Global News Podcast - Lebanon completes first phase of plan to disarm Hezbollah
Episode Date: January 8, 2026The Lebanese military says it has completed the first phase of its plan to disarm Hezbollah, but Israel has warned far more needs to be done. The army in Lebanon says the south of the country is now f...ree of non- state weapons. The area had long been dominated by Hezbollah. Also: President Trump has signed a memorandum ordering the withdrawal of the United States from sixty-six international organizations -- nearly half of them UN bodies. Cambodia says it has extradited a billionaire businessman from China, who is accused of masterminding a vast cryptocurrency scam. And human like robots - aptly named humanoids - take centre stage at the annual consumer electronics trade show in Las Vegas. 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 Julia McFarlane and at 16 hours GMT on Thursday the 8th of January, these are our main stories.
The Lebanese government says it's completed the first phase of a plan to disband armed groups in the south of the country,
the traditional hotlands of Hezbollah.
Protests and fury erupt in the US city of Minneapolis after a 37-year-old mother was shot dead by immigration agents.
And President Trump withdraws the US from dozens of UN groups,
including a climate change treaty and bodies to advance peace and democracy worldwide.
Also in this podcast?
You still need to see what it does when things aren't smooth.
You know, when it's bumbling around in the dark, when there's a tear in the carpet,
can it avoid those trip hazards?
Can it still do all the computing, if you like, that we do in our everyday lives?
Humanoid robots unveiled at a trade show capable of folding laundry,
Is it progress or a dystopian nightmare?
The Lebanese military says it has successfully completed the first phase of its plan
to embed across the south of the country disarming local armed groups under the control
of the Shia militant organisation Hezbollah, who for decades have dominated the area,
which also borders Israel.
The cabinet in Beirut had earlier taken the decision for the move,
and the information minister, Paul Morkos, said further operations were planned.
The cabinet reviewed the Army Command's report
and commended the efforts of the Lebanese army in the region south of the Litani River
to impose operational control over the area.
It also called for drawing up a plan for the region north of the Littani River,
based on a general assessment currently being prepared by the Army Command,
which will be presented and discussed in the next monthly report
to be submitted by the army commander to the cabinet in February.
The efforts follow a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hezbollah
that was brokered by the United States back in 2024.
However, towns and villages across the south
have continued to face heavy and regular Israeli bombardment ever since.
The Israelis say they are targeting Hezbollah military infrastructure.
The BBC's Karin Torbay, who's in Beirut,
told me what the Lebanese officials have been saying.
What they say is basically that they have completed phase one of a disarmament plan
that aims to disarm all illegal armed groups across the country.
Phase one is basically related to the area south of what is known in Lebanon as the Lithuania River,
which is a river that separates the south of the country
between the areas that are very close to Israel, border town,
and areas that are further inside the country.
So what it is saying is basically that it has full control now
of the area between the river and the border with Israel.
Karin, there has been a ceasefire agreed between Israel and Lebanon since last year,
but there has continued to be Israeli operations in the south.
Has what Lebanese army, what they've announced today,
do you think that's done enough for the Israelis to maybe?
halt their operations? Today we heard from the office of the Israeli prime minister that said that
basically what the efforts that the Lebanese army and the governments are doing are an encouraging
beginning, but they are not enough, they're not sufficient. And Hezbollah has said that
in the absence of any measure taken by Israel to do something in return of what Lebanon is doing,
it is not going to cooperate any further or to disarm.
Right. And I mean, they're more than just an armed group, aren't they, Hezbollah?
They've been deeply embedded into Lebanon for decades.
Is it even possible for the Lebanese government to truly dismantle this organisation?
Well, Lebanon says it is adamant that it will not accept any presence of any armed groups anymore.
But as you said, Hasbola is not just a paramilitary group or a militia in the country.
Hasbullah is also a very important political group with a very large base, and it has been
quite popular among a large community in Lebanon, especially the Shia community within the
country.
So what the government is saying is basically that all it wants is basically the disarmament of
the group on the political level.
The group is an active group in the country.
It is in the parliament.
It isn't the government.
And no one wants it to be outside this political system.
It is an integral part of it.
But that the efforts of the government are mainly about disarming groups
and making the Lebanese government the only entity in the country
that is capable of deciding of peace and war.
Karin Torbay in Beirut.
And for more on this story, you can go on to YouTube.
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There's a new story available every day.
Protests have broken out in Minneapolis and several other US cities,
after a 37-year-old woman was shot dead by a federal agent from ICE, the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement Agency.
People gathered around a makeshift shrine of flowers and candles, and hundreds of Minnesota residents held a vigil for the victim who has been identified as Renee Nicole Good.
Videos of the incident posted on social media show immigration officers ordering a person to get out of a car in a residential part of Minneapolis as one of them tries to open the driver's side.
door. The vehicle can then be seen reversing and beginning to drive away. Seconds later,
several gunshots are fired and the vehicle crashes into a parked car. President Donald Trump reacted
to the shooting on social media, saying the ICE agents had acted in self-defense. Speaking later
at a press conference, the Homeland Security Secretary, Christy Noam, said the woman had tried to
use her car to run over the officers and called it domestic terrorism. But the high-profile
Democratic politician Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said Ms. Good had been murdered whilst fleeing for her life.
What we need to see is this incident prosecuted. What we saw today was a criminal, a criminal, murder a woman and shoot her in the head while she was trying to escape and flee for her life. And I think what we saw today was a manifestation of every American's worst nightmare.
Lynette Rainie Grandel was there at the site of the incident.
She told the BBC she tried to intervene after realizing that someone had been shot.
I started trying to run over to the vehicle.
And at that point, ICE agents were around and preventing us from getting close to the vehicle and threatening us.
They had guns out. It was very scary looking.
They didn't point them at me, but they had them raised in the air.
So it was certainly threatening.
and they had their tear gas canisters or whatever that is ready to go.
So they had those kind of poised, ready to spray us, and they were pushing us back.
They wouldn't let anybody go to her aid as far as I could tell.
Speaking to the BBC's U.S. partner, CBS News,
the Minneapolis police chief, Brian O'Hara, said law enforcement officials
are trained to avoid situations where the use of deadly force may be required.
In my years of experience as a police officer,
over the last 25 years, I can tell you, police officers have been training more and more
as time has gone on to try and avoid these situations in the first place, especially the last
few years. There's been a very strong emphasis on trying to de-escalate situations whenever
possible. But certainly for many years, professional law enforcement training has been to try and
avoid using tactics that place officers in a situation with an unarmed motorist where deadly force
may be necessary. So, Chief, it sounds like what you're saying is that this, what we see on that
video is not the protocol your police officers would have followed in that situation.
I think the overwhelming majority of city police departments in this country have been training
to try and avoid putting officers in situations where deadly force may be necessary, particularly
when there is no underlying serious criminal threat. In this case, it appears that this woman was not
the target of any pre-planned law enforcement investigation, and that the initial reason for
approaching the vehicle was because she was blocking the street. So that being in mind,
certainly everything that we do in law enforcement, we are trying to be proportionate and reasonable.
So what more do we know about this woman whose youngest child, aged six, also lost their father
three years ago? Nedda Tofique is our correspondent in Minneapolis, and she's been speaking to Tim Franks.
Renee Nicole Good lived just blocks from where she was killed.
So the people in that area had known her.
They said she moved from Colorado to the Twin Cities and lived with a partner.
And they described her as a caring, generous person.
In fact, her mom was reached.
And her mom said that what happened, the way she was killed was stupid.
She said her daughter must have been so afraid that her daughter is not someone
who would have been seeking to confront ICE agents.
any way. She said she was the kindest person that she knew. So by all accounts, you know,
she is a beloved member of the Minneapolis community. And so that just really adds to this
conflicting narrative of what put Renee Nicole Good in that situation. And whether she was, in fact,
trying to confront ICE agents or to help those in the community in that area, you know, ICE had
been raiding neighborhoods and business areas for some days after the Trump administration
declared that they were going to launch the largest immigration enforcement operation ever
in this city. And residents had kind of gone out blowing whistles, blaring their car horns
whenever they saw ICE agents out in the community to warn their neighbors. So it was already
a tense situation. And then you see in the video, just how that escalated.
You mentioned that it's a tense situation and I know that there was a protest,
impromptu protest last night.
There's, there are, I think, further vigils planned for today.
I mean, one never wants to predict trouble, but Minneapolis is, of course,
the city where there were big protests following the killing of the unarmed black man
George Floyd back in 2020.
I mean, are people drawing parallels, it just,
in terms of how tense the place is?
I think people absolutely are in the sense that, let's not forget,
this was just a few blocks, in fact,
from where George Floyd was killed by police.
And the fact that this city was still healing,
you had an overhaul of the police department,
but nevertheless, you know, with the kind of arrival of ICE agents in the city,
we have seen this new feeling of,
It is the community against an overzealous federal government.
That has been the feeling.
And Minneapolis officials in the press conference, including the police chief,
talked about how they warned this could happen,
that the arrival of immigration enforcement officers was not going to help
keep the city safer, that it was only going to sow fear and chaos
because it was going to pick the community against federal agents.
not just that, that federal agents weren't cooperating with state officials. And so despite the
kind of efforts of officials last night to tell residents, if you aren't peaceful, you're really
playing and taking the bait of the Trump administration because they want to use that as a reason
to further militarize Minneapolis. That's what the officials here in Minneapolis believe
would happen. Despite that, I think there is another fear, which is, if I
ICE doesn't leave the city, and by all indications, Christine O.M. is saying they will get to those
2,000 ICE agents in the Twin Cities, then what happens? It's not just the fear of protests,
but it's also the fear of more incidents like these happening.
Nedda Tofique in Minneapolis.
President Trump has signed a memorandum ordering the withdrawal of the United States from 66
international organizations, nearly half of them UN bodies. He's deemed them as operating
contrary to the interests of the United States.
Many of those organisations were founded to combat climate change
and promote peace and democracy, as Danny Aberhardt reports.
Donald Trump has already stripped many multilateral organisations he dislikes of funds.
Now, following a review he ordered at the start of his second term,
he's pulling the US out from dozens of bodies he sees as being globalist,
inefficient or ineffective.
Many deal with the environment.
Most strikingly, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change,
the treaty that underpins all international efforts to combat global warming,
and the IPCC, the expert body that assesses climate science worldwide.
Other UN organisations affected include those working on family planning,
maternal and child health, peace building and sexual violence in conflict.
Mr Trump's action may well face legal challenges.
A member of a US-based non-profit advocate,
Group, the Union of Concerned Scientists, described the step as a new low.
Rachel Cletus told the French News Agency, AFP,
it was another sign that an administration she described as authoritarian and anti-science
was determined to sacrifice people's well-being and destabilise global cooperation.
Danny Aberhard.
Human-inspired robots, aptly named humanoids, have been doing all sorts
at the annual consumer electronics trade show in Las Vegas this week,
everything from pouring the coffee to folding laundry.
One company, the Hyundai Motor Group, says it will roll out humanoids in its factories from 2008.
Jack Jukowski is a vice president at the Hyundai-owned Boston Dynamics.
He introduced the new Electric Atlas humanoid robot in Las Vegas.
We've also been at this robotics thing for a while,
and we've learned that there's more to it than just,
copying nature. We can pick the best parts of what nature has to offer and do better in others.
So as you can see, Atlas here has joints that can move 360 degrees. This lets Atlas move even more
efficiently than humans, particularly in manufacturing environments where every second counts.
We've also designed Atlas's head and face very purposefully. We want folks working with Atlas
to know that Atlas is a helpful robot and not a person.
Well, Zoe Kleinman is our technology editor.
She told us about the possibilities of humanoids.
I think the audience gassed, and actually I gassed as well when I saw Atlas takes this stage,
because I've never seen a humanoid move so smoothly.
Traditionally, humanoids have been really quite clunky machines.
You've got to bear in mind, though, this was a demo, it was programmed, it was on a clear stage.
The argument for humanoid, you know, why do robots need to look like us,
is that if they're going to operate in an environment that's designed for a human,
you know, your house or a factory or an office,
they've got to be able to get around it in the same way that we have,
therefore having the same kind of physique that we do.
But if you think about it mechanically,
every roboticist I've ever spoken to says,
do you know what, legs are really hard.
There's a lot of hardware, there's a lot of joints,
there's a lot of things that could go wrong.
Wheels are actually more efficient.
And don't even get them started on why human eyes don't need heads.
However, the tech bros in the last year have really,
been bigging this up. There's been a huge push towards making humanoids happen and getting them
out there into the world. You know, this idea that they can multitask and do a number of jobs.
Again, not something that traditional robots have been able to do very well. They're usually
primed to do one thing in particular. But this is the vision. And as we saw on stage with high
undized Atlas, it does seem to be getting a little bit closer to reality. But you still need to
see what it does when things aren't smooth. You know, when it's bumbling around in the dark, when
there's a, I don't know, a tear in the carpet, can it avoid those trip hazards?
Can it still do all the computing, if you like, that we do in our everyday lives to get around
without falling flat on our faces?
Zoe Climbing.
Still to come in this podcast.
It's an incredibly elegant palm.
It has these arching leaves on a stem that can be as much as 15 metres tall.
And the leaflets are really stiff.
They're absolutely spectacular.
And then when it flowers and fruits, it produce the...
cascading bunches of bright red fruits.
Scientists here in Britain name nearly 200 new plants and fungi,
but some are already at risk of extinction,
despite only just being discovered.
Protests in Iran are now entering their 12th day,
and there are reports they are spreading to towns and cities
that haven't been affected until.
now. On Wednesday, two police officers were killed in the western town of Laudagan. At least 36 people
had been killed since the protests began over worsening economic situations. Paham Gubadi from BBC
Persian told James Coptnell more. We would hear the name of the cities from, you could say,
all four corners of Iran, people were protesting. And the difference this time is that we see the number
of the small towns, the crowd, the sheer crowd in the small towns, thousands and thousands
of people have gathered in the street.
I mean, we've been covering the protest last time back in 2022.
Yes, it was also nationwide.
It was all across Iran.
But the sheer number of the people on the streets, and especially on a small town,
it's as if the entire, in some towns, it's as if the entire town is on the streets, you know.
So that is one of the differences this time.
And the other thing is that Iranians, it seems that this time, they are having a leader at the helm of the protest,
unlike the previous one in the woman life freedom movement back in 2020.
This time, many people across Iran are shouting and calling for Reza Pahlavi, who's the son of Iran's last shaw.
That is an interesting development.
So then it would be right to say that these protests, at least now, are overtly political, even if they may have started on economic grounds.
That is absolutely correct.
So they started off because of the devaluation of Iranians' currency against US dollar.
But then later on, it turned into immediately interned in terms.
to political and we could hear people on the streets of Tehran and other cities chanting slogans
like death to the dictator and they want an end to this regime. But the reformist government
of Masu Pesachian at the very beginning tried to adopt a more conciliatory approach and tone
towards the protesters saying that we recognize your protest, we understand that and we try to
have a talk with the representative of these people at the Grand Bazaar of Tehran because it's where
it all started. However, after a few days after protests spread to other cities in Iran and became
more anti-government, we started that riot forces started using more force. They started shooting
in the protesters and more videos emerged on social media of protesters being killed and being
injured and wounded and the number of casualties rose immediately. And also Iranian head of
Judiciary has said that because of the American support and because of the Israeli support,
this time around, we have no mercy.
This dimension of some people calling the name or supporting Reza Palavi, the exiled son of the Shah.
What do they want exactly for him to return in a political guise or to return almost as a royal
figure?
What are people calling for?
So he hasn't made it clear.
He says that I want to step in as a transitional figure to help the transition into a democracy.
He says that this is what he says.
He says that I want everything to be determined at a ballot box so people can vote whether they want a constitutional monarchy or they want, for example, a republic.
That's what people are going to choose.
But I'm going to step in as a person who's going to help that transition.
What people want is that it's not clear what they want.
They're just shouting his name on the streets.
We don't know if all of them want a constitutional monarch.
all of them want him to return as a monarch, or the reason they're calling him is because
that nobody has his political weight and leverage. So they are choosing him for the transition,
only for the transitional period. So that is not clear yet. And I think we have to wait
and see for that. Paham Ghabadi. Cambodia says it's extradited a billionaire businessman from
China who's accused of masterminding a vast cryptocurrency scam in which trafficked workers were
to labour camps and forced to defraud victims around the world.
Chinjo was one of three Chinese nationals arrested on the 6th of January,
following a joint investigation with the US into transnational crime.
Our South East Asia correspondent Jonathan Head told me what he knows about the case.
This is a bit of a surprise because when the US and UK authorities really put him in the
headlines in October last year with this description of this incredible network,
They confiscated more than $15 billion of crypto and property and detailed Chen Juer heading
this amazing sort of network of scam operations all across Cambodia with shell companies
in many other parts of Asia.
The Cambodian authorities at the time were very standoffish about it.
I mean, he was a very well-connected man.
They didn't say they knew where he was.
They didn't say anything about the allegations against him.
They simply said they hoped that the US and UK authorities had their evidence.
Well, you know, almost three months later, suddenly we're told he's actually been extradited to China, which has also been investigating. We know that.
But it's interesting they've chosen China and not the US.
I strongly suspect that is because the trial in China will be largely kept out of public view.
And the Chinese will help avoid embarrassment in Cambodia about any possible revelations that would have come out in, let's say, a trial in the US, because he was very well connected to the very top leadership in Cambodia.
and that would indeed have been deeply embarrassing.
So we expect that the Chinese authorities will announce charges at some point,
and we have no idea when, but he will certainly be going on trial in the next few months.
Jonathan, last year you reported in nearby Myanmar from this booming city,
which was also being accused of enriching itself from these types of scams.
Why are these cyber fraud empires really booming in Southeast Asia
in some of the poorest countries in the region?
largely because of poor law enforcement, entrenched corruption and the hunger for local elites
to make money easily. In Cambodia, we think the scams may now account for around 60% of the economy.
If you go over into Myanmar near the Thai border, this is a war zone where there are very few sources of income,
few ways of making money, people are very poor, and the local warlords who are fighting each other
and fighting the military government need to raise funds. And this is one of the easiest ways of doing it.
It's also because China's enormous sort of footprint
which has spread into Southeast Asia over the last 20, 25 years.
Of course, with that has come incredible investment, you know, technology,
but it's also brought China's enormous criminal underworld
who are highly regulated in China,
but realize that Southeast Asia is a place they can bring their practices
and make huge amounts of money,
and they're only just being reigned in now.
There's still a very powerful force.
This will not be stopped easily.
Jonathan Head.
Scientists at the world-renowned botanic gardens at Kew here in London, along with their collaborators,
have named nearly 200 new plants and fungi in 2025.
The list include some of the weirdest new finds in the plant world,
including a zombie fungus from Brazil, a blood-stained orchid from Ecuador,
and a fiery plant named after a Studio Ghibli character.
But despite only being recently discovered, some are already at threat of extinction.
Professor William Baker, a senior research leader at the Royal Botanic Gardens Q,
told Tim Franks about some of the new plants.
A new species of Christmas palm, which is found only on the island of Samar,
which is one of the 7,000 islands in the Philippines.
It's an incredibly elegant palm.
I've only ever seen cultivated specimens of this,
but it has these arching leaves on a stem that can be as much as 15 metres tall.
And the leaflets are really stiff.
they're absolutely spectacular and then when it flowers and fruits it produce these cascading bunches of bright red fruits but
hang on you said that you've seen it cultivated and yet you are naming a yes this is a sort of new
subspecies or what no it's a completely new species it was discovered in 2013 and written about a little bit
and very quickly leaks into horticulture which is a bit concerning right because that means those
seeds have likely been illegally collected and entered horticulture.
That is something we have to be very careful of when we describe new things
that may have various kinds of appeals to a broad audience.
But the process of actually naming this took some time
because while we knew it was a new species, there was nothing else like it,
we actually didn't know where to fit it in the broader palm family.
And that required my fantastic colleagues at Q
to help our Filipino counterparts who'd actually done the discovery.
parts. We had to do DNA work, kind of quite deep genomic work, to place it in the broader
palm tree of life and say, well, okay, you know it's a new species, but you can describe this
new species in this particular taxonomic box. I mean, that is extraordinary. I mean, is this
something that you describe, you do the DNA sequencing where you decide exactly what this
plant is, but presumably there are locals who have known about this for eons. That is a very
important point. Thank you for raising that. I mean, most I would dare to say, of the new plants that
we find and describe as new to science, and I stress new to science, they very often have local
names already. Our Christmas palm in Samar and the Philippines was already known by the name
Ammaring in the local language. You know, when we assert newness, it's important for us to be clear
in our own heads and people we share this information with that this isn't to say no one has ever seen
this before. No one has owned this thing before until scientists came along and fixed it.
And I suppose one of the purposes of you doing this is not simply of this naming and you
sharing it with us and also coming up with rather grabby names like the bloodstained orchid
and a zombie fungus and a demon flower and so forth. It's to remind us that this biodiversity
is at risk. We think, for example, that in the case of plants, probably three quarters of the
species that we describe as new now are already threatened with extinction. And, you know,
it's very hard to exactly monitor whether a plant has become extinct, but, you know, we do our
best. And it's a weird thing about my job is a huge privilege to do what I do. I'm incredibly
fortunate. But we also have to deal with this kind of background grief of the things you're
working on, the places you've been to disappearing all the time. But I remain optimistic and I will
never stop. You know, with everything else going on in the world, we must not lose sight of the fact
that if our nature is lost, we're all done for. Professor William Baker. 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 any of the topics covered in it, you can send us an email. The address is
Global Podcast at bbc.co.com. You can also find us on
at BBC World Service, use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Sydney Dundon, and the producer was Oliver Belau.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Julia McFarlane.
Until next time, goodbye.
