Global News Podcast - Iran seizes two cargo ships in Strait of Hormuz
Episode Date: April 23, 2026Iran's president, Masoud Pezeshkian, says the US blockade is the main obstacle to peace negotiations and accused Washington of using "endless hypocritical rhetoric". The White House press secretary, ...Karoline Leavitt, said President Trump was "satisfied" with the US naval blockade of Iranian ports. She also insisted the blockade was proving successful, by "strangling" Tehran's economy. Also, billionaire Justin Sun has sued Donald Trump's crypto investment firm after suffering hefty losses. A court in Moldova jails an oligarch and a former senior politician over the theft of a billion dollars from banks. And, the monkeys of the rock of Gibraltar start eating soil to counteract the ill effects of their junk food diet.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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How did Pakistan become the key peacemaker in talks to end the war in Iran?
I'm Asma Khalid, one of the hosts of the Global Story podcast from the BBC.
For decades, the South Asian country has sat on the margins of global diplomacy.
But now it's emerging as a key player trusted by both the U.S. and Iran.
So how did Pakistan arrive here and can it use this moment to raise its profile on the world stage?
To hear more, check out the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson, and in the early hours of Thursday the 23rd of April, these are our main stories.
No deadline for an end to the ceasefire with Iran, according to the White House,
but that's not persuaded Iran to end its threats over the Strait of Hormuz.
One of the main backers of the Trump family's digital currency venture, World Liberty Financial, has sued the firm for alleged extortion.
Also in this podcast, rhetoric around AI become very tense. The existential threat that AI poses to the public, it's definitely causing alarm.
Public fears about AI, which has been the cause of some violent incidents and attacks in the U.S.
Both the United States and Iran are holding firm to their positions in what is now a standoff in the Strait of Hormuz, the world's busiest oil shipping channel.
Iran's president, Massoud Peschkian, says the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports is a violation of the ceasefire between the two sides,
and he's also accused the Trump administration of endless hypocritical rhetoric.
In Washington, the White House press secretary Caroline Levitt said the president was satisfied with the naval.
blockade. We are completely strangling their economy through this blockade. They're losing $500 million
a day. The Karg Island is completely full. They can't move oil in and out. They can't even pay their
own people as a result of this economic leverage that President Trump has inflicted over them.
Meanwhile, a day after Mr. Trump extended indefinitely the U.S.-Iran ceasefire,
Iran has again tightened its grip on shipping in the strait, seizing two cargo ships and
attacking a third one. Michelle V. Spockman,
is a senior maritime intelligence analyst at windward shipping.
She told the BBC more about why, in particular,
these three ships may have been targeted by the Iranians.
The three vessels all had links to MSC,
which is the world's largest container line.
And I believe the reason they were seized,
the IACC's modus operandi is to engage in tip-for-tat vessel seizures.
And of course, we had the detention of the Iran-flag container ship,
Tuska, on April 19,
and the boarding and detention of other Iran trading tankers in past days.
And so we believe that they were targeted because of the perceived lengths of the owner,
Gia-Louis, Aponte's perceived links to Israel.
So this very much fits in with the directive that they've given that no US or Israel-affiliated ships can go through the strait.
As many as 2,000 ships are stuck in the Gulf, many of them, oil tankers.
One of them is captained by Raman Koum.
Poor and his crew of 23.
We are stuck here
ever since the war started
on 28 February. The main
concern is lack of clarity
on how long we remain here.
My message to the authorities
would be as a ship captain,
I urge to prioritise de-escalation.
Let's keep the seas open for
trade and humanity. We, the seafarers,
keep world connected.
Please protect us.
The stalemate has pushed up the price of
oil and gas worldwide, but it
has also worsened the economic situation inside Iran,
which was already suffering from years of economic mismanagement
and international sanctions.
Our chief international correspondent, Lee Doucette, is in Tehran.
She's reporting from Iran on condition that none of her material
is used on the BBC's Persian service.
Similar restrictions apply to all international media organisations operating there.
She told me that Iran remains defiant
despite the economic pain caused by the war.
There is no doubt that Iran is suffering economically. We can see it, we can hear it here in Tehran. People tell us of the job losses, of the price rises. Economists are warning of even one economist had a staggering 72% inflation. But Iran's leaders will not capitulate. President Trump used to wonder why Iran hadn't surrendered when it was defeated militarily. Iran didn't, doesn't think it lost that.
war for all of the destruction to its military capabilities, and it will not capitulate it because of
the economic pain. Surely, though, cutting off their main revenue source, the oil by shutting
the strait of Hormuz for the Americans, in the end, they're going to run out of money, aren't they?
They seem to think that they can outlast the Americans on this one. And we do understand
that behind the scenes, behind this escalating war of words,
there are discussions to that effect.
President Trump keeps saying that he's satisfied with the naval blockade,
but Iran has shown time and again its ability to absorb pain,
and it is not going to surrender on this one.
President Trump talks of a fractured system in Iran,
that they can't come to a unified position.
Yes, we have seen some tactical differences emerging
in some of the contradictory statements,
in media outlets here, including those linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
But from what we understand is that when it comes to big strategic issues
and the fate of that straight is one of them, there is a broad consensus.
Iran is not going to give it up during these negotiations.
It sees it as a key bargaining chip, one of its main levers.
And this is something then we'll have to deal with later.
It also doesn't want to give it up in the long term.
So while it keeps saying we will completely open it once the US lifts its naval blockade,
there's also caveat saying the roots will be coordinated and monitored by Iran.
This is not, it is now a short-term problem, but in the future it will be a long-term problem too,
that not just Iran and the United States, but the world will have to contend with.
You're in Iran, you're speaking to real people. What are they making of this?
We really get the feeling talking to Iranians. They are living day by day.
This young architect we spoke to called it the lipstick effect. You try to find nice things,
if you can afford nice things, to try to get through the day. They're exhausted by years of failed nuclear talks,
by those spiraling prices, by the international sanctions, by the tightening security and surveillance,
by the restrictions on their lives.
So they just get on with it until there is some resolution.
And we're really struck that when we go around asking people about,
are you hopeful the ceasefire will hold?
People say to us, no, we want more war.
Tonight we were at one of those nighttime gatherings
where people come out into the main squares every night
at the call of the government to show solidarity,
to show defiance.
And one man said,
I want to continue to inflict more pain on Israel and the United States.
And then earlier in the day, at a cafe, a rather trendy cafe,
one man said to us, I want more war because I want to bring down this government.
So there's a churn of emotions for Iranians, but it's absolutely clear they're suffering from this crisis.
They want the sanctions to be lifted.
They want to get on with their lives.
And right now, they see no end to this crisis.
Lee Doucette in Tehran.
Despite reported violations, Lebanon and Israel are in talks to extend the 10-day ceasefire
with a second round of negotiations between their ambassadors on Thursday in Washington.
The ceasefire followed six weeks of devastating conflicts between Israel and the Iranian-backed armed group Hezbollah.
The Lebanese health authorities say that more than 2,100 people have been killed in Israeli air strikes,
and over a million, or roughly one in five of the country's population, have been displaced.
John Donelson has more.
So these preliminary talks about talks are due to get underway on Thursday in Washington,
but I don't think there is really any great grounds for optimism at the moment.
For starters, really, the fighting during this sea sphere has fire has never really stopped entirely.
Israel has continued to carry out strikes on Hezbollah targets,
and to some extent, Hezbollah has been firing back, even if it is in a more reduced way than
before the ceasefire. And secondly, the two sides seem to be really quite far apart. So we've
heard today that the Lebanese president is demanding that, once again, that Israel fully
withdraws its forces. There are thousands of Israeli troops occupying southern Lebanon. He wants
them to withdraw to the internationally recognized borders, in other words, back to Israel.
And really, the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has given no indication that he
is ready to do that. So the Lebanese president had also said that he might be looking for
an extension to the ceasefire, which is due to expire on Sunday evening. And that really might be the
best that we can get out of these talks.
ceasefire continues, at least in some fashion, even if it's not an incomplete ceasefire,
it continues to buy more time for talking. And I think there's no doubt that the Americans
do want a deal between Israel and Lebanon. You have to remember, of course, that Hezbollah,
Israel's enemy in this, they're not even involved in these talks, but the Americans do want to
deal because getting a deal here in Lebanon is also part of getting a more long time
term peace deal with Iran because of the Iranians in those negotiations have been insisting
that there has to be a complete ceasefire in Lebanon as well. So I guess it's positive that
these talks are happening, but as I say, no great grounds for optimism.
John Donnison in Jerusalem. President Trump has been a staunch supporter of cryptocurrencies.
World Liberty Financial is the most prominent of several lucrative,
crypto businesses co-founded by the Trump family in recent years.
But now, one of World Liberty's billionaire backers, Justin's son, is suing the company.
World Liberty denies any wrongdoing.
Our North America technology correspondent, Lily Jamali, is following the story.
World Liberty Financial is a firm that was set up by the Trump family in 2024.
Interesting timing, because that was just a couple of weeks before the U.S. presidential election.
It was President Trump and his sons, plus the son of Steve Whitkoff, who is now Trump's Middle East envoy.
And World Liberty Financial is basically a cryptocurrency company, which is not something a lot of presidential candidates would set up, given that crypto is the threat to the dominance of the U.S. dollar.
But it can also be used, not always, but sometimes for shady things like drug trafficking and money laundering.
And the list goes on.
This was the firm that went on to launch the Melania coin and the Trump coin, which,
members of our audience have probably heard about. So what's the crux of the lawsuit and who has the
upper hand? This lawsuit was filed right here in San Francisco in federal court. Justin's son,
the crypto billionaire. He's accusing World Liberty Financial of hatching a scheme to unlawfully seize
tokens, crypto tokens, which he says he bought from the company for north of $40 million.
He also alleges that the company froze all of his tokens, blocking him from selling them,
basically locking him into this investment, which obviously helps boost the price of the coin.
He is effectively claiming extortion, saying that they had this good relationship, things turned sour
when he didn't want to invest in a different product, that they were selling and World Liberty
Financial, as you say, denying wrongdoing. Who has the upper hand is a really good question.
I mean, certainly, if he can prove these extortion claims, he has the upper hand, but at the same
time, you have to think that the Trump family is going to really dig in its heels and fight this
to the end. Yeah, the Trump family has reportedly made millions from World Liberty Financial,
but Mr. Sun is not the only investor to lodge a complaint about the company.
That's right. And this venture has really drawn controversy from not just some investors,
but all kinds of critics who say that this is enabling President Trump to sell influence.
You may remember last year there was this crypto dinner that was hosted by the president at one of his personal properties where for the first time you could actually see who was invested in this thing because it was completely cloaked.
We had no idea until you could see the people in the line and it was around that time that Justin's son made clear.
He was actually the biggest holder of the firm's so-called Trump coin.
Interestingly, the top U.S. securities regulator dropped an investigation into this very same person last year.
once President Trump took office. So in terms of leverage, like it or not, the Trump family,
President Trump controls all of these government agencies, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission. And so I think something to watch is, will he leverage that control to punish Mr.
Son as this lawsuit plays out? Briefly, any word from the Trump's?
The Trump family calling this a baseless set of allegations, kind of resorting to some personal
attacks against Mr. Sun, but effectively denying that there was any wrongdoing here.
Lily Jamali in San Francisco. Artificial intelligence seems to be meeting some resistance in the US.
At times, even a violent one, a Molotov cocktail thrown at the home of the open AI boss Sam Altman, for example.
Miranda Nazaro is a tech reporter with the Hill website and has been writing about the incidents of pushback against AI.
She told the BBC what people are worried about.
Data centers is a large part of the pushback, though I would say it's definitely multiple factors.
So when you talk about data centers, you're obviously talking a lot about the effects on the environment,
as well as the effects on any one community that you are to put a data center in.
It obviously takes up a lot of physical room.
But you're also looking at concerns around workforce, what AI will do to the economy.
and overall just human intelligence or human capability. So data centers do tend to take a lot of
the brunt simply because they're something I think that constituents right now, as well as state
legislators and governors, feel as if they can control this because it's something in the
immediate future, whereas concerns about workforce, economy, they're a little bit harder to
actually wrap your head around and do something tangible about it right now. I think what
people are concerned about is that this is just the beginning of what could be a trend. We've seen
rhetoric around AI become very, very tense. People talking about the existential threat that AI poses to the
public. And I think that rhetoric is getting into hands of people who want to take violent actions. I would
say a lot of the advocacy against AI is nonviolent. Most of the biggest groups you see tell me that
they're frustrated by the violence because they don't feel it represents the whole picture. But,
you know, I think the incident sort of sparked a wake-up call for a lot of people of, oh, wow,
we've been talking a lot about these threats. We've been, you know, hearing industry pushback as well,
you know, against regulations. They want to innovate and innovate. But it's clear these tensions are
reaching new highs. So even though we're not seeing this as a major wide trend of violence,
I think it's definitely causing alarm and also starting the blitzers.
lame game as to who is responsible for these tensions right now.
Miranda Nazaro at the Hill.
Scientists say that the hay fever season is lasting even longer than the spring and summer
months, up to two weeks longer than 30 years ago because of climate change.
The research published in the Lancet Public Health Journal also found that rising
temperatures have caused a higher risk of heat-related deaths, food insecurity and drought in
parts of Europe.
is our health correspondent Dominic Hughes.
Around one in five people will be familiar with the itchy eyes, sneezing, runny nose and headache
associated with a pollen allergy, known more commonly as hay fever.
On warm, dry, windy days, pollen, mostly from grass and trees, is spread through the air.
In Europe, this is usually between late March and September.
But now scientists say that climate change is shifting the flowering season of plants that
release allergenic pollen.
When researchers looked at the timing and intensity of the birch,
order and olive tree pollen season,
they found it was starting one to two weeks earlier than previous studies in the 1990s.
And it's not just hay fever.
The report focuses on the broader impact of climate change on health in Europe.
And according to Professor Joachim Rockloff from the University of Heidelberg,
there are clear signs that a warming climate presents real dangers.
What we see in the report is that we have,
about the doubling of deaths from heat
and we have 300% increase in the days
when extreme heat levels, heat populations and deaths go up.
So we see very strong patterns in this report.
The report's authors warn that climate change
from warmer temperatures to more mosquito-borne diseases
and worse air pollution
is placing the health of millions of people at risk,
not in a distant future,
but today. Dominic Hughes.
Still to come in this podcast.
The ingestion of the soul may bring some microorganisms such as fungi or bacteria
that could rebalance the microbiome that can be disrupted by junk food.
The monkeys of the rock of Gibraltar eating soil to counteract the ill effects of snacks
left over from tourists.
How did Pakistan become the key people?
peacemaker in talks to end the war in Iran. I'm Asma Khalid, one of the hosts of the Global
Story podcast from the BBC. For decades, the South Asian country has sat on the margins of global
diplomacy. But now it's emerging as a key player trusted by both the U.S. and Iran. So how did Pakistan
arrive here and can it use this moment to raise its profile on the world stage? To hear more,
check out the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News Podcast.
China's immense oil reserves have put it in an enviable position during the fuel crisis caused by the war in Iran.
But the ripple effect of a global economic slowdown is now causing pain on the factory floors of the world's biggest exporter.
Our China correspondent Laura Bicker reports from the world's biggest trade fair in Guangzhou.
In the back streets of China's manufacturing heartland, it is clear why Beijing is pushing so hard for a
Sea Spire in Iran.
We've come to an area that is the world's largest textile supplier.
There are rolls of fabric being transported all around me,
onto the backs of carts, onto motorbikes, onto lorries,
all to be shipped around the world.
But there's a problem.
The price of this fabric has gone up in some cases by 20%.
Why? Because it needs oil to make these fabrics in the form of petrochemicals.
Just off the street, in an office filled with cigarette smoke,
four local suppliers pour tea into small porcelain cups.
They fear they'll have to absorb the extra costs,
as clients won't pay higher prices.
Overall, the number of orders were likely decrease,
as they higher the price, fewer the orders.
On the other side of town,
in the cavernous exhibition halls of the Canton Fair,
This city is welcoming buyers from all over the world.
Chinese traders show off new gadgets from vacuum cleaners
to shiny new espresso machines.
This event has long been a barometer for global trade
and this year it's reflecting a world shaped by conflict.
Under bright spotlights and an advertisement written in both English and Arabic
is one of China's biggest exports,
electric vehicles.
How are you?
I'm fine. How are you?
Good, good.
Why are you here at the Canton Fair?
We are delegation from Oman Chamber
to visit the Canton Fair
to find it to cooperate with the Chinese company.
How does the war in the Middle East
complicate things for you?
It's hard, but inshallah
I hope that is finished.
The business is going on. I think so.
One of my growth, we have factory.
Okay.
Yeah, so, let me.
Zahir Al-Khabi spends around 30 minutes negotiating the best price with Alyssa Yanshan.
Are your shipments able to get through right now?
That's a big challenge for me.
Everyone now is waiting to hope the war where I'll finish soon.
Trader Vera Chen is looking for opportunity amidst all the uncertainty.
We're still having so many customers from every single other countries
that they are looking for electric cars
and very hope we can just sell them as soon as possible
and the demand of electric cars is racing up.
It's hard to comprehend the scale of this Canton Fair.
There's a whole floor full of robots, robots dancing, robots waving.
This is a China trying to welcome the world and look to the future.
But traders here in Guangzhou and right across the country will be concerned.
about the fallout from this war
and whether it will cause a global recession
and effect their ability to sell goods abroad.
But within this crisis,
some may see an opportunity for President Xi Jinping.
But he's a very tough negotiator.
That's not good.
President Xi is a great leader of a great country
and I think we're going to have a fantastic relationship
for a long period of time.
Donald Trump will try to negotiate a new trade deal with Mr. Xi
when he visits Beijing next month.
China has been cautious in its criticisms of US actions in the Middle East.
Online, however, China has not been so diplomatic.
This AI cartoon, which depicts a warmongering eagle fighting a Persian cat,
has been circulating on Chinese social media,
a not-so-suttle dig at the Trump administration.
This is an outlet of frustration at a distant conflict that's reshaping trade in this nation,
which is both at the centre of the global economy and increasingly at the centre of global power.
Laura Bicker reporting from Guangzhou in China.
The Pentagon says the US Navy's top civilian official John Feeleon has left the job.
No explanation has been given for the sudden departure.
Mr Feeleon had never served in the military before President.
Trump nominated him as Secretary of the Navy. He was a major donor to the president's election campaign.
His deputy, Hung Kau, who spent decades in the Navy, will take over as acting secretary.
Several high-ranking military leaders have left the Trump administration in recent months.
Our correspondent in Washington, Bernd de Booseman, has more.
There was no official reason given by the Pentagon statement earlier, but the U.S. media has reported that Secretary
feeling had had kind of a very tense relationship with the Secretary of Defense Pete Heggseth over
many months now, both over personnel issues in the Navy and the Marine Corps, which he also oversaw.
But also in terms of where he was going with the Navy, he was a big proponent of what Trump
is called his Golden Fleet, which is essentially a fleet of large battleships, Trump-class
battleships, he's called them and other large vessels. Whereas the Pentagon, in another respect,
has kind of aimed to develop more its unmanned capabilities, its submarine fleet.
So there was kind of a divergence of opinion there.
At the same time, this is very much a surprise, the timing here in Washington.
John Phelan was someone who was seen as very close to President Trump personally.
He was a very significant donor during Trump's presidential campaign.
And as recently as December, he was with Trump in Mar-a-Lago when he unveiled a Trump-class battleships.
But the timing also does raise some questions.
here in Washington, even though it's an administrative role rather than an operational role
for the Secretary of the Navy to be dismissed with no reason given at a time when the Navy and
the Marine Corps are so committed to the conflict with Iran. In addition to the conflict against
drug trafficking vessels in this hemisphere, it's certainly raising some questions, and there's
already been quite a lot of criticism from Democratic lawmakers.
Burt de Booseman. A court in Moldova has sentenced an oligarch and former senior politician
to 19 years in prison.
Vladimir Plahot-Nuk was found guilty of involvement
in the theft of hundreds of millions of dollars
from three Moldovan banks,
which led to a financial crisis.
It prompted a government bailout and street protests.
Danny Aberhardt reports.
It's become known in Moldova as the theft of the century,
the spiriting abroad of a billion dollars from banks
between 2014 and 15.
In one of Europe's poorest nations,
that was equivalent to an eighth of the country's entire GDP.
Vladimir Plahot Nook, once Moldova's richest man and a key power broker,
was said to have made tens of millions himself.
He's now been found guilty of fraud, money laundering, and leading a criminal organisation.
The court ordered the seizure of $60 million of his assets.
Placot Nook had fled Moldova seven years ago
when the party he led and which ran the country lost power.
He was extradited from Greece last.
year. The tycoon called the trial political retaliation. He plans to appeal.
Plahotnuk has been sanctioned by the United States, the European Union and Britain.
Danny Aberhardt. Researchers believe monkeys in Gibraltar have found a cure for the upset stomachs they suffer
after eating sweet and salty snacks they've been given by, or steal from, tourists. It's soil,
According to a team from Cambridge University, Wendy Urquhart reports.
There are more than 200 macaque monkeys in Gibraltar,
and legend has it that British rule will end if they ever leave.
Over the years, tourists have been feeding them all sorts of rubbish,
so the macaques have actually become addicted, and they're anything but shy.
If you happen to be walking past them eating ice cream or chocolate,
you better look out, because they'll dive on you to get their hands on human food.
The problem is they're diet.
digestion can't handle junk food, which can cause stomachache, nausea and diarrhea. Unlike us,
they turned to instinct rather than the local chemist to treat their symptoms and started eating
the red soil that the territory has in abundance. Dr. Sylvia in Le Moyne, one of the researchers
from Cambridge University who's looking into why the macaques eat dirt, says it actually makes
a lot of sense. The main soil which has been observed to be consumed by the macaques is this red clay
called Terra Rosa, containing high levels of iron and probably carolain as well, which are known
to absorb toxins and tannins in other species. The ingestion of the soil may bring some
microorganisms such as fungi or bacteria that could rebalance the microbiome that can be
disrupted by junk food. The macaques are not the only primates to eat soil. Some birds have also
been seen chewing on it. But what's fascinating is that the macaques were able to identify
what would make them feel better purely by instinct. And if they're staying healthy,
it's unlikely they'll be leaving Gibraltar anytime soon. Wendy Urquhartt reporting.
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.com.com. You can all.
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 Sid Dundon,
and the producer was Muzaffa Shakir.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson.
Until next time, goodbye.
How did Pakistan become the key peacemaker in talks to end the war in Iran?
I'm Asma Khalid, one of the hosts of the Global Story podcast from the BBC.
For decades, the South Asian country has sat on the margins of global diplomacy.
But now it's emerging as a key player trusted by both the U.S. and Iran.
So how did Pakistan arrive here and can it use this moment to raise its profile on the world stage?
To hear more, check out the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
I don't know.
