Global News Podcast - Israel lays out conditions for any Iran nuclear deal

Episode Date: February 16, 2026

Israel's prime minister has demanded the removal of all enriched uranium from Iran as part of any deal on Tehran's nuclear programme. Benjamin Netanyahu was speaking as Iran's foreign minister travell...ed to Switzerland for the latest round of indirect talks with the US. Also: In a new Instagram video the American celebrity news host, Savannah Guthrie, has addressed the kidnappers of her eighty- four year old mother, Nancy. She said she and her family still had hope their mother would be returned safely. The alleged gunman of the Bondi Beach shooting in Australia, has appeared via video link at a Sydney court for the first time. Nigerians welcome the return of the celebrated Argungu fishing festival. And how artificial intelligence is changing agriculture. 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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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 you second-guess yourself? Is this a good price? Am I making the right choice? With car gurus, you don't have to wonder. You get deal ratings, price history and dealer reviews without the surprises. So you can shop with confidence. It's no wonder car gurus is the number one rated car shopping app in Canada on the Apple app and Google Play Store.
Starting point is 00:00:29 Buy your next car today with Car Shopping. Car gurus at Carguoros.ca. Go to cargueros.ca to make sure your big deal is the best deal. That's C-AR-G-U-R-U-S.Ca. Car gurus.com. America is changing, and so is the world. But what's happening in America isn't just a cause of global upheaval. It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere.
Starting point is 00:00:55 I'm Asma Khalid in Washington, D.C. I'm Tristan Redman in London, and this is the global story. Every weekday, we'll bring you a story from this intersection where the world and America meet. Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts. This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Pete Ross, and in the early hours of Monday the 16th of February, these are our main stories. An Iranian minister tells the BBC the ball is in America's court if it wants to reach a nuclear deal. Israel carries out more deadly airstrikes in Gaza,
Starting point is 00:01:34 while the US pushes ahead with its peace plan. And the alleged gunman of the Bondi beach shooting in Australia appears via video link at a court for the first time. Also in this podcast, the FBI finds a glove in the Nancy Guthrie disappearance case and the sound of a successful forest recovery program. Over the years, the Swiss city of Geneva has hosted many important diplomatic meetings. And it will do so once again on Tuesday when the... the U.S. Special Envoy, Steve Whitkoff, meets Iran's foreign minister, Abbasarachi,
Starting point is 00:02:16 for the second round of indirect talks focusing on Iran's nuclear program. Many leaders in the Middle East will be watching closely, including Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Earlier, he laid out his demands for any future deal between Tehran and Washington. The first is that all-enriched material has to leave Iran. The second is that there shall be no enrichment capability. dismantle the equipment and the infrastructure that allows you to enrich in the first place. And the third is to deal also with the questions of ballistic missiles.
Starting point is 00:02:52 The talks come at a difficult time for the Islamic Republic. International sanctions continue to hurt the country's economy. And tensions remain high following the regime's bloody suppression of pro-democracy demonstrations in which thousands of people were killed. President Trump, who's threatened strikes against Iran, if a deal to curb its nuclear program cannot be reached. But Iran's deputy foreign minister said his government was open to compromise if the Americans were willing to lift sanctions.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Majit Tagravanchi was speaking to our correspondent, Lee's DeSette, who's in the Iranian capital. Tehran. A city without certainty. No one's sure what the next days will bring. For people who've lived through the worst. last year's war with Israel and America. Last month's uprising put down with lethal force. A place buffeted by so many worries.
Starting point is 00:03:52 Even its markets, beautiful to behold, are now a measure of a nation's suffering. Iran's cost of living crisis is on another scale. Eunice, the spice seller, tells us some prices have doubled. Others quadrupled. It's sanctions, he says. Iran's real currency is in free fall against the dollar.
Starting point is 00:04:26 There's a direct link between the prices in this market and the success of the negotiations far away. If Iran doesn't do a deal with the United States, none of the sanctions will be lifted. And if they're not, the government has few tools to fix the economic crisis, much less all the other demands from their people. One of Iran's top negotiators tells us, in this week's talks, they're ready to compromise if sanctions are lifted.
Starting point is 00:04:57 We are ready to discuss this and other issues related to our program, provided that they are ready also to talk about the sanctions. Those sanctions have to be also on the table. One cannot accept the notion that Iran has to do certain things without the other side committing itself to do their share. President Trump prefers a deal, but he said it's hard to get, very hard to get a deal with Iran. He says it's up to you.
Starting point is 00:05:25 No, the ball is in America's court. Across Tehran, the scars were anger boiled over in last month's nationwide protests, a tax building, intact. a symbol of a system. This was Vanak Square. On a night it burned with rage and slogans calling for change.
Starting point is 00:05:56 There's little trace of what happened here. The police post was quickly repaired. We heard President Trump saying that, you know, go and take the institutions. Health is underway. So it seems to us that this is an incitement to violence. We are having normal.
Starting point is 00:06:14 normal relations with other countries. But they haven't accepted your account. They have said you should have allowed people to express a call for their basic rights and freedoms. Those who are engaged in peaceful demonstrations, they have every right to express their views, their opinions. But when it comes to violence, nobody tolerates violence. In the city's largest cemetery, pain is still raw. what happened here still looms large and no one knows if the next month
Starting point is 00:06:51 will bring a deal or another deadly war. These disset in Tehran, working on the condition that none of her material is used on the BBC's Persian service. It's a restriction that applies to all international media organisations operating in Iran. Israel has carried out more strikes in Gaza. Palestinian officials said at least 11 people were killed and several others injured in the latest attacks. Israel does not allow the BBC to report freely from Gaza.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Joel Gunter is following developments from Jerusalem. The fragile ceasefire in the Middle East was broken yet again when Israel carried out several strikes in the Gaza Strip. Palestinian officials say the strikes hit a refugee camp in the north and a suburb of Khan Yunis in the south. Israel said it was responding to a ceasefire violation by Hamas, accusing fighters of emerging from a tunnel into the area of the strip controlled by the Israeli military.
Starting point is 00:07:47 The ceasefire agreement, brokered by the US and signed last October, has barely held since it came into effect, with both sides accusing each other of near-daily violations. The Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry says that at least 600 people have been killed by Israeli strikes since the ceasefire began. Gaza's future will be discussed this week when the so-called Board of Peace, organized by President Trump, meets for the first time to negotiate funding and security for the strip.
Starting point is 00:08:17 Meanwhile, in Israel, there's been unrest in the city of Nebrek, which has a large ultra-Orthodox population. The police arrested more than 20 people and rescued two female soldiers after riots broke out on Sunday. Anna Aslam reports. That's the moment Israeli police fired tear gas at ultra-Orthodox Jewish men who were throwing stones, burning rubbish bins and attacking officers and their vehicles. Security forces were deployed to the area after large crowds chased two female soldiers through the city streets. Footage showed police escorting the pair away as men yelled and ran after them. Reports suggest they were wrongly suspected of attempting to deliver army conscription orders
Starting point is 00:09:03 during an official home visit to one of their colleagues. Ultra-Orthodox men have historically been exempt for military service, but many are now furious over a law that may force them to serve. A hardline movement has established what it calls a national alert system to mobilize the community when the IDF engages in enforcement activities against draft dodgers. Prime Minister Benjamin Hattinyahu strongly condemned the attack on the soldiers, but blamed an extremist minority for the violence. Ultra-Orthodox Jews make up about 13% of Israel's population
Starting point is 00:09:34 and oppose military service because they believe studying full-time in religious seminaries is their most important duty. But that claim has been criticized by many Israelis, especially during the two-year war in Gaza, with tensions often spilling on to. the streets. Anna Aslam. It's a case that's gripping America. Police in Arizona are still struggling to make progress in the hunt for the missing mother of a well-known television presenter. 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie disappeared from her home in Tucson more than two weeks ago. Authorities
Starting point is 00:10:05 believe she was taken against her will. But despite some clues, like doorbell footage of a possible mass intruder, a potential DNA breakthrough and the recovery of a glove, the mystery surrounding her disappearance seems no closer to being solved. Our correspondent in Tucson, David Willis, gave us the latest. This investigation, Pete, has centred on a man caught on video, surveillance video, on Nancy Guthrie's doorstep. And that person, of course, was masked and wearing what appeared to be thick, possibly black gloves. Well, a glove has since been recovered in a field, about two miles from Nancy Guthrie's home.
Starting point is 00:10:48 And today, the FBI said that the glove appears to match, use their words, appears to match that of the subject in the surveillance video. And the DNA of that glove is now being sent for analysis. Now, separately to all this, a couple of days ago, investigators reported finding DNA inside Nancy Guthrie's home. There wasn't hers, and it didn't match that of her close relatives or family. France and that DNA sample has also been sent to the lab. So we don't quite know what connection, if any, there is between these two things, but it does appear that forensic evidence could now
Starting point is 00:11:32 be the key to this inquiry. There seems to be a lot of unknowns in this case. I mean, police haven't even been able to confirm that Nancy Goughrey was abducted. I mean, that's the line of investigation they're following. But there's a lot of. lot that we don't seem to know. Can you talk us through anything else that we do know? That's absolutely right. And the part of the reason for that has been the phenomenal number of leads from members of the public that the police, the Sheriff's Department, the FBI has received. But you're absolutely right. They've yet to identify the suspect in the surveillance video, the man in their mask, as it were, and there is no sign of Nancy Guthrie. And they have now
Starting point is 00:12:15 about 400 detectives on this case. But yesterday, the local sheriff was quoted as saying that this could take days, could take weeks, could take months or could take even years to solve the case of the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie. You said it could take a long time to solve this, but surely given Nancy Guthrie's age and the fact that this has been ongoing for more than two weeks, time is off the essence, you would have thought. Well, that's right. And that is, of course, concerning concern on the part both of detectives and of course on the part of family members. And indeed, Savannah Guthrie has issued another heart-wrenching video on her Instagram page. And that video is captioned, Bring Her Home.
Starting point is 00:13:01 It's never too late to do the next right thing. David Willis. After a period of intense deforestation, Costa Rica has focused on conservation programs for the last 30 years. The forests have been recovering, but is the wildlife also returning? Yes, according to a study by the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Giancomo Delgado and his team set up more than 100 microphones in pastures, natural forests and restored lands, and then use the audio recordings to compare and analyze biodiversity. Traditionally, biodiversity monitoring would require you to spend much more time at a single site,
Starting point is 00:13:43 have a certain amount of knowledge about certain taxonomic groups to make kind of a full list of what is there and what is not. And what soundscaps allow us to do is actually tune in to a different type of information. And so what we did in Costa Rica, we were able to look across this huge geographic expanse. And actually, we've already recorded across the entire country. So kind of the first time that this type of scale in terms of data collection has been possible for biodiversity. That's a howler monkey. It's one of the larger
Starting point is 00:14:20 bodied animals that you might hear in the Costa Rican forest and always a pleasure to hear when you're out there. You can feel it, but also what we see in the data is we see this recovery of life, really, of these myriad connections and relationships which ecologists call it by a diversity, but really it's life, it's like
Starting point is 00:14:36 flourishing. And I think, you know, what makes Costa Rica so successful in this regard is this kind of combination of directly attacking ecologically damaging behavior, so banning forest conversion, taxing gasoline use, etc. And then redistributing wealth directly to local people. On the whole scale, that's kind of the approach that we should be taking globally to our ecological crisis. The ecologist Jayacomo Dogado.
Starting point is 00:15:05 Still to come in this podcast, how artificial intelligence is changing agriculture. We use solar-powered AI-enabled cameras. that detect pests and diseases on the farm. And Nigeria's famous fishing festival makes a comeback. America is changing. And so is the world. But what's happening in America isn't just a cause of global upheaval. It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere.
Starting point is 00:15:41 I'm Asma Khalid in Washington, D.C. I'm Tristan Redman in London. And this is the global story. Every weekday will bring you a story from this intersection, where the world and America meet. Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts. Shopping for a car should be exciting, not exhausting, but sometimes it can feel like a maze.
Starting point is 00:16:05 That's where Car Gurus comes in. They have advanced search tools, unbiased deal ratings, and price history, so you know a great deal when you see one. It's no wonder Car Gurus is the number one rated car shopping app in Canada on the Apple App and Google Play Store. Buy your next car today. with Carguroos at Cargurus.ca. Go to cargueros.ca to make sure your big deal is the best deal.
Starting point is 00:16:29 That's C-AR-G-U-R-U-S.Ca. Carguerus.ca. If you can't keep up with all the Epstein news, you're not alone. This week, the files have nearly but not quite brought down a British Prime Minister. There have been allegations that Epstein was a spy, and surprising countries have been drawn into the scandal, from Norway to Poland to Israel to France. It's a lot.
Starting point is 00:16:54 So we're recapping all the main developments and making sense of them. Listen to the global story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcast. This is the Global News podcast. Australia is still coming to terms with the massacre just over two months ago of 15 people at a Jewish event on Bondi Beach. Dozens more were injured when two gunmen, a father and his son, opened fire on people taking part in a Hanukkah festival. The father, Sajir Akram,
Starting point is 00:17:27 was killed by police during the attack. The son, Navid Akram, was arrested. The alleged gunman has now appeared via video link at a magistrate court in Sydney, facing 59 charges over the mass shooting. Our correspondent in the city, Katie Watson, gave me the details. He appeared via video link from prison. He's at a supermax prison about a couple of hours outside of Sydney.
Starting point is 00:17:52 He was wearing a green jumper, a prison-issue jumper. He said very little. There was some discussion about some reporting restrictions on the identities of survivors. He was asked whether he understood that conversation. He said yes. And pretty much that was it. Now, his lawyer did speak after the court hearing as well. And he was asked whether or not there was any understanding of which way he would be pleading.
Starting point is 00:18:21 And according to the journalists who were there outside the court, the understanding is it's still too early, but he will be appearing. It looks like next month again in court, so we might get more information then. And just briefly, Katie, you mentioned outside the court and given us a bit of a sense of, you know, Australia must still be reeling from this. But what happens outside the court? Is there much of a presence there? I mean, this is a story that is obviously a hugely important story, a shocking story.
Starting point is 00:18:51 I mean, the one conversation I had repeatedly was this. doesn't happen here in Australia. I think people were reeling from the violence, but reading from this, the anti-Semitic attack in particular, in a community that had long called for more protection and more notice to be taken with concerns about rising anti-Semitism. So this is a case that's clearly being watched very closely by people across Australia. Katie Watson, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine approaches its fifth year, Moscow's illegal use of foreign fighters in the war is coming under further scrutiny. Ukrainian officials now say they found the bodies of two Nigerians who were killed in combat in the east of the country last year.
Starting point is 00:19:35 Several countries have accused Moscow of bringing their citizens into Russia for non-military purposes, only then to press them into service in Ukraine. My colleague, Rajini Viaghanathan, spoke to Francis Farrell, a journalist from the Kiev Independent. She asked him, how many foreign fighters have been recruited. We don't have have obviously accurate or official data on this, but it is definitely in the tens of thousands. This is, of course, not including the tens of thousands of North Koreans who came in an official capacity to fight for Russia. But Ukraine has said that they have, this is from late 2025, 18,000 names of foreign fighters that they definitely know have fought 3,000 of which
Starting point is 00:20:24 have been killed, but the real number is likely, at least in order of magnitude higher. CNN has reported that just from Nepal alone, for example, it's been 15,000, and it could be a similar number of Cubans, and Ukraine has also said, around 1,500 at least, from different African nations. I mean, it's quite a geographical spread as well, isn't it, Francis? Yeah, from the Ukrainian figures of those 18,000 people they have the names of, that's from 128 countries. Russia is definitely, there are a few countries that it prefers, that it seems to be targeting more deliberately, but it sees a great opportunity to basically deceive and recruit people from all across the global south. And what sort of techniques are being used? I mean,
Starting point is 00:21:14 I assume it's financial incentives. It's the main driver. Yeah, absolutely. So if we look at the interviews from prisoners of war who've come from some of these countries, Somalia from Sierra Leone, from Nepal. These are all people who simply were attempted by an offer of a different level of income that they would have access to at home and potentially a new life in what they thought was Europe. And it's important to remember that some are not even told in advance by these recruiting agencies that they're going to the military at all. They're just saying it's work in Russia, it's good pay, it's stable, they're going to be a security guard or something. And those that do understand they're going to the military are still deceived themselves. They're told that it's logistics work.
Starting point is 00:22:06 They're going to be a driver in the rear. And only when they arrive and they have no agency to do anything, are they sent to the front line? Francis Farrow. We're often told that artificial intelligence is revolutionizing our lives. And now it's even changing the way we grow our food. Rob Young has been looking at AI's increasing use in farming. Picture this, a farm in California that hasn't changed much in decades. Flatland, stretching for miles, rows of leafy green vegetables almost as far as the eye can see.
Starting point is 00:22:40 But where workers want bent under the hot California sun, pulling up weeds and applying fertilizer, there is now a one million dollar machine powered by artificial intelligence. Third generation farmer Daniel Alameda says finding workers has been tough. And this machine is doing a job nobody enjoyed anyway. Mainly what we've been using AI for is differentiating between a plant and a weed. And I know that sounds very simple, but it's actually very difficult to do. I suppose in a field of spinach, anything that's green, looks like spinach.
Starting point is 00:23:20 Correct. So when we started, more or less, we knew where we placed our seed. So we kind of knew where that healthy, wanted plant should be. This is the sound of tomatoes being mechanically harvested in northern Italy for Muti, a global brand. Tomato plants require lots of water, and the farms that supply the company often overdo it to avoid losing crops in the Italian summer heat. Muti is now using AI sensors to make sure plants get exactly the amount of water they need and not a drop more.
Starting point is 00:23:56 Francesco Muti is the fourth generation of his family to run the business. Let's consider that 70% of the water utilized is for agriculture consumption. If we are able to measure exactly what are the needs of the plants in terms of water that can reduce on the tomato field, definitely cannot be done having this sensor that is analysing help in reducing this quantity. So what about farmers in emerging economies? Cutting edge technology from the US and Europe is expensive, but small-scale farmers are accessing some AI tools too.
Starting point is 00:24:39 I am Esther Kimani, the founder and CEO of Farmer Lifeline Technologies. Fama Lifeline exists to get farmers ahead of crop pests and diseases. And how we do this, we use solar-powered AI-enabled cameras that detect pests and diseases on the farm and notify the farmer with a simple SMS on the mobile phone. And this SMS will contain the crop that has been planted by this farmer, the pest or disease that has been detected, and recommendations of the most affordable and environmental. environmental-friendly solutions that they should apply and the exact quantities. So far, so optimistic, but every new technology creates winners and losers.
Starting point is 00:25:25 Medadavari is from the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture, which works to improve livelihoods and enhance food security in poorer countries. Machine learning has been used for years in agriculture to optimize fertilizer application, to model pest and disease probabilities and provide early warning in weather predictions. there is a lot of potential. But if these kinds of solutions are fed data that is poor quality, it's completely agnostic. It will still provide answers, but they may be highly erroneous.
Starting point is 00:25:54 And since AI also offers the potential to disseminate information really quickly, really widely, we do need to be careful with that. Medadivari ending that report by Rob Young. From farming to fishing. If you were in Nigeria this weekend and lucky enough to be close to the banks of the Matan Fadhan River, you would have witnessed an incredible sight. Fishermen with traditional handmade net wading into the milky water, hoping for the biggest catch as spectators line the banks cheering them on. The Argunoo Fishing Festival began in the 1930s and as one of Nigeria's most well-known cultural events.
Starting point is 00:26:34 But it hadn't been held for the past few years over security fears and funding shortages. So, this year's return has generated huge excitement. Tisha is one of the fishermen who took part. This year, things went peacefully, and there was a bigger crowd than last time. And also, we caught 100% more fish compared to the last event. Our reporter in Lagos, Makuchi Okafor, told Janet Jalil about the festival. The Aruggo Goon Fishing Festival is really one of the oldest and even most famous cultural events in Nigeria. So you see hundreds and hundreds of fishermen are gathered to compete for who will get the biggest catch.
Starting point is 00:27:19 And this happens in Aragungu, which is one of the villages or communities in Kibi State. Now, this event started about over 80 years ago. It started small just as a peace celebration between two communities, the Sukoto Caliphate and the Aragogun Emirate. But now it has grown to become not just a local event, but such an international. events, even recognized by UNESCO as one of the intangible cultural heritage of humanity. So it's huge. The last one that just happened this weekend had even the president. Another top Nigerian dignities are attending.
Starting point is 00:27:55 So it's quite really huge and very careful. And just describe what the fishermen do? The fishermen in hundreds race into the river. And the idea is for at least one person to get the hugest catch. Now, this year, the winner got a fish that is about 59 k-g. Now, the winner, the first, second and third position gets rewarded and they get celebrated. You know, and they even get acknowledged by the country and the state and even the president. So 59 kilograms, that's the size of a person.
Starting point is 00:28:29 Yeah, more or less. Actually, yes. So a huge fish, so incredible. The people that win the fish then get to keep the catch, it's good. for the local economy. It's good for Nigerian culture. So all kinds of benefits. Yes, it is. Not just even about the fish, which of course, clearly communities get to sell and trade and eat and feed and all that. This events attract lots of people. It has lots of attention from Nigeria to Nigeria to Niger to neighboring countries and even beyond people travel far and wide to attend.
Starting point is 00:29:03 I know that it was halted for a bit a couple of years back due to insecurity in. northern Nigeria, which is a region where this happens, and also a bit of lack of funding. But now it's been revived. So I've seen lots of attention, not just from people in Nigeria, but from even my friends who live outside Nigeria, they're like, oh, Arirungo Fishing Festival is back. I'm so excited. I'm going to attend next year. So it's buzzing online. It's fuzzing offline. Makurochi Okafor. And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at Global Podcast. BBC.co.uk. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
Starting point is 00:29:46 And don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story, which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story, available wherever you get your podcasts. This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Derek Clark, and the producer was Paddy McGuire. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Pete Ross. Until next time, goodbye. you need to see all the information. With the Car Gurus app, you can. Powerful search tools let you see deal ratings, price history and dealer reviews on listings all in one place. And you can turn on real-time price drop alerts, so you'll never miss a great deal. It's no wonder Car Gurus is the number one-rated car shopping app in Canada on the Apple app and Google Play Store. Buy your next car today with Car Gurus at
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