disallowed. Dressigay's Hedder
against the post with Ismail Asar putting in the rebound,
but the whistle had gone before the ball hit the net,
with Drissigay having a judge to have brought down Hekimi.
That stirred up the controversy, and then to compound Senegal's frustration.
Morocco were awarded a penalty after a VAR check,
Al-Hajim Malik Jouf, appearing to drag Brahim Diaz to the ground by his neck.
Both those decisions on review, and we've seen the replays a number of times,
feel like they were fair ones
but that didn't mean the
Senegal coaching staff agreed with that
it was Pap Chow who was encouraging his players
to leave the field of play
we then Alex saw some very ugly scenes
with the small group of Senegalese supporters
that are here inside the stadium
a number of them spilling out onto the pitch
and with angry, violent confrontations
with the security personnel and police here
it took a very lengthy delay
over 10 minutes before they returned to
the field of play, encouraged to do so by Sadio Manet, and then the penalty Alex.
Well, a remarkable one from Brahim Diaz.
He attempted the Penenka, where you try and deceive the goalkeeper into making a dive
before you chip it down the middle of the goal.
But Edward Mendi didn't move at all.
It was a comfortable catch.
And yet, incredible scenes, even before Senegal, scored their goal in extra time.
Is that chaos a bit of a sad end to what has been an amazing?
tournament. It really has been. We've been praising the organization of the tournament, certainly the
infrastructure, the stadium where this final was played, the Prince Moulet Abdallah, is state of
the art, one of the finest stadiums in world football. It will host World Cup matches here in
2030. But yes, I think the controversial scenes do leave a very sour taste, and for the organizers,
they will be the images that will inevitably be remembered from this tournament. It took several
minutes to get control from the fans from Senegal who were causing those problems away to our left.
It actually took the actions of Sadio Manet to try and restore some calm.
He was the one that was encouraging his players not to walk down the tunnel.
He was telling them to come back onto the field of play and then he went over to the Senegal
fans after the full-time whistle, begging them to calm down so the match could resume in extra
time.
So he deserves great credit for that.
but with a World Cup in four years time,
certainly not the scenes that the organisers here would have wanted from this final.
So the long wait continues for Morocco,
but Senegal worthy winners?
Yes, absolutely.
I think with the goal that was scored in extra time from Prat Chow,
because it was a stunning strike,
hammered into the top corner just off the bar,
and yes, that long wait goes on.
It's been over 50 years now for Morocco.
They've spent so much here.
They've invested so much in football.
They wanted a return with a trophy.
It is not to be, but Alex will be talking about this final for a long, long time to come.
Lee James.
Coming up later, the sound almost lost to extinction.
Conservationists celebrate the Carcapoo parrots comeback.
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If journalism is the first draft of history,
What happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed, hundreds killed.
But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it.
It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories.
I'm Helena Merriman, and in a new BBC series,
I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story.
What did they miss the first time?
The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Chilean president, Gabriel Boric,
has declared a state of emergency in two southern regions
where wildfires have forced 50,000 people to leave their homes.
At least 19 deaths have been confirmed in Nublae and BioBio regions.
Bernadette Keough has the latest.
The region's worst affected, with fires blazing for two days,
are about 500 kilometres south of the capital Santiago.
Fire crews are contending with flames fuelled by gusting winds.
Images on local television showed widespread gutted buildings,
charred cars and hospital evacuations.
The most ferocious blaze, which is burning across more than 20 kilometres,
has raged through dry forests and plantations
bordering the coastal city of Concepcion.
The declaration of emergency means the armed force
will now get involved. A forestry official, Norma Perez, urged extreme caution.
We are working with all the resources we have available,
deployed in all the advancing zones of this fire,
to try to stop it as soon as possible.
And we're trying to contain this emergency with numerous fires across the region.
And I want to reiterate the call to people to take extreme precautionary measures.
The authorities said fire,
firefighters were battling 24 active fires across the country early on Sunday,
with most areas under extreme heat alerts.
Chile has experienced a series of devastating fires in recent years,
worsened by long-term drought and climate patterns,
with similar fires breaking out in Argentina's Patagonia earlier this month.
Bernadette Kehoe,
thousands of people across West Africa are being lured by the promise of a job abroad,
only to find themselves being held.
held captive and pushed into forced labour and exploitation.
The problem is rife in Sierra Leone,
where about two-thirds of young people are unemployed.
Women and children from poor communities are most vulnerable.
Our reporter Seidou Bar was given exclusive access to a raid by Sierra Leone Police
and Interpol's anti-trafficking unit in the city of Makini.
Stay!
This is Makini in the north of Sierra.
Police officers read a concrete building where dozens of young people are held captive.
Some of the captives are as young as 14, held in poor conditions, cloths and suitcases thrown all over the floor.
The human traffickers who trapped them here appear to have fled.
Young people are tricked into paying money with the promise of a job abroad.
The traffickers used the name of a legitimate wellness and lifestyle company called QNET
to offer work opportunities as a front for their illegal activities.
Get one of my friend.
A friend introduced me to this program, QNET.
On the outskirts of McKinney, I met a young trafficking survivor
wearing short braids and a black t-shirt.
She told me she paid a thousand dollars for a supposed job in the US.
She did not want me to use her name.
When they first go, they feed you.
When they first go, they feed you, they take care of you.
But as time goes by, they stop.
So we women had to go with extra mile to survive.
You have to sell your body and go sleep with men so that you can get money.
Victims like her are often pushed to recruit more people in the scam.
So if you call and try to convince your friends to join,
the traffickers will give you an international number.
Then they take you to the airport.
They give you a passport, give you fat travel papers.
Then they take your photos so you can send them to your friends and family
and persuade them to come.
The name QNet has become a byword for this type of trafficking in West Africa,
prompting the community to publicly distance itself from these activities.
Meanwhile, one of the trafficking buses,
has been in contact over the phone with the police.
A member of his trafficking gang was arrested in an earlier raid
and they want to secure his release.
Let's find a way to cool this thing down.
Maybe leave something in the envelope
and we can put this police thing on hold.
I don't have the power to do that.
I have to call somebody.
You say you don't have the money, but...
What I can do is call one or two people.
Whatever they tell me, I will tell you.
We can give you one or two million.
No problem.
I'll listen to you from now to money.
Thank you.
The police tells me that they will not accept money from the traffickers
and that this is just a tactic.
Yes, this is just a method we are using to get in.
So it's like a bait.
It's a bit.
But it is still shocking to me to see how easy it is for them to negotiate in this way.
The police said they have conducted over 20 raids in the last year,
rescuing hundreds of victims of human trafficking.
But many of the victims find it difficult to return home.
I was scared to go back home.
I had told my friends I had traveled abroad.
I had told my family the same.
I was thinking about all the money they had given me to get there.
So when I pray, I pray to forget about what happened.
That report from BBC Africa eyes, Say Dubai.
New data shows that China's economy grew by 5% last year.
Despite it being in line with government predictions,
it's not anywhere near these stellar growth figures China has had over years past,
and the economy faces a number of problems,
not least a continually weak housing market.
The population also fell by just over 3 million last year.
I asked our Asia business correspondent Nick Marsh,
to put these numbers into context.
5% is one of the slowest rates of growth that China has seen in a long, long time.
We're used to spectacular growth from this very fast growing economy.
But you compare it to the 1%, 2% rates of growth, if that, that we see in most developed Western democracies,
and it suddenly looks really, really big, doesn't it?
Another reason that China's government will be happy with these figures is basically the year that China had last year,
when you think about the Trump administration's campaign of tariffs, of tariff threats, of trade tensions, and so on.
And in the face of all of that, Chinese exports still continued to explode.
They announced a trade surplus of $1.2 trillion last week, $1.2 trillion more goods and services sold than were imported in.
China. So yes, trade with the United States was down, but China found customers in places like
Southeast Asia, Latin America and Africa to sell to. And it actually accounted for a third
of China's GDP growth. So in spite of all these pressures from the outside, Chinese exports
go from strength to strength, and they are the main contributing factor to this 5% growth.
And yet the compilation of these figures, it's not done quite as independently as in some
other countries, is it? Can we trust them? It's a very difficult question to answer, Alex,
to be perfectly honest. I think the broad direction of the numbers, the sort of broad picture
they paint, I think are widely respected and recognised by economists in and outside of China.
When you dive down into the nitty-gritty details, yeah, it becomes more difficult because we know
China's a one-party state and all institutions are ultimately controlled by the Communist Party.
China's never missed the growth target, you know, put it that way.
But that doesn't mean that there aren't problems with the Chinese economy at the moment,
and that policymakers, they're not hiding the fact that China is facing challenges economically domestically.
Yeah, and the population shrinking, that's a significant item, isn't it?
The population shrinking is a long-term problem that China's going to have to deal with.
It's not the only Asian nation that's going to have to deal with that.
Right now, the biggest problems really are to deal.
with domestic consumption. So basically households not feeling like they have much money to spend.
That's been really exacerbated, created actually, by a property crisis in which property prices
have plummeted. Lots of Chinese people have their money in property, invested. So people aren't
spending as much as they want to. So even though China's selling a lot abroad, people domestically
aren't spending. There's a graduate jobs crisis as well with high unemployment there. So this year,
expect growth to be lower than 5%. And expect the government to,
actually start intervening with some stimulus packages and maybe belowing interest rates as well.
Nick Marsh. Now, some good news from the natural world. People in parts of New Zealand can hear
more of this distinctive sound. That's the mating call of the carapoo, an intriguing species that's
been brought back from the brink of extinction over the past three decades. They are the world's
Fattest parrots.
Bright green, flightless and nocturnal.
And a bumper fruit crop this year
means they're gearing up for a hefty breeding season.
Conservationist Deirdrieverco says it could lead to the biggest boom in chicks yet.
Kakopo are a really unusual parrot.
They're the only leck breeding parrot in the world.
So they don't form peer bonds,
but the males advertise and compete for females,
and they do that with that beautiful booming sound.
you just heard. And they're making that sound from some thoracic air sacs that are kind of
inflated in their chest. So they've got this big spongy boom sack. And it has the most beautiful
whiskers. They're the best dressed bird in the forest in New Zealand, I think. They're exactly
like a dappled forest light. So they're very camouflage. It's very hard to see them when you're in
the forest. But yet they have very forward-facing eyes. They've got kind of that wise owl look to
them, big beak, beautiful whiskers. They do have reasonably big wings, even though they can't fly,
but they've got very strong, sturdy feet, and they can climb right up into the tops of the canopies.
And then they're very agile, actually, once they're up there, 20, 30 metres off the ground,
moving through the trees at speed. There are quite a few things out there that could bring
Karkapu to harm and definitely drove them to that brink of extinction. So Stoots are enemy number one,
feral cats, rats potentially could take young chicks or eggs from nests.
So we've been able to double the population over the last 10 years
and we're heading in the right direction.
236 kakopo as of today, which is still a critically small number,
but some quite good population growth.
So that does bring a few challenges.
And one of those challenges is where to put them next.
We're actually running out of predator-free real estate here in New Zealand.
That's suitable for kakopo.
That's our kind of challenge for the next five to ten years.
Dear Dereverco from the New Zealand Department of Conservation
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 Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Pat Sissons. The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson. Until next time, goodbye.
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