Global News Podcast - First funerals take place for Australia shooting victims
Episode Date: December 17, 2025Naveed Akram, the surviving suspect of the Bondi Beach mass shooting, is charged with fifty-nine offences including fifteen counts of murder, as well as committing a terrorist act. He was charged at h...is bedside in hospital, after coming out of a coma. His father, Sajid Akram, was shot dead by police during the attack, which targeted Australia's Jewish community at an event celebrating the first night of Hanukkah. Also: the head of the World Health Organisation calls for the immediate release of health workers who are believed to be detained in south-western Sudan. The authorities in the Indian capital, Delhi, roll out strict measures to curb air pollution, that has been in the severe category for the past few days. The tiny mountain kingdom of Bhutan has announced it will spend a billion dollars of the country's reserves to build what it's calling a "mindfulness city." And scientists warn that nature photographers are causing irreparable harm to the endangered Galaxy Frog in India. 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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Hello, Greg Jenner here, host of Your Dead to Me.
In my new family-friendly podcast series, Dead Funny History,
historical figures come back to life for just about long enough to argue with me,
tell us their life stories, and sometimes get on my nerves.
There's 15 lovely episodes to unwrap,
including the life of Ramsey's the Great, Josephine Baker,
and the history of football, plus much, much more.
So, this Christmas, give your ears, a treat with Dead Funny History.
You can find it in the You're Dead to Me feed on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson and at 16 hours GMT on Wednesday the 17th of December, these are our main stories.
Australian police have charged the surviving suspect in the Bondi Beach mass shooting with murder and terrorism offences.
More than 70 health workers are.
detained in Sedan's troubled Darfur region.
The entertainment giant Warner Brothers has told shareholders to reject a hostile takeover bit
by its rival Paramount worth more than $108 billion.
Also in this podcast,
The Italians call me the crazy Englishman.
They think the project is a bit daft,
but they've all been willing to share their knowledge, share their passion.
Climate change makes commercial olive growing possible thousands of,
of kilometres from its traditional Mediterranean home.
Funerals have been held for two of the 15 victims of Sunday's mass shootings at a Jewish
festival on Sydney's famous Bondi Beach in Australia. Both of them were rabbis.
Relatives and friends expressed their grief, shock and anger over the deaths, while others
have spoken of the need for reconciliation. Katie Watson is in Bondi.
There's a very heavy police presence.
here at the funeral of Elie Schlanger, a British-born rabbi.
There were bags being checked.
The roads are shut off.
Just a short while ago, a hearse pulled up and a coffin was removed.
They laid over a black velvet shroud with the star of David on it,
and the coffin was taken inside.
There were mourners weeping as it entered the synagogue.
More mourners now are coming down, and a ceremony is about to begin.
we have all been hoping over the last three days
that we would wake up
and somehow realize
that this was all a terrible dream
we can't wish that anymore
we are here
raw
and devastated
crying in unbearable pain
along with the entire Jewish people
and all good people across Australia and the world over.
That was Rabbi Aaron Moss speaking.
Elie Schlanger's father-in-law, Rabbi Ullman,
was also one of those who gave an emotional address.
And you became everything to me, my hands, my feet.
Ellie was the best husband,
the best father.
the best son
we all lost the sun
hundreds of mourners are now
on the steps of the synagogue
as the service ends
the coffin's being put into a hearse
now it's the chance for public
to pay their respects to rabbi
any schlanger as the funeral possession
goes through Bondi.
Katie Watson reporting.
Police have now charged the surviving suspect,
Navid Akram, with 15 murders as well as terrorism offences.
His father, Sajid Akram, was shot dead by police during the attack.
The Premier of New South Wales, Chris Minns,
is recalling the State Parliament to press for stronger gun control laws.
I heard more about the investigation from Phil Mercer, who's in Sydney.
Naveed Akram is in hospital charged with 59 fences overall, including 15 counts of murder.
This was a man who the police say was one of the perpetrators here at Bondi Beach on Sunday.
He was in a coma.
The police were waiting for him to wake up.
He did so on Tuesday.
Charges were laid today.
And we also understand that this man did appear in court via a video link.
So the legal process is underway, and there is speculation that the real meat of the court's process will begin perhaps in April of next year.
So it certainly won't be a quick process, but so far, 59 offences this man is facing 15 counts of murder.
A gun control law is going to be tightened as a result of all of this.
I think what we're seeing is an intensification of the political fallout from,
this atrocity at Bondi Beach. We have the federal government and the state governments of
New South Wales promising to reform Australia's gun laws to try to make it harder for individuals
to hold multiple firearms. There could also be restrictions on the types of weapons people can
hold and a revamp of the licensing system. So the governments, federal and state want to
toughen those laws. But the critics of the federal government say that this is all a ploy to
divert attention away from what they say is the Prime Minister's failure to address a rising
tide of anti-Semitism. So on the one hand, you have the grief that follows an attack like this
and the funerals and the impact on society, but also you've got an intensifying political
situation as a consequence of this attack as well.
More than 70 health workers have been detained in Sudan's war-ravaged region of Darfur.
There are among 5,000 people who are being held in the city of Niala, the capital of South Defoe,
by the paramilitary rapid support forces.
Now, the World Health Organization has called for the medical staff to be released.
I heard more from our correspondent, Chingai Nyoka, who's covering the story from Harari.
I spoke to the spokesperson for the Sudan Doctors Network a while ago.
and he says that they are part of a group that were detained,
and these are prisoners that have come from Khartoum, the capital of Sudan,
as well as from Al-Fasha, which fell to the rapid support forces about two months ago.
What he says is that, according to local sources in Niala,
which is the headquarters for the RSF,
and where these people are being held,
About 19,000 people in total are being held in two prisons.
And as you can imagine, the conditions they say are deplorable.
Those 19,000, many of them are former police officers, security forces,
but then their concern is about the civilians who are being held about 5,000 in total,
of which 73 are doctors.
According to the Sudan Doctors Network, which issued a report,
About a week ago, they say that the conditions are deteriorated in these prisons.
They're overcrowded.
There's a lack of medicines, a lack of medical care, that there's a disease outbreak.
There's not enough food, not enough safe drinking water and poor sanitation.
And they say that there's also an outbreak of cholera which has caused deaths within these prisons.
And the World Health Organization, I think that's why they've stepped in.
They say that they are trying to verify that.
information about the detentions and about the conditions, but they have described this as
deeply concerning that there are doctors and civilians that are being held.
And briefly, no sign that the conflict is coming to an end despite various peace initiatives.
Absolutely not. And I think that's why there's such concern. This has been described as the
worst humanitarian disaster in the world. The Sudan force army and the RSAF have been fighting for
close to three years now, and tens of thousands of people have been killed and millions of people
displaced. Shingai Nyoka. Aid workers say heavy rain has created widespread hardship in Gaza,
washing away thousands of tents and further damaging buildings already affected by Israel's
two-year offensive. They say Palestinians who have been displaced by the conflict have been
living in a continual state of emergency, battling against the elements to stay warm and dry. Jonathan Cricks
is the head of communications for UNICEF Palestine.
Last night was really horrendous for the families.
I mean, the heavy rains were so intense
that we could see 10, 15 centimeters of water
and the winds were so strong.
And when I drove this morning,
I could see many, many people
were trying with buckets to remove some of the water.
Most of the people while living in tents in Gaza,
they have been displaced multiple times.
And when you're displaced during those two years of war, you're just moving with what you have on your back.
You don't have the time to pack a lot of clothes.
So most of the children that I'm seeing, you know, they don't have change of clothes or very little change of clothes.
When I was seeing them this morning, their clothes were damped.
I could see parents trying to dry some of the blankets they had.
But, you know, it's been raining almost all time in the past four or five days.
So it's extremely difficult to keep the children dry.
and with temperature about 7 degrees, 8 degrees Celsius at night,
we are extremely concerned about children getting sick
or even worse dying from hypothermia.
These tents are not really high-quality tents at all.
There are tents which are makeshift tents made with like a piece of tarpaulins,
a piece of plastic, nailed to a fragile wood structure.
So the day before yesterday, I was on the road moving from Gaza City
to the south of Gaza, and I could see like the heavy winds
and families trying just to keep the tent in place
because it was simply blown away by the strong winds.
And we're not talking about a few people here.
We're talking about three-quarter or one million people
who are living in tents.
I don't have the exact figure,
but we're talking about large numbers.
So the situation after those days of rains is extremely concerning.
In terms of what aid is being provided
and what help can you say of that?
We have been able, especially since the ceasefire,
A ceasefire which is very fragile and very unstable, but still we have been able since the beginning of the ceasefire to bring in more aid.
Just a few figures, we brought like quarter of a million warm clothes kits for children.
So it's 250,000.
But the needs are huge.
We need to be able to cover one million children.
So we are definitely not there.
We've been able to bring in blankets, 600,000 blankets.
We've been able to bring quite a lot of tents, but not enough, 7,000 tents.
if efforts are really going on and we're working relentlessly to bring that aid
and to distribute it.
But the scale of the needs is so immense that we still have like thousands of people
and children who are really suffering every night.
Jonathan Cricks from UN Children's Agency UNICEF talking to Emma Barnett.
The UK government has announced its intention to rejoin the Erasmus Study Scheme
six years after Britain pulled out following Brexit
it when it left the EU. It means that from 2027, people from the UK will be able to spend
a year studying at European universities as part of their degree courses without paying
extra fees while allowing European students the same benefits. These students, from Leeds in the
North of England, reacted to the news. It would be really useful, I think. Be able to do an
national section of my degree would have been a really good thing to do. And in some way it could
be difficult if there's a lot of demand for it, but it would have been really useful, I think.
I think that it probably would have just opened up a lot more opportunities.
You know, studying the UK, it's great, but, like, could that have taken me to jobs abroad
where there's a better job market potentially?
I think definitely languages is such an important thing to learn, to be able to go abroad
and potentially learn that alongside my degree, again, opening up opportunities for jobs,
moving countries in the future.
Our education correspondent is Vanessa Clark.
The UK has to pay a membership fee to take part of the negotiations
to rejoin would have been looking at how much that would be
before it ended more European students
were coming to Britain than UK students going abroad for example
so this will all have been looked at as part of that
already we're seeing reaction from students and universities
who are very keen on Erasmus restarting
you know it means students will have a wider pool of placements
to choose from across the European Union
and then we'll have also students coming here
who won't have to pay those international fees
I think this is all about actually, you know, expanding relationships with the EU.
You know, many would like to see the youth mobility scheme,
which allows UK young adults to go to the EU to live, work and study, restart.
So this looks for some people like a re-step towards that kind of thing.
Education correspondent Vanessa Clark.
When you think of olives, you might be forgiven for assuming they've been grown in countries like Spain or Italy,
but just under 2,000 kilometres away from the warm climate.
of Sicily, the small oval fruit is now being produced in the English countryside.
Due to the warming effects of climate change, olive oil is now being made in Lincolnshire.
The BBC's Paul Murphy has taken a trip to the farm in eastern England.
The windswept Lincolnshire fens have little in common with the sun-kissed villages of Tuscany.
But you know what? The olives don't seem to mind.
David Hoyles mostly grows conventional crops like spuds and spuds.
wheat. So this is actually one of our early maturing varieties. But rising temperatures have brought
new possibilities. We're aware farmers, we're growers at heart, so we really like that
challenge of trying to produce good quality food. We were seeing climate change coming in and
making it more of a struggle to grow our conventional crops. So then I was thinking what crops
would work well with higher temperatures. Grapes didn't suit our soil type. So olives was a bit of
extreme choice but one we've gone for. There's many, many challenges with it, but we're trying
to use different techniques, precision farming, and things I've picked up from overseas growers.
Walking through these olive groves feels like a bit of a surreal experience. These are trees
that you normally see when you're on holiday in Spain or France or Italy under the baking
sun. But here in the Lincolnshire Fens, well, they appear to be doing okay.
Specialised machinery is used to crush the olives and extract the oil
so it can be bottled and sold.
There's even a technique for tasting it.
Wow, and that's the polyphenols.
Now that's what the experts want.
Sampling his own olive oil is a labour of love for David.
He spent six years researching the crop before getting to this point.
Some peppery aftertones at the back of the throat.
quite a mild mellow flavour
a bit grassy a bit piney
something along those lines
David's made several trips to Italy
to take advice from olive farming experts
The Italians call me the crazy Englishmen
They think the project is a bit daft
But they've all been willing to share their knowledge
Share their passion, their enthusiasm
They've been over here
I've been over there on numerous times learning
It is one of the world's
most northerly olive groves and a huge farming challenge.
But so far, so good.
Paul Murphy.
Still to come, is biodiversity being damaged
because of the need to get that perfect shot?
I think we should try to don't touch and to don't interact with any man anymore at all.
That's the general rule we should always follow.
If we won't put the limit, we always do something more.
because we need that picture.
Hello, Greg Jenner here, host of Your Dead to Me.
In my new family-friendly podcast series, Dead Funny History,
historical figures come back to life for just about long enough to argue with me,
tell us their life stories and sometimes get on my nerves.
There's 15 lovely episodes to unwrap,
including the life of Ramsey's the Great, Josephine Baker,
and the history of football, plus much, much more.
So this Christmas, give your ears, a treat.
with Dead Funny History. You can find it in the Your Dead to Me feed on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Warner Brothers has rejected Paramount's hostile bid for the entirety of its business.
In a letter to shareholders, the board said the bid lacked adequate financing assurances.
It's the latest twist in the battle between Paramount and streaming giant Netflix to buy the historic Hollywood studio.
Earlier this month, Netflix agreed to buy the film and streaming businesses for 72 billion
before Paramount swooped in with a bid of $108 billion to buy the whole business.
At the same time, a key backer of Paramount's attempt to buy Warner Brothers, Affinity Partners,
has reportedly pulled out of the bid, citing the involvement of two strong competitors.
Affinity was founded by US businessman and President Donald Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner.
I spoke to our business correspondent Nick Marsh and began by asking him what Paramount might do next.
The understanding is that Paramount will probably come back with a bigger and better offer.
Then we'll see where the next chapter of this tale takes us.
Can Paramount afford it now, though, because Affinity Partners have disappeared from the bid?
There's actually not that many details as to why they've pulled out.
It doesn't seem to have affected the ability of Paramount to raise money.
because it's understood that Paramount are still very much interested,
it could be more of a reflection of the political controversy
that this would have brought.
And maybe Jared Kushner was weighing up
whether this would be an advantage to him,
obviously being son-in-law of the president,
or whether this would be a hindrance,
given all the opposition that would raise from various quarters.
There's a lot of stake for whoever wins this.
What's it going to do to the streaming market, the movie industry?
It would completely change the landscape of American entertainment
and global entertainment, Warner Brothers,
Discovery, they have HBO Max, so Game of Thrones, Succession, The Wire, in terms of the
film, we've got Batman, Harry Potter franchises, really huge names. Say Netflix bought that. All of
these massive shows would be all under one umbrella. That's going to pose big regulatory
problems because the market share, put quite simply, would be too big. That's going to pose
antitrust issues, anti-monopoly issues in the rest of the world. If Paramount were successful,
they would still have a huge conglomerate there.
It just wouldn't be quite as big a market share.
So no matter what happens, there will be regulatory hurdles to overcome.
Not just in the United States, by the way, because these are distributed all around the world.
Either way, it's going to be an issue.
And there are people in Hollywood who are a bit afraid of this mega merger because they think,
well, does that mean that wages will be driven down?
Does that mean that corners will be cut, that the workforce will be reduced?
and if you're a consumer sitting at home, it might be great.
Everything's under one subscription.
You don't have to take out an HBO Mac subscription, a Netflix subscription, Paramount, and so on and so forth.
Might be good in the short term.
But who's to say in the long term you don't have that choice that the prices might not go up
in terms of the subscriptions and you have nowhere else to look.
So it does look like a deal is going to happen.
It could take as long as a year for this all to get over the line.
Or it might not happen at all.
If it does happen, it would be really, really big.
Nick Marsh.
The authorities in the Indian capital Delhi
have rolled out strict measures to curb air pollution
that has been in the severe category for the past few days.
Pollution is an annual winter problem in Delhi and its suburbs.
A global affairs reporter and Barrison Etirajan
describes what it's like living in Delhi
when it's in the grip of severe pollution.
When you wake up early in the morning,
if you want to go for a walk,
you breathe in the smoke-filled air
and that irritation goes down your throat
and then you feel it.
And after five minutes, some people might start coughing.
And especially for children, it is really, really bad.
Because if we talk to many hospitals, what they say,
the number of people, the number of children will come in
because they have the immunities slowly building up for them.
And when they breathe this air and their respiratory organs,
they have, especially those with asthma and other conditions,
they really suffer.
And that's why the percentage of children,
admitted to hospital goes up during the winter time. That's why the local government has now
introduced the highest level of response grade four by banning older vehicles like diesel
vehicles coming into the city, number one, number two. Now they're asking or ordering government
and private offices to limit the number of staff coming to work so that 50% can work from
home so that they don't have to bring their own cars or other means of transportation.
to come into the city, and the construction activities have already been suspended in and around the city,
and also classes for schoolchildren move to online, partially like a hybrid example.
But this is not going to reduce the pollution problem, because this is winter, this is an annual problem,
but the dense air traps all the pollutants, and also there is a change in wind direction,
and also the humidity level. That is trapping this pollutants.
And that is why you see a surge in terms of pollution level in the past week,
really worrying many residents of Delhi.
Even many people leave Delhi and go to places like Goa or to the south
to escape this period because the children are really suffering.
Ambarasan, Etirajan.
The tiny mountain kingdom of Bhutan has a population of less than a million
and its capital city, Thimbu, just over 100,000.
So you might think it's surprising that Bhutan is planning to build a whole new city, one which it hopes will become a regional tech hub.
Wednesday saw the Bhutanese king announce that it will invest around a billion dollars in building the city to be known as Galefu.
But more than that, it says this will be a city of mindfulness, balancing innovation with traditional Buddhist values.
I heard more from our global affairs reporter Paul Moss.
It's called Gleifu, and it's going to be right on the.
border with India. I can read you a description from the official Bhutan website, but I've got to say
it looks less like the perspectives for an industrial development, more like an advert for a yoga
retreat. I mean, the website says that Galefa will be an oasis of mindfulness and prosperity,
offering the world a different path of development, combining traditional Bhutanese values of
spirituality with economic vibrancy. Now, the thing is, economic vibrancy is needed in Bhutan. I mean,
it may give an image of happy peasants tending their flocks. In fact, Bhutan famously decided to measure
its gross national happiness as well as GDP. In fact, there's very serious unemployment problems in
Bhutan. Lots of the population have to go abroad for work. It does have some sources of money.
It sells hydroelectric power to neighbouring India and also has tourism, but that's very limited.
So the idea is to create this new tech city. One interesting thing, the billion dollars you
mentioned, that's going to be invested, that it currently holds.
that money in cryptocurrency. Botan started buying cryptocurrency in 2019 may have made some money
out of that, but the amount it's made is actually a state secret. Sounds interesting,
but is it going to work? I don't know. I mean, it says it's very hard to work at what this
new spiritual city is going to actually do. It seems that financial services will be at the
centre of the plans. It does have a very educated workforce, but it's a very small workforce.
So I don't think any major banks are going to open themselves there, nor can it be a major
a high-tech manufacturing hub.
However, Bhutan sits at a very strategically interesting spot
between India and China.
India is very keen to keep up its own influence there
and to keep China out.
So I do think there's a chance that you'll see India prepared to invest a lot of money in Galefu,
but that would be for reasons less to do with, you know, karma and mindfulness,
be more about hard-nosed geopolitics.
Paul Moss.
Wildlife photographers play an invaluable
role in capturing the astonishing diversity of the natural world. But sometimes it seems in their
search for the perfect shot, these photographers may also be hastening the demise of the very
creatures they're trying to preserve on film. Take the tiny galaxy frog native to the rainforest
of Kerala in southern India. They get their name because their black spotted skin with flashes
of orange looks like the night sky. They're extraordinarily rare and now even rarer. After a researcher
from the Zoological Society of London
found that one group had disappeared
after photographers found them
and moved them to get a better shot.
Stefano Untatina
is an award-winning wildlife photographer
and zoologist.
James Menendez asked him for his reaction
to this event.
I'm not so surprised, unfortunately,
because I heard some bad story
about nature photography around the world.
Of course, it's kind of shocking
because it's involved in an endangered species.
So it's kind of a surprise, but not too much, because more and more story about, you know,
photographers don't ethically work in the field is becoming increasingly happening, importantly.
And why is that, do you think? I mean, why are people's standards slipping?
There is several aspects to consider. First, probably, you know, the kind of pressure we have from social media
and the fact that we want to shine with our picture
and especially kind of amateur photographer,
the one to show their work,
and also the competition.
The photo competition can cause more kind of stress
or competition about getting a better picture.
It's difficult, but to me, it's just about the lack of headache,
the lack of knowledge.
I grew up in the mountain where I learned
that photography means most of the time,
fatigue.
You have to learn, you have to improve your photography slowly.
And we are in the consuming and fast society.
We want also to take a kind of shortcut.
And that's wrong.
Yeah.
It's interesting you talk about lack of knowledge.
I mean, in this case, it sounds as if the photographers moved the little frogs to try and get a better shot,
move them from underneath the logs that are their habitat to get a better shot.
I mean, I was quite surprised by that.
And they did that without wearing gloves.
How common is it to move animals into a place where you can take a better photo?
Well, probably it's more common, you may think,
because especially for amphibian or, you know, snakes,
a lot of amateur photographer or even professional photographer,
they can move the animal just in the better place for light
or, you know, for better background, just to have a better picture.
It's quite a common habit, even from the past,
and in still a wrong habit
that you're always thinking that it's not a problem,
but in some species it can be a very big problem indeed.
I mean, do you think that is unethical?
I mean, do you think it's wrong to move creatures
that they should be photographed in their natural habitat?
I think we should try to don't touch
and to don't interact with any animal at all.
That's the general rule we should always follow.
If we want to put the limit,
we always do something more because we need that picture.
It's a difficult balance, isn't it?
Because getting the shot and getting a shot that's going to get attention
may be good for that creature
and that it brings awareness of that creature.
But as you say, I mean, it can be, well, very harmful.
It depends on what are you doing.
If you have a big project, maybe working with conservation or researcher
or involving in a communication project on that species
that can be kind of necessary,
that you can bring a little bit the rules.
But it's not acceptable that for just one picture
and for your social media or even for your colour in your computer,
you can do whatever you like.
So for my point of view, it's really depending on why you are working.
Of course, it's a kind of balance and understanding why you are photographing.
But for most amateur photographer, beginner, or even professional,
you're always asking yourself why you are doing this.
Photographer Stefano Untitina.
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.com.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Volodomir Muzetka, and the producer was Alice Adely.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson.
Until next time, goodbye.
Hello, Greg Jenner here, host of Your Dead to Me.
In my new family-friendly podcast series, Dead Funny History, historical figures come back to life for just about long enough to argue with me, tell us their life story, tell us their life story,
and sometimes get on my nerves.
There's 15 lovely episodes to unwrap,
including The Life of Ramsey's the Great,
Josephine Baker, and the history of football,
plus much, much more.
So this Christmas, give your ears a treat with dead funny history.
You can find it in the Your Dead to Me feed on BBC.com
or wherever you get your podcasts.
