Global News Podcast - Protests at COP30
Episode Date: November 16, 2025Thousands of indigenous people and activists demonstrate against global warming in the Amazonian city of Belém, where COP30 is taking place. It's the first time since 2021 that people have been allow...ed to protest outside the UN climate talks. Also: Palestinian families suffer, as heavy rains destroy camps in Gaza; Pakistan's Balochistan province bans child marriage; Mexican cities see protests over growing violence and insecurity; Ecuadorians are set to vote on allowing foreign military bases back into their country; and Pope Leo hosts some of Hollywood's biggest stars, describing them as "pilgrims of the imagination".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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Hello, it's Ray Winston.
I'm here to tell you about my podcast on BBC Radio 4.
History's toughest heroes.
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This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Charlotte Gallagher, and in the early hours of Sunday, the 16th of November, these are our main stories.
Thousands march outside the COP Summit in Brazil to demand stronger action on global warming.
Mexican cities see protests over great.
growing violence and insecurity, and how the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza is being made
worse by heavy rain.
Also in this podcast, Pope Leo celebrates cinema as he hosts the stars of Hollywood at the Vatican.
Do not be afraid to confront the world's wounds.
Violence, poverty, exile, loneliness, addiction and forgotten wars are issues that need to be
acknowledged and narrated.
Let's start in Brazil.
Thousands of protesters took to the streets of Bilem on Saturday,
where the UN's climate conference, COP 30, is taking place.
Activists converged on the Amazonian host city,
urging delegates to take more decisive action in the fight against global warming
as discussions reached the halfway stage.
Some of the protesters included indigenous Brazilian communities, youth groups, and climate activists from around the world.
Here's what two of them had to say.
We keep fighting for life.
Our struggle is for life, for the life of nature, for the life of the springs, the river sources,
so we can have a good planet, a planet that's healthy for everyone.
I wish world leaders would understand that.
there is no point in exploiting more oil, more mining,
because the forests can no longer endure abuse.
The climate is not negotiable.
The demonstrations outside the conference hall
were among the first major protests at a COP summit in four years.
Our correspondent, Ione Wells, was there.
Thousands and thousands of protesters have turned out on the streets of Berlin.
Some are indigenous groups from both here in Brazil,
but also around the world.
Others are climate activists getting here.
to call for various things as we mark halfway through the COP 30 Climate Summit.
Some of the banners and posters here are calling for a more rapid phase out of fossil fuels,
some calling for reparations from richer nations or even from oil companies, energy companies,
towards areas that have been damaged by the impacts of climate change.
This is actually something which we haven't really seen at COP summits over the last couple of years.
The last ones in Azerbaijan, in Egypt, in the United Arab Emirates,
protesters were afraid that they may face arrest, even detention,
if they went out on the streets like this.
Here, though, in Brazil, this kind of civil action has been something
that has been encouraged somewhat by the Brazilian authorities
that have been some protests in and around the conference centre.
There have been two indigenous protests at the conference centre itself,
one of which did break through the security line.
Here, though, the main message from people going in to the conference centre,
the final week of COP 30 summer negotiations will be how are they actually going to deliver
on some of the promises that have been made at previous COPS?
This includes things like how are rich nations going to finance foreign nations
transition away from fossil fuels?
And how are some of those wealthier nations as well going to move away from fossil fuels
in their energy systems?
These are things that have been agreed in the past.
But now this COP is really about how do they get implemented?
Ione Wells.
Is Ecuador about to allow US.
troops on its soil again. Well, that question will be answered as the country votes on Sunday
in a referendum to decide whether to change the constitution and allow foreign military bases
which have been banned since 2009. President Daniel Naboa has said such bases are key to fighting
organized crime as Ecuador has become a major drug trafficking hub and the US has launched a
military campaign in the region. BBC Monitoring's Latin America expert, Luis Farado, told me more.
President Daniel Novoa of Ecuador had campaigned basically on the issue of security.
Ecuador has been suffering a great deal of drug-related violence in the last few years,
even though it had traditionally been one of the more peaceful countries in the region.
And the central peace for many people of this referendum is, as you mentioned,
presenting to the people the option of allowing again U.S. basis in a country.
Ecuador. They had been present for a few years, but a few years ago, a leftist government
ordered the removal of U.S. bases there and a constitutional prohibition, which is now what is
what is being considered for potentially repeal during this referendum. And why does the U.S.
want bases in Ecuador? It is seen as a very important post to try to control drug trafficking.
Of course, there has been a lot of recent attention to the U.S. military buildup in the Caribbean, in another coast of South America, as part of what the U.S. describes as an counter-narcotics effort there.
But, however, the fact is that most of the cocaine leaving the area lives from the Pacific coast.
And Ecuador is a crucial point in this drug trafficking.
It does not produce a lot of cocaine, but it is next door to Colombia.
and a lot of Colombian cocaine uses the Ecuadorian coastline to live towards markets in North America
and eventually in Europe.
So it is seen as a very important potential point for the US to try to counter this flow of narcotics living South America.
And something that certainly stood out to me, Louise, about this, was where it could be built this base,
because there was talk about the Galapagos Islands.
And obviously, of course, their ecological treasures.
what would that mean for the environment if they were built there?
Certainly a lot of controversy over that specific point you're mentioning.
Of course, Galapagos being a very environmentally sensitive area.
It is true that during World War II, the United States actually had a military base there.
At that time, the main issue was trying to exercise surveillance over the area near the Panama Canal,
which was, of course, a very sensitive area.
Now, of course, it is about drug trafficking, and there is a lot of opposition to any possibility of the bases being actually located there in Galapagos.
There have been many other sites, apparently Manta, which is in the Pacific, in the coastline of Ecuador, and a place where the base, where the U.S. base used to be located until 2009.
That is talked about as a possible site for the military installations, the U.S. military installations, if they are eventually authorized.
So there's a lot of resistance that Ecuador and Prescott has also been saying that it is not clear that it would eventually be in Galapagos if the bases are finally allowed in Ecuador.
And is it likely to pass this referendum?
Poles say that it is a mixed picture. It is not clear at this point.
That was Luis Fahado.
Representatives of the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Rwanda-backed M23 Rebel Group have signed a new framework for peace in eastern Congo.
The agreement was signed in Doha following mediation by Qatari officials with support from the US and African Union.
David Bamford reports.
The fighting caused by the M23's resurgence in eastern Congo has displaced millions.
Speaking in Doha, the American Africa envoy, Masadbulos, said the framework document covered eight protocols.
These include a ceasefire, prisoner releases and ways to ease disputes over resources and ethnic tensions.
The agreement does not include any binding commitments.
Kinshasa is demanding the withdrawal of Rwandan troops from Congolese territory.
Kegali says this can happen once the ethnic Hutu FDLR militia that threatens Rwanda is disbanded.
David Bamford.
Protesters in Mexico City have been clashing with police in front of the government palace.
The rally had been organised.
by young people angry with the increasing violence, insecurity and corruption in the country.
One protester told us the state is dying, while another said it's a country where you can be murdered
and nothing happens. Terry Egan reports. With a series of high-profile killings, Mexicans say
security is the country's most pressing issue. Protesters kicked and banged on fortified
metal barriers surrounding the National Palace in Mexico City. Security forces have used tear gas
to control the crowd. People also chanted slogans against President Shanebaum's party.
Marches are also being held in other cities. Mexico's government says the march is backed by
a paid digital campaign from abroad and by opposition and business figures. While youth groups,
known as Generation Z, have been spearheading the rallies, they've also attracted support from other
organizations angry about high-profile killings, including the murder of the outspoken
anti-crime mayor of Uruapan, Carlos Manzo. The 40-year-old was gunned down during a public event
earlier this month, shocking the entire nation. He'd been demanding tough action against
the armed cartel members who terrorise the country. President Shane Baum has been acting
against cartels, but resisting calls for another all-out,
war on drugs. Previous attempts by her predecessors have ended with bloody results.
Terry Egan, next. That's one of the most famous poems in Iceland put to music. And we're playing it
because the former Prime Minister, Katrina Jacobs-Dottier, has told the BBC she's concerned
her native language is under threat. She said the 350,000 people who speak Icelandic
need to do more to fight for its future. We have seen radical changes in our society for a last
decade or so, simply because of new technologies. The younger generation is really surrounded
by all sorts of material, mainly in English, because English is, of course, the lingua franca,
this part of the world. They're playing video games. They are watching TikTok videos, YouTube
stuff. And of course, all this is just one click away. So I can absolutely understand that
it's fascinating. And it's good that they learn to speak English. However, when we don't have
the same amount of material in Icelandic, it's very difficult to compete to preserve the
Icelandic language. That's really part of our history. Because Iceland used to be part of the
Kingdom of Denmark, a Danish colony, if you like. And then the Danish language was very influential
in Icelandic. So there was quite a movement here in Iceland of those who wanted to preserve
the Icelandic language and connected it with our fight for independence. It's important that
we learn other languages too, and not least coming from a small island, we need to understand
the rest of the world. But we also need to continue to write in Iceland.
Icelandic. You know, I find it more difficult, obviously, to speak English than Icelandic. We
talk differently about weather and we talk a lot about weather. We use verbs a lot in our
language. It's based on using verbs. We have a certain tradition of descriptions of people. So there
are all sorts of differences between languages, which makes it so beautiful to study them.
Katrina, Jacobs, dot here.
this podcast. We started setting some particularly awkward questions and very difficult songs on
the music round and stuff and then they were still getting them right. How to catch a cheat at a
pub quiz. Hello, it's Ray Winston. I'm here to tell you about my podcast on BBC Radio 4. History's
Toughest heroes.
I've got stories about the pioneers, the rebels, the outcasts who define tough.
And that was the first time to anybody ever ran a car up that fast with no tires on.
It almost feels like your eyeballs are going to come out of your head.
Tough enough for you?
Subscribe to History's Toughest Heroes wherever you get your podcast.
Pakistan has one of the highest.
number of child brides in the world, more than 19 million. But could that change? The country's
province of Balochistan has passed a new law, making child marriages illegal with immediate
effect. But opposition politicians tore up copies of the bill as it was tabled, claiming it
violates Islamic law. Our global affairs correspondent and Barrasan Aterajan has been
covering the story. And he spoke to my colleague, Alex Ritson.
Now, this comes after years of campaign by civil society activists, government officials, and also various UN agencies.
And it is being described as a landmark decision because Balochistan itself is a very conservative province where there have been number of reported cases of child marriages, those who get married at the age of 14, 15.
This creates huge complication.
And we are talking about millions of people involved in this.
and the UNICEF says it's one of the highest figures in the world.
Now, the local government has passed to this bill.
Now, according to this new law, anyone found to be involved in child marriage
marrying any woman below the age of 18.
They can be imprisoned up to three years, one.
Number two, it is also applicable to anyone who's arranging the marriage from the family,
anyone who facilitates, or even the government officials who register these weddings.
they will also face imprisonment as well as fine.
And the government officials have been instructed
to check the identity cards of both males and females
before they can register and solemnize the weddings.
So these are the various rules, and they are imposing now
and also making it illegal with immediate effect
because this is causing a huge problem within the society,
but it is not without any resistance
because opposition parties as well as Islamist parties,
they were saying, you know, this was against Islamic law.
So that is why there was a lot of opposition.
This is a prevalent practice.
What are ordinary people think of this?
They see this as a first step towards stopping this practice
because you need a legal framework.
At least you have the law.
This previous law was 1929 during the British colonial era.
Now, both male and female should be 18 years of age.
Now, even though the Pakistani government's centrally banned,
then each province can have their own.
laws. Sindh province, for example, passed this about 10 years ago on Islamabad earlier this year.
So it takes time even for a conservative country like Pakistan so that the rules are
imposed step by step in various provinces for ordinary people, especially for young girls.
This means they can have access to education, they can have access to better health,
they can continue to schools and universities, and many experts point out what kind of
psychological and even physical impacts the child marriages having, especially
early pregnancies, and then complications related to pregnancies.
And then once you get married, all your lifetime opportunities come to an end.
So this means a lot for the millions of young girls in Pakistan.
And Barisan Etirajan.
As if the people of Gaza have not faced enough over the last couple of years,
they're now having to cope with heavy rain.
Over the last 24 hours, the water has got into tents,
housing displaced Palestinian families,
leaving them with soaked bedding and belonging.
The United Nations spokesperson, Stefan de Jarek, says that Israeli restrictions on getting supplies into Gaza are hampering their ability to help.
Proper flood prevention requires equipment that is not available in Gaza, including tools to drain waterways from tents and also to clear solid waste and rubble.
Millions of urgently needed shelter items remain stuck in Jordan, in Egypt and Israel as well, awaiting approval to enter Gaza.
Since the ceasefire began on October 10th,
Israel authorities have rejected 23 requests from nine of our partners
to bring in nearly 4,000 pallets of critical supplies,
including tents, ceiling and framing kits, bedding, kitchen sets and blankets.
Yusra Abashirak is the Gaza coordinator for the International Network for Aid, Relief and Assistance.
We are in the winter season officially in Gaza,
but the intensity of rain was not expected to be like this.
During the first few minutes of raining, the streets flooded,
not only with water, but also with sewage, with the clay, with garbage as well,
because the infrastructure of Gaza Strip is destroyed after two years of bombardment and operations.
So it's very bad.
live in tents and makeshifts, they don't have anything to protect them. They didn't receive
tents or tarpaulines to prepare for such season and such floods. And what makes it very
difficult that the situation of people in Gaza is fragile and they are not prepared, not only with
tents or the housing, but also with the clothes, the children and elderly and everyone don't have
warm or heavy clothes to protect them from the weather conditions.
Uthra Abu Shirek.
In an escalation in Colombia, more than 200 dissidents from the FARC rebel group have used
gunfire, drones and explosives to attack a police station.
Several officers were wounded and dozens of homes and buildings destroyed in the fighting.
Our reporter Mimi Swaby told Alex Ritson more.
This is a massive attack and one which has shocked.
the country due to the number of militants. Fighters from a breakaway faction of a mostly
disbanded rebel group stormed the town of Mondomo in Calca, that's near to Cali, and parts of
the Pan American Highway are temporarily shut. And that is because militants supposedly
blocked the highway using trucks, and they also blocked ambulances from trying to respond to
the attack by puncturing tires. Police really quickly called for reinforcement, and we understand
that some officers have barricaded themselves in the police station.
So a very scary scene and an eruption of violence which is not uncommon in the Kalka region.
This is a kind of traditionally a stronghold for Marxist insurgents and other illegal armed groups
and a hotspot for drug cultivation as well, sparking and fueling that violence.
But on this scale really is something we haven't seen in a while.
These sound almost like military tactics, but FARC was supposed to have been disbanded.
What's going on?
So the FARC was disbanded under a peace plan after decades-long armed conflict.
However, we've seen numerous distant groups come from the FARC.
So these smaller groups have splintered off and created their own kind of ideology and policies and fighting techniques
and all of that under kind of former FARC ideology and kind of training as well.
And they have branched off into multiple areas of the country.
So like I said in Kalka, that really is a stronghold for some groups.
but also in the Amazon region and further south, there are many areas across the country.
And the left-wing president, Gustavo Petro, a former guerrilla fighter himself,
has really been criticised for not doing enough to tackle this violence, which is seemingly on the rise.
Is this about politics or is it more about the drugs trade?
So Gustavo Petro has recently stepped up military action to try and really squash and contain this violence,
including air strikes.
But these air strikes have also been condemned for.
sometimes killing innocent civilians. We saw this week alone that six children who were said
to be victims of forced recruitment were killed in an anti-guerilla strike in the southern Amazon region.
But it's also part of pressure Colombia is facing from the US to crack down on drug trade.
So yes, it is politics trying to kind of stop violence as it's terrorizing many communities
just like in Mondo, that we saw this attack on the police station.
But it does all come down to drug trafficking.
drug trading and groups fighting over control and against the government.
Mimi Swayby, Pope Leo has hosted some of Hollywood's biggest stars at the Vatican,
describing them as pilgrims of the imagination.
The Pope said films make a valuable contribution in reflecting humanity and inspiring hope
and that his favourites are The Sound of Music, nuns of course, and it's a wonderful life.
Our correspondent Sarah Rainsford sent this report.
This was a first for the Vatican.
a Pope hosting a celebrity crowd from the world of cinema.
Beneath the stunning frescoes of the Clementine Hall,
film stars and directors from Italy itself and from Hollywood.
Kate Blanchett, Spike Lee, Monica Balucci,
just some of the names for a long cast list here to meet the first American Pope.
Leo the 14th told his guests that cinema had great power to bring hope and to entertain,
but he urged them not to shy away from what he,
called the world's wounds. Good cinema does not exploit pain. It recognises and explores it.
This is what all the great directors have done, given voice to the complex, contradictory
and sometimes dark feelings that dwell in the human heart is an act of love.
There was a round of applause as he warned against cinema's closing around the world,
calling them the beating heart of communities.
Then came the individual greetings and the gifts.
I gave the Pope a New York, Nick, Jersey.
He's the 14th Pope, so it was number 14.
This is the first time probably the hope that we talked about cinema.
So it was very uplifted.
It was a bracelet that I wear in solidarity with people who were displaced.
His Holiness' words today were a real charge not to shy away from difficult, painful stories.
and he was talking about tears that often people are unable to shed in their everyday life,
as well as laughter, you know, that that often happens in the cinema.
Leo the 14th is still stamping his mark on the paper sea.
But six months in, he is clearly keen to engage.
And today, from Hollywood, this was a sprinkling of stardust.
Sarah Rainsford.
Finally, no one likes a cheat, especially when it might cost you money or drinks at the bar.
Now, one pub in the north of England has banned.
and a team from taking part in their weekly quiz after catching them not playing fair.
And the story has spread around the world.
The newsroom's pub regular, David Lewis, has this report.
It's a curiously British night out.
Test your trivia, show off your jam-packed facts to your mates or date,
and if you get lucky, win some cash.
The great British pub quiz has been a staple of entertainment
and a way to get the punters in and drinking for generations.
But honesty is the byword.
Don't know the capital of Cambodia?
Avoid looking it up on your phone.
Unsure how many actors have played James Bond,
do not ring your roommate to find out.
Now one public house, the barking dog in Manchester,
has had enough after the same team kept winning
and claiming a £30 bar tab.
That's about $40.
Awkward questions were asked.
Who were these Brainiacs?
How did they do it?
Was something afoot and it was impacting too.
Some regulars gave up and taken.
turned it down, costing cash at the bar.
And then a clue.
Bosses at the boozer received a tip-off.
An anonymous source told the team what to look for,
then boom.
Staff spotted contestants on one table mumbling into their smartwatches.
Answers sought, illicit info received.
Mark Rackham, who owns the pub, told BBC Manchester how the trap was set.
We started setting some particularly awkward questions
and very difficult songs on the music.
around and stuff, and then they were still getting them right.
What were they like when you actually said, listen, I don't think you're allowed here anymore,
because we think you're cheating.
Bang to rights is the phrase that springs to mind.
We caught them so solidly well, and they couldn't do anything other than accept it
and take themselves off into hiding, I think.
Now the story of the eggheads poached has spread.
Reporters from as far as Australia, New Zealand and Canada have been in touch and covered the story.
But the show must go on.
A journalist from the BBC popped into the pub for this week's quiz.
17 teams took part, but the scandal looms large.
One returning quiz goer, Jack, was taking extra precautions.
I didn't wear my smartwatch because I didn't want to be done, he said.
Teammate Grace admitted she felt blindsided by the alleged cheats.
We just thought at first they were incredibly intelligent, she said.
That was David Lewis.
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.uk. You can also find us on X at BBC
World Service. Use the hashtag Global NewsPod. This edition was mixed by Rebecca Miller. The editor
is Karen Martin. I'm Charlotte Gallagher. Until next time. Goodbye.
Thank you.
