Global News Podcast - Iran ridicules - then rejects - US peace plan
Episode Date: March 25, 2026Iran's state broadcaster says that Tehran has responded "negatively" to a US peace plan. A senior, unnamed official said Iran would end the war when it decided to do so - and when "its own conditions ...are met". The details of the 15-point plan were never made public, but it's reported to have demanded major concessions from Tehran. Also, after declaring an energy emergency, the Philippines said it was seeking new sources of oil from sanctioned countries, including Russia. The CEO of investment firm Blackrock said that if the war led to long-term high oil prices, there would be a global recession. We also hear from some of the survivors of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the impact of a smartphone ban in Dutch schools, and how an Australian dog that was used to rescue koalas is getting a well-earned retirement.The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson, and at 16 hours GMT on Wednesday the 25th of March, these are our main stories.
Iranian state media is reporting that Tehran has rejected US proposals aimed at ending the war.
It says the Americans are only negotiating with themselves.
The oil crisis caused by the war continues.
The Philippines has declared a national energy emerging.
and says it's ready to buy oil from sanctioned countries such as Russia.
Also in this podcast, survivors of the late paedophile Jeffrey Epstein speak out.
A couple of times where I would triple check that my garage was locked because I was afraid I'd go out and like my car would explode the next morning.
Just weird random fears.
And the UN considers whether the transatlantic slave trade was a crime against humanity.
Iranian state media is reporting that the government in Tehran has rejected a 15-point peace plan
proposed by the United States to end the war.
Over the last two days, President Trump has, publicly at least, seemed upbeat about the prospects of a conclusion to the fighting,
an attitude that's sometimes been ridiculed by Iranian officials.
In what was perhaps an indication that they were going to reject the plan earlier on Wednesday
and Iranian military spokesperson mocked U.S. attempts at a ceasefire deal.
Speaking on Iranian state television,
Lieutenant Colonel Ibrahim Zolfiqari,
the spokesperson for Iran's main military command,
insisted that the Americans were only negotiating with themselves.
The strategic power you used to talk about
has turned into a strategic failure,
The one claiming to be a global superpower would have already gotten out of this mess if it could.
Don't dress up your defeat as an agreement.
Your era of empty promises has come to an end.
We state this clearly.
Until it is our will, nothing will go back to the way it was.
Just before we recorded this podcast, our Middle East analyst Sebastian Usher,
who's in Jerusalem, gave us the latest.
Well, the plan essentially is quite comprehensive in terms of
what it's demanding from Iran, that is the end of any kind of ambition towards developing nuclear
weapons. Now, we know that that was the key aim of the war, both from the US and Israel,
announced from the start, and it's been in the ether for a long, long time.
So it has to dismantle its nuclear capabilities, commit to not pursuing further nuclear weapons,
not to enrich any more nuclear material and to hand over the enriched uranium that it has developed,
that its nuclear facilities, Venatans, Isfahan and Fulot will all be decommissioned,
that the atomic energy agency, the UN watchdog on nuclear facilities and programs,
will be given full rain, as it was meant to have had in the past,
to monitor all Iran's activities.
Also, that Iran will no longer fund or run any proxy militant forces in the region
that would mean Hezbollah, that would mean the Houthis to an extent, that would mean militias in Iraq.
It would to some extent mean the involvement that Iran has had with Hamas.
So it essentially, the way it's been phrased, this has not been put publicly, but saying it will abandon its proxy model.
And another issue, the Strait of Hormuz, which has become an absolute essential factor in what's been happening in the past week or two in the way the war has been working itself out.
with Iran essentially closing it to almost all shipping with the knock-on effect that has had on energy markets around the world.
This, again, not made public, not officially confirmed, but one of the points in this plan is Vestrade of Hormuz will remain open as a free maritime zone and unblocked in the future.
Now, Iran in return for all of these concessions would have sanctions, all sanctions relating to its nuclear.
ambitions removed, there would be some assistance given to its civilian nuclear infrastructure
at Boucher. But it seems, from what we've been hearing, this is not acceptable, certainly in
its present form, to the Iranians. We've been getting all these lines through the Reuters News Agency,
but they are quoting press TV in Iran, just responding to the plan, saying Tehran will only
and the war at a time of its choosing and only if its conditions are met as well.
But do we know who this is coming from from inside Iran?
Who's making decisions?
Who would messages be passed to who is shaping the narrative?
I mean, we don't know 100%.
I mean, we don't know what role the new Supreme Leader Mushita Hamanai is playing.
For all we know, he might be dead.
There's been no sign of him, no visibility since he was appointed the Supreme.
leader, the Speaker of Parliament, Galabath. He certainly has come to the fore. He is the man
who the US was saying would be involved in the negotiations, would be leading the team if those
negotiations were to take place. I mean, you could say that this is a negotiating position
for Iran. Certainly the messages that officials have been giving out recently have been very, I mean,
have been openly mocking the US essentially, describing originally the idea that there were talks
as fake news and then saying that this is in response to the energy markets, essentially giving,
without saying it specifically, but essentially saying that the US, that President Trump in particular,
had blinked first. And, you know, in a sense that despite the massive destruction that there's
been the decapitation of so much of its leadership, Iran may believe that it has a very strong
position still because it's survived.
Sebastian Usher in Jerusalem speaking to Lucy Hawking's.
The closure of the strait of Hormuz to most shipping and the day-to-day fluctuations of the war,
not to mention the sometimes very difficult pronouncements from President Trump,
have led to wild swings in the price of oil.
But it's now far more expensive than before the fighting started.
This has caused problems for many countries.
In the Philippines, the government has declared a national energy emergency.
It's now seeking new sources of oil, including from sanctioned countries such as Russia.
Now, Asia business correspondent Surinjana Tuari spoke to me from the Philippine capital Manila.
The Philippines government has said that it is in discussions with the US to source fuel from,
as you mentioned, sanctioned countries, including potentially Venezuela and Iran.
And actually local media have reported, and the government has already said that it was working
on securing fuel supplies from Russia and that the first tranche in five years actually arrived
today. Now, as I mentioned, that was local media reports, but the government did confirm that
they are definitely going down that track. Look, what's going on in the Middle East has huge
consequences for the Philippines. It relies on fuel imports. More than 90% of its oil needs come
from the Gulf. And ever since the conflict started, it's really suffered. There have been
multiple price hikes. And as a result, the president had to impose that state of emergency,
the state of energy emergency, because there were so many threats to the current stock of fuel.
What's the reaction to this suggestion been? It's been a mixed reaction. The private sector has
really welcomed these emergency powers because it gives so much more flexibility to the government,
not only to procure new oil supplies, but also to give cash handouts to transport workers,
for example, who are really struggling to make ends meet, but also to try and oversee the supply
of things like food. There was lots of concerns about food hoarding as a result of the higher
fuel costs. Now, I've been speaking to some ordinary people to find out,
what their reaction is.
Here is a Jeepney driver, which is an open bus that's used widely in the Philippines for commuting
and also a food stall owner.
The situation is as bad as the pandemic.
Diesel has become very expensive.
There's strong demand for rides, but each trip now costs me much more to operate.
The government is offering some cash assistance, but I won't receive mine until the next round.
And there's still no clear timeline for when that will be.
We are shocked by how quickly prices are rising.
The cost of cooking gas and food has gone up sharply.
We've seen fewer customers as people cut back on spending,
and I've had to reduce what I spend on my children as well.
Briefly, Souran, what are you hearing from the rest of Southeast Asia?
Most of the oil that passes through the Strait of Hormuz actually comes to Asia,
so many countries in this region are under a lot of pressure,
and many of them are emerging economies, big manufacturing hubs that require a lot of electricity and energy in order to power their factories.
So just today we heard from the Vietnamese government that diesel prices have doubled there.
The Philippines also is seeing diesel and petrol prices double the rate it was before the Iran war started.
And then there's Thailand, even Japan and South Korea are really struggling, although.
they have much more capacity to hold reserves than these developing economies do.
Sirenjana Tuari. To say the war with Iran has created uncertainty in the global economy
is something of an understatement. Even those paid to work out what's happening have no
real idea how it will end and what the consequences will be. Larry Fink is the chief executive
officer of BlackRock, the US investment firm that manages 14 trillion.
billion dollars. He sees two possible scenarios. I can see a year for now oil at $40 a barrel. I can see
it above $150 a barrel. We have two very extreme outcomes. And in my conversations throughout the
world with the U.S. government, all that, to me, everybody has to recognize it's, there's not
going to be an outcome that's somewhere in the middle. It's going to either be two extremes. Is Iran
a country that can be accepted by the international community.
Can Iran be a country that participates in the world again?
If that outcome occurred, then you could have the Iranian oil back into the marketplace,
alongside the growth of the Venezuelan oil.
And you can paint a picture where oil prices could be lower than they were prior to the Iranian war.
If there's a cessation of war, and yet Iran remains a threat, a threat to trade,
a threat to the straits of Harmouth.
Then I would argue that we could have years, years of, you know,
above $100, closer to $150 oil.
What happens to the global economy if that happens?
How do we see it?
We'll have global recession.
Larry Fink, speaking to our business editor, Simon Jack.
Still to come in this podcast, we hear about the Australian dog
who has helped rescue koal.
from bushfires.
It's a simple reward-based game, right?
Each time bear smells that specific scent of the koala,
he gets to play with us, and so he has the best time ever,
and so he just wants to do it all the time,
and therefore he search for koalas all the time.
Bear, the 11-year-old Australian Coulee finally retires.
Survivors of the late-convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein
have told the BBC they believe everyone in his orbit.
knew what was going on. In a special program from Washington, the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire
spoke to survivors who told her their stories. They saw. Yeah, everyone saw from the cab driver to the
chef, to the maid, to the cameras. They knew what was going on. I mean, I knew. You couldn't be
friends with Jeffrey and not know what was going on. Are you saying it's impossible for them not
to have known? Why? Why? Why? Because we were there. Because we were there.
50s and the girls are all under 23.
But you can already see what's going on if you walk into a room
with those, that power dynamic and huge age gap.
One of the victims, Joanna Harrison, is speaking out for the first time.
She wanted to remain anonymous,
but her name was released in the Epstein files.
She was 18 when a friend introduced her to Jeffrey Epstein.
She was raped by him.
My fear was, with the files being released,
that my name would be released, which it was.
and it was released over and over and over again.
Even though it was supposed to have been redacted?
Supposed to been redacted.
There were even times that we reached out.
Things were taken down, but then new things were put back up.
And so it's just kind of a never-ending thing.
And you just get sick of it.
And it's like, all right, I guess it's my time.
Do you feel it's been forced upon you?
I do, yeah.
In terms of your name being out there?
For all of us.
I mean, it's not normal to see your abusers face every day for six years on TV, hear their name.
You walk in a store, you see him on a magazine,
just kind of gets to a point where you're being suffocated and you need to breathe.
And I feel that this is my way of trying to breathe.
Many of the women who spoke to us said they were worried about their safety after speaking out.
Chonte Davis was in her early 20s when she first met Epstein.
You know, I find myself locking doors in my house that I didn't normally lock before.
There were a couple of times where I would triple check that my garage was locked
because I was afraid I'd go out and like my car would explode the next morning,
just weird random fears.
Because you think what you might potentially be targeted because you've spoken out
against powerful, the powerful elite?
Yeah, and because I don't plan on quitting,
and I still have a lot more to say that hasn't been said.
So, yeah, I feel like there's already been people
who have been silenced permanently.
And I don't know why would we be left off that list, to be honest.
I mean, even Jeffrey himself, whoever killed him,
silenced him, so...
You don't believe he took his own life?
Absolutely not. No.
None of you do?
We knew the kind of person he was.
He never, he didn't seem like...
He knew he thought he was going to walk away from even this.
He knew he was going to get away with everything.
What Epstein and his network of rich, powerful friends and associates did
has dominated American and UK politics
after the release of millions of documents related to Epstein
by the U.S. Department of Justice.
Millions more still haven't been.
made public. Former Prince Andrew was stripped of his title over his links to the convicted
sex offender. Lisa Phillips, who was a 21-year-old model when she first met Epstein, told the BBC,
a friend of hers was sent by Epstein into a room with the former prince. Andrew Mountbatten
Windsor has strongly denied any wrongdoing. My girlfriend, she was the reason why I started speaking
out because I wanted to speak for her because she didn't want to because the abuse happened to her.
In late 2003, she said she went to his Upper East Side house, and former Prince Andrew was there,
and that he made her, forced her, to go into a room and to have sex with this man.
And she didn't want to, and she argued with him.
She said he made her, and she went into the room for a few minutes,
and then he kind of discarded her and walked out.
And when you say he, who's the he making her do that?
Jeffrey Epstein making her go into that room and Andrew was in there and she was required to have sex with him.
That's what happened.
Right.
Andrew denies all wrongdoing.
Why do you think your friend has never gone public?
Well, I don't blame her.
I mean, I think most victims don't want to go public.
Have the police in the UK, Lisa, ever asked to interview you about what your friend alleged Andrew did?
The police in the UK?
No.
Should they? Yeah, I think they would learn a lot by talking to the victims.
Victoria Derbyshire talking there to some of the victims of Jeffrey Epstein.
The BBC has approached the former Prince Andrew for comment about these specific allegations made by Lisa Phillips,
but has not received a response.
Let's go now to the United States. Garner's president is there,
and he's accused the Trump administration of normalizing the irisive.
erasure of black history. Speaking at an event on slavery reparations at the United Nations,
John Dramani Mahama said President Trump's executive orders had required national parks and museums
to remove so-called anti-American ideology. Its comments come ahead of a vote at the UN General
Assembly on a draft resolution led by Ghana calling for the transatlantic slave trade
to be formally recognised as a crime against humanity.
Global Affairs correspondent Richard Kegoy in Nairobi told me more about the vote.
For the African states, what this mean is an opportunity for all countries who are affected or involved in this to have an honest conversation.
They're saying it's an opportunity to revisit history, an opportunity for countries to have what they describe as a constructive dialogue,
and just means streaming the whole conversation to become a global.
reflection. They're saying it's not just about reopening old wounds, but they just want an
acknowledgement of the honesty in terms of the atrocities that are committed during the over
400 years of the transatlantic slave trade. So for them, he's saying it's just working towards
a path of healing and also justice, you know, collectively not divided based on historical
experiences. So what are they hoping to achieve? Well, they want, you know, the transatlantic
trade to be declared crimes against humanity because of what the people who are the victims
really underwent. What they're pushing for is also the construction or the establishment of a
reparations fund, much as the fact that they have said it's not just the monetary value,
but they're just saying a fund needs to be established and mobilizing member states to contribute
towards it. And also the return of artifacts that was stolen from different parts of Africa
that do hold sentimental value, historical, cultural and also spiritual,
this without any cost at all.
So those are just some of the highlights from this resolution.
The reparations fund is likely to be the sticking point, though, isn't it?
Absolutely.
And that's why former colonial powers have really shied away from opening this discussion.
They say they're sorry, but really not an honest formal apology has been issued towards this.
And so it's difficult because most of them say that current generation shouldn't really be held for historical wrongs that were committed centuries ago.
Briefly, what are the chances of getting this resolution today passed?
It's really tricky, but significantly this is a major step that's been taken by the African continent just to push for this.
But yeah, it's a wait and see how this pans out based on the mobilization that's been done.
Richard Kagoy.
A question being asked in many countries at the moment is,
how to protect young people from the dangers posed by social media.
One place that's taking action is the Netherlands.
Since January 2024, mobiles, smart watches and tablets
have been exiled from classrooms, corridors and canteens in schools across the country.
A Dutch government study of more than 300 schools found that three quarters reported better concentration
and around two-thirds a better social atmosphere since phones were taken out of the
school day. And now Dutch politicians are debating whether under 15s should be kept off social media
altogether. Our correspondent Anna Holligan has been to a secondary school in Amsterdam to see how the
rules are working in practice. I've just arrived at the Cygnus Gymnasium and there is a bright,
fluorescent yellow notice and it says let up. So from this point as I cross over into the school
playground. Pupils' phones have to be stored in their lockers.
Yeah, telephone at house or in the cluis. So a phone is either at home or in the locker.
That slogan now applies nationwide. Instead of passing a law, the Dutch government went
for a national agreement with schools, parents and teachers. I'm Felix and I'm 15 years old.
I'm Carol and I'm also 15 years old. Yeah, I've seen some changes. People in the breaks, they talk more,
They're doing stuff like going to the store together and not just sitting on the bench in the cafeteria sitting on their phone.
The social connections of me and my friends have improved.
But the debate has now moved beyond the schoolgays.
The Dutch government advises under 15s to stay off social media and the new coalition wants an enforceable Europe-wide age limit,
arguing addictive platforms deserve the same restrictions as alcohol or gambling.
Just part my bike by the edge of a canal and I'm heading into the Dutch Ministry of Education.
My name is Coon Becking. Our distracted kids feel anxious, not only in schools, but everywhere else in society, I think.
And public opinions shifting in that direction too with Generation Z, perhaps surprisingly, among the strongest supporters of a ban.
Back at Cygnus Gymnasium, I ask Felix and Carol,
What would you say to your peers, so 15-year-old boys and girls,
about how your life has changed as a result of the ban?
When I first heard the news, I also thought, like, I want to switch schools.
This isn't what I came here for.
But I haven't really felt a downside of it.
Both boys spend between two and five hours a day scrolling.
And would you be as positive about the ban that they're talking about for social media for 15-year-olds?
I think you would get used to it relatively fast because that's then the new normal.
The Dutch Research Council is now investigating one of the bans possible unintended consequences,
whether going without a phone all day triggers more intense scrolling before and after school.
The pupils here in Amsterdam insist it doesn't.
But the most rigorous study to date found teenagers in phone-free schools compensate.
for lost screen time, almost minute for minute, once they got home.
Anna Holligan in Amsterdam.
Here on the global news pod, we love a good animal tale.
And this next story is definitely podcast gold.
An Australian dog credited with saving more than 100 koalas
from the country's devastating bushfires a few years ago
is retiring after a decade of service.
Bear, who's an 11-year-old Australian Cooley, was one of the first dogs trained to detect the
scent of koala fair. His work drew attention and praise from around the world, including from
Hollywood stars.
Hey, I'm Tom Hanks, and I'm going to read some of the nicest tweets on the internet. Here's
a dog one. This is bear. He was abandoned as a puppy due to his OCD, but quickly found a new
life as a koala detection dog.
This is a Disney movie that must be made.
The story of Bear, the koala detection dog.
That's adorable.
My colleague James Menendez has been hearing more about Bear from one of his handlers.
Remain Kretescu.
Bear is definitely what we call OCD, obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Bear would play all day long, all night long weekends.
He doesn't care, just he wants his toy.
It's actually sometimes become a problem for that kind of dog.
So bear just was too much for a normal family.
So he was surrender to us.
And basically for us, it's a simple reward-based game, right?
Each time bear smells that specific scent of the koala.
He gets to play with us.
And so he has the best time ever.
And so he just wants to do it all the time.
And therefore, he search for koalas all the time.
How difficult was it to train him to detect that koala scent?
Yeah, it was extremely difficult. I'm not going to lie. We have quite a few detection dogs and Bay had the toughest job because koalas are high up in trees.
So even though Bear is trying to take us to the scent, he actually can't take us up the tree, obviously.
So he's got to kind of bring us to the stronger scent that he can find on the ground, but trying to then pinpoint the koalas.
Yeah, it was tough. It was a very long and difficult training.
But it did work in the end. Tell us about it.
what it was like working with bear during those terrible bushfires in Australia a few years ago?
Yeah, and at the time of those fire, everywhere around the world, I think people were really struggling
or just, you know, the impact that that fire had on human lives and, of course, on nature and wildlife.
And so we were, you know, in our office at the university and we thought,
oh, you know, we have a dog that can find koalas.
How serious is that that we're not in the ground?
trying to find surviving koala.
And so we decided to go on the road, and we ended up being six months on the road.
And so there was really dire situation months after the fire where everyone kind of had moved on to something else.
And something else was often COVID because COVID was starting in.
And so, yeah, we just felt that, you know, there was no one else but really going through those burned forests trying to find surviving koalas.
So that was really important.
We stayed there.
And the beauty of bear and a little bit why he brought soul.
much joy to people is that he was playing a game. And we were all, all the humans were really
in a bad spot right. But Bear doesn't see the devastation the same way we did. And, you know,
he has a goofy personality. He's quite fine as a dog. And so I think it was a little bit of
comic relief to have that dog who really was doing silly things and just making everyone laugh.
Yeah, people needed their spirits lifted. So what's he going to do now in retirement? I mean,
Presumably he still needs quite a lot of stimulation, doesn't he?
Yeah, absolutely.
He's been adopted by one of his main handler,
who also has another dog, a Labrador,
and he's in love with this Labrador.
So they're having the best time as buddies
and lots of belly rubs, of course, lots of treats,
because Bear loves his food as well.
So lots of the good stuff, just not with koalas.
Remain Kretescu, speaking about Bear,
the koala rescue dog now happily living in retirement.
And that's all from us for now.
If you want to get in touch, you can email us at global podcast at BBC.co.com.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
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 James Piper, and the producer was Vanessa Hini.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson. Until next time, goodbye.
