Global News Podcast - Israel hits Houthi targets in Yemen's capital

Episode Date: August 25, 2025

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israeli airstrikes on Houthi targets in Yemen have struck a military compound housing the presidential palace in Sanaa. They also hit the city's... power station. Mr Netanyahu insisted that the Iran-backed group is paying a heavy price for its attacks on Israel. Also: Zelensky vows to continue fighting as Ukraine marks independence day; costumes and colour fill the streets on the first day of the Notting Hill Carnival in London.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. Ever feel like car shopping is designed to make your second guess yourself? Is this a good price? Am I making the right choice? With car gurus, you don't have to wonder. They have hundreds of thousands of cars from top-rated dealers and advanced search tools, deal ratings and price history. So you know a great deal when you see one. That's cairg-g-U-R-U-S.ca.cagurus.cagurus.ca.cagurus.ca.ca.
Starting point is 00:00:30 Box, a delicious streamer. Collider says everyone should be watching. Catch Britain's next best series with Britbox. Streamer claim new originals like Code of Silence. You read lips, right? And Linley, based on the best-selling mystery series. Di-I, Linley. Take it from here.
Starting point is 00:00:45 And don't miss the new season of Karen Piri coming this October. You don't look, look, please. I'll do that as a compliment. See it differently when you stream the best of British TV with Britbox. Watch with a free trial today. This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Nick Miles, and in the early hours of Monday the 25th of August, these are our main stories. Israel has launched deadly airstrikes on the Yemeni capital, Sana, in response to an attack by the Iranian-backed hoofies.
Starting point is 00:01:17 The US vice president says Russia has made significant concessions to end the war in Ukraine and is not delaying efforts to achieve peace. Venezuela has released 13 opposition politicians arrested in the aftermath of last year's disputed presidential election. Also in this podcast. The first day of the Notting Hill Carnival is traditionally known as Children's Day where many compete for the title of best costume.
Starting point is 00:01:45 We get to celebrate our different cultures from Africa, the Caribbean, all over. Thousands line the streets of West London for the first day of the annual Notting Hill Carnival, one of the largest street festivals in Europe. We begin in Yemen. Israel says it has launched deadly airstrikes on the Yemeni capital Sanna. In response to an attack by the Iranian-backed Houthis,
Starting point is 00:02:12 online videos show a large fireball lighting up the skies over the Houthi-controlled city. The Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the attacks. The Air Force struck strategic targets in Yemen again today. It attacked the presidential palace in the Umbuds. heart of the capital, Sana'a, the city's power station. The Houthi terror regime is learning the hard way that it's paying and will continue to pay a very heavy price for its aggression against the state of Israel. As we record this podcast, the Houthis have said the Israeli strikes killed four people and injured 67 more. The BBC tried to contact people in Sanaa to tell us what
Starting point is 00:02:54 happened, but communications are tricky and people are also fearful of speaking to Western media. But the BBC did manage to talk to the journalist Nazim Mohamed, who's based in the city of Aden on Yemen's southern coast, an area not under Houthi control. He sent the BBC a voice note, which we translated and voiced up. There were heavy Israeli air raids that targeted the capital Sanah this evening. These raids hit the zone of the Republican Palace in a 70. district, there were three raids. They also hit a petrol station in a compound for the oil company
Starting point is 00:03:35 and the Hiziz electric power station. The raids were terrifying and explosions could be heard all over the capital. These raids spread terror among the residents close to the targeted areas. Many districts are now living in darkness after these raids hit the main electricity station. It had been previously targeted in Israeli air raids. People say these raids were extremely terrifying. They were herded across the city. They were very powerful, intimidating and terrorized families, especially women and children. People are afraid that these raids target infrastructure that provide services for ordinary civilians, like electricity, gas or petrol. There would be shortages in these sectors. That would lead to a crisis.
Starting point is 00:04:19 While the raids targeted the presidential compound zone, the Houthis are not transparent and generally their statements are ambiguous and don't mention the military target. that were struck. The British journalist Iona Craig has covered Yemen extensively. James Menendez began by asking her what she thought was going on at the moment. The tip-for-tap between the Houthis and Israel has been ongoing now for almost two years, but this seems to spike as and when there is escalation in the war in Gaza. And of course, with Israel's new offensive into Gaza City, this appears to be why the Houthis would then escalate strikes against Israel again, as they have done over the course of the last sort of 18 months or more. And this has then created
Starting point is 00:05:08 a response from Israel. So we saw back in May when the Houthis successfully targeted Ben-Guron airport and hit a field within the airport compound that Israel's response to that was to destroy all of the passenger aircraft in Houthi control territory in the capital sonar in air strikes. Those were all destroyed. So this has been each, you know, one of them, the Houthis responding to Israel and Israel then responding to the Houthis. And there doesn't seem to be any change in that despite, you know, 60 days of strikes by the Trump administration targeting Houthi's sort of infrastructure and their ballistic missile capabilities. They still seem to be able to carry out these attacks against Israel, or although only having a sort of handful of incidents that
Starting point is 00:05:58 have been able to break through the Israeli defence systems. Yeah, so it hasn't completely degraded their ability to attack. And as you say, those Houthi attacks fairly limited on what they can achieve. Why do they keep going with it? Well, as I say for the Houthis, this is very much linked to Israel's war in Gaza. They see this as a support for Palestine and their way of attacking Israel. although with no impact really in that respect. But as I say, when things have escalated in Gaza, the Houthis have mounted more strikes.
Starting point is 00:06:33 And equally, when there was a ceasefire in Gaza back in January, there were then no strikes by the Houthis against Israel and there were no airstrikes by Israel against the Houthis either. So it is in direct mirroring, if you like. It is an extension of the conflict in Gaza now. Iona Craig. Now, can Syria's new government, keep the peace in a nation full of sectarian splits.
Starting point is 00:06:56 The UN is worried about the safety of people, particularly in Swedia province in the south, where the majority of people are from the Druze religious minority. A thousand people or so were reportedly killed and more than 190,000 displaced there last month during clashes with Bedouin tribes. Pro-government forces sent in to curb the violence were accused themselves of siding with the Sunni Muslim Bedouins.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Our Middle East regional editor, Mike Thompson, has this report. With hundreds dying last month in clashes between Drew's militias and Bedouin tribes, Syria's interim Islamist government had a job to do. Hundreds of Bedouin gunmen firing wildly by the roadside. Holding them back, Syrian government troops sent south to influence. force a ceasefire. But instead of enforcing it, pro-government forces were accused of siding with the Bedouins, executing nearly 200 people and burning over 30 villages. And despite a later ceasefire, killings and abductions by both sides are continuing. Resad Rashidi heads the
Starting point is 00:08:11 rights group, the Syria campaign. Acts of violence and specifically kidnapping and kidnapping of women continues to be an issue on the rise. Female students, university students, for example, are unable to go to the universities because they are worried about the issue of kidnapping. Since Thursday at 10 a.m. For more than a month, he has been missing, and his phone has remained switched off.
Starting point is 00:08:46 The people who kidnapped him have nearly, never contacted us again. This woman's husband, a member of the local White Helmets Rescue Group, is one of many recent abductions. Hamza has children who want him pack. Every morning and evening they say they want their father. Imagine when you before bedtime, they ask, where is daddy? And you are completely unable to answer them.
Starting point is 00:09:18 Drew's protesters in Suuida, angry at the killings by government forces in July, took to the streets this month to demand independence for the province. I'm actually very worried that Syria is on the brink of the new civil war. Rassad's pessimism follows last month's sectarian killings in Zouada as well as another thousand in former President Assad's Western Heart last March. This, on top of growing friction with Kurdish forces in the north and the Syrian government's failure so far to prosecute members of its own forces who were involved in the recent bloodshed. We continue to hear about specific names that they will be brought to justice. But so far,
Starting point is 00:10:09 what we have seen is kind of a ticking boxes exercise for transitional justice or accountability. Hathen Kiwan, a musician from Zuweda, is pinning his faith in the power of local children, singing this song of hope to help bring his country together. At first, the children's performance was shy and filled with fear, but by the end, their singing had transformed into a cry from their heart. We are alive, we remain, and our dreams continue. That report was by Mike Thompson. The US Vice President has denied that Russia is delaying efforts to achieve peace in Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:11:05 Jetty Vance told NBC's Meet the Press that Moscow had made significant concessions for the first time since launching its full-scale invasion three and a half years ago. He said they included an acknowledgement of the need for. security guarantees for Ukraine. Well, in Kiev, President Vladimir Zelenskyy on Sunday issued a defiant message to mark his country's Independence Day. He said Ukraine wanted a just and lasting peace, but would continue to fight for its freedom if the call was not heard. Moscow says an agenda for a meeting between President Putin and Mr Zelenskyy has yet
Starting point is 00:11:40 to be drawn up. The Independence Day ceremony in Kiev came as Russia and Ukraine each handed over 146 prisoners of war. many of the detainees having been held since the early days of the invasion. The exchanges remain one of the few areas of cooperation between the two countries. This report from our correspondent in Ukraine, Katie Watson. In central Kiev, Sophia Square, President Zelenskyy celebrated Ukraine's independence, flanked by allies, including the Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Starting point is 00:12:11 The US Special Envoy, Keith Kellogg, was presented with the Order of Merit, a recognition of his support for Ukraine. Mr Zelensky praised them for their friendship. They are strong and not alone. Every day we are pushing this war back to where it came from, to the Russian sky and Russian soil. With each passing year of this war, the pressure on Russia and their real losses are increasing.
Starting point is 00:12:37 We know that peace is coming. Peace for Ukraine is getting closer. But today wasn't just about pomp. It was also about pragmatism, meetings and deals. Canada announced a £1 billion military package, including drone production. Mark Carney didn't dismiss the idea of boots on the ground either. Meanwhile, fighting continued on both sides overnight. Russia blamed Ukraine for a drone attack on a nuclear facility in the Western Kursk region.
Starting point is 00:13:05 A fire was extinguished, nobody was hurt. The International Atomic Energy Agency said it was aware of media reports but had no independent confirmation of what happened. Away from the front line, families in Kiev enjoyed the national holiday, but politics is never far from people's minds. We're a freedom-loving country, Yehul told me. We want to live peacefully with our own flag and our own language, and the Russians just want to destroy it all.
Starting point is 00:13:36 We simply will not let them do this. Independence Day used to be an excuse for a big celebration. Much, though, has changed. With soldiers busy fighting on the front line, there's no military parade, fence here are far more muted. There's still huge pride though, now more than ever. Katie Watson in Kiev. Hungary has been mentioned as a possible venue for peace talks between the presidents of Ukraine and Russia, but it would be a controversial choice. Relations between
Starting point is 00:14:04 Budapest and Kiev are frosty to say the least. Nevertheless, there are ties between the neighbours in the past few weeks, about 8,000 Ukrainian children visited Hungary to take part in summer camps. Nick Thorpe sent this report from a children's camp in San Pod on the southern shore of Lake Belatom. Six. Three small girls roll a dice on a tabletop in the shade. Others sunbathe. Some boys kick a ball around. The smaller children are drawing with crayons.
Starting point is 00:14:39 Aged from 4 to 16, it's their last day here. From their faces, you'd never guess that these are the ones. the children of Ukrainian police officers. More than half the 53 children here have lost one or both parents in the war. I'm in the canteen now and the children are all having their lunch, some kind of goulash, a very Hungarian dish. You speak a little English. Hi, what's your name? Antonina.
Starting point is 00:15:09 Antonina. Where are you from, Antonina? In Ukraine. I'm from in Ukraine. And was it a nice camp here? Did you have a good time? Yes, it's very nice camp. Yes, I have many new friends. Many new friends? Yes. Great.
Starting point is 00:15:26 My name is Natalia, and I'm from Ukraine. I'm a teacher of English. Injitomir Polytechnic University. It's been a few days, so I kind of got used to the quiet and peaceful and it's easy to forget the bad things. But still, when some noises are loud and sudden, it triggers. But all in all, they had some peace these days, so good feeling. I think it's important to show that despite what our government does,
Starting point is 00:15:58 the people who live in Hungary, I'd rather with Ukraine and not against Ukraine. Gerge Kovac is leader of the twin-tailed dog party, a name which might appeal to the children here and the mayor of the 12th district. in Budapest. His district raised $30,000 in three days from more than 500 donations through crowdfunding to pay for this camp. We all know that Russia began this fight and I think we should have Ukraine and that's why we made this camp for Ukrainian children. The Ukrainian ambassador to Hungary, Shandor Fedir visits the camp and organizes an impromptu game of Simon Sez for the children.
Starting point is 00:16:50 Originally a university lecturer from the city of Usharod, he's no stranger to war. He fought for more than two years on the front lines in the east. I asked him if he has a message for the Hungarian Prime Minister, Victor Orban. Message what? Messages here. Thank you, district in Budapest, thank you Hungarian people, cooking, super-Hungarian people, thank you, only thank you. The issues which disrupt Hungary-Ukraine relations, Ukrainian attacks on a Russian oil pipeline on which Hungary depends. The death of an ethnic Hungarian conscript in the Ukrainian army, a recent spy scandal, are all put aside for this lazy summer afternoon.
Starting point is 00:17:41 Natalia, the English teacher we heard earlier, told me what she and the children will miss most from Hungary when they return to Ukraine. I'm thinking about this. It's so lovely to look at the sky and to see passenger planes flying. I haven't seen this for quite a long while. Last Thursday, the city of Mukachevo in the far west of the country, almost on the Hungarian border, was hit by Russian drones for the first time. An electronics factory was set on fire and 19 people injured. But the children tell me they're homesick nonetheless, and soon they will all be unsafely home. That report by Nick Thorpe in Hungary. Now we turn to Serbia, where this weekend saw violent clashes
Starting point is 00:18:26 between police and anti-government protesters. The demonstrations were called initially over allegations of corruption, but have since broadened into demands for the country's president, Alexander Vuchich, to resign. Now, that is the sound of protesters setting off fireworks on the street, so President Vucic has now responded with radical measures aimed at helping the economy. But will they calm things down? I asked our Europe regional editor, Paul Moss, why the protests became so widespread and heated.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Well, it all began last November when the canopy at a train station in the city of Novi Sad collapsed. That killed 16 people. and immediately there were allegations that the station roof hadn't been built properly and that this was connected to corruption in the tendering process and the construction. There were protests, people took to the streets. And as you said, though, this quickly widened into a general protest about corruption in Serbia. President Vucic has clearly been trying to put a lid on this. I mean, people have been arrested in connection with the roof collapse,
Starting point is 00:19:31 including six only this month. And he replaced the country's prime minister, but clearly not enough. the protests continuing and judging by what we saw in Belgrade this weekend, if anything, they're becoming bigger and more tense. Now, I mentioned that the president has put in place some radical measures, quite unexpected things as well. Yeah, I mean, he's put price caps on food by essentially limiting the profits that retailers can make and he said that interest rates will be cut than a few odd little things. Like he's guaranteed that the cost of firewood will go down.
Starting point is 00:20:02 I don't think it's clear whether this is really going to work. I mean, inflation is a problem in Serbia, but first of all, plenty of economists will tell you putting price caps in as a sticking plaster. It doesn't deal with the underlying issues. But more than that, you know, it is not the economy. That is not the main grievance that these protesters have. They are fed up with what they see as an essentially corrupt government.
Starting point is 00:20:22 And as you said, they want the president to resign and they want new elections. Now, clearly this is of concern for people in Serbia, but these protests are causing concern in other European capital. Indeed, yes. I mean, Serbia, for a start, has been. treading a very fine line between the West and Russia. It's condemned the invasion of Ukraine, but at the same time, President Wuchich went to Moscow for the Russian Victory Day parades this year.
Starting point is 00:20:46 The West is trying to keep the President, at least partly on side, not totally in the Kremlin's embrace, so they're watching very closely to see what he'll do, will he survive in power, and who might replace him. Also, if he feels threatened, there is the fear that Alexander Vuchich will start playing the Serb nationalist card. That in turn could cause him to cause all sorts of problems in next door Bosnia and Kosovo, where you have an ethnic minority Serb population that's in conflict with the majority population. Again, the potential for trouble there. And if I can give you a history lesson which you probably don't need, Bosnia, Serbia,
Starting point is 00:21:21 this is where World War I began. I'm not suggesting that World War III is going to begin there. But what my point is that small acts of instability in this part of the world do have a habit of growing and sometimes spreading. Paul Moss. A memorial ceremony has been held in Spain for a 17-year-old cyclist who died during an international race
Starting point is 00:21:44 for top junior riders. Officials and competitors observed a minute silence for Ivan Melendez. Current Ferret reports. The Spanish teenager was one of about 20 competitors hurt in a huge crash on Saturday near Aranda de Duero. Two of them are thought to remain in a serious condition
Starting point is 00:22:03 in hospital. The rest of the competition has been called off. One report said Ivan Melendeth gained a place in the Vuelta Ribeira, which attracts about 150 competitors from various countries, as a late replacement for an injured teammate. The accident again highlights the risk associated with competitive cycling. In July, a 19-year-old, Samueli Privetera, died as a result of injuries suffered in a crash during a race in Italy. Grant Ferret. Still to come, a story of resilience emerging from a Palestinian displacement camp. My friend bring a guitar and I sing with all the kids gathering it around me. In these moments, I forget the war.
Starting point is 00:22:54 Next to Gaza. As part of its offensive to take over Gaza City in the north of the territory, the Israeli military is calling up around about 60. thousand reservists. They're expected to report for duty next month. But how are these reservists feeling about fighting in the war? Davidi Ben Zion is a reservist and a deputy commander. He's also involved in campaigns to get Jewish people across the globe to join as reservists. He gave Julian Warwicka his reaction to the news that he and others are being re-enlisted. Me and my 600 soldiers got a new order to another reserve duty.
Starting point is 00:23:35 I can tell you that 95 or 96% of the soldiers, they will come. Usually people have a career, family. I think it's normal that 3 or 4% will not come. The main reason people come again and again to the reserve duty, it's not the ideological. The reason is friends. Because people know that it will be harder without them. The second reason, of course, it's the hostages.
Starting point is 00:24:03 You mentioned the hostages. They are still being held. We know that. Some, sadly, have been killed. We know some are still alive. If you've done it once and that didn't get them out, why will it work this time? First of all, you know, I'm major in the Power Troopers 55.
Starting point is 00:24:21 We have an operative mission. I'm not part of the government, of the cabinet, etc. I just can tell you, I hope that this time will do something different. Clearly, as you say, you're not the one making the decisions, so I'm not pushing you in that area. But I will say two things to you. One is that you'll be aware of significant voices within Israel, people who've been protesting, for example, in Tel Aviv and other cities because they don't believe this is the right thing to do. And you'll be aware, too, of the thousands of Palestinian families in Gaza City who will now be terrified about what
Starting point is 00:24:58 lies ahead. What are your thoughts on both of those viewpoints which run counter to what is about to happen here? We didn't choose this war. On October 7, I was in Kfaraz. Kibbutz Kfarada. It was one of the terrible place that Hamas made the Yvesa massacre. And after two months, when I was commander in Han Yunus, we came, it was Saturday morning to the house of the commander of Hamas in Bani Suhila, Baniswila is the eastern village of Han Yunus. And we found nearly to his bed, mine camp, written by Adolf Hitler, translation to Arabic. And then I understood Julian that, unfortunately, Hamas have really agenda like the Nazis. They want to kill us all.
Starting point is 00:25:49 I can understand my friends in Tel Aviv that say stop the war now because we can't see another children died in Gaza. I can understand it, but I have no any option. It's the world of our life. But you'll be aware of the argument that says you can't destroy Hamas in the way Benjamin Netanyahu outlined because it's a belief as well as a group of people. And the more you fight and the more Palestinians suffer and are killed, the more you'll recruit more people to back an organization like Hamas in the future. Of course, you can destroy terrorism.
Starting point is 00:26:27 agenda. Even ISIS still alive. Of course Britain and the United States and the Western world, I made a great war against ISIS and still, we can find some terrorists that have the same agenda like ISIS. So we know that we can destroy them.
Starting point is 00:26:43 But we must claim to the break-even to the specific point that Hamas will understand that if you want to survive, he must give the 50 ostrich's death. That was Davidi Ben-Zeyon, an IDF reservist. Well, staying in the region
Starting point is 00:27:00 and a story of resilience emerging from a Palestinian displacement camp. Some musicians from the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music based in the West Bank are now displaced and living in tents at a site in Gaza City. But against a backdrop of airstrikes,
Starting point is 00:27:16 they've been sharing their knowledge of the musical world with the children around them, some of whom had never previously picked up an instrument or sang in a group setting. Within a few months of the teachers beginning these sessions, a band called the Gaza Bird singing was formed, with some adults getting involved too. They now post their songs about grief, hope and war to thousands of followers on social media, giving them a global platform. Julian Warwicka also spoke to Ahmed Abu Amshar, one of those teachers who specialises in guitar and violin. So what led him to create this band?
Starting point is 00:27:55 Right now in this war, I do activities for the kids in the Middle Gaza. Before I was living in Bithanun before this war, and we evacuate Bithanun at 3 o'clock of the morning. We have a message that leave immediately. Then we go to Jabilia after Jabilia. I'm displacing maybe until now 12 times. The music began in Raffah. My friend bring a guitar, and I sing with all the kids gathering around me. In this moment, I forget the world.
Starting point is 00:28:34 So when you play music, when you teach music, you're able to forget everything that's going on around you. Yeah, and I feel it inside the kids' eyes, you know. And they have three hours of singing. and playing and, you know, I take them to another place like we are not in Gaza, not in war. So this is the beginning of the idea. Why we not make it for all the kids around us?
Starting point is 00:29:10 When you first talk to parents of children that you want to teach music in these circumstances, what do they say? Really. It's like a joke, you know. They told me, hey, Rahmad, are you crazy? They told me, we need food, we need water, not music. Nobody has time for that.
Starting point is 00:29:33 I told them no. It's better than the food than the water. We can change the kids. We can make them happy. And after one month, all the parents come to my tent and they thank me. They told me, you change our kids. There's something they can do. They can play music.
Starting point is 00:29:52 They can communicate with us. You know, a lot of kids have a trauma. And after months, two months, they are communicating and they are good. And this is a mix of children, isn't it? Some who will have played music before the war began, some who've never done it before. Yeah. To find the talent children,
Starting point is 00:30:10 I was looking around the tents and asked the families, who wants his kid to learn music and to have fun. I find a lot of talented kids that they have a good voice, a good tone. I take some kids. They have a problem with their voices. But, you know, after a couple of months, they get him better. There is a dark side to this, though, isn't there? Because I'm reading, for example, that there are some young people that you've been able to teach who sadly have been killed in this war. Oh my God. Yeah, yeah. I was have a student. His name is Yusuf. In the morning, he comes to me and drink with me coffee. We was in Han Yunus. And he told me, Mr. I
Starting point is 00:30:51 Ahmed, I love you so much. I told him, I love you too. And told him, Yusuf, what do you have today? He told me, I want to go to the coffee to make a connection with the internet, to have a call with my father. His father was in the north of Gaza. After he goes there, they strike the coffee, and he was in the coffee, and Yusuf's dead. It was a horrible night. After he died, all of us cried.
Starting point is 00:31:24 And I want to make something for him, for his family. So I compose a song that called No Nights. That means we're not sleeping, thinking of you, you see it. This song, I sing it, and a girl, called Bayan. We record this song. I'm in my mobile and post it in Instagram. All the people heard this song. They love it and they're crying. It's from the heart. That was Ahmed Abu Amshah. To Venezuela now, where 13 opposition politicians have been released. They've been arrested in the aftermath of last year's contested presidential election. Eight of them have had their sentences
Starting point is 00:32:18 is cancelled, while the others have been placed under house arrest. Our America's regional editor, Leonardo Roshar, has the details. The opposition says their political prisoners falsely accused of corruption by the government. President Nicolas Maduro says right-wing extremists in Venezuela have sided with the United States to try to undermine his government. Hundreds of opposition activists and politicians, who challenged the official results of last year's election, were arrested. Most of them have since been released as the Maduro government came under increasing international pressure.
Starting point is 00:32:52 The Trump administration has recently announced it was deploying three warships near Venezuela to combat drug trafficking. Leonard Orozha. Here in Britain, the streets of West London have been filled with thousands of people for the first day of the annual Notting Hill Carnival, one of the largest street festivals in Europe. The event taking place across the weekend and on Monday is a celebration of Caribbean culture, featuring brightly coloured outfits, brass instruments, steel drums and dancing. But there have been concerns about policing and public safety. Our correspondent Greg McKenzie sent this report from Notting Hill on Sunday's events.
Starting point is 00:33:30 The first day of the Notting Hill Carnival is traditionally known as Children's Day, where many compete for the title of best costume. We get to celebrate our different cultures from Africa, the Caribbean, all over, and we get to have fun and celebrate what's important. What's been your favourite part of carnival? Watching the fancy dress. Not a little carnival! The carnival which began in the late 50s
Starting point is 00:33:59 as a celebration of Caribbean culture and resilience continues to serve as both a cultural showcase and the unifying community event. Food stalls line the streets, offering everything from jerk chicken to doubles. By the end of the... Tomorrow, more than 2 million people will have taken to the Notting Hill Carnival. This year, it's 59 years old.
Starting point is 00:34:25 The Metropolitan Police are using live facial recognition cameras at key points for the first time. The technology scans crowds in real-time, matching faces against a watch list of individuals wanted for serious offences. The aim is to keep people safe to make sure that we're looking at it. preventing serious violence, particularly around knife crime and violence against women and girls. For many Londoners, the carnival is more than a party. It's a symbol of multicultural Britain, celebrating identity, history and belonging. Greg McKenzie in Notting Hill in West London. And that's all from us for now, but there will be a new edition of the Global News podcast later on.
Starting point is 00:35:08 If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can 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 NewsPod. This edition was mixed by Simon Numb. The producers were Lear McSheffrey and Peter Goffin. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Nick Mars and until next time.
Starting point is 00:35:31 Goodbye.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.