Global News Podcast - Houthis in Yemen say prime minister was killed in Israeli strike
Episode Date: August 31, 2025Yemen’s Houthi movement has confirmed that an Israeli airstrike on the capital, Sanaa, on Thursday killed its prime minister as well as other senior officials. The Houthis' have vowed to avenge the ...PM's death, although Ahmed Ghaleb Nasser al-Rahawi was not considered part of the inner leadership. The Houthis have frequently fired on Israel, and on ships in the Red Sea, in support of the Palestinians in Gaza. Also: Prominent Ukrainian politician Andriy Parubiy is shot dead in Lviv, and an AI stethoscope could detect major heart conditions in seconds.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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
Ever feel like car shopping is designed to make your second guess yourself?
Is this a good price? Am I making the right choice?
With car gurus, you don't have to wonder.
They have hundreds of thousands of cars from top-rated dealers
and advanced search tools, deal ratings and price history.
So you know a great deal when you see one.
That's cairg-g-U-R-U-S.ca.cagurus.cagurus.ca.cairus.ca.
Box, a delicious streamer.
Collider says everyone should be watching.
Catch Britain's next best series with Britbox.
Streamer claim new originals like Code of Silence.
You read lips, right?
And Linley, based on the best-selling mystery series.
Di-I, Linley.
Take it from here.
And don't miss the new season of Karen Piri coming this October.
You don't look, look, please.
I'll do that as a compliment.
See it differently when you stream the best of British TV with Britbox.
Watch with a free trial today.
This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Jeanette Jolil and in the early hours of Sunday the 31st of August, these are our main stories.
The Hufi movement in Yemen has confirmed that its Prime Minister and other senior officials were killed in a recent Israeli airstrike.
A massive manhunt is underway in Ukraine for a gunman who assassinated a prominent politician in the western city of Leviv.
Also in this podcast,
Up to 80% of heart failure is diagnosed in the emergency department rather than in the community.
And if we can shift that diagnosis into the community, then treatment is started earlier.
Trials of an AI-powered stethoscope find it's twice as effective at detecting heart conditions as traditional stethoscopes.
Israel has killed Hezbollah leaders in Lebanon, Hamash leaders in Yemen.
Gaza, and it now appears to have killed a number of senior Houthi figures in Yemen in a strike
three days ago on the Yemeni capital Sana. The Houthis confirmed that the group's prime
minister, Ahmed Galeb Nasser al-Rahawi, was killed along with several other ministers on
Thursday. The Iranian-backed Yemeni group has frequently attacked Israel with missiles in support
of the Palestinians in Gaza, as well as carrying out attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea.
Mardi al-Mashat, the head of the Houthi's political council,
said his movement would not be deterred from continuing to attack Israel.
Though the enemy has inflicted pain on us with this attack,
we vow before God, the people of Yemen and the families of the martyrs and the wounded,
that we will take revenge.
From our deep pain we will forge victory.
We affirm to our people that our armed forces remained strong
and the enemy's gain was nothing more than a stroke of luck.
A correspondent in Jerusalem, Emanada, told Paul Henley more about the Israeli strike.
We had a statement on Thursday the day of the airstrike with the IDF, the Israeli military,
acknowledging it had targeted parts of the Sana, the capital of Yemen.
However, it didn't clarify who the targets were, didn't name any names.
But in Israeli media, we did hear that they had.
targeted senior leadership of the Houthi group there, and there was some reporting that
that might have included the PM. So this statement from the Houthis today is the first
official confirmation that we've had from them, acknowledging the killing of the Prime Minister
Ahmed Ghalib al-Rahawi and a number of other ministers in the Houthi government there.
A change in tactics by Israel. Previously, they've mainly targeted energy infrastructure,
transport? Well, there's been a huge bombardment of parts of Yemen in going back many months now
because those strikes by the Houthi group on Israel have been very disruptive, though they
haven't caused much material damage. The Houthis say they are attacking Israel in support
of Palestinians in Gaza and calling for a ceasefire. And they've really weathered very heavy
bombardment, not just by Israel, but we saw earlier in the year the United States bombing hundreds of
locations throughout Yemen, energy infrastructure, ports, and indeed places in the capital of
Yemen, Sanar, which it said were being used by the Houthis, and yet the Houthis continued sending
missiles those 2,000 kilometres from Yemen to Israel, most of them intercepted by the Iron Dome
here in Israel. However, they have continued, despite coming into that heavy bombardment,
this appears to have been a much more targeted attack at that senior leadership.
Israel has been pretty successful in its campaign against regional enemies
in recent weeks, years, months.
There's been the strikes on Iran and on Lebanon,
where Hezbollah seem pretty much a spent force.
That's right.
And the Houthis in Yemen are really the only Iran-backed group in the region
that was still able to mount missile attacks on Israel.
We've seen much of the decimation of Hamas.
We barely see any rockets coming out of Gaza Strip now.
into Israel. Hezbollah, obviously that was seen as the jewel in the crown of the Iranian
axis of resistance against Israel. That's been pretty much decimated. There is a process
going on in Lebanon of the demilitarization of Hezbollah that appears to be going ahead,
though it is a fairly rocky process. And of course, we had those 12 days of direct attacks
between Israel and Iran that ended with Iran essentially giving up, and we haven't seen any
attacks directly from Iran towards Israel since then. The Houthis, they have continued with
their attacks. And they seem very defiant and keen to say that they will continue their attacks
in this statement that we've had announcing the killing of the Prime Minister and the other
ministers. They've said that it won't affect their continuation of the defence and support
of the Palestinian people, as they call it.
Eminada in Jerusalem. A huge manhunt is underway in Ukraine for a gunman who assassinated a leading
politician as he was walking on a street in the western city of Lviv.
Andrew Parraby rose to prominence a decade ago as one of the leaders of mass protests
calling for closer ties with the European Union, which eventually brought down the then
pro-Russian president.
Ukraine's current president, Lodomir Zelensky, says all necessary resources are being deployed
to find the killer, who was reportedly dressed as a courier on an electric bike when he fired
repeatedly a Mr. Perubi.
Law enforcement agencies,
the Minister of Internal Affairs
and the Prosecutor General
are reporting regularly.
They are investigating
the circumstances surrounding
the murder of Andri Parabi.
A lot of resources are being used,
all that are necessary.
Unfortunately, the crime was carefully planned.
But everything is being done
to solve this crime.
The shooting came hours after Russia carried out a massive attack on Friday night across Ukraine,
killing at least one person and wounding dozens of others.
Katie Watson reports from Kiev.
Emergency workers were on the scene in Zaporizia in southeastern Ukraine,
putting out fires after homes were destroyed.
Hopes of peace, it seems, have also gone up in flames.
People were screaming for help from the window.
They were suffocating. Everything was on fire.
President Zelensky said 14 different places across the country were hit.
Ukraine attacked two Russian refineries, a deliberate strategy to disrupt oil supplies,
and the income Moscow needs to keep fighting.
And in the western city of Lviv, an assassination in broad daylight,
of the former parliament speaker, Andri Parobi,
a prominent leader of the Euro-Maidan movement
that unseated the pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych,
more than a decade ago. Mr. Parubi was shot down by gunmen dressed as a courier. The hunt for his
killer has begun. President Zelensky has accused Moscow of using the time to prepare for a leader's
meeting to instead prepare these attacks. He called for action from the US, Europe and the world.
But few people here believe Donald Trump's peace initiatives will deliver. Maria's father is fighting
on the front line. In few next years, it can be my father. It can be everyone's father, boyfriend's brother.
What's like Trump is doing? Is he helping us?
Do you think he's helping you?
No.
President Zelensky is angry about the strikes, but he knows he needs to keep up the diplomacy.
Next week, he says he wants to dot the eyes on security guarantees at a leader's meeting in Europe.
But what those guarantees will be remains so unclear.
Katie Watson in Kiev.
For decades, people in Western nations have protested about the rising numbers of immigrants arriving on their shores.
But there's a growing backlash in a number of popular tourist destinations against Westerners
and gentrification that's pricing locals out of their own neighbourhoods.
In recent weeks, there have been several demonstrations in Mexico City,
with at least one of them turning ugly as boutique stores and coffee shops were attacked,
and foreigners intimidated on the streets, with some protesters even yelling gringoes out.
Will Grant reports from the Mexican capital.
The timing of the anti-gentrification protest in Mexico City was no coincidence.
The 4th of July, US Independence Day.
It began as a peaceful march over aggressive rent hikes, unregulated holiday lettings,
and the endless influx of Americans and Europeans into the capital's trendy neighbourhoods of La Condessa and Roma,
but it soon descended into violence.
Radical demonstrators attacked coffee shops and boutique stores aimed at tourists,
smashing their windows and spraying graffiti while chanting Fuerre gringo, meaning gringoes out.
In a press conference two days later, President Claudia Shainbaum,
who previously served as the mayor of Mexico City, condemned the protest as xenophobic.
No matter that, for a demand, for more legitimate that is the gentrification,
how legitimate the cause, as with gentrification, the demand can never be to just say
get out to people of other nationalities inside our country, she said.
Her administration would support the mayor, Clara Brugada, in tackling the issue, she added.
Mayor Brugada then set out a 14-point plan to regulate rent prices, protect long-term residents,
and build new social housing.
affordable prices.
For many, though, the mayor's promises came too late.
Activists Sergio Gonzalez says in the past decade his group has recorded more than 4,000
cases of forced displacement of long-term residents from his neighborhood of L'ahuarez alone.
He was one of them.
We are definitely facing what we call a new war.
What's in dispute is the ground itself, who does,
and who doesn't have rights to this ground.
The first apartment I rented here
cost around $4,000 pesos a month in 2007.
Today, that same apartment
cost more than 10 times as much.
It's an outrage.
It's pure speculation.
The Juarez Roma and Condessa
are now so changed in character
that they're almost unrecognizable
to some of the original residents.
Trendy coffee shops,
high-end restaurants,
clothing stores. And the growing complaint is that the original character of so many of these
communities is being lost in the endless pursuit of the foreigner earning in dollars,
euros or pounds.
The violence of the anti-gentrification protests sparked headlines across Mexico.
Branches of Starbucks and banks being smashed up made for images of a sort of
anti-American class war unfolding on the capital streets. But for displaced resident Erika Aguilar,
the radical demonstrators and agitators don't represent her cause. Still, she has advice to anyone
planning to relocate to Mexico City, learn Spanish and pay your taxes. That report by Will Grant.
The stethoscope has been a vital part of the doctor's toolkit for the best part of two centuries.
But now a team of researchers here in the UK has created an AI-powered version
that they say can detect serious heart conditions within a matter of seconds
and is more than twice as likely as doctors with traditional stethoscopes
to detect early signs of heart failure.
The head of the research team behind the AI Stethoscope, Professor Nicholas Peters,
says this could save lives and money by diagnosing people's heart problems much earlier.
The health economics, the cost-benefit analysis, is very strongly in favour of use of this device.
Currently, about two and every three patients with heart failure don't have the diagnosis made until they are very unwell and possibly in an emergency setting.
And the ability to diagnose patients earlier and start them on drugs earlier has benefits to the patient and benefits to the health care system.
system. Our reporter Michael Davenry describes how this new technology works.
The shape of a stethoscope is familiar. You have the earpieces and you have a little round
device that's placed onto the patient's chest. Now, in this new device, the earpieces are the
same, but instead of that round cup, you've got a flat device, which looks a little bit like
a credit card. And it can listen out for differences in heartbeats and blood flow that
the human ear normally cannot hear. And it takes all that data and it instantly sends it
into the cloud to compare it to data from tens of thousands of other patients to diagnose. And this is
what the team from the Imperial College London Research Group have been doing. And it helps to generate a
diagnosis pretty much instantly. So exactly what heart conditions can it diagnose and how accurate
is it? Well, the researchers say that it's effective at picking up conditions like heart valve disease
or irregular heartbeats. And also crucially very important, it can diagnose them a lot earlier
in the patient's treatment cycle.
It also has been particularly effective at, for instance,
picking up cases of arterial fibrillation,
which is irregular heartbeats.
It's three and a half times more effective at that
and two and a half times more likely to find patients
with heart failure in the next 12 months.
And, Michael, also many lives that could potentially be saved.
Absolutely.
Faster treatment is a particularly important part of all of this.
To find treatment at doctor surgeries
rather than in the emergency departments
means that they treated faster,
it's a lot cheaper, and also the patient's health is less likely to be compromised.
Michael Daventry.
Still to come on the global news podcast?
It has been pretty intense and we're pretty relieved to be on land now,
but we're feeling pretty good.
The adrenaline's still pumping.
We all think that, you know, in a few moments' time,
we're going to wake up and we'll still be out there in the middle of the Pacific.
Three brothers from Scotland have set a new record for rowing unsupported across the Pacific Ocean.
Hi, I'm Master Model Builder Noel at Legoland Discovery Center, Toronto, inviting you to build the best summer ever.
Jump into a world of fun, creativity, and playful learning at the ultimate indoor Lego playground.
Explore Miniland created from over a million bricks.
Join me in a creative workshop class.
Ride Kingdom Quest, enjoy a 4-D movie, discover eye-catching build-in-play zones, and much more at Legoland Discovery Center.
Your tickets online now at Legoland Discovery Center.com slash Toronto.
Refugee advocates have criticized a multi-million dollar agreement between Australia and
Nauru, which will allow Australia to deport hundreds of immigrants to the tiny Pacific nation.
Some of these people have serious criminal convictions but can't be deported to their home
countries for fear of persecution or harm.
Asia Pacific editor, Mickey Bristow, is following the story.
This is a deal essentially to deal with a group of people that Australia doesn't want but cannot get rid of.
So as you indicated there in your introduction, these are people who, for one reason or another,
can't be deported back to their home country.
Their home countries might not want them or they might not want to go back there.
They also are not being allowed to stay in Australia for one reason or another.
So what does Australia do with them?
It's come up with this deal to send them all the way to narrow tiny island, as you mentioned there, in the Pacific.
Australia has agreed to pay about nearly 300 million US dollars too narrow initially,
and then afterwards to give about 50 million a year in order to upkeep and to look after these people.
So it's extraordinary amount of money for, I think it's around 350 people.
As you said, some of them have got criminology.
records and they were being detained indefinitely, but a court a couple of years ago said
you couldn't detain them indefinitely. So that's why the Australian government has had to come
up with this plan. And this deal has been criticised with some saying that the Labour government
is not living up to its progressive values? Can't escape to anyone's attention that Australia
is run by Labour government, progressive, supposedly liberal, supposedly more welcoming,
if not to migrants, then at least more in tune with liberal ideas
of where people should have equal treatment when it comes to the law,
they should be treated fairly, should have recourse to legal action.
One of the other things that the Australian government is doing,
as well as signing this agreement,
it's trying to push through Parliament a law
which will undermine the legal rights enjoyed by these people.
So essentially, they won't be able to tangle these cases up in the courts
and never leave Australia.
And it's not the first time that Australia has sent immigrants to Nauru.
Tell us more about this tiny little island.
Yeah, I think it's worth mentioning that.
Now the idea of sort of offshoreing immigrants,
so people arriving in a country and you send them to a third country
because you don't want them in your country,
is quite an idea with currency all over the world at the moment.
But actually, Australia was one of the first countries to practice this.
and Nauru was one of the countries.
This is tiny island.
I think it's the world's third smallest country.
It's in the middle of the Pacific.
A lot of it previously was used for mining,
so it's not a lot of the places are uninhabitable.
And obviously they've taken these or agreed to take these immigrants
because it's a lot of money for them.
Mickey Bristow.
The Maldives in the Indian Ocean,
it's often described as a tropical paradise for tourists
with beautiful white sandy beaches and crystal clear waters.
The Maldives is also known as something of a shark sanctuary,
having banned most shark fishing in its territorial waters for more than 15 years.
That's about to change.
The government has announced that from November it will allow the fishing of the gulper shark,
whose liver oil is widely used in cosmetics, beauty products and health supplements.
The government says this will bring in much needed new revenue.
But this is angered environmentalists and some in the crucial tourism industry.
Gary O'Donoghue spoke to Mohamed Rashid, a tourist operator based in the capital Mali,
and asked him why he thought the ban was being lifted.
There's a pledge of the president before he came that he would open this type of fishing.
So I think it's very politically a motivated thing rather than an economical thing.
My view on people whoever is in the tourism sector,
I think it would have a negative impact on the future for the tourism of the Maldives.
Why is that?
Firstly, Maldives has been a very shark-friendly country.
Lifting or election in the shark fishing ban poses high risk to the Maldives tourism.
It's a very tourism-driven economy.
sharks they play an important role in ecotourism and marine health
so the status as the top shark safe country status would be gone
with this lift in the band
these sharks as you said they swim very deep
so the tourists don't get to see these sharks so why would the tourists care
if there was fishing of these sharks now
yeah very good question because this shark doesn't have any
relation with the tourists
dive in to see them or to swim
along with them because they are very deep
they will never see them
but for me I believe
relaxing on this thing will open
a big thing for
a lot of bycatch like if you're
targeting for this type of
deep sea fishing or so many other fish might
as well get beaten and dead and
they will do other types
of shark fining
for me it exports
like if you can't
have a proper control, it would damage a lot of fish, I believe.
That was Mohamed Rashid, a tourist operator in the Maldives.
Now, you have to get on pretty well with your siblings to want to share a confined space with
them for 140 days. But that's exactly what three brothers from Scotland chose to do in a tiny
boat. And as well as managing not to fall out with each other, they have set a new record
for rowing non-stop and unsupported across the Pacific Ocean from Peru to Australia.
Ewan, Jameley and Lachlan MacLean were greeted on their arrival
by the sound of Scottish bagpipes.
Paul Henley spoke to Jamie not long after he'd come ashore in Cairns in Queensland in Australia.
It has been pretty intense and we're pretty relieved to be on land now,
but we're feeling pretty good. The adrenaline's still pumping.
What a welcome we've had in Cairns.
We've had four pipers on the harbour wall.
And yeah, we're on Cloud 9 at the moment.
It all feels a bit surreal.
I think we're pinching ourselves.
We all think that, you know, in a few moments' time, we're going to wake up
and we'll still be out there in the middle of the Pacific.
And it sounds as if there were moments when you genuinely doubted you'd make it.
It's been a real roller coaster, you know.
It's been much tougher than we anticipated.
The weather was a lot more unpredictable than we were expecting for this time of the year
for the crossing we were doing, pushed off course.
We had to shelter behind islands to avoid storms being blown backwards
and pretty chaotic and wild seas, large waves, high winds.
Yeah, there were definitely moments where we all thought, you know,
have we bitten off more than we can chew,
but we're obviously very relieved to be on dry land now.
And judging by the snippets of film that I've seen from on board,
you were really exposed to the elements.
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing with these boats.
It's an open-top rainboat.
So, you know, the only shelter you have are these tiny little bubbles at either end,
and you're only really going in them when we're at night and you're on your night shift.
They're pretty uncomfortable. They were extremely cramped. We had so much food with us because, you know, we were expecting to be at C4 up to 150 days. So we were really packed to the gunwales. We would spend 18 hours a day on deck, exposed to everything that Mother Nature could throw at us.
And you all seem like you're getting on still. You must have incredible brotherly relations.
Oh, I think for the three of us, it's really our superpower. You know, we've always gotten on well and we've always gotten up to no good as three little boys growing up.
And, you know, like any siblings, in a very small space or very small area for 140 days in extreme conditions, of course, you're going to have tiffs, you're going to have squabbles.
But really, the only thing you can do out there is address it. I mean, I think the beauty about being brothers is you can just be honest with your siblings.
And the rules are very strict. You can't resupply. You can't touch land. And you can't accept any help from passing boats. You must have been tempted at times.
We saw remarkably few vessels, you know, for the vast majority.
of this crossing. You know, after setting off from Lima, we didn't see an airplane for about
120 days and we didn't see another vessel for an equal amount of time. We did have to, you know,
shelter around New Caledonia and the loyalty islands from a couple storms. And when we were doing
that, you can't step foot on land. You can't take any assistance from anyone, but you can seek
shelter and drop anchor in sheltered bays if needs be. There were a couple occasions where we were
anchored less than 100 feet from land, you know, tantalizingly close to beautiful beaches and
forests and greenery. Your brother Lackland was washed overboard at one point, was he?
You know, that was probably one of the darkest moments on this crossing. It was during an
anti-cyclone where we just couldn't escape it, so we had to take it front on. Kept getting hit
by these, every 10th wave would come at the boat at 90 degrees, and it would smack the boat, it would
knock us off our own seats and it was on the third occasion. We'd just broken into our night shifts
where there's one person on the oars and two people trying to have a short sleep. Ewan, the eldest
brother was on the oars and Lachlan, the youngest brother, he was at the stern cabin. He was just getting
ready to go inside the cabin. He was just looking up, you know, at these moments it's really
important that you open the cabin door for as brief a moment as possible because if a wave
hits when the cabin doors open, that could be game over. And he looked up and this towering wave
was just coming towards him, a big, massive, black, 20-foot wave.
It just took him, and he grabbed the nearest thing on the boat.
It was a carbon pole that we used for putting cameras on.
That ripped off the cabin.
He was thrown over the safety lines and thrown overboard.
And thankfully, you know, the most critical bit of safety equipment that we would wear
24-7 is a climbing harness and a line that tethers us to the boat.
It saved his life.
Absolutely.
You must be celebrating now with the things and the people you miss most at sea.
Who and what are they?
I think so far I've had a couple pizzas, I've had a couple ice creams, I've had my first shower
and all that's left is to tuck myself into a bed with clean sheets and sleep for more than an hour and a half.
A well-earned rest there for the rower Jamie McLean.
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.com.com.
This edition was mixed by Massoud Ibrahim Cale,
the producers were Liam McSheffrey and Stephanie Zacherson.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Janet Jaliel. Until next time.
Goodbye.