Global News Podcast - Dozens killed in Hong Kong fire
Episode Date: November 27, 2025More than forty people have died and hundreds are missing after a fire engulfed high-rise apartment blocks in Hong Kong's Tai Po district. Firefighters have been battling to contain the blaze for near...ly 24 hours. Also: a "targeted shooting" near the White House critically injures two National Guard troops; Nigeria declares a nationwide security emergency; the military in Guinea-Bissau stages a coup; a special report from Lebanon on the anniversary of Israel's ceasefire with Hezbollah; a warning about ocean noise; the latest scandal from the Miss Universe beauty pageant; and what Warner's partnership with Suno means for the future of AI in music. 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 Janet Jalil and in the early hours of Thursday, the 27th of November, these are our main stories.
A massive fire that has engulfed a complex of high-rise buildings in Hong Kong has killed dozens of people and left hundreds missing.
Two US National Guard troops have been critically wounded, blocks away from the White House in what officials say was a targeted shooting.
Nigeria declares a nationwide state of emergency
after a series of mass abductions.
Also in this podcast, a special report from Lebanon
on the anniversary of Israel's ceasefire with Hezbollah.
And?
A lot of the time, when I send this piece of music to people,
they're like, that's the best thing I've ever heard.
And then when I tell them it, say I, they suddenly hate it then.
And I'm like, has it actually fundamentally changed the piece of art,
the thing that you were listening to?
One of the world's biggest record labels,
partners with an AI music generator.
As we record this podcast,
firefighters in Hong Kong have been battling for nearly 24 hours
to contain a massive fire that spread through a high-rise apartment complex.
At least 44 people are known to have been killed.
Dozens more are critically injured and hundreds are missing.
Flames could be seen on every.
every story of the massive tower blocks
as huge clouds of black smoke billowed above.
These residents of Wang Fook Court
spoke to the BBC.
Around quarter to three in the afternoon,
I suddenly heard a very loud noise
and I looked outside
and saw that in the distance over by Block 5
there was a fire.
I left and I've been downstairs until now.
It's already been more than three hours.
I'm devastated.
I don't know what's going on anymore.
One neighbour said he still could not find his wife.
I know some are still inside the building.
Why is there no one saving them?
I know someone who has young children and elderly members of their family.
I called him and he said he was still trapped inside the building.
Tembury shelters have been set up for the hundreds of people made homeless.
And as they wait to find out what has happened to those feared to still be trapped
inside the burning and smouldering buildings.
Local media has been showing footage
of the late-night rescues of a baby and an elderly woman.
The Chief Executive of Hong Kong,
John Lee, insisted the authorities are doing all they can.
I take this incident with the utmost seriousness.
We have deployed 140 fire engines
and more than 60 ambulances.
Over 800 firefighters and rescue personnel
have been mobilised
and drones are being used.
We will use all necessary resources and manpower to extinguish this fire.
Well, firefighters are slowly bringing the fires in some of the buildings under control,
but conditions are still dangerous.
Police say they've arrested three construction company executives on suspicion of manslaughter.
I got this update from our correspondent at the scene, Danny Vincent.
I'm looking up at the burning towers,
and there are large plumes of smoke,
which are still pushing up into the air.
There are one, two, three, four streams of water from fire engines,
just spraying constantly at the buildings.
I can still see a number of apartments on fire.
I can literally see the flames in quite a few apartments.
It's a big contrast to last night when I was on the scene
where the entire buildings were just completely engulfed in flames for hours.
Today, you can see that there's few flames, but they're still there.
It's worth noting that some of these flames have been burning for almost 24 hours now.
Around me, there are a group of people just looking silently, sending text messages, taking photographs, some are live streaming.
They all seem to be very shocked about what's happened.
This is a large residential building.
There are thought to be around 2,000 people living there.
We know that close to 1,000 people stayed in shelters last night.
I know from last night, people I spoke to at the scene, people were fearful that their loved ones, their relatives, their neighbours were sadly trapped in the building.
We know there are hundreds of people unaccounted for, and there are fears that those people may have been in the building and were unable to escape.
And some people are blaming construction work that was going on as the question.
cause of this and we now know that three construction company executives have been arrested?
That's right. I mean, an investigation is underway into the cause of this fire. It's been said,
it's been reported to the authorities, or shall I say the authorities have said that this fire
escalated at an unusually rapid pace. Now, we know there have been arrests relating to
executives of a construction company. Those arrests are under the suspicion.
of manslaughter.
Now, as I'm looking up at this building,
I can see a type of green mesh
that's on top of and covering many of the buildings.
There have been reports
that this particular residential area
was actually facing renovation
for more than a year.
Local media has reported
that bamboo scaffolding
and this green mesh has been surrounding the building
and an investigation is now underway to finding out how this large fire was started.
Danny Vincent in Hong Kong.
When they were deployed to Washington, D.C. earlier this year by President Trump,
National Guard troops were supposed to make the city safer
as part of what he called a crackdown on crime.
Instead, two members of the National Guard are now fighting for their lives
after being shot and critically wounded close to the White House
by what police say was a lone suspect.
The attack on the eve of a Thanksgiving holiday caused panic.
I heard gunfire.
We started to run, and then there was another round of gunfire.
There was just one police guard there, and they were yelling at somebody to stay down.
We noticed that there were two National Guards down, and one, they were trying to resuscitate.
Officials said the suspected attacker was also shot and is now in custody.
President Trump said he was a suspect.
an Afghan national and describe the incident as an act of terror.
This heinous assault was an act of evil, an act of hatred, and an act of terror.
It was a crime against our entire nation.
It was a crime against humanity.
The U.S. has now stopped processing all immigration requests from Afghan nationals indefinitely.
Mr. Trump also said that he'd ordered 500 more National Guard troops to Washington
in addition to the hundreds already deployed there.
But former FBI special agent, Catherine Schweitz,
said putting extra resources in the nation's capital
could have unintended consequences.
There are 20-some law enforcement agencies already existing there,
stepping on top of each other all the time,
and in a good way.
So adding 500 more National Guard to an area that's already filled with law enforcement,
in my opinion, is potentially adding 500 more targets.
Now, as we know that in the past 15 years, law enforcement and first responders have become more of a target.
Well, Alan Etter is a reporter in Washington with the radio station WTOP. He was at the scene.
This all happened around just after 2 o'clock local time in the afternoon in broad daylight.
It was quite shocking. People were milling about, going to the stores, going to the businesses around the area there.
This is quite heavily populated with the commercial properties.
And this individual apparently targeted these two National Guard members.
And according to witnesses, literally walked up to them and shot them.
Now, when they went down, they had three other colleagues who were nearby, according to police,
who then responded and then shot that individual.
The suspect, who was also shot, is in serious condition, but without life-threatening injuries.
What law enforcement has been telling us and other news outlets across the country is the person has been identified as a 29-year-old Afghan immigrant, Rachmanola, Lakunwal.
And he's been here since September of 2021.
So, I mean, of course, all this is still under investigation. And we don't have any identifications yet on the individuals who were shot. Since August of this year, the National Guard, federal police have been deployed to cities, including Washington, D.C., across the country. And however, people here feel about that, I mean, it hasn't resulted in the lessening of crime. But, of course, this is going to renew the debate on immigration. Of course, the Trump administration.
has been quite hard line on immigration here since the campaign.
Reporter Alan Etter.
A year ago today, a ceasefire ended the war between Israel and the Lebanese militia Hezbollah.
But Israel has continued to attack targets, it says, are linked to the group.
Lebanon says more than 330 people, including civilians,
have been killed by Israeli strikes across the country since the CISO.
fire came into effect. Our correspondent Hugo Byshega has been to some of the hardest-hit areas
in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel to see for himself how residents there are living
under the constant fear of Israeli airstrikes. To travel there, our team had to inform Hezbollah,
but the group didn't interfere with their reporting.
Southern Lebanon is the heartland of Hezbollah, but they're not.
not safe here. They remain
a target for Israel, despite a ceasefire.
In the village of Frun,
a car has been hit.
This airstrike happened about
an hour ago, possibly
another targeted assassination.
An attacks like this happened
almost every day across this country.
Israel says it is targeting
Hezbollah's efforts to rebuild
its capabilities, but the
constant bombing means
no one is feeling safe.
The village of Baitleaf is on alert.
Israel has accused Hezbollah
of using dozens of places here for military purposes
and has threatened to take action.
Isat Hamud is the local mayor.
No, no, no, no.
There are no militants and no weapons here.
And I can be held responsible for what I'm saying.
One of the locations that appeared to be suspicious
was a house across the street.
Is Hezbollah using this building for military purposes?
You are the BBC, you have cameras, you are journalists, and the owner is here.
Haider insisted on taking us to his family house.
Outside, a banner remembered his brother, a Hezbollah fighter, killed in the war.
It's difficult for us to confirm what could be happening here.
He wanted to prove that there was nothing wrong.
People seemed desperate for any protection,
such as the fear of becoming an Israeli target.
We want stability.
We don't want war or anything related to it.
We are done.
We are done with this matter.
Thank you.
Just months ago,
you would have been almost impossible
to have this kind of conversation with residents
without organising interviews through Hezbollah
or being approached by Hezbollah minders.
It is perhaps an indication of the new reality here in the South.
Hezbollah was battered in the war.
The Lebanese military is now in places once dominated by the group.
But Hezbollah insists it will not disarm,
a standoff that has gripped this country.
That grey concrete wall separates Lebanon from Israel.
And those hills in the distance are inside Israeli territory.
Now, many villages on the Lebanese side of the border
have been completely destroyed.
This is now a buffer zone between the countries.
In a deserted village called Yaron,
we meet Nayef, one of its last resident.
At all times, we hear in Israeli drone circling overhead.
We've got every reason to be afraid, because as you can see, no one else is here.
You will live in a bit, and we'll be left alone.
There is a Hezbollah flag right next to your house.
Do you think the Hezbollah must disarm?
I find it hard that they will give it up.
But one also wants to live.
This is no life.
Hesbollah remains defiant, but some supporters are getting tired.
The group is trying to survive, and a battle for its future may be emerging within.
That report by Hugo Bershika.
This year's Miss Universe beauty pageant has been mired in a series of controversies,
including an official publicly berating Miss Mexico before later having to apologize.
And now, just days after the contest in Thailand ended, with Miss Mexico being crowned as a surprise
winner, it's been hit by a fresh scandal. The Mexican co-owner of the contest has been accused
of drugs and arms trafficking and his Thai counterpart has been accused of fraud. Mimi Swaybi
has the details. The majority owner of the Miss Universe Corporation, Rao Rocha Cantu,
is accused of supplying weapons to drug trafficking cartels across Mexico, including the
Gulf cartel, as well as stealing and distributing fuel from Guatemala.
He faces multiple charges tied to what investigators have described as a complex
multinational criminal network allegedly operating for years under the guise of legitimate
business structures. Mr. Roshakantu entered a witness corporation arrangement shortly after
the warrant for his arrest was issued, signaling the potential of reduced penalties in
exchange for a testimony implicating other participants. It comes as another co-oerone,
is reported to have been the subject of an arrest warrant issued by a Thai court over
alleged fraud. It's been a troubling year for the Miss Universe contest. Chaos long reigned
over the competition before Miss Mexico was crowned the victor. Judges resigned and there were
allegations of vote rigging. Mexico's contestant, Fatima Bosch, made headlines by walking out
of an event after being publicly criticised by the organiser.
Mimi Swayby.
Still to come as underwater
noise disrupts ocean life.
It really affects all components of the ecosystem, from plankton to fish and marine mammals.
There are calls to turn down the volume.
Following a recent series of mass abductions in Africa's most populous nation,
the Nigerian president has declared a nationwide security emergency.
One of the kidnappings in northern Nigeria last week saw more than 300 children taken from a Catholic school.
This comes at a time when President Trump has alleged that Christians in Nigeria are being targeted,
an allegation strongly refuted by the government who say Islamist extremists like Boko Haram
target Muslims, Christians and those of no faith alike.
From Abuja, here's our Africa correspondent, Miani Jones.
With this new state of emergency, it constitutes one of the first.
of the strongest set of security policies that President Bola Métinabu has implemented since the
resurgence of this wave of mass kidnappings in the last couple of weeks. Among some of the
decisions that he wants to implement, he wants 50,000 additional police officers recruited to help
tackle the security crisis. He also wants to deploy forest guards to wooded areas around the
country. Now, that's because a lot of the armed gangs that have traditionally kidnapped people
in rural areas, tend to keep them in forests until a ransom is paid.
So he says he doesn't want those guys to have anywhere to hide.
Other policies he's implemented is he wants police officers who used to look after VIPs
to receive crash training on how to deal with high-risk areas.
And he's also controversially recommended that local authorities avoid building schools
in areas that are too remote.
Now, northern Nigeria is a part of the country that already has devastating.
statingly low levels of access to education.
And many could argue that this policy would make it even harder
for some of the poorest children in the country to get access to school.
And Bola Ametinabu introducing these policies at a time when he's coming under intense criticism
from rights groups, from the U.S., and from the Catholic Church,
for failing to get a handle on a security crisis that has been many years in the making,
to bring back our girls, activists group,
who drew attention to the kidnapping of over 200 schools.
girls in 2014 say that these recent kidnappings are not isolated incidents. They're part of a wider
pattern and that the government after 11 years should have found a new more permanent solution for
this. The president will be hoping that this new state of emergency will be that solution.
Mione Jones in Nigeria. Moving further west, the small nation of Guinea-Bissau on Africa's coast
has seen numerous coups and attempted coups since independence. And now in a scene that has become
all too familiar across West Africa.
Gunfire was heard near the presidential palace on Wednesday
and a military spokesman appeared on state television
to announce that the army had taken control
and the president Umaro Sizoko Emballo
had been arrested to quote, protect national integrity.
The military command of military high command for the restoration
of national and order in public.
The military high command for the restoration
of national security and public order has just taken control of the powers of state of the
Republic of Guinea-Bissau. The military high command is reacting to the discovery of a plan
for the destabilization of our country. This comes three days after a hotly contested presidential
election in which the main opposition candidate was barred from standing. And a day before
the results of that vote were due to be released. Our correspondent, Richard Kugoy, is monitoring
the situation from Nairobi.
have military officers who have mounted checkpoints across the city, and the residents have
actually expressed fear even of just stepping outside. The main opposition party candidate
was disqualified, and it seems like there has been loyalty within the security forces of
people who perhaps sympathized up with his cause, and this could have contributed now to the
situation that we are currently witnessing. So the fact that actually he was excluded from
participating in the election process, then it seems like there are divisions even within the
security forces itself, because what we have not been able actually to verify so far is that
also some senior military officials we are hearing that they have also actually been detained
by the faction that has taken full control of the country. In the past, say maybe five years,
there have been attempted coups, even as President Sisoco has been in power, some time in 2020
and most recently in December 2023.
Yeah, so it's a country that has had struggles
in just ensuring political stability.
It's a bit unpredictable.
In fact, just one of our correspondents mentioned to us
that a resident when they had of gunshots
near the presidential palace said he was not actually surprised
because this is something that they have increasingly gotten used to.
So that's really the challenge that this country,
very small coastal nation between Guinea,
and Gambia and Senegal has been experiencing for the past nearly four decades.
Richard Kegoy, there are growing calls for our oceans to be quieter.
From the Arctic to the Great Barrier Reef, scientists have documented how excessive noise
is damaging the fragile ecosystem.
And at an assembly of the UN's International Maritime Organisation here in London,
experts have pushed for a new focus on the design and operation of ships.
Lindy Wargart is a marine biologist based on the Nova Scotia coast of Canada.
She explained the impact of underwater noise to Julian Warwicka.
It is a very pervasive problem because sound travels so far and so fast underwater.
So it has a huge potential area of impact.
And it really affects all components of the ecosystem from plankton to fish and marine mammals.
There's just general stress.
There's a reduction in food finding.
Animals can't hear their prey.
They can't stay in contact with their group members or their offspring.
With every decibel of noise increase, the communication space just shrinks.
A lot of these whale species like fin whales and blue whales are solitary animals.
And the only way they can find mates is through sounds.
So, you know, that has huge implications to the health of their populations, obviously.
And this is noise, what, from ships, engines, propellers, most obviously?
Yeah, shipping is a big one, commercial shipping, even recreational boating.
Then there's also seismic air guns that are used to find oil and gas deposits underwater.
And then there's like pile driving for wind farms and other construction.
and then things like naval sonar.
So as you highlight those various examples,
I mean, can you point to ways in which each one of those
could go about their business more quietly?
Shipping is one of the easiest ones
because that is unintentional sound.
And generally what makes ships quieter
also makes them more efficient, fewer emissions of greenhouse gases and so on.
First of all, slowing down is the biggest, biggest,
solution, but then there's also technological modifications. I would say the seismic
air gun industry is the worst at recognizing and being willing to make changes. The shipping
industry is more open. The pile driving industry is particularly open for wind farms, I would
say, and the Navy is in between. Lindy Wildgart. It's been a remarkable turnaround in a short
space of time, one of the biggest record labels in the world, Warner Music Group, has gone from
suing the makers of AI Music Software Suno over copyright to ending the legal battle and
announcing a partnership instead. The label says it will let the AI music platform use the names,
voices and likenesses of its artists as long as they consent. So what does this mean for human
musicians and songwriters? Our reporter Will Chalk has been finding out. It's tech that even a few years ago
to most of us was unimaginable.
You log on, ask it to write a song in whatever style you like,
say Ed Shearren-esque pop,
and it will pump out an infinite number
of fully formed, completely original compositions.
Like any AI model, Suno's technology is trained on what's already out there.
And as it stands, the artists whose songs it learns from
get nothing whatsoever in return.
It was this problem that, a year ago,
led Warner Music Group to start legal action against Suno,
describing the tech as wholesale,
theft and something that threatened the very ecosystem of music. They weren't alone. Billy Eilish,
Nikki Minaj and Katie Perry were among more than 200 artists who signed an open letter
calling for the predatory use of AI to stop. So how did we get from that to Warner Brothers
announcing a first-of-a-kind partnership with the very company it had previously threatened?
Well, firstly, it looks like there have been some attempts to address the potential issues. One of the
Big fears is that AI-generated music, because it's infinite in nature, will flood the market.
Suno says from next year it will make people pay to download the songs they make and give them a monthly limit, too.
Warner, for its part, says it will not only compensate artists, but also give them the option to opt out completely.
But is there also a cultural shift going on within the industry?
Jamie Rodigan is a Grammy-nominated producer and songwriter and one half of duo-crate classics.
He told me, as long as artists are compensated, he doesn't see a problem with Suno.
I enjoy using AI in the creative process if I start writing a piece of music and need an idea or maybe some harmonies.
I may upload a track to AI and AI throws me back some different variations or different examples of how the track could develop.
Jamie's background is electronic music.
So you could argue it makes sense that he would be on board.
But John McClure is part of indie band Reverend and The Makers.
His music is rooted in guitars,
grit and being genuine.
I honestly expected he would have the opposite opinion to Jamie,
but I was wrong.
I have a piece of music which is 17 minutes long.
A lot of the time, when I send this piece of music to people,
they're like, that's the best thing I've ever heard.
And then when I tell them it's AI,
or I use AI in some way to help it come along,
they suddenly hate it then.
And I'm like, has it actually fundamentally changed the thing?
The piece of art, the thing that you were listening to, it's not that big a deal.
There are still countless musicians with very real worries about AI.
But John and Jamie seem to show that this isn't as simple as a good versus evil battle.
And there are artists out there more than happy to make music alongside a machine.
We'll talk.
And that's all from us for now, but there will be a new edition of the Global News podcast later.
If you want to comment on this podcast, you can send us an email.
the address is Global Podcast at BBC.co.org.
This edition was mixed by Rosenwyn Dorell, and the producer was Arienne Cotchi.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Jeanette Jalil. Until next time, goodbye.
