Global News Podcast - Nigeria to recruit extra police officers after abductions
Episode Date: November 24, 2025The Roman Catholic Church in Nigeria says 265 people are still missing after a mass kidnapping from a school in Niger state on Friday. Among those unaccounted for are dozens of nursery and primary sch...ool children and 12 members of staff. The Nigerian president, Bola Tinubu, ordered the recruitment of an extra thirty thousand police officers in the latest attempt by the federal authorities to bring an end to the chronic insecurity in the north of the country. Also: American-led hopes of a breakthrough in the Ukraine peace talks have been tempered by European leaders who have stressed that Russia must come to the table. A suicide bombing attack kills several people in Pakistan at a paramilitary headquarters in Peshawar. Police said the bomber blew himself up at the entrance of the compound and two other attackers were shot dead. The US designation of the Venezuelan Cartel de los Soles as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation comes into force as Washington ramps up its pressure on the president Nicolas Maduro. South Korea's most prolific online sex criminal is sentenced to life in prison, after being convicted of exploiting dozens of people by spreading thousands of sexual abuse materials using an encrypted messaging app. And how conservation efforts in Kenya are starting to revive the fortunes of endangered Black rhinos. 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 Alex Ritson and at 18 hours GMT on Monday the 24th of November, these are our main stories.
Nigeria's president announces plans to hire 30,000 new police officers after the latest
abduction of hundreds of school children. America's top diplomat leaves the Geneva peace
talks on the Ukraine war expressing hope, but President Zelensky is more measured. A life sentence
for the leader of a Korean online sex crime group for blackmailing hundreds of victims,
many underage girls. Also in this podcast. I think what really impressed me is just how innovative
the Incas were in terms of the business.
building and being able to cut stone before they had tools that really cut stone.
We hear whether Machu Picchu, Peru's most lucrative attraction, is in financial trouble.
Nigeria's president has ordered the recruitment of a further 30,000 police officers after a series of mass
abductions in recent days. President Bola Tinubu's office also says officers currently assigned to
protect VIPs will be redeployed to frontline.
duties. The Roman Catholic Church in Nigeria says 265 people are still missing after a mass
kidnapping from a school in Niger state on Friday. Authorities in several Nigerian states
ordered schools to shut following the mass abduction in Nigeria and another smaller hostage
taking in Kebby State on Monday when 25 pupils were kidnapped from a boarding school.
The abductors have not been identified but are believed to be criminal gangs seeking
ransom payments. The BBC
heard from this man who witnessed
the latest abductions.
They've been
moved along on foot the way
shepherds control their hearts.
The gunmen ride their
motorbikes while controlling the girls
and sarcastically tell them
to run, run.
And that's how they treat them.
Sometimes they pick up the younger
ones to run them farther ahead
and then return to pick up more.
They pressure those that
fall on the ground because of fatigue to move on quickly.
Our Africa correspondent, Maini Jones, is in Abuja.
The town that they were taken from is incredibly remote.
It takes about nine hours to drive to from the state's capital, Mena.
And you have to take a ferry as well to get past it.
So it's very difficult to get information out.
And the remoteness of the area where this took place,
that doesn't bode well for finding the kids, does it?
Absolutely.
Exactly. Niger state is the biggest state in Nigeria by landmass. This means that they're very ideal ground for these criminal gangs to take their victims to and hide them. And that's why the authorities are saying they want to deploy more armed forces in the area. There's an ongoing search and rescue operation. They're trying to mobilize more police officers to secure more parts of the country. They're trying to recruit 30,000 more police officers to try and reinforce the security services here.
We say criminal gangs because obviously this is a horrific criminal act,
but should we read anything into the fact that the children who were kidnapped were Christian?
Yeah, at the moment we can't rule anything out at all.
Obviously, the north of Nigeria has been home to Islamist insurgent groups linked to IS, linked to Al-Qaeda,
for several years now, for well over a decade.
And they have been targeting people of all faiths.
Clearly, at the moment, they're also very savvy.
They realize when the government is under pressure
and when it might be a good time to try and exert to ransoms for them.
And at the moment, with President Trump's comments on,
Christians being targeted in the north,
they know that the Nigerian authorities will be keen
to try and keep the security situation under check.
And so some analysts have suggested that perhaps
we're seeing this spike in abductions recently
because they know this might be a good time
to try and extort money from the government
as they try and get victims back to avoid diplomatic problems with Washington.
Meanwhile, the impact on the education of children, millions of children, is huge.
Yeah, absolutely devastating.
A number of states in northern Nigeria have now asked all secondary schools and colleges to close down.
This is a part of the country that already has big problems with access to education, particularly for girls.
And so you now have thousands, potentially millions of children in this region who find themselves
unable to go to school every day and it's not clear when the authorities will deem it safe enough
for these schools to reopen. The problem with these kidnappings is once you get one
and people are released and other gangs think a ransom may have been paid
that serves as an incentive for them to carry out their own kidnappings. So they do have a way
of kind of replicating themselves.
Myini Jones. The United States has described talks on a peace deal for Ukraine as productive.
A 28-point plan from the White House asks Ukraine to hand over territory to Russia,
limit the size of its army and agree not to pursue the Kremlin for alleged war crimes.
The U.S. Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, said there were just a couple of issues still to be resolved.
He's now left Geneva, where the negotiations were taking place.
As we record this podcast, President Putin's spokesman, Dmitri Peskov, said the Kremlin had not received any information on the outcome of the talks.
Meanwhile, in a video address to Sweden's parliament, President Zelenskyy said,
ceding territory to Russia remained a major problem.
Dimko Jelenko is a Ukrainian drone pilot in Donetsk.
How does he feel about the prospect of Ukraine giving up this land?
We think it's hilarious because we think that given the progress that they get
each and every day by sacrificing hundreds of their soldiers and those endless assaults,
I think it would take them a good couple more years to at least take the
rest of Donetsk Oblast. And there is no point of just giving it up for free, as it's stated in the
initial US peace proposal. I asked our Geneva correspondent Imogen folks if the US Secretary of State
Marco Rubio was being too optimistic. The short answer to that might be yes. If you look at
the bitter and also complex nature of this conflict and the many apparent stumbling bloat.
in this 28-point plan. We have in it the suggestion that Ukraine should give up territory,
that it should abandon all hopes of joining NATO and that it should reduce the size of its armed
forces. On the other side, there's a demand that Russia hand over some of its billions of its
frozen assets to fund Ukraine's reconstruction, to rebuild the cities that Russia attacked. So I
I think there's a lot of stumbling blocks that both sides will be looking at and saying,
well, we've got a red line there, they've got a red line there.
Is there going to be any compromise?
And this is why I think many people, including in Ukraine and in Europe,
don't really share Marco Rubio's optimism that this is just about a done deal.
And we just heard that clip of President Zelensky speaking to the Swedish parliament.
He's making all the noises that you'd want.
want him to make, but he's not really changing his position either, is he?
No, and you know, you get this sense, not just from Zelensky, but also from the Europeans who
were also in Geneva yesterday and still into today, where they're conscious always that one
misstep, one misliked or misunderstood word, could launch another angry,
social media post from the White House. I mean, frankly, we were astonished in Geneva yesterday
to see these talks just beginning and then this all capitals post from President Trump
complaining that Ukraine was ungrateful. At any point, there could be frustration or anger that
could derail things. And I think this is why we see President Zelensky saying, I'm very grateful
and the U.S. has been so good to me, but I don't want to give up any territory.
It's not diplomacy as we know it, but everybody feels, I think, that they have to try.
Imogen, folks. So what chance is there that Ukraine and its European allies can come up with counter-proposals that might work?
Yulia Osmalovska is a former senior Ukrainian diplomat who's now director of the Keeve Office of the International Affairs Think Tank Globsec.
She's been speaking to Tim Franks.
Definitely, I'm confident that the version that's...
we will see at the end as a result of the talks and negotiations would be different from this
original U.S. Russian suggested plan because the Americans are signaling that they are talking
intensively with Ukrainians, both yesterday and today, and they are determined to come to
the common ground on the paper. So normally what we have in diplomatic practice is actually we
would like to see the joint paper, which would combine both the proposals and counter proposals
also in the single document, and this paper would be a very good starting point for analysis.
I understand the principle. Do you think it's at all feasible that the sort of the Russian
maximalist positions on Ukraine, its territory, its abilities to defend itself, and so on,
that that can be squared with what would be acceptable to Kiev?
Because at the moment, it feels as if the two sides, I mean, understandably, are very,
very far apart? Yes, of course. These talks could provide a sort of document that then will be
presented to the Russian side, because as we know, Americans are determined them to have
the next round of talks in Moscow. However, we already have seen the remarks of the Deputy
Minister for the affairs of Russia, Ryapkov, saying that Russians are not stepping down from
the initial demands like prohibition of any enlargement of NATO and withdrawal of all the
allied troops from Eastern Europe, so not just from Ukraine.
as long as Russians are still confident that they're having the upper hand in the situation,
which is a bit misleading in Russia if you see the situation on the front line,
they are not advancing at such a pace that could give them the confidence that they're definitely winning.
But this is a perception that is currently grounded in the mind of the American president, I guess.
So I think that one of the challenging and the most important psychological points right now
in all these talks and discussions, actually to effectively convince the American side that Russians
are not winning. Therefore, they can't just simply dictate their terms.
Clearly, one of the big issues is over the status of the territory in the East, which Russia
currently occupies. One of the other big issues is about justice and how far that is
pursued after the end of hostilities, there does seem to be in the leak of the U.S. Russian plan
a sort of an idea of a general amnesty. How much of a red line is that for Ukraine, do you think?
I think it is a very important red line for Ukraine because the society expects the justice.
And some of the social sentiments measurement clearly showed that for Ukrainian society, justice and
punishment for war crimes rings much, much higher than even corruption inside the country.
So I think if the Ukrainian side is to compromise on this particular point, this would be
very, very difficult then for the president and his team to sell this in the society.
Former senior Ukrainian diplomat Yulia Osmalovska.
The U.S. designation of the Venezuelan cartel Dilos Soles as a foreign terrorist organization
has come into force as Washington ramps up pressure on the President Nicholas Maduro.
The designation is part of a U.S. campaign against drugs and illegal immigration from Latin America.
Our global affairs reporter Mimi Swaby has more details.
As Venezuelans anxiously await a supposed new phase of Washington's Operation Southern Spear,
the designation of Cartel de los Soles grants the U.S. more legal power
in what it insists is a fight against drugs.
The Trump administration accuses the cartel of trafficking and says it's headed by President
Nicolas Maduro and his officials. Venezuela's government has rejected what it called a ridiculous
plan to designate a non-existent group. It says Washington's true motive is regime change.
US pressure has been mounting, heightened by the arrival of the world's largest warship to the
South Caribbean, adding to an already large military buildup. Several international airlines
have cancelled flights to Venezuela due to heightened military activity. At least 80 people
have been killed in US strikes and vessels, allegedly carrying drugs from South America to the US
since early September. Mimi Swayby. Peru is home to Machu Picchu, the ancient Inca city in the Andes
mountains. It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which attracts around 1.5 million visitors every
year, making it very lucrative for the Peruvian government, which receives most of the ticket
money. But there are conflicts about how that money is being spent, and whether it's
benefiting the tourists and locals.
The BBC's Jane Chambers reports from Peru.
Aguas Calientes is the gateway town to Machapica.
Most tourists come here by train and then take a 20-minute bus ride up to the site.
One of them, Elizabeth Radke from the United States,
tells me what she thinks of the legendary site.
I think what really impressed me is just how innovative the Inca's were
in terms of the building and being able to cut stone
before they had tools that really got stone.
Tourists come here from all over the world.
They're a major source of income for the town,
as the mayor of Machu Picchu District, Elvis Latore, explains.
Around 95% of our economy comes from tourism.
A general adult ticket to Machapichu costs around $45,
but the mayor says the money ends up elsewhere.
And 90% of all ticket sales go to the market sales go to the market.
Ministry of Culture. He wants the allocation of money to change.
We want to receive a bigger percentage of the money and for it to stay here in the Cusco
region so that we can improve services for tourists here in Machu Picchu and in the
rest of the region. I contacted Peru's Ministry of Culture for a response to the comments
made by Mayor Elvis La Torre but haven't yet had a reply.
The train to and from Aguiskalia.
is a magical journey through lush tropical landscapes with brightly colored flowers and snow-cat mountains in the distance.
Back in the former capital of the Inca Empire, Cusco, I meet Carlos Gonzalez, the president of the Chamber of Tourism for the region.
Like the mayor, he's also not happy about how the ticket money is currently spent by the Ministry of Culture.
The sad part is only 7% of that money, so we're talking about $5 million per year, goes to the preservation of the site.
and the rest, the largest son,
93% of it, goes to the Ministry of Culture
and is used primarily for paying payrolls.
But he admits it's difficult for him to get the change he wants.
Peru's suffering from political instability
with a high turnover of presidents and ministers.
I've been a leader of the tourism sector for five years now.
I've lost count how many ministers,
vice ministers and congresspeople I've.
spoken too. But we cannot cease to exert that pressure from the private sector. Otherwise, things are
going to remain the same. Carlos Gonzalez, president of the Cusco Chamber of Tourism, ending that report
from Jane Chambers. Still to come in this podcast. There is a place where wildlife rules,
where humans risk their lives to protect nature, where rhinos are not.
a symbol of extinction, but one of hope.
With one in 20 rhinos killed by poachers each year, a rare success story in Kenya.
A suicide bombing attack has killed several people in Pakistan at a paramilitary headquarters in
Peshawar at 8am local time this morning. Police said a suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance to
the compound and two other attackers were shot dead.
Now, Pakistan correspondent is Caroline Davis and has been following the story.
We heard from eyewitnesses that they had two explosions around 10 past 8 this morning.
Rescue teams went to the site.
We know that all of the local hospitals have said that there were five people brought in with minor
injuries, but two police officials have also told the BBC that there were five soldiers
and seven civilians injured, so still some lacking clarity about it.
exactly the number of people who were caught up in this,
although there is confirmation that there have been civilians injured as well.
Three soldiers were killed in this explosion
that's been confirmed by Pakistan's interior minister
who commented in a social media post.
We've also heard a little bit more about exactly what seems to have happened.
We've heard from the police who said that there were two suicide explosions.
The first one, they say, took place just at the main gate
and the other they've described as being there a motorcycle stand,
located just inside the premises. They've also said that the attackers that came in were then
shot by the forces that were guarding the headquarters, and that they're sort of suggesting
has managed to foil the attack according to the words of the interior minister.
Do we know who's behind this?
We haven't had an official claim of responsibility. And I would also say that when we had
a relatively recent incident here just earlier this month in Islamabad, although there was
an initial claim that was being circulated by local media and were circulating on social media
that it had been the Pakistani Taliban, that is for the Islamabad incident. We then heard
that the Pakistani Taliban spokesperson was telling local media distancing themselves. So even
when we start hearing claims, there's also quite often a lot of confusion about exactly
who might be behind these. So we're waiting to hear if anyone does claim it and if that claim
then sticks. Because this is far from a one-off issue, isn't it? Yes. We've seen an increase in
militancy across Pakistan, but that's quite often more in the sort of border areas,
particularly with Afghanistan. We, of course, earlier this month, as I mentioned, saw a suicide
bombing referred to as by the authorities here at a judicial complex in Islamabad. That is quite
unusual. We haven't seen a suicide blast for several years in the capital. And this is significant
as well, because this was an incident that happened with these paramilitaries in this particular area,
which was a highly secure area.
And so it will be interesting to see
what further response we get from the authorities here.
Caroline Davis in Pakistan.
It's six weeks since the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
While more aid is now entering Gaza,
the World Food Programme says it's been getting in
only about two-thirds of the volume of food supplies it hoped
and that there are still access constraints.
With the help of our freelancers in Gaza,
we spoke to an aid worker at a community kitchen
run by the US aid organisation Enera to see what's changed.
Here's our Middle East correspondent Yoland Nell.
Garlic is simmering in huge pots set up in a long line heated over open wood fires.
What's being prepared here isn't just lunch.
It's a lifeline.
This community kitchen opened in Azuida in central Gaza after the ceasefire.
Forty cooks now serve up food daily.
for thousands of displaced people living in nearby camps who rely on it.
We increase up to 120 pots in a day, targeting more than 30 IDD camps,
serving more than 4,000 families compared to just 900 families six months.
Taste testing the dish, Sammy Matar works for American Near East Refugee Aid,
a nearer, which runs two kitchens, working with another.
the U.S. Humanitarian Organization, World Central Kitchen.
But while more food is getting into Gaza than it did before,
there are vital ingredients missing to improve people's diets.
We are mostly confined to cook just three types of meals in a week.
Rice, pasta and lentil.
We need the food to be more diverse and to secure essential.
protein like meat and chicken. Those essential are not allowed to enter Gaza for humanitarian aid
distribution. On the menu today, it's spaghetti, made with canned vegetables and tomato sauce
and flavoured with herbs and spices. An increase in fuel allowed into Gaza means the Nira can
use a lorry to get the meal to camps where children are already queuing for the handouts. The pasta
is a popular choice.
A little red-haired boy shows his delight.
I'm happy because of the kitchen, he says,
because there's sweet corn and everything.
Other children, grinning, sit on the ground
and start tucking into their family's rations,
eating with their fingers.
Anira has a list of those vetted to receive aid in the tent camps.
Most people like Aida Salha come from northern Gaza.
They've had their homes destroyed in the war,
lost loved ones and have no savings left.
We eat the food available from the soup kitchen.
We live off it.
I swear, nothing's changed since the ceasefire.
We were only happy because the constant bloodshed had stopped.
The UN has already confirmed famine in parts of Gaza.
With the onset of winter, life has been.
been getting harder. A week ago, camps were flooded by heavy rain. Aid agencies are pressing
for all the border crossings to be opened by Israel to bring in more supplies. For now,
aid workers like Sami Matar do their best. The conversation we have with the family in the camps
are heart-breaking. The overwhelming feeling is one of the deep uncertainty and exhaustion. Most of them
are focused on survival from one day to the next,
how to keep their children warm and fed,
especially in the winter season.
The ceasefire in Gaza remains shaky,
and Palestinians are sceptical about the international peace plan.
Still, with no other good options,
they desperately need it to work.
Yoland Nell.
South Korea's most prolific online sex criminal
has been sentenced.
to life in prison
after being convicted of exploiting dozens of people
by spreading thousands of sexual abuse materials
using an encrypted messaging app.
Kim Nock 1 was head of a pyramid-style gang
that blackmailed victims, many of them underage girls,
into sharing explicit content.
I got more details from our correspondent in Seoul, Jake Kwan.
Telegram, the messaging app
that really prides itself on the privacy, the encryption.
they shared for the very first time in the history
the information around the users with the South Korean police.
Now, until this point,
the South Korean police had really had trouble finding this person.
They've been investigating this case for a whole year,
but it was really dragging on.
And how this crime works is the perpetrator,
they have created these chat rooms on telegram
where they lure the victims to come and ask for,
some like a deep fake sexual images to be made using the latest, you know, AI technology
to create these sexual pornographic images of people that they know.
And the person, Kim, he has offered to do it for them, but in exchange, he says,
I need to see your ID.
And once the victim shows the ID, that's when Kim turned and used that ID,
use this identity to blackmail the victim and saying that I will leak your information
to people that you know
or I'll take this information to the police
and at that point the person is on the hook.
There have been other high-profile cases
of this nature in recent years in South Korea, haven't there?
That's right. I mean, some of the listeners might be familiar
with the anthroom case, which had gotten a lot of coverage
because it was, you know, what came to be known as a sextortion case
that these few people who are anonymous
on these social media app, this messaging app,
And then essentially they hold this compromise and control their victims who are often underage and making them do really heinous, you know, either asking to self-harm or have sex with somebody they do not want to or take, you know, videos of these things happening and share it with the perpetrator.
and some of these perpetrators has even sent these terrible videos to the victim's family members
or other people really trying to exact the most amount of psychological damage.
I know it's impossible to get inside the heads of the perpetrators in these kinds of things.
But is the motivation financial or sexual?
Well, I think there has been multiple motivations here.
One thing I do notice is that a lot of these perpetrators are quite young.
This case today he was 33, and it seems that he had told the investigators that he did it because of the thrill that he was really answering his sexual urges.
Jake Kwan in Seoul.
The German actor Udo Kier has died at the age of 81.
Over six decades, he amassed more than 250 credits, collaborating with some of the most celebrated filmmakers of his time, including Rinawif.
Fassbinder and Werner Herzog, as well as other artists like Madonna and Andy Warhol.
Sebastian Usher looks back at his life.
Udo Kier's piercing stare featured in films by some of the most taboo-breaking directors of the past 60 years,
including Rain of Fasbinder, whom he met when the two were teenagers in a bar in Cologne.
From the start, he was all but tightcast as an unsettling presence,
with his breakout role in the horror film Mark of the Devil in 1970.
Two of his most memorable performances came about by chance
when he sat next to Andy Warhol's director, Paul Morrissey, on a plane
who then cast him as both Dr Frankenstein and Dracula.
In a prolific career, he said 100 films were bad,
50 needed to be seen with a glass of wine,
while 50 others were good.
Sebastian Usher,
Black rhinos are among the world's most critically endangered species.
The animals once roamed much of sub-Saharan Africa,
but relentless poaching, driven by demand for their horn, has pushed them to the brink.
Now, conservation efforts in Kenya are starting to reverse that trend,
winning a fight that much of Africa is losing.
That struggle is at the heart of a new documentary out in cinemas here in Britain this Friday,
following the relocation of 21 black rhinos to protect them from poachers.
Among the extraordinary footage, there are images that capture for the first time ever
one of the black rhinos giving birth in the wild.
Here's a clip from the documentary.
There is a place where wildlife rules,
where humans risk their lives to protect nature,
where rhinos are not a symbol of extinction, but one of hope.
Tom Martinson is the film's director.
Kenya has done a really remarkable job of dealing with the poaching crisis,
of 2009, 2010, and as a result, they've had a huge population growth in the number of
black rhinos that are critically endangered species. And so now, as the population outgrows
the size of the habitats, they're having to find new places to move them to, the areas
immediately around the Conservancies where they currently are, still have issues with
cattle, banditry and organised criminality. And so you can't simply open the fences and let them
out because of poaching, crisis would resurge. And so you have to move them to completely new
habitats. Black rhinos are solitary, extremely aggressive. And in order to film kind of natural
behavior, you have to do everything on foot and make sure that they don't know you're there,
which involves being the right side of the wind, being silent and trying not to be seen by them.
You've got this huge, very aggressive, very dangerous animal, sometimes 10 meters away on foot with
cameras that weigh 30, 40 kilograms. It can be interesting at times. The conservation efforts
that the rangers in northern Kenya have done, you know, they're essentially, they are winning
a war that in almost every other country in the continent, they're losing that same fight.
And so those people need a recognition and, you know, the work that they're doing can stand
as a kind of blueprint for other places. Tom Martinson.
And that's all from us for now.
But there'll 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.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Chris Cuzaris,
and the producers were Carla Conti and Ariankochi.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson.
Until next time, goodbye.
