Global News Podcast - Israel continues airstrikes in Lebanon
Episode Date: May 10, 2026Israeli airstrikes have continued in Lebanon despite the ceasefire - we report from the site of a residential building in Saksakiyeh hit in the latest barrage. Hezbollah is retaliating with attacks in...side Israel and against troops occupying southern Lebanon. Also: Péter Magyar becomes Hungary's new prime minister after 16 years of Viktor Orbán's rule; Russia's Victory Day is marked with muted celebrations amid the Ukraine war; Indonesian authorities crack down on an alleged online gambling ring; Australia's far-right One Nation party wins its first parliamentary seat; scientists call for New Orleans residents to evacuate as climate change drowns the US city; Iran sets out conditions for its participation in the men's football World Cup; and our boxing reporter weighs in on the epic Fabio Wardley vs Daniel Dubois fight.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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You're listening to the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
Hello, I'm Oliver Conway. This edition is published in the early hours of Sunday the 10th of May.
Israel has continued heavy strikes in Lebanon, despite a ceasefire. Nearly 40 people have been killed.
Hungary's new Prime Minister has taken office and pledged a change of regime.
And Russia has held a muted Victory Day parade in Red Square without.
a tank in sight.
Also in the podcast, political history has been made in Australia as the far right
one-nation party wins its first seat in Parliament.
And all the parties involved, they wanted to happen, but still it's going to be very, very,
very difficult.
Will Iran's footballers play in the Men's World Cup despite the war with hosts USA?
But first, despite an apparent ceasefire, cross-border.
strikes have been continuing between Israel and Lebanon.
Almost 40 people were killed in southern Lebanon in another day of intense attacks on Saturday.
Seven died after a residential building was hit in the town of Saxaqia.
Our correspondent Hugo Boshaga was there.
This is the building that was hit by an Israeli air strike here in the town of Saxaqia.
And they've just finished the rescue operation.
Now residents have told us that three families who had been displaced,
because of the war. We're living here in this building that has been completely destroyed.
Now, the victims of this attack include a child who was two years old.
Now, attacks like this are happening every day across southern Lebanon.
The ceasefire here has failed to stop the war.
Now, Israel says it is targeting Hezbollah, accusing it of violating the deal,
but often its civilians who are being.
killed. And Hezbollah has been responding by launching rockets and drones into northern Israel
and also against Israeli troops occupying parts of southern Lebanon. And there have been
new evacuation warnings issued by the Israeli military for towns in southern Lebanon, an indication
that these Israeli attacks are likely to continue.
Lebanon. After 16 years dominated by one man, Hungary has a new Prime Minister.
I'm Magar Pater,
Fogadom, that Maguarsak to that
under lawfey he'll beck.
That Magar was sworn in four weeks after a landslide election victory over
long-term ruler Victor Orban. In his first speech to lawmakers,
Mr Marjar promised what he called a regime.
change, saying his government would create an independent office to investigate corruption during
the Orban era. He then addressed supporters outside Parliament.
Take it with you. Take this day with you as a memory and remember this day for your whole life.
Maybe one day you will show it to your children, to your grandchildren, that this is how it was.
This is how it was in 2006, the first day of the Free and Democratic Hungary.
Our correspondent Nick Thorpe told us about the atmosphere in the Hungarian capital, Budapest.
Certainly the mood in the square in front of Parliament and along the banks of the river Danube was one of sheer exhilaration.
Pretty much everybody was dancing, thousands of people dancing on the street.
So you had the big screens, but also just, all.
ordinary people, very young people, teenagers, families with children, literally dancing in the streets.
So there is a sense of that Hungary is sort of shaken off a heavy burden.
Obviously, there's disappointment on the Fides side.
There's fear of repercussions.
But in terms of the supporters of this government, this incoming government,
especially among young people, there's a very happy mood.
many, you know, similarities, I would say to what we experienced in 1989, the time of the fall of
communism. Now, Peter Maja spoke of regime change. What actually will change and what will stay the
same? What he would like to do, and he has a mandate, a legitimacy, the power to do this in
Parliament with his two-thirds majority, is basically to dismantle the structures that Victor Orban
built, which was his critics, what Victor O'Ban's critics say, was effectively state capture,
taking over major state institutions, eroding or doing away with checks and balances. So
14 out of 15 judges in the constitutional court, I think, could be said to be supporters of the
outgoing government, the head of the Supreme Court, all these sort of major institutions. And
Peter Madhya came in very clearly in his speech in Parliament today,
as he'd been sworn in, asking all these people just to step down to get out of the way,
telling them that they have no place in the changes that he wants to bring in.
I think what we may see is, well, Fidesz passed its own constitution back in 2011
after other parties, opposition parties, at that time, boycotted the talks there.
I think Peter Madja will be tempted to bring in a constitution just to sort of decentralise power,
which was so centralized under the Fides government.
And what does this mean outside Hungary, the EU, Ukraine, Russia?
Peter Maja's victory was greatly welcomed in Brussels.
Oslo von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission,
Antonio Costa, president of the European Council.
They also sent congratulations again today.
Ursula von der Leyen, I've just got the quote here in front of me,
wrote that our hearts are with Budapest, the hope and promise of renewal or a powerful message
in these challenging times. She spoke about important work ahead for Hungary and for Europe.
I think that sense of relief is really that they will no longer have a leader in Budapest who's
putting a spanner in the works, who's blocking, vetoing aid from the European Union to Ukraine,
for example. Also a message of congratulations from Vladimir Zelensky, the president of Ukraine,
sending his congratulations. In terms of Russia, though, I think this is a pretty major setback.
Viktor Orban has been described as Vladimir Putin's greatest asset. That voice has now gone,
and while Peter Madhya has said he will have an independent policy, he's not going to sort of
roll over and wait to receive instructions from Brussels or from other European heads of
of government. Certainly he said he wants to work constructively and that Hungary will have its own
distinct identity, but it will be a constructive debate rather than a sort of destructive or
an obstructive one which we saw under Viktor Orban. Nick Thorpe in the Hungarian capital,
Budapest. Well, on to Russia now and President Putin may have given an upbeat assessment of the war
in Ukraine, telling reporters it could be soon over. But there was a distinctly downbeat feel to the
annual Victory Day parade in Moscow on Saturday. The celebration of the Soviet Union's victory over
Nazi Germany in the Second World War normally makes for a stunning showcase of Russia's military
might, with large numbers of troops, vehicles and hardware on display in Red Square. This year,
there wasn't a tank in sight, as our Russia editor, Steve Rosenberg found out.
In Moscow, they were celebrating victory, commemorating the defeats of Nazi Germany.
But this year's Red Square parade had been scaled back out of fear of a Ukrainian attack.
The soldiers were here, but the military hardware, well, that was on a screen, not on the square.
I've been on Red Square on Victory Day many times before, but this year's parade looks very different.
There are no tanks, no missiles, none of the military hardware that Bosco normally showed
cases on this day to try to project its power to the world.
Vladimir Putin likes to project strength and will have been reluctant to pare down his parade.
He wants Russians to think that the war on Ukraine and World War II are connected.
The great feat of the generation of victors inspires the soldiers fighting in today's special
military operation.
They are confronting an aggressive force
which is armed and supported by the whole of NATO.
Despite this, our heroes move forward.
With a little help from their friends,
North Korean troops took part in the parade,
their army has been fighting for Russia against Ukraine.
Ukraine did not target President Putin's parade.
A last-minute ceasefire, brokered by Donald Trump, reduced that danger.
As for the finale, it was very patriotic.
Russia can truly celebrate what it calls the great victory of 1945,
but victory in Ukraine, there's no sign.
Steve Rosenberg in Moscow.
New Orleans is no stranger to the perils of rising water.
It was famously inundated during Hurricane Katrina,
decades ago. It already sits on one of the most exposed coastal areas in the world. But a new study
from Tulane University suggests the U.S. City could actually be surrounded by ocean waters within decades.
Residents are being urged to think about moving and to make buildings more climate resilient.
Professor Jesse Keenan, co-author of the study, spoke to Carl Nassman.
What we face in New Orleans and all of Southeast Louisiana is the prospects that in the coming
decades and really in the coming century, the area will be inundated by a combination of land loss
and sea level rise. And in that context, we have time. We have time to make investments and
adaptation, and more particularly to build land. And this has been an immediate, let's say,
political challenge in the last year, year and a half, with some major projects being canceled.
but we do have time. We have generations to begin the process of thinking and preparing for this inundation
and moving not just populations, but businesses, industry, and the like.
What do you mean when you said building land as one of the solutions potentially to this?
So in the past two decades, the state of Louisiana has engaged in coastal master planning
and the development of projects that steer the sediment-rich Mississippi River into areas
that allow for the deposit of that settlement to build land.
Currently, for a lot of different reasons, land is being lost.
Football pitch every hundred minutes is being lost in the region.
And so when they divert the Mississippi, even in small areas or sometimes very large areas,
it builds land.
And most critically, in this context, that land buys time for the city and the region and really all of Southeast Louisiana.
You know, we should say that when your study was published, there were some pretty dire headlines out there.
One said the city has reached a point of no return and relocation must start now.
What's your reaction to that?
I mean, are we at a point right now where people should really think about picking up and leaving New Orleans?
Well, I think where we are is we've seen a lot of sensationalism in the drafting of headlines.
We have generations ahead of us that can make investments in the city of New Orleans, in infrastructure, in hazard risk reduction in integrated flood protection systems.
But that being said, we do need to begin the process.
There is already a domestic outflow of population from the city, the region, and the state.
So it's a complex picture.
There's no need to panic.
We have time ahead of us.
Professor Jesse Keenan.
And still to come on this podcast.
The main thing to take away from it is the sheer brutality.
It's hard to really call it a boxing match.
The world of boxing watches a thrilling heavyweight classic.
The crew of NASA's Artemis II mission have returned home safely after successfully completing their groundbreaking voyage around the moon.
Splashdown confirmed.
Humans are back in the business of going to the moon.
But while the mission is over, the Artemis Space Program is just getting started.
13 minutes, the BBC Space Podcast is looking back on their epic journey
and discovering what the future holds for the Artemis Space Program.
Just imagine what we as humans can do next.
13 minutes presents Artemis 2 from the BBC World Service.
Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
You're listening to the Global News Podcast.
Now, we've heard on the podcast before about the rise of scam centres in a number of Southeast Asian countries, including Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia.
Now, the problem seems to be spreading to Indonesia as well.
Officials in the capital Jakarta say they've detained more than 300 foreign nationals allegedly running such an operation.
Our global affairs reporter and Barrasanne Etirajan told Valerie Sanderson about the raid.
It was a very well-coordinated operation in central Jakarta.
they had deployed a heavy security presence in around the building,
and they found dozens of people, more than 300 people inside this compound,
where they had organized a setup, like a normal office setup with computers and desks,
and they seized several hard desks as well as mobile phones.
So what they suspect is this could be part of an international syndicate.
It's a Ponzi scheme where you invest some money, you get more money,
but actually it is a scam project.
They came to Indonesia only two months ago
and they were targeting people outside the country
and it was more of an online gambling centre.
Also, online gambling itself is banned in mostly majority Indonesia
and this can carry up to nine years of sentencing.
And how big a problem is this in Indonesia?
Is this the first such scam they've found?
They have intensified their crackdown.
Only on Friday, they are arrested.
another group of 200 people, many of them from Malaysia, Cambodia, and Lavos.
And most of those arrested in this week, they were from Vietnam, more than 200 people.
So what they suspect is it is not only online gambling.
This is also the kind of cyber scam operations.
The reason why was, you know, there was a lot of international attention in Myanmar and in Cambodia and Laos
where you had huge townships, you know, buildings, compounds, where they were
online gambling as well as scam centers operating, and also that is linked to human trafficking.
And China put a lot of pressure on Myanmar, and the ASEAN countries were putting pressure on these
two countries, especially Myanmar and Cambodia. And we saw hundreds of people fleeing
and these compound, these camp compounds. And the officials are suspecting that because their
attention is there, a lot of security operation going on. They're moving to countries like
Indonesia. And that is why they find more people. In fact, in February, they found
a group of Indians operating from Bali, Ireland also.
So we have seen hundreds of people being detained in Indonesia.
And what can the authorities do to prevent this happening?
It's a major issue for all the Southeast Asian countries.
So they have been coordinating.
What they want to do is to establish a joint centre,
some sort of monitoring centre in Singapore.
And China has also held meeting with ASEAN ministers to how to control,
because this seems to be what you call a cross-border criminal activity
and then cryptocurrency is involved
and then you have these scams on then gambling.
So a joint effort is needed and Asian countries have come out with an action plan
how they can tackle this.
But it is not going to be easy.
Last year alone, the online gambling plus these scam centers
estimated to have cost around $60 billion.
And Rassan Etirajan talking to Valerie Sanderson.
Political history has been made in Australia with the far-right One Nation Party winning its first ever seat in the Lower House of Parliament.
David Farley was victorious in a by-election in New South Wales.
The governing Labour Party didn't put forward a candidate and still holds a large majority in the lower house.
But what does this signal about Australian politics?
The BBC's Katie Watson, who is in Sydney, spoke to Lees Doucette.
I think there's a growing frustration with the traditional parties here in.
In Australia, there's a cost of living crisis.
That's something that people talk about a lot, a high cost of housing.
And I think that's driven people to look for other alternatives.
I mean, we've seen it in other parts of the world.
Australia is no exception.
Do you see it as a protest vote or you think this is a genuine shift?
Because of course, the party is now saying they're going after all the other seats as well.
The leader, Pauline Hansen, did say that.
I think it's a significant milestone.
I mean, that's what the candidate called it.
It's not going to change anything in terms of the Labour government's vast majority,
but it's also being the first kind of federal test of One Nation's support.
So back in March, when South Australia had state elections,
it recorded the second highest number of votes out of any political party.
So Labor won, that was clear.
but it was its best ever electoral performance.
So clearly there's a move towards and certainly increasing popularity for One Nation.
So I don't think it's anything that can be ignored.
And it's interesting because with the elections last year here in Australia,
the federal elections, there was such a discussion about how Australia has a preferential voting system.
So basically voters rank candidates from their most to least preferred.
And there's a final tally that's worked out.
I was talking to many analysts who say that helps make Australia.
Australia much more kind of central and the fact that there's compulsory voting means that they don't have the swings kind of to extreme left or extreme right that we might have seen in other countries.
But that's clearly not true.
How would you describe one nation? What are some of their defining slogans, policies?
Anti-immigration, for sure. Pauline Hansen has talked about how Australia does not want Sharia law.
So that's very clear. And that's very difficult right now because of what happened.
back in December with the terrible shooting at Bondi Beach at a Hanukkah event,
which was Australia's worst terrorist attack.
And it's a difficult time for Australia.
And I think that's perhaps made people a bit more on edge.
So perhaps there's an element of what Pauline Hansen's talking about making people listen more.
For a long time, she didn't gain so much traction, but she's clearly resonating.
You know, she's a right-wing populist and anti-examination.
immigration is pretty much her strongest political argument.
And she likes the limelight and doesn't shy away from controversy?
Several times she's Warner Berker in Parliament. She's been sanctioned for that.
But she is equally loved and reviled here in Australia.
I suppose for some Australians, it might have been unthinkable that the One Nation Party would win a parliamentary seat.
But what we've seen in many countries is that they start to infect the policies of the more traditional parties.
do you think this might start happening?
There might be a wake-up call.
When I speak to people in Australia after Bondi as well,
and I was at the hearing for a Royal Commission on anti-Semitism,
so many people talk about how Australia is such a great multicultural country.
But being here for the last few years,
I feel that that pride in multiculturalism is being tested,
that it makes it more difficult for politicians to read the room
or they read the environment,
especially after what happened in December.
Katie Watson in Sydney in Australia.
The men's football World Cup kicks off in the US, Mexico and Canada next month.
Iran is due to take part, but there have been questions over whether it will actually be there, given the war with the US.
Now, the Iranian Football Federation has announced the team will go, but only if a series of conditions is met.
Here's Porio Jaffaree of the BBC Partion Service.
There are 10 conditions in a statement by the Iranian FAA or the Football Federation.
a big chunk of it is about the IRGC connection.
When it comes to the players, to the coaching staff, and also to the journalists,
and also there's another part about the visa for the fans.
They want the players who have done their military service at the IRGC to get visas in order to take part,
which seems like a really reasonable request.
And we've heard from the US authorities that they're going to cooperate when it comes to this.
We've heard from President Trump and the Secretary Rubio that they don't want this to affect the athletes.
But then again, with the journalists, they're very sensitive.
They've warned the Iranians that they don't want IRGC people to come in as journalists.
With regards to the fans, when you look at the laws and regulations, one might find it very difficult for the U.S.
to change any of those regulations when it comes to the travel bans.
And also the Iranians are very much scared of what might happen if they face,
testers who don't like the Iranian regime, one of their strongholds is in Los Angeles in California.
The Iranian team, they've chosen a camp in Arizona, which is seven hours drive from Los Angeles.
And one would think, like, the reason they've done that is they wanted to stay away from whoever might cause them any trouble during the tournament.
You look at it from, like, really objective angle.
I think there are three parties here.
There's the United States, the host.
There's FIFA who are the organizers.
and there's Iranian football community and the Iranian people.
And if Iran does take part for FIFA is a win, for Iranian football is a win,
we know this is a once in a lifetime opportunity,
and also from a marketing perspective,
and like the business side of it for the US, it's also a success that they got them together.
And if it doesn't happen, if they pull out for whatever reason,
then I think we're going to have three losers here.
Poria Jafferay of the BBC Persian Service.
A few hours before we recorded this podcast, all eyes in the world of boxing were on an intense bout here in the UK.
As two fighters from very different backgrounds slugged it out for the WBO heavyweight belt.
Fabio Wardley, a former white collar boxer, was defending the title against the homeschooled former champion Daniel Dubois.
The contest lasted into the 11th of 12 rounds when the referee stepped in to stop Wardley taking more punishment,
making Dubois a two-time champion.
Our reporter Yusuf Anani was watching.
The main thing to take away from it is the sheer brutality.
It's hard to really call it a boxing match.
This was a fight, an unadulterated fight.
I mean, there was skill on display,
but that was shown by the Londoner, Daniel Dubois,
who's a very schooled boxer.
So there's not much finesse with him, but he's got the basics down.
Whereas Fabio Wardley, who was a...
recruitment consultant, and as you said, he had a few white-collar fights, and just sort of fell into boxing
quite late in life. So he didn't master the fundamentals, and tonight that really showed.
Were you surprised that Fabio Wardley didn't go down, or that his corner didn't step in and
try to stop the fight? I wasn't particularly surprised that Wardley didn't go down, because I've followed
his career very closely. And it looks like the man's made of metal or something. He's incredibly
tough, incredibly durable. And he takes shots, he doesn't have much of a defense. He takes big shots,
flush on the chin and can withstand them. But the problem is he's skin can't withstand them.
So even though he's still standing, spitting defiance, his nose and mouth have opened up. And it makes
a pretty scary spectacle. And I think certainly in a British boxing ring, they're only willing
to take so much of that before they stop the fight. So if there's blood spraying everywhere,
as there was, then basically the fight of bleeding is on borrowed time. So no, I don't think it was
stopped too early. And he's a warrior. He's an incredible warrior. And he'll be devastated to have
been stopped in a boxing match. I mean, there's no.
There was no way he was going to quit.
I mean, some boxers do.
Daniel Dubois, his opponent tonight, has been known to quit in a boxing match.
And I wouldn't blame him.
And what does this result mean for heavyweight boxing as a whole?
Well, it is internationally significant.
I mean, there was a world title belt.
I mean, the world titles have been fragmented.
For the first time in 20 years, we did have one undisputed champion,
the Ukrainian Alexander is.
but then he's now decided to engage in kind of novelty fights.
He's fighting a kickboxer by the pyramids soon.
So he relinquished the belt that Dubois and Wardley fought for tonight.
So for the heavyweight scene,
because the top man, Ussick, has already beat him twice.
So there'll be no interest whatsoever in Ussick defending against Dubois
and trying to recapture the belt that he,
He surrendered.
Our boxing expert, Yusuf Anani.
And that's all from us for now, but the Global News podcast will be back very soon.
This edition was mixed by Darcy O'Brien and produced by Wendy Urquhart and Guy Pitt.
Our editors, Karen Martin.
I'm Oliver Conway.
Until next time, goodbye.
The crew of NASA's Artemis II mission have returned home safely after successfully completing their groundbreaking voyage around the moon.
touchdown confirmed.
Humans are back in the business of going to the moon.
But while the mission is over, the Artemis Space Program is just getting started.
13 minutes, the BBC Space Podcast is looking back on their epic journey
and discovering what the future holds for the Artemis Space Program.
Just imagine what we as humans can do next.
13 Minutes presents Artemis 2 from the BBC World Service.
Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
Thanks.
