Global News Podcast - Largest Anti Government Protests In Iran Since 2009
Episode Date: January 11, 2026Protests have been taking place in cities across Iran, in the biggest show of opposition to the clerical authorities for 17 years. Reports of clashes between Iranian security forces and demonstrators ...in Tehran and other cities. Also: officials in Minneapolis say the FBI has blocked them from investigating the shooting dead of a woman by a US immigration agent. The Trump administration alleges she tried to run over officers - local officials reject that claim. As NASA prepares to evacuate a sick crew member from the International Space Station, we ask how astronauts can stay healthy in space. Skye Newman fends off Sombr, Jim Legxacy and Geese to be crowned BBC Sound of 2026 winner. And why boredom is a good thing. The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight.Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment.Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Keith Adams, and at 430 GMT on Friday the 9th of January, these are our main stories.
Iranians are taking to the streets in the biggest anti-government protests in years.
The government in Venezuela says it's begun releasing political prisoners in order to promote peace.
Columbia's president tells the BBC he believes there is a real threat of US military action against his country.
Also in this podcast, Star Trek like Sick Bays, we maybe need doctors on the staff, surgeons, robotic surgery, all those sorts of things.
As NASA prepares to evacuate the sick crew member from the International Space Station, we'll ask how to keep a growing number of space travellers healthy.
Tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of Iran
in the country's biggest demonstration for years.
The rallies began nearly two weeks ago
with shopkeepers railing against a sharp fall
in the value of the Iranian currency against the dollar.
But protesters are now calling for the removal of Iran's supreme leader,
Ayatollah Khomeini.
At least 40 demonstrators and five security personnel have been killed.
And President Trump has threatened to strike Iran very hard
if the authorities continue to kill, though,
demonstrating. Our world affairs correspondent Caroline Hawley has more details.
In towns and cities across Iran, protesters have taken over the streets.
Tens of thousands of them in extraordinary scenes posted on social media.
For days there's been unrest in Iran, sparked by an economic crisis. But what's happening now,
the numbers involved, is on an altogether different scale.
Here in Mashad, Iran's holiest city, they're trying to destroy CCTV cameras used by the Iranian regime for surveillance.
And the chants are calling for an end to the Islamic Republic.
Many are also calling for the restoration of the monarchy, which was overthrown back in 1979.
In the capital Tehran, huge crowds, apparently galvanized by calls from Reza Pahlavi, son of the late Shah.
These are the largest protests there had been since millions turned out to object to elections in 2009 that they saw as rigged.
One young woman who'd been out on the streets tonight told me the size of the demonstration was unbelievable.
And then, scared, she asked me to delete our online conversation.
Human rights groups have accused the security forces of using excessive force,
as the protests spread nationwide, with more and more people from all walks of life getting.
involved. It points to the widespread nature of anger, frustration and grievances across Iranian
society. I think the protests are adding to a cycle of protests that make clear that change is coming
one way or another. No one knows exactly where all this leads now. Donald Trump has again warned
Iran it will be hit hard if people are killed. Soon after these pictures emerged, the regime imposed
and near total internet blackout,
cutting Iranians off from each other and the outside world.
Caroline Hawley reporting.
I asked G.R. Gull from the BBC's Persian service
if this feels like a turning point for Iran.
It is certainly the most sustainable and white-ranging unrest
we have seen in many years.
And that alone makes it significant.
But what we have seen in Tehran
and the footages we have obtained
and also eyewitnesses
before the regime cut off the internet
totally. We're telling us in so many
different neighborhoods in Tehran,
tens of thousands of people have
poured into the street, chanting
slogans against the
Iran's supreme leader Ayatullah
Ali Khan, targeting him
directly, holding him responsible
for the current conditions
of the country. I think
in the past, most
of the mass protests were
outside of Tehran. And I think
this time around, it is also in Tehran, and if people in Tehran come out in masses, it will
encourage the rest of the country, and it could be a turning point.
Iranian human rights groups say more than 40 people have been killed. BBC Persian has
talked to the family of 21 of them and confirmed their identities.
When the protests started, it seemed to be about money, the economy, inflation, stuff like that,
but it's changed, hasn't it?
The U.S.-led sanction has crippled the economy.
The value of Iranian currency rules has sharply fallen against U.S. dollar.
And this has created an unsustainable situation for so many people.
Many people are struggling to make ends meet.
But also many people are unhappy about social restrictions and deep anger at political unaccountability,
corruption on the highest level among the officials and also their families.
families. I think there are a combination of so many different reasons. People are coming to the
street. It feels many of them have little to lose. G.R. G. G.R. G. G. G. G. G. G. G. P. P. G. P. P. G. G. G. P.
been spreading in the United States over the fatal shooting of a woman by a federal immigration
agent on Wednesday. Thousands of people marched through the streets of Minneapolis, close to where
René Good and American citizen, was shot, chanting slogans against immigration enforcement or ICE.
These residents were vocal in their opposition.
I'm showing that my discomfort with ICE being here and calling senators and mayors and telling them
how I feel and stuff like that.
I feel like that's just one way that I can show my support.
They need to get out.
There wasn't a problem in our state until they showed up.
Something's got to be done.
And, you know, I don't think violence is the answer,
but things have to change.
The Trump administration does not like Minneapolis
because Minneapolis stands up to the Trump administration.
And so their presence is really to just incite more chaos,
incite fear.
Hundreds of people also gathered at demonstrations
in New York and Philadelphia.
The incident has sharpened the already intense political divide across the U.S.
Officials have offered differing accounts of her killing,
with the Trump administration claiming the ICE agent was acting in self-defense,
while local officials say the woman posed no danger.
Here's the vice president, J.D. Vance.
There's a part of me that feels very, very sad for this woman,
not just because she lost her life,
but because I think she is a victim of left-wing ideology.
What young mother shows up and decides they're going to throw their car in front of ICE officers who are enforcing legitimate law?
You've got to be a little brainwash to get to that point.
Officials in the U.S. state of Minnesota say the FBI has cut them out of the investigation into the incident
and that the inquiry will be neither transparent nor fair without the involvement of local law enforcement officials.
But the Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam said they had no jurisdiction over the state.
the case. State Governor Tim Waltz said the people in the Trump administration had already
passed judgment. They have determined the character of a 37-year-old mom that they didn't even know,
don't know. They've determined that the actions are done. I don't know. I've not used
inflammatory terms of what happened. I've asked us to find the answers. The only way we find
the answers is a thorough investigation by non-partisan professionals.
Well, during his election campaign, President Trump promised the largest deportation program in American history,
and he placed ice at the centre of his immigration policies.
The agency has deported hundreds of thousands of people in recent months,
but critics say that it's acting as a paramilitary organisation.
So how did the American public feel about what's going on?
That's a question I put to our North America editor, Sarah Smith.
Well, if you look at recent polling that was conducted before this incident in Minnesota,
you'll see that most people do generally support Donald Trump's immigration policies,
its desire to stop illegal immigrants coming across the border
and to deport undocumented migrants who are living in the United States.
But over recent months when we have been seeing more ice agents moving into different cities
and using quite aggressive tactics there,
more and more people have been concerned about the method in which this is being conducted.
And most recently, more than half of people saying that they are really worried about
how this policy is being carried.
married out. But there are no signs from the administration that they are going to
change their tactics in any way as a result of what's happened in Minneapolis. They're
already sending more agents into that city and are very unlikely to back down from the
kind of harsh enforcement tactics that they have been using up until now.
So it seems that they don't feel that this is damaging the popularity of the Trump administration?
No, because you hear from administration officials that they are absolutely certain of the
brightness of their policy, but also of their interpretation about what happened in this particular
incident in Minneapolis. Almost immediately after it happened and people had had a chance to see
the videos on social media, administration officials were doubling down on their interpretation
that René Good caused her own death, they say, by trying to ram an ice agent with her car. They're
convinced that that's what happened. And all day to day, they've been becoming very combative
about this. The Vice President J.D. Vance came to the White House briefing room to speak
reporters. And he was insisting not only that what happened in Minneapolis was an attack on law
and order itself, according to him, he was calling Renee Good, without any evidence, a deranged
leftist, he said, and claiming that she was part of a network of activists who were trying to
incite violence against law enforcement officers. So if anything, what's been seen by the Trump
administration officials redoubles their certainty that they need to carry on with the immigration
enforcement tactics that they've been using up until now.
But on the other side, in this very, very divided country,
other people have looked at the video footage,
come to completely opposite conclusions about what has happened,
are deeply worried about the way in which the ICE agents behaved.
The Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, who is a Democrat, of course,
he's saying that administration officials are absolutely lying
about what happened on the streets there
and that he doesn't even believe that a federal investigation,
when it looks into this, will have a fair outcome.
And I have to say everybody and this entrenched debate came to their conclusions very, very quickly after seeing some video footage.
And before the opportunity had come for any sort of investigation to be done, people have decided that they know what happened and are very much sticking to the entrenched positions that they've taken.
Sarah Smith in Washington.
NASA has confirmed that it's preparing to bring the crew of the International Space Station home early because one of them has a medical issue.
The US agency said the astronaut was in a stable condition
but gave no further details on the grounds of privacy.
Space journalist Richard Hollingham says such events are a reality
when human beings are in space.
Going into space is risky.
Further away we go from Earth is risky
and these things do need to be thought about.
We do maybe need Star Trek like sick bays.
We maybe need doctors on the staff, surgeons, robotic surgery, all those sorts of things.
So what's it like looking after you?
your health in space. Clayton Anderson spent 152 days on board the ISS back in 2007. He spoke to the
BBC's Evan Davis. We were fortunate enough on my five months that we had Oleg Kotoff, who was a medical
doctor on board. We never needed his services for the most part. But I was trained to take blood.
I was trained to pull a tooth. Several basic medical things, although if I were to have been called
upon to do some of those things, I would have told the crew member that I was working on that,
hey, it's possible you're going to die because, I mean, I'm not a doctor. And, you know,
you maybe practice those skills three or four times. And then you don't think about those
skills for a long time until you get to space and maybe have to use them. And so that's a
concern for me for long duration missions to the moon or to Mars. Do we need a doctor on board?
I mean, appendix attack, if it's not dealt with, can be fatal. And it can happen out of the blue to
some extent. And you do just think, is it just a matter of time before something like that hit someone?
You're not only up there for two days. It's months up there before somebody has an episode of that
kind, not an infectious disease, not a virus, a cardiac episode, for example. These are all
terrifying, I would have thought. Yeah, if you think about this as Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos and all
these people begin to send more and more folks into outer space, many of those people are not
medically cleared like astronauts. We're looked at every which way to Sunday and when we fly into space,
there's a pretty good chance that we're going to be very, very healthy when we go. But if we think
about commercial space flight, all those other things that you mentioned become more possible,
more prevalent. And how do you deal with those things when you have them? For example, if there was a
situation where you would need to provide fluids intravenously to an astronaut and then decide
that they need to come home, what do you do about that person's space?
How do you get them into the vehicle?
I mean, there's lots of issues that, to my knowledge, we haven't really thought about.
Yeah.
And how long does it take, in an emergency, to bring a crew or a crew member home from the space station?
What's the quickest they could do that, get them into a hospital on Earth from 400 kilometers up there?
It would be a variable answer depending on when you undocked and where you targeted landing.
It could be ours.
But if it were an emergency situation where you couldn't exactly predict where you're going to land such that you'd have people waiting for you.
there. It could be a harrowing situation. Those are things that NASA's pretty good about thinking about
and planning for. But as we get into this new time of commercial spaceflight, it kind of
opens that window of the things we need to think about and prepare for. We've talked Clayton about
physical conditions. Do you worry about mental health episodes in a place like the space shuttle
where someone needs to come out? Is that something that is often talked about? It's not often
talked about. It's happened before on a shuttle mission. There was a situation which then led to
astronauts like me having to put a padlock on the hatch in the middeck so that it couldn't be
opened without purposeful operations. And if you think about humans traveling together in a small
confined space, you know, I don't know how small, small is or how large a spaceship traveling to
Mars would be. But you're putting people in a can for six to nine months to get to a planet where
they can't even see Earth anymore. The psychological aspects of this are critical to me. You have
the issue of depression. You have the issue of sexual tension. You have these medical issues, right?
If you have a medical situation, do you have a little room where the tools and the table and
the things are available for you? We haven't gotten that far yet. And those are going to be
critical things if we're going to become, as Elon Musk says, an interplanetary species.
That was the former astronaut Clayton Anderson.
Still to come in this podcast.
Many of the best ideas have been generated during periods of fallowness and boredom.
So I feel like mindfulness has had a rebrand and it was boredom's term.
Why boredom is a good thing.
This is the global news podcast.
Venezuela's interim government has released a number of political prisoners calling it a goodwill gesture.
It was announced by the president of the National Assembly, Jorge Rodriguez.
The Bolivarian government, together with state institutions,
has decided to release a significant number of Venezuelan and foreign nationals.
These releases are taking place as we speak.
Consider this gesture by the government, with its broad intention to seek peace,
as the contribution we must all make to ensure that our republic continues its peaceful life
and pursuit of prosperity.
The release of the prisoners comes just.
days after US forces seized the former president, Nicholas Maduro, and declared that the US
administration was now in charge of Venezuela. Norberto Paredes from BBC Mundo was outside the prison
in Caracas. President Trump said that he had ordered the closure of this prison and today we
see this action. So I think this move suggests that Tadze Rodriguez, the acting president of
Venezuela might be indeed cooperating with President Trump. We can see some. It's a little bit of
intelligence forces coming out of the prison. So people in Venezuela don't know what's actually
happening. Don't know who it's actually needed. Will Grant is our Central America and Caribbean correspondent.
It has been one of Washington's demands for a long time. Really, any time there's heightened
repression in Venezuela, particularly around contested elections, around protests around those
same elections, Washington has urged the Venezuelan government to release political prisoners. Of course,
Mr. Rodriguez said it was a sort of unilateral step by the Venezuelan government,
but the suspicion is that, of course, this comes under pressure from Washington.
We don't know the identities or the numbers of those who are currently being released,
but NGOs in Venezuela believe 1,11 people have been detained over the years
because of their political leanings.
There is a very notorious, very well-known detention centre
an alleged torture centre in Caracas called ELECOID,
and one human rights group, amid rumours and information,
unverified information at this stage that it is currently being shut down,
said, look, there are other centres in the country.
They want to see a genuine change after Nicholas Maduro has been removed from office by the Americans.
Will Grant reporting.
Meanwhile, Colombia's president, Gustavo Petro,
has told the BBC he believes there is a real threat of US military action
against his country after the strikes on Venezuela and the seizing of Nicholas Maduro.
President Trump has said a military operation in Colombia sounds good to me.
Our South America correspondent Ione Wells sent this report from the Colombian capital, Bogotar.
These two world leaders have long been adversaries, frequently trading insults and threats on social media.
Since the US's military operation in Venezuela last Saturday, Donald Trump has suggested several times
that Colombia is also in his sights, telling President,
Petro, in ruder language, to essentially watch his back. I asked Mr. Petro how seriously he was
taking these threats and if he was afraid for his own security.
I do believe it's a real threat and the prospect of removing it depends on the ongoing
conversations. Colombia has already experienced military violence from the United States,
most recently in Panama at the beginning of the 20th century. Today, Panama is not part of Colombia.
Mr Trump, as he did with Nicolas Maduro, has accused Mr Petro of being personally involved in trafficking cocaine, which he strongly denied, saying that it had always been proven that he was not involved in that.
His critics have accused him of failing to tackle cocaine production, which has hit record highs in recent years.
Ione Wells in Bogota.
Now, put down your phones.
It's no secret that there's been growing anxiety about what social media or always being online is doing to our brains.
But could one way of giving our often overworked and overstimulated mind to break be boredom?
It's become recent trend on social media with people filming themselves doing absolutely nothing,
otherwise called raw dogging.
So what are the advantages of boredom and how does it change the way your brain works?
Sarah Montague spoke to Helen Russell, an author who recently wrote a piece entitled
the quiet rebellion of doing nothing,
and Dr. Sandy Mann,
a senior psychology lecturer at the University of Lancashire
here in England,
who wrote a book called The Science of Boredom,
the upside and downside of downtime.
First up is Helen.
Having the privilege of being raised
before the internet in 1980
meant that I was quite familiar with Borden,
but like many of us, with social media,
with constant distractions,
I had become a little alienated from it,
and then I had three children
and the constant refrain of, I'm bored, was driving me slightly up the wall.
So I began to look into the advantages of boredom and saw that there are many.
And actually, many of the best ideas have been generated during periods of fallowness and boredom.
So I feel like mindfulness has had a rebrand, and it was boredom's turn.
I think there is much to be said for staring at a wall or staring out of the window,
and all of my school reports would accuse me of daydreaming, I now feel a sense of pride over.
And my children, if they are allowed to be bored, then that's when the magic happens.
That's when they create things or famously get along, which is rare but beautiful.
Okay, Dr. Sandy Mann, tell us what is going on when we are bored.
I've done all the research which backs up at everything that Helen has been saying.
It's that lack of stimulation that leads us to search.
And if you imagine you're kind of like a search engine, constantly searching for stimulation.
And when we're not getting it, we're just looking more and more.
And that can lead us to negative things.
So the things that we do to try and unbore ourselves can be harmful.
So when we are bored, we can get that stimulation by being more creative
because creativity is a very stimulating process.
And that's why there can be advantages to bored and because it leads us to go into our own brains
to look for that stimulation rather than getting in externally.
And Helen, have you experienced that idea of something you would think,
I know that wouldn't have happened if I hadn't actually just been sort of letting my mind wander?
Absolutely. I tend to write nonfiction, but I've just finished my second novel, and none of that would have happened had I filled the idle moments.
Can you train yourself to be good at boredom?
I think so, and I think that's what Helen's been referring to, just spending that time or more time in downtime.
I actually did an experiment around my University of Central Lancashire where we got people off the street to a sensory-deprived room without any phones, with nothing to look at, soundproof, and we wanted to see what would happen to them.
And those that agreed to do it reported that at the start, they found it really stressful, really
frustrating, they were agitated, they couldn't stand it. And some of them kind of begged to be let
out. But those of them that managed to get through that kind of pain threshold found that they
became actually relaxed and they got into it. And they came out feeling that it was like a warm
bath or a bit of respite. So it's training yourself to just be in the moment, what Helen called
mindfulness, but not needing constant levels of stimulation.
I think rather than feeling we have to be productive all the time.
So giving ourselves a bit of a break is always helpful, I think.
Helen Russell and Dr. Sandy Mann,
speaking to Sarah Montague about the hidden virtues of boredom.
Finally, a name to remember, in the space of just eight months,
the British pop singer, Sky Newman, has had a meteoric rise.
She's toured with Ed Shearren and Lewis Capowdy,
made her Glastonbury debut,
and she scored her first top 10 single.
Now she adds another accolade.
to her collection by winning the BBC's Sound of 2026,
which predicts the year's biggest new stars.
Our music correspondent, Mark Savage, went to meet her.
Sky Newman burst onto the charts with her debut single last April.
Within a month, she was drawing huge festival cries.
So it was like a very quick journey to everyone else,
but not to me.
I've been doing music my whole life.
For a show, I'd done, I was about six, and I sung in school.
And that was just magical.
And it's when I really realised that this is what I want to do.
Do you remember what you sang?
I sung True Colours, Cindy Lauper.
What a song. Those are big notes.
My little voice managed to do it at the time.
I don't know how.
Sky's biggest hit to date is Family Matters,
a song that details her tough upbringing,
surrounded by drugs and violence on a London council estate.
I wrote that song from the perspective of someone who comes from a broken background
and I think there's a lot more of it than people realise.
A lot of people have children not really understanding how big it is.
And a lot of people have children without knowing themselves first
and without fixing their issues and they think that they don't have love elsewhere in their life
so they're going to get it from a child,
but you're then just passing your pain and trauma on to them,
and it doesn't fix it.
Her stark and confessional songs have won a legion of fans,
among them Elton John.
I'm talking to Sky Newman, who's our guest on The Rocket Hour this week.
Thank you.
You are something else, and you're such a good songwriter as such an...
It's just insanity when I think about it, really.
It means everything, because these are voices that I heard in my home growing up.
It made me feel proud of myself.
which is not something I always feel to have people who I respect and look up to you so much,
be so kind and welcoming because they don't have to be.
Did Elton John give you any glasses tips?
No, but I was really sad because I went on the interview and I didn't wear my glasses
and I was feeling at myself.
Edward, don't worry, I love him next time.
And it's not just famous friends.
A panel of 170 music experts have named Sky Newman the most promising new act of the year.
Here's the moment she found out.
You are the winner of Radio On Sound of 2026.
Make some noise for Sky Newmans!
He's a winner, everybody.
The signed-off list has previously tipped the likes of Adele, Sam Smith and Jewel Leaper for success.
Now, Sky Newman joins their ranks, setting her up for a huge 2026.
Well, that report by Mark Savage.
And Sky Newman beat two American rivals, Somber and Geese, as well as the British rapper Jim Legacy for that coveted.
Sound of 2026 title.
And that's all from us for now,
but there will be a new edition of the Global News Podcast later.
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.com.
This edition was mixed by Zabihullah Karush,
and the producer was Rebecca Wood.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Keith Adams.
Until next time, goodbye.
