Global News Podcast - Iran protests: hundreds feared dead
Episode Date: January 11, 2026A medic at one Tehran hospital reported "direct shots to the heads of the young people, to their hearts as well", while a doctor said an eye hospital in the capital had gone into crisis mode. Despite ...this, large crowds have returned to the streets of Iran's capital, including entire families with children, defying increasingly severe warnings from the authorities. Also: the US military has carried out 'Operation Hawkeye' strikes in Syria against the Islamic State, as revenge for the killing of two American soldiers. We hear from Venezuelans who have fled to Colombia, after the capture of President Nicolás Maduro. Why a deadly train crash in 2023 in Greece could lead frustrated voters to turn to new political options in the 2027 election. The case of a Google employee made redundant after reporting sexual harassment. Why a rare Superman comic that was once stolen from Nicolas Cage has sold for $15m. And how much are dogs eavesdropping on us?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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If journalism is the first draft of history, what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed, hundreds killed.
But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it.
It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories.
I'm Helena Merriman, and in a new BBC series, I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story.
What did they miss the first time?
The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Chris Barrow and at 4 GMT, these are our main stories.
A picture of violence and horror is emerging in Iran as anti-government protests continue across the country.
The US military has carried out strikes.
in Syria against the Islamic State as revenge for the killing of two American soldiers.
We hear from Venezuelans who fled to Colombia after the capture of the President
Nicholas Maduro. Also in this podcast,
I get some very funny stories of owners telling me they were thinking of ordering a pizza
and they were talking between them and then the dog ran into the room with their toy named
pizza.
How dogs learn to understand words by eavesdropping. And later...
I actually got to hold it in my hands. It was an incredible thrill as a comics fan all my life.
to have this piece of history in my hands.
They did take it off me again, mine.
Find out what makes a Superman comic worth $15 million.
Large crowds have returned to the streets of Iran's capital Tehran
as anti-government protests spread across the country,
despite increasingly severe warnings from the authorities.
Witnesses say families, including children, are taking part.
In his latest comments, President Trump,
has said Washington, in his words, stood ready to help.
So what could a US intervention?
mentioned look like. David Petraeus is a former CIA director.
There are numerous options all the way from diplomatic and informational.
Even just getting Starlink dishes in on the ground would help them communicate with each other and
with the outside world. There can be economic sanctions of various types against individuals,
against Iran's ability to export oil. There's humanitarian options. And then, of course,
there are many military options. And I was also the former commander of U.S. Central Command,
which is the Greater Middle East, that would be the regional combatant command that undoubtedly
has been developing the menus of options for the president and others to consider.
There can certainly be strikes on the headquarters of the security force organizations that are
violently putting down these protests, these demonstrations that have been killing to people
in very substantial numbers.
He could go after the missile capability that they have, which of course was heavily damaged
during the Israeli strikes against Iran, which concluded with a U.S. substantial bombing as well.
They've been trying to reconstitute those missile arsenals that would be useful.
It could prevent some of the retaliation that might be of a concern.
Again, a number of different activities that wouldn't require boots on the ground,
many of which could even be done with unmanned systems, cruise missiles and the like.
For an update on the latest situation on the ground in Iran,
I spoke to our US-based BBC Persian correspondent Bachman Kalbasi.
And a warning, you may find some of what he shared distressing.
The numbers that we are seeing in terms of casualties are increasing by the hour.
We have, at BBC Persian, confirmed horrific accounts of tens of bodies being sent to hospitals
in city like Rashd and also Tehran, Karaj, Mashhad.
and the numbers are now very much into hundreds, dead and injured, many of them with live ammunition.
Hospitals are struggling to cope.
Most can't really help those arriving with gunshot wounds, and the government is even restricting
families from receiving the bodies of their loved ones.
They're simply identifying them and not allowing them to take them for burial.
So it's a scene of horror in many of these cities where this skis.
security forces have open fire on protesters. The jaw-dropping reality of all of this is that
the shootings have happened on Thursday night and Friday night, and despite it all, Saturday
saw even more protests in the city like Mashhad, second largest city in Iran, also in Tehran.
Parts of it was overtaken by protesters. So it's a scene and reality of a extremely violent crackdown,
while protesters are persisting.
And they are persisting, despite an internet blackout,
getting information out being extremely difficult.
I guess these are some of the tactics of the authorities
to try and suppress these protesters.
Indeed, I mean, the minute they took the extraordinary step
of basically cutting the country off from the outside world,
and they went further, they even restricted communication
within the country between the citizens.
You can't send SMS or text messages.
messages to other people with mobile phones. It's even hard to call landlines in some cases.
So they are basically cutting all ways that the citizens can communicate with each other or sent
information outside. And given this reality, you would think that protesters won't be gathering
again, but they did. And the images of that has trickled outside as well, whether with Starlink,
which is most of the people who have access,
have managed to send these footage out
or in occasional cases of somebody connecting to the internet.
So that is how we're getting these images
and these reports about the dead.
We also saw images of something look like a gymnasium space
where bodies were lined in black bags,
rows and rows of bodies,
still being verified of where exactly it is,
but it is very clear that we are looking at
piling of people who've been killed and their bodies just staying in different spaces.
There have been calls from the exiled prince Reza Pahlavi for people to keep coming out,
for Iranians to keep protesting. Are his calls particularly powerful? Is that driving a lot of the
protesters? Or does he not have as much support as perhaps people might think?
It is a debate of whether how much support he has. And we have to remember that these protests did not
start with him calling for protests.
It started with the grievance about the economic situation.
But of course, one has to be realistic about the fact that Thursday night and Friday night, the big protest and also Saturday evening, were following his calls for a certain hour for people to gather.
So there's definitely support for him.
We've seen him a lot of chance and nostalgia about a regime before the current regime also plays a role.
So there's definitely a base of support for him.
And he's certainly now directing some of these protests.
Of course, it becomes a lot harder when the internet is completely cut off so people can't really hear messages that he says, except through satellite television like BBC Persian and other satellite TVs where his messages are broadcast.
But so the reality is there is a base for him and there's also other opposition figures and
groups who are joining for what everybody now is calling for, which is the end of this dictatorship.
Baham and Kilbassi. And you can hear and see more on the protests in Iran on our YouTube page
where we ask our chief international correspondent, Lee Doucette, whether this could be the end of the religious regime.
Just search for BBC News, click on the logo, then choose podcasts and global news podcast.
And there's a new story available every weekday.
The US military has carried out strikes in Syria against Islamic State
as part of Operation Hawkeye.
It's the latest action in a mission that was launched last December
after a deadly IS attack on American and Syrian forces.
Meanwhile, the US Special Envoy met the Syrian President in Damascus
and offered Washington support in stabilising the country.
Our Middle East analyst Sebastian Usher told us more.
The US Central Command has issued a statement
saying that's carried out multiple strikes,
across Syria against Islamic State targets.
This is the second major operation
that's carried out since there was an attack
which the US has accused an Islamic State fighter
of carrying out in Palmyra last month
on December 13th.
Just a few days after that,
there was a similar range of strikes across the country
in response to that.
I mean, we don't know exactly
how much impact that's had on what's left of IS.
Some of the information I've seen
is that it hasn't really had a huge effect.
So I think it's more to give that statement of intent.
And that's very much the way that it was phrased by the US Central Command.
I mean, they call this Operation Hawkeye Strike.
As I say, this is in response to an ambush in which two American soldiers were killed
and a US civilian interpreter were killed.
So, you know, a major setback for the US in that.
And the US Central Command ends its statement with this saying,
our message remains strong, and this is very Trumpian.
If you harm our war fighters, we will find you and kill you anywhere in the world,
no matter how hard you try to evade justice.
That is what the message they're trying to get across.
And they say they're trying to root out Islamic State and terrorism in its entirety.
Do we have a sense of when they'll be satisfied that that's happened?
In a sense, obviously there is a military strategy to this,
but it is also performative in a way.
I don't think that the strategists can believe that they can stamp out what's left of IS in Syria on this.
I mean, IS has essentially gone to ground.
It's in remote areas.
It's in cells.
I think there's been a sense that since a toppling of Bashar al-Assad, what's left of IS there sniffed an opportunity, perhaps, to regroup, to carry out attacks again,
trying to get close to a sort of scale that they once were capable of doing.
But nothing like any concerted effort to take territory.
That's long gone. There's no chance of that.
So, I mean, this is essentially a massive operation to swat what in some sense is a fly as far as the US Central Command there is concerned.
Not say that IS doesn't represent a threat in many other areas around the world to the US and other interests.
But in Syria, it's not perhaps anywhere near what it once was.
Sebastian Usher.
It's been more than a week since American forces flew into Venezuela to seize President Nicolas Maduro.
And while he waits for his next appearance in court in March, his authoritarian regime still runs the country,
and security forces have been given powers and permission to capture anyone who supports the US military operation.
The US State Department has told Americans in Venezuela to leave immediately after reports of armed militias,
setting up roadblocks and searching cars for US citizens.
Some Venezuelans have also fled uncertain about the future of the country.
Our correspondent Sumi Somerskanda has been speaking to expats,
in Colombia. The heart of Cucuta, a town on the border with Venezuela, where many Venezuelans have
come to find work and build a new life, including Laura Hernandez. She'd moved back to Venezuela
in December after many years in Colombia. But after Nicolas Maduro was captured, she says she put out
a message on WhatsApp, Venezuela Libre, free Venezuela. She says in minutes her SIM card was blocked.
She deleted all messages. But police arrived at her house asking for information.
She denied any knowledge. When they left, she fled, leaving her three sons with family for now.
I tell them to say they don't know anything about me, that I left the country and they don't know where I am,
because I'm scared something will happen to them, and there will be reprisals against them.
Why did you write Venezuela Libre? Because it's what we all wanted, that they removed the president
because we thought removing him meant Venezuela would change, but we're returning to the past, to the same.
We couldn't independently verify Laura's story, but there are reports of similar cases.
For other Venezuelans, the winds of change are reason for hope.
With President Trump, quote, running the country and the interim government announcing
its releasing some political prisoners, they're hoping for new economic opportunities back home, too.
Little by little, at least with food and medicine, now there's everything.
Now it's possible to go back home.
I'm going to return with the help of God.
On a busy stretch of highway near the border,
Marta Alarcon has built her life around helping the thousands of Venezuelans
who have stopped by her stand, a haven providing food, water, medicine,
and the kindness of a stranger.
Martha's guests have written countless messages of thanks,
including this past week.
Couples have been coming, because they say things are difficult.
because they've started closing everything.
There's no money to buy anything, no food.
I pray to God that Venezuela will get better
so that everyone can return.
Why?
Because there are many people here who have suffered too much.
It's an uncertain time for Venezuelans here,
as the future of their country remains in limbo.
Sumis Somerskando with that report.
And still to come in this podcast?
If the grateful day they'd had an ethic,
it would be served the music, and Bobby certainly did.
That was what he was put on earth for, and he did it to the last.
Founding member of the Grateful Dead, Bob Weir, has died.
If journalism is the first draft of history, what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed, hundreds killed.
But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it.
It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories.
I'm Helena Merriman, and in a new BBC series, I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story.
What did they miss the first time?
The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast.
When a freight train travelling at high speeds collided with a passenger train in the Tempe Valley in Greece back in 2023,
it sent shockwaves through the nation, sparking protests, strikes and anger at the country.
government. A large part of the blame was put on a perceived lack of funding for rail maintenance.
And that tragic incident could have a profound impact on the next election there as a new political
party has sprung up in response to it. Stephanie Prentice told us more.
Chris, it's worth revisiting the severity of this crash to really understand that long-lasting
significance. I was working here when it happened and it felt like every time I went into the
studio to give an update, even more horrifying details had emerged. It was
A head-on collision. The front carriages of this passenger train just completely crushed on impact.
There was a fireball that moved through some of the carriages.
Rescuers couldn't even get inside to reach people that were trapped because of the high temperatures.
57 people died and many were young students who'd been in that front carriage that took the brunt of the impact.
It was the worst world disaster Greece had seen in decades and the people there haven't forgotten.
On the second anniversary in 2025, we again saw man.
demonstrations against the government in more than 100 cities,
people still really angry and really frustrated of what happened
and saying even now, not enough has been done to modernise those railways
and improve their safety standards.
And so tell us about this new party then?
So we're not only 40 people are going on trial in March over that collision,
but that hasn't stopped accusations of corruption around the general investigation.
And amid that search for justice, one of the victim's mothers has become something
of a national figure.
Some Maria Cristiano became known as the mother of Tempe.
Tempe, of course, been where it happened.
She lost her 20-year-old daughter,
and she never stopped campaigning for answers.
And now she's announced a new party.
She says it'll combat corruption.
Polls are suggesting it could do well.
It's being called the Citizens Movement.
The polls say it could get between 10 and 30% of the vote.
It's obviously far too early to be calling that
there isn't a general election in Greece until 2027.
We do know the government is currently in some trouble.
It's managing a farmers crisis that spans an EU investigation,
as well as protests on the ground from farmers themselves.
And we've seen other protests generally over low wages, cost of living pressures.
So new parties springing up can be seen as representative of the frustration some Greeks are feeling.
And the 2023 crash is something that really united the nation against the government at the time.
Stephanie Prentice.
Now, if you're a dog owner, you probably know just how,
clever your beloved pet is. But a new study suggests that some canines can learn to understand words
by eavesdropping in on our conversations, sometimes even better than a one-and-a-half-year-old child.
Dr. Shani Drawer is from the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna and is the author of the study.
She explained her findings to Julian Warwicka.
I've been working with these special dogs for a while and I've noticed how they're paying attention to their owners.
And I'd also get some very funny stories of owners telling me they were thinking of ordering a pizza and they were talking between them.
And then the dog ran into the room with their toy named pizza.
Or they were talking on the phone and they mentioned something like a bag of rice and that the dog ran can with the toy named bag of rice.
And I was like, okay, so the dogs are doing something here.
And I really wanted to understand the depth of what they were doing.
So we know that almost all dogs can learn things like sit or down or stay, the labels of actions.
What we found in our previous studies is that actually only very few dogs show evidence of learning object labels.
So for example, to get their ball versus to get their rope or a frisbee.
And I have to say it's not only our research group that found this.
There are also a few other research groups that tried to train dogs to learn names of objects
and found that there were only a small group of dogs that can do.
this. And particular breeds of dogs? The majority of these dogs are border collies. It's important to
note that they're not only border collies. We have also a few other quite surprising dogs. So in previous
studies, we had a Pekingese, Shih Tzu, Yorkshire's, and it's still very rare even among border
collies. Because these dogs are so rare, we work online. The dogs are located all around the world,
speaking Norwegian, Portuguese, English, a lot of different languages. And in our studies, you know,
they're learning only a name of an object, so it doesn't seem to matter to them in which language you say it.
But there are other studies of neuroimaging, not from me, from my colleagues, that show the dogs actually do
differentiate between languages and the languages that they don't hear often. In our study, you know,
in the headline of the study, we say like one and a half year old children. The reason for this is,
Because when we look at the surface level behavior, it looks the same.
The dogs were listening to a very brief interaction, and at the surface level, they managed to perform something like kids do it.
But like is the key word here.
It looks the same.
It doesn't mean that what goes on in their brain is the same.
And actually, this is something we always need to keep in mind when we're looking at animals behaving, quote-unquote, like humans.
then we need to keep in mind that even if the behaviour looks the same,
it's most likely that the thoughts that underlie this behaviour are different.
Animal behaviour researcher Dr. Shani Draw.
A senior Google employee in Britain has claimed she was made redundant
after reporting a manager for sharing inappropriate sexual stories with clients.
Victoria Woodall told an employment tribunal in London
she was subjected to a relentless campaign of retaliation
after raising concerns about the man who was later dismissed for gross miscarriage.
conduct. Google denies any wrongdoing. A judgment is expected later this month. More details from
our investigations correspondent, Rihanna Croxford. Victoria Woodall claims she was working in the UK
sales and agencies team at Google when two female clients contacted her to report that a manager
had been sharing details about his swinger lifestyle. One complained that during a business lunch
he'd been boasting about the number of black women he'd had sex with. Another says,
that he had shown her a nude photo of his wife. Google investigated and found the manager's conduct
amounted to sexual harassment and that he'd also touched two colleagues without their consent.
But Ms. Woodall claims she was retaliated against for reporting him. In court, she said that,
among other actions, her boss had tried to downgrade her performance and demoted her on a big
project before she was made redundant. Google denies any retaliation,
arguing that Miss Woodle became paranoid after whistleblowing
and began to view normal business decisions as sinister.
Rianne at Croxford.
The American singer and guitarist Bob Weir,
who was a founding member of the Grateful Dead,
has died at the age of 78.
The band was credited with defining the sound of San Francisco's psychedelic rock movement.
He joined the group as a teenager
and spent the next 30 years touring the world,
followed by a loyal group of fans known as deadheads.
He was diagnosed with cancer last summer,
weeks before he played the Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary shows.
His former publicist Dennis McNally shared his memories of Bob.
We spent a lot of time together.
I wrote on a bus with his band Rat Dog for four years,
as well as all the Grateful Dead time.
And he was a unique personality.
He had a very off-kilter or unusual sense of humor
that was dry and funny.
There's a Grateful Dead song called Liberty,
and there's a line in it,
Find Your Own Way Home.
And though that's true of all the band members,
they were all anarchists and all went their own way.
In some ways, you know, Bobby was the epitome of that,
and music was his life.
And if the Grateful Day had an ethic,
it would be served the music.
And Bobby certainly did.
And, you know, that was what he was put on earth for.
And he did it to the last.
Bobby played, you know, covered the bass notes.
sometimes. Sometimes he played lead. None of them played conventionally. And that required all of them
to listen to each other, which is the essence of improvisational music. And that's what made them special.
At a Grateful Dead show, everyone in the room was a member of the Grateful Dead. And that was the way
the band thought about it, at least down deep. So they weren't performing in a theatrical sense.
They were having a conversation with each other, musically, that included the audience.
And Bobby subscribed to that and played to that.
Dennis McNally.
Now, if you know your Iron Man from your Iron Fist
or your Green Lantern from your Green Arrow,
then you won't be surprised to learn
that a rare first-edition comic book
that introduced the world to Superman
has just sold at auction for $15 million.
When it was first published in 1938, though,
you could buy it for just 10 cents.
Mike Collins is a comic book and storyboard artist
who's worked for DC Comics on some of their most
famous superheroes like Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman,
Celia Hatton asked him if he's ever seen a copy of this first edition.
About five or six years ago, I was visiting the offices of DC Comics out in Burbank,
and the executive editor who's somebody I've worked with over the years.
In fact, I've drawn Superman for him many years ago.
He said, do you want to come and visit the vault?
And you don't always get the chance to visit the vault.
So, of course, I said yes.
And we went through.
I saw lots of old comics.
I saw costumes from various movies and what have you.
And then he opened this big drawer up.
And inside was sealed in plastic, a copy of action comics number one.
And I actually got to hold it in my hands.
It was an incredible thrill as a comics fan all my life to have this piece of history in my hands.
They did take it off me again, mind.
I'm sure they did.
So can you describe for us what Superman looks like in that very first edition,
first time we ever see him?
It's very protean.
We're used to seeing this big yellow and red S on his chest.
When it started, it was a very simple and a small S and wasn't always very obvious.
It was an S there.
And Superman's hair was completely slick back.
And he was a far bulkier figure.
The boots weren't always drawn the way we see the boots now.
I mean, what's interesting about Superman is that he was actually created by Joe Siegel and Jerry
Schuster five years earlier.
And it got rejected and rejected and rejected.
So they really sort of never thought this thing was going to see print.
It's only when Action Comics number one was going to press.
They didn't have enough material to go in there.
So they had to go through the slush pile,
and they found this story that these two kids had written and drawn.
Because they were only in their late teens when they did it and shoved it in there.
And obviously they did it as a one-off thing.
But then it was a massive success.
It went from, I think the first issue of action comics sold something like 200,000 issues.
But after a few months, it was selling a million issues,
a month. So they really have to think about what Superman was and how Superman looked. And so
within a year, we got to see the Superman we kind of think of us today. What was it like
to draw Superman yourself? It was easily one of the biggest thrills of my life. But it was so daunting.
When you realize when you're sitting and putting pencil to paper that you are drawing a character
that's been around for longer than your parents, you know, it's a figure out of history.
I did freeze up a bit when I started
because it was just the most extraordinary opportunity to do.
What a thrill.
And what's the appeal of Superman?
Why do you think he made it as a character
beyond all of these other characters
that were in competition at the time?
I think it's the human aspect.
Even though Superman as a character is this alien
and that explains his powers because he's from another planet,
he still has the Clark Kent identity.
And I grew up as a specky kid.
So seeing a heroic figure,
that wore glasses.
It sort of gave you that little bit of humanity to it.
I mean, you'll get other characters that are literal gods like Thor,
but you have this aspect of Superman that he is also Clark Kent.
He's also the guy in the office that people should look down around
because he's not sporty and he's a bit book learning rather than sort of being a jock,
even though secretly he's a jock.
Comic book artist Mike Collins.
And that's all from us for now.
There'll be a new edition of the Global News Podcast.
later. If you'd like to comment on this podcast and the topics we're covering, do send
us an email. The address is Global Podcast at BBC.co.uk. You can also find us on X at BBC
World Service. Use the hashtag Global News Pod. This edition was mixed by Chris Lovelock. The producer
was Stephanie Zacherson. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Chris Barrow. And until next time,
thanks for listening. Goodbye.
If journalism is the first draft of history, what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed, hundreds killed. But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it. It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories. I'm Helena Merriman and in a new BBC series I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story. What did they miss the first time? The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs. Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
