Global News Podcast - Drones become Hezbollah's primary weapon against Israel
Episode Date: May 29, 2026The BBC reports from the Israel-Lebanon border, where fibre-optic drones have become Hezbollah's primary weapon of war. Also, Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered Israeli troops to take control of even more... of the Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, the UN has added Israel and Russia to its blacklist for sexual violence in conflict zones. A 21-year-old Austrian man has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for planning a jihadist attack on a Taylor Swift concert. The people of Kenya are coming to terms with one of the worst school fires in the country's history. Jannik Sinner is out of the French Open in the biggest shock of the tennis tournament so far, but how much was Europe's heatwave to blame? And an underwater recording of bearded seals is named the sound of the year. 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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30 years after two civilian airplanes were shot down,
why is the U.S. government now bringing charges against the former Cuban president, Raul Castro?
I'm Asma Khalid, and I host the Global Story podcast from the BBC.
Cuba's government is calling this all a political maneuver,
but the Cuban exile community in Miami calls it justice.
Thirty years in the making.
Is the U.S. setting the stage for a military intervention?
For more, check out the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
Hello, I'm Ankara Desai, and in the early hours of Friday, the 29th of May, these are our main stories.
As Israel intensifies attacks in Lebanon, we have a special report on how Hezbollah is responding with a new drone threat of its own.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he's ordered the military to further increase its occupation of the Gaza Strip, contradicting the terms of the ceasefire deal.
The United Nations has added Israel and Russia to its blacklist on sexual violence in conflict.
Also in this podcast, an Austrian court has handed a 15-year jail sentence to a man who planned a jihadist attack at a Taylor Swift concert.
And the heat wave across Europe affects the French Open.
You heard tennis player today saying he was dizzy.
That's one of the symptoms of heat stress or heat illness.
Janik Sena suffers a shock defeat after feeling unwell on court.
We begin in Lebanon, where leaders there have sharply criticized deadly Israeli attacks
near UNESCO protected historic landmarks.
The Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said nothing could justify ongoing strong.
strikes on the Taya and Nabatia regions and the destruction of their landmarks.
He said Israel orders for residents to evacuate sways of southern Lebanon
amounted to a collective punishment condemned by all international norms and laws.
Israel has intensified attacks on Lebanon in recent days and has also hit the capital,
Beirut, saying it's targeting Hezbollah.
But the Iran-backed group is fighting back.
It's developed a new drone.
that has become the main threat faced by Israel's soldiers in southern Lebanon
and on civilians in northern Israel.
The BBC's Lucy Williamson has been to the Israeli border community of Shomera.
And a brief warning, this piece begins with air raid warning sounds.
Minutes after arriving in Israel's border town of Shomera, a warning.
Explosive fiber optic drones, the newest threat from Hezbollah in Lebanon.
It's close to the border.
the warnings and the weapons come seconds apart.
In the fifth?
They used to tell us.
They've just gone off.
There are a Hespolar drone attacks here and all the time.
And all Israel's firepower, it's occupation of Lebanon.
Can't stop them.
Go.
We've just ducked inside the bomb shelter here in Shemara
because we've had three separate alerts.
This community has been the target of HesBelar drones over and over again.
From the entrance to the shelter, we scan the sky,
but there's no sign of a drone.
Israel's army later told us it lost contact with it,
but that an Israeli soldier was killed in a separate drone attack outside Shomerah an hour earlier.
Outside, near a bus stop, hit by a drone this week,
Shomera's council chief, Zami Zanetti, told me there was sometimes no warning at all.
The problem is you don't feel them coming, he said.
You're sitting there and suddenly it arrives.
And if you run,
It follows you.
The day before we arrived,
Shomeras security team were chased by a drone,
firing at it right above the house of Amichai Ben David,
a peach farmer with seven children,
whose roof already has a large hole from a Hezbollah rocket attack last year.
It came and we rushed into the house.
The soldiers, who were here outside,
shot at it and managed to knock it out of the air,
and saved us, thank God.
missile stopped because of the ceasefire, and drones started coming instead.
Despite the ceasefire, Israel's artillery still fire across the border. Its forces still occupy
large areas of southern Lebanon, and its Prime Minister this week vowed to deal Hezbollah
a crushing blow. But none of it stops the small, low-flying fiber-optic drones.
Israel's military has been criticized for not learning from Ukrainian forces, facing the same threat
for two years.
On a visit to the northern border today, Israel's military spokesman Effie Deferrin addressed the threat.
We are constantly formulating responses to the drone threat.
The best minds in the IDF and outside it are working tirelessly.
There are no limits on the use of strength and resources when it comes to the security of our troops and our civilians.
Several Israeli companies are working on ways to intercept the drones, including specialist ammunition,
and a project that links sensors to computers on soldiers' personal weapons,
which can lock on to targets and provide a firing window.
But Sarid Zahavi, head of Israel's Alma Research Centre,
which monitors the conflict,
says Hezbollah is increasingly using its drones to target civilian communities like Shomerah.
They intensified the amount of attacks that are border crossing into Israel.
I think that it's direct order from Iran.
and this is all with the background of what is happening with the deal.
Iran wants to see a situation that Israel is attacking Hezbollah and everything explodes here.
Everything goes back to the beginning and the regular Iranian back and forth.
A return to full conflict with both Hezbollah and its backer Iran would please some in Shomera.
Along with many Israelis, Council Chief Sami Zanetti is frustrated at the U.S. desire to wind up the region.
I'd like the country to take a brave decision and finish off Hezbollah, he told me.
Today, our hands are tied by President Trump.
Lucy Williamson, reporting.
Meanwhile, on another front of the conflict in the Middle East,
the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered his troops to take control of even more of the Gaza Strip.
Far beyond what was agreed in the U.S. brokered ceasefire deal,
with Hamas last October.
Speaking at an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank,
Mr Netanyahu said he wants the IDF to occupy 70% of Gaza.
We are currently squeezing Hamas.
We now control 60% of the territory of the strip.
You know this.
We were at 50.
We moved to 60.
My directive is to go to 70.
We're pressing them from all sides.
We're dealing with the remnants.
Since the truce between Israel and Hamas,
hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza have been killed in Israeli strikes.
There are fears that the proposed Israeli expansion in the Palestinian territory
could result in thousands more civilians being cut off from their homes.
Israel does not allow the BBC to report freely from Gaza.
A correspondent, Emineda, is following developments from Jerusalem.
The ceasefire process in Gaza has ground to a halt.
Hamas hasn't disarmed.
The Israeli military has killed more than 900 Palestinians since the ceasefire deal came into effect seven months ago.
You have Israel still accused of blocking a Palestinian technocratic committee from coming in to take over the administration of the Gaza Strip.
And Israeli troops, of course, haven't withdrawn.
We're seeing them doing the opposite.
Israel is insisting it is meeting its aid obligations, its humanitarian obligations.
But the UN and aid agencies are saying the opposite, that much of the aid,
remains blocked. And this board of peace that is backed by the US, created by the US, has shown itself
ineffective in brokering a way forward, finding solutions in order to progress the ceasefire process.
Now, there's a couple of things that should be noted. One, Israel is very anxious about this emerging
US-Iran ceasefire deal. Of course, Iran is insisting that the deal should include a ceasefire
on all fronts in the war in the region. That would include Lebanon. It would include
Gaza and for Israel, its government, it's thinking that this is going to stop it, being able to
declare military victory in all of these different arenas on the terms that it wants.
And then you also have this trend in Israeli politics of people who want to see Gazans,
Palestinians forced out of the Gaza Strip.
Just yesterday you had the Minister of Defense Israel Katz vowing once again to implement
what he called voluntary emigration from the Gaza Strip at the Krored.
time, which for Palestinians, they read that as a euphemism for forced ethnic cleansing. And it should also
be borne in mind that Israel is entering election season. So Prime Minister Nessin Yahoo and the other
ministers want to speak to their different audiences and they want to show that they are still calling
the shots. And all of this must be held in mind when you look at what Israel is doing in Gaza and
elsewhere in the region, be it Iran, be it Lebanon. Emineda reporting.
The United Nations has added Israel and Russia to its blacklist on sexual violence in conflict.
In an annual report, the UN says that despite warnings,
it's continued to document patterns of sexual violence in the wars in Ukraine and Gaza
and the occupied Palestinian territories.
A correspondent in New York, Patigcha Giliel.
Tommy Moore.
We have obtained a copy of this report,
and it has been shared with the Security Council as well by the Secretary of,
General's office, I'm told. It says that in general the cases of conflict-related sexual
violence went up significantly last year in 2025 as compared to 2024. And as you were saying
just now, Israeli and Russian security forces have been added to this blacklist on sexual
violence and conflict. In Israel, particularly, they say they have documented patterns of
sexual violence against Palestinians detained in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.
They say they documented cases against 14 men, seven women, nine boys and one girl from Gaza
and the West Bank. These violations consisted of rape, gang rape and violence to genitals,
among others. But it's important to note that the UN says that these cases are indicative
of a multi-year trend rather than a comprehensive report
since they say that the Israeli government denies them access to detention centres.
In response, the Israeli ambassador to the UN denounced this report.
He called it unacceptable.
He said that it was unacceptable to put Israel and Hamas terrorists, as he called them,
on the same list.
And any reaction from Russia? You mentioned Israel there?
We haven't seen any formal reaction.
action from Russia yet. But again, this report highlights sexual violence in the occupied
Ukrainian territories and even within Russia. And the UN says that Russia continues to deny access
to UN monitors in its territory. The report goes on to say 310 cases of conflict related
sexual violence were documented. These include an overwhelming number of men, which is 288.
men, 26 women and six girls, the UN accusing that these were all perpetrated by Russian
armed and security forces. And just very briefly, for any victims, will any justice be
served or handed out? The thing is that this is not a legal procedure, this is not a legal
document. This is basically what the Security Council had mandated the UNSG office to do.
That being said, these things can be taken into evidence from what I understand in legal procedures if there are to be any.
But as we have seen that a lot of such UN resolutions, mandates, they do put moral pressure, but don't seem to go too far where it comes to actual legal repercussions.
Pridiccia Gilliel reporting.
Still to come in this podcast, the winner.
of the sound of the year.
We tell you more about the award
and what that sound actually is.
30 years after two civilian airplanes were shot down,
why is the U.S. government now bringing charges
against the former Cuban president, Raul Castro?
I'm Asma Khalid, and I host the Global Story podcast from the BBC.
Cuba's government is calling this all a political maneuver,
but the Cuban exile community in Miami calls it justice.
30 years in the making.
Is the U.S. setting the stage for a military,
intervention. For more, check out the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast. Back in 2024, 200,000 Taylor Swift fans were left disappointed
when the Austrian leg of her era's tour was cancelled due to a bomb threat. Now the man who
planned that attack has been sentenced to 15 years in prison. A correspondent, Bethany Bell,
was at court in Wiener Neustadt. This 21-year-old
man, he's only been named as Baron A, because that's in line with Austrian privacy laws.
He was found guilty to plotting the attack on the Taylor Swift concert.
The court heard how he'd tried to make a bomb, how he'd tried to buy weapons illegally,
how he'd sworn allegiance to the militant group Islamic State.
But these were not the only charges he faced.
He was also implicated in the same trial of a separate plot with two of his
friends to carry out attacks in Middle Eastern cities, plots in Dubai, Istanbul and also in Mecca.
It's very rare for Austria to deal with the terror-related issues like this.
Has it little changes in how security services respond to potential threats?
It's not the first time Austria has been faced with terrorism.
Vienna saw a terrorist attack in 2020 when a man ran through the center of the city with a gun,
shooting a number of people.
but certainly I think there was shock when the Taylor Swift concerts were targeted.
And it's interesting to note that it was discovered through a tip-off by the CIA.
Austria, because it's not seen as many attacks as a number of other places,
had perhaps, you know, got used to being a more peaceful place.
But this, of course, has reminded people that attacks can happen anywhere.
Bethany Bell reporting.
The people of Kenya are coming to terms with one of the worst school fires in the country's history.
Sixteen young girls died when a blaze tore through a boarding school in the Rift Valley town of Gilgill, northwest of the capital, Nairobi.
More than 70 other children were injured as they fled.
Some parents are still waiting for confirmation.
Their daughters are amongst the dead.
With an investigation now underway, the incident has sparked a debate in Kenya about schools.
safety after a series of previous similar tragedies.
A correspondent Thomas McQuarnum sent this report from Gilgill.
The wailing of a grieving parent.
An all-too-familiar cry in Kenya's boarding schools.
She's wailing for her daughter,
who's among 16 girls who died at Otomishi Girls' Academy here in central Kenya.
Police say the fire started just after midnight on Thursday.
Some parents had the news on the television.
This elderly woman is relieved her.
granddaughter is alive.
I came to pick my granddaughter after seeing the news on the TV that children have died in the
fire. We were shocked. I thank God that I have found my grandchild safe. Not far from them is
another parent. She's too weak to let us record an interview. I'm not strong enough, she tells
us. Next to her is a bucket with her daughter's schoolbooks. It was 2 p.m. in the afternoon,
and she had been waiting since 6 a.m. to reunite with her.
her daughter, she's losing hope.
Just tell me, is she
alive or dead? That's what I want to know.
Please!
Please, tell me.
This man is demanding
to know the way about his daughter.
He's been here since morning, and the police are not
giving him answers.
He's one of the many parents
who've been waiting all day for answers.
They're now taking out the bodies
of the 16th.
The police are
have cordoned off the area. Everyone's behind the line. The yellow tapes.
Several fires have occurred in Kenyan boarding schools over the years. In September
2024, a dormitory at a boys school in a nearby region caught fire at night, killing 21
boys. Kenya's Education Cabinet Secretary announced safety inspections at all boarding schools.
The cause of this fire is still unknown. I just want to say that as a country, this is a serious
tragedy. The investigations are going to be thorough.
The investigation continues here. The school closed indefinitely and the government
pathologist is searching the ground. For the children and parents of this school, an imaginable
pain. For Kenya, another tragedy in a school dormitory. More questions about the safety
of the country's children. More calls inevitable for more to be done to protect them.
Thomas McQuana reporting. Well, as anyone who's
live through a heat wave, like the one Western Europe is currently experiencing, we'll know
even simple things like getting some sleep or popping to the shops can be a chore.
Several hours on a tennis court, playing at the very highest level, is another thing entirely.
No wonder then that the heat is a big talking point at the French Open,
and it's led to a huge upset too.
World Men's number one, Yannick Sinner, melted under the blazing sun to go out in the second round.
Our reporter will chalk. How's the story?
It's important to stress here just how close Yanik Sinner was to winning this match against Argentina's Juan Manuel Serundolo.
At 5-1-up in the third set, Sinner was just four points away.
But then he started dropping points, complained of feeling like he was going to vomit,
and had to take a medical timeout.
Fast forward 90 minutes, and it had gone the other way.
Juan Manuel Serundalo had gone on a winning streak and taken the match.
in five sets. So how much were the high Paris temperatures to blame? Well, according to Sina himself,
they weren't. I mean, it was warm, but it was okay. You know, it was not like I was dying because
of the heat. The Italian insisted he'd been feeling ill since that morning. But given he's struggled
in high temperatures before and the nature of his collapse, it seems unlikely the sun had nothing
to do with it. On Wednesday, Czech player Jakub Mensik had to use a wheelchair.
after collapsing on court.
Dr. Christina Dahl is from US non-profit climate central.
We know that there are dangerous effects on the human body.
So, you know, you heard tennis player today saying he was dizzy.
That's one of the symptoms of heat stress or heat illness.
And that can escalate all the way up to heat stroke, which can be fatal.
But is there another way to look at this?
What have I told you some people look at athletes struggling in the heat and think you should have trained harder?
I have had that thought recently.
Manika Gamble there.
You might be thinking, who is she?
And what right does she have to judge these high-level competitors?
My quads have seized up completely.
I just will stop for a while.
Now I'm back moving again.
Well, she's a veteran of several extreme ultramarathans
through places like the Dunes of Namibia
covering 150-plus miles in temperatures topping 50 degrees,
Yeah, fair enough.
So how did she do it?
So about two months before the race began, I joined a sauna studio.
And so for two months, I would go to the sauna every single day.
I would do my workout sometimes in the sauna.
Yeah, and I just really built up my tolerance as much as I could.
The people who work with athletes like Minneka Gamble insist bodies can be trained to compete in extreme heat.
But if climate change continues, we're left with the question,
do we want to live in a world where every sport becomes an endurance sport?
Will Chalk reporting.
The Sound of the Year Awards are designed to try and encourage people to listen to the world more consciously
and celebrate sound in all its forms.
Matthew Herbert, a musician and producer who founded the Radiophonic Institute that runs the Awards
has been telling Sean Lay about the global entries.
So this was recorded in a private garden outside of Tehran.
this year. And there's something extraordinary going on in this sound, I think, as well, which is
it's not just, we're not just listening to one thing, we're not just listening to bombing, but we're
hearing a number of things going on. So we're hearing the bombing at a distance, which has a kind of
an interesting thing because we're listening at it from a distance as well. But you can also hear a
kind of distress in the natural sounds like birds are distressed too. And whilst it appears to be one
sound, it's actually quite a sort of layered narrative of different sounds going on.
This was recorded by Tom Fisher
and it's the sound of tree hopper insects
and he modified a contact microphone
this is a microphone that you're physically attached to a source
rather than held at a distance
and he attached it to a stalk of a plant
and you can hear it very lightweight
yes very small very sensitive
and you lose some of the high frequencies
so it's quite muffled but you sort of get like
oh, oh, hello.
You know, it really
it really feels like you're putting your ear
into an entirely other world,
like this insect world.
You think, blimey, if that's just one stem
in one rainforest, like what are we missing
around the world that we can't hear?
Tell us about the winner and why you chose it.
So the winner of this year is recorded by Matthias Arignon
and it's called Songs of the Bearded Seals.
and it's recorded in the Arctic Ocean during a 90-day window,
which is the breeding season for these particular seals.
And this is an incredible sound.
We're so used to so much noise at the moment, you know, just political noise.
A sound like this, I think, really reminds you that actually we share this planet.
These other mammals and these other plants and these other insects,
they all have their needs and their wants and their desires,
and they need their space.
too. And I think that's one of the things we were drawn to this year is to sort of look
slightly differently at all the political turmoil that's going on and trying to hear
hear through that, cut through that noise somehow. Matthew Herbert speaking to Sean Lay.
And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at global
podcast at BBC.com.com. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag
Global News Pod. And don't forget our sister podcast the Global Story, which goes in depth and
beyond the headlines on one big story. This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by
Russell Newlove, and the producer was Mazafra Shakir. The editor is Karen Martin, and I'm
Ankara to sign. Until next time, goodbye.
30 years after two civilian airplanes were shot down, why is the U.S. government now
bringing charges against the former Cuban president, Raul Castro? I'm Asma Khalid, and I host
the global story podcast from the BBC.
Cuba's government is calling this all a political maneuver,
but the Cuban exile community in Miami calls it justice,
30 years in the making.
Is the U.S. setting the stage for a military intervention?
For more, check out the global story on BBC.com
or wherever you get your podcasts.
