Global News Podcast - Russian general dies in Moscow explosion
Episode Date: December 22, 2025Russia's Investigative Committee said Lt Gen Fanil Sarvarov died on Monday morning in Moscow after an explosive device planted under a car detonated. He is the third military official to have been kil...led in bomb attacks in the Russian capital over the last 12 months. Investigators say they're considering whether Ukraine was involved. Kyiv hasn't commented. Also: A huge operation to tackle cybercrime in several African countries leads to nearly 600 arrests. Why four residents of an Indonesian island are taking a Swiss cement company to court. And gold prices are rocketing, but bourbon sales are struggling. 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 Celia Hatton, and at 16 hours GMT on Monday, the 22nd of December, these are our main stories.
A top Russian general is killed in an explosion in Moscow.
Cambodia and Thailand head back to the negotiating table, months after signing a failed peace deal alongside Donald Trump.
And nearly 600 people are arrested across Africa in a cybercrime investigation.
Also in this podcast,
Videos posted online show Ukrainian soldiers, battle-hardened men in well-worn uniforms, tearing into presents and beaming with joy.
Bringing some Christmas cheer to the front lines in Ukraine.
And the residents of a small Indonesian island seek justice for climate change.
We're starting in the Russian capital.
Officials in Moscow say a Russian general has been killed in a car bomb explosion.
These people live nearby.
I woke up and panicked.
I saw policemen, firefighters and ambulances arriving.
I thought somebody needed help, so I went outside and asked the neighbours if they needed any assistance.
It was frightening.
At first, I thought a Shahed or some other Ukrainian drone had been shot down.
I started reading the news, but there was no information about the incident.
so I only learned about it this morning.
Lieutenant General Fanil Salvarov
headed Russia's operational training department
and the Kremlin has been quick to point the finger at Ukraine.
Svetlana Petrenko is a spokesperson for the Russian investigative committee.
The inspection of the scene is ongoing.
Eyewitnesses are being questioned
and security camera footage is being reviewed.
Various versions of the killing are being examined,
one of which involves a possible role of Ukrainian intelligence services in organizing the crime.
Moscow has blamed Kiev for the death of two other senior generals
who've died in explosions inside Russia in the past 12 months.
We heard more from our Russia editor, Steve Rosenberg.
Well, first of all, let me say I went down to the scene of the explosion this morning
and the wreckage, the mangled wreckage of the car, is still there, hasn't been taken away.
Investigators say that early this morning, just before 7 o'clock local time, a bomb which had been concealed under the vehicle was detonated.
Lieutenant General Faneil Salavarov was inside the car.
He was badly wounded.
He later died of his injuries.
And this is the third Russian general to have been killed in the last 12 months.
So we're getting used to hearing things like this happening.
So to an extent a sense of shock, however, as I say, these attacks have happened before and we're now almost four years into Russia's war in Ukraine and in a sense the war sort of come to the Russian capital.
I mean, assuming it really is Ukraine behind this, is this an attempt to do some damage to the Russian military?
Are these generals really quite important?
Or is this just a flex from Ukraine to show how far?
or Ukrainians can penetrate inside Russia?
Well, possibly both.
I mean, Lieutenant General Salvarov was a senior figure
if you're the head of the operational training directorate
of the general staff of the Russian armed forces.
And that's a pretty senior role.
I mean, that particular part of the Russian military
deals in combat training, readiness for operations and things like that.
So it would be a sign.
I remember a year ago when General Igor Kirillov was killed,
walking out of his apartment block in Moscow.
A bomb had been hidden in an electric scooter that exploded.
Back then, there were sources in Ukraine that claimed that Kiev was behind that attack.
So I think the Russians strongly suspect there is a Ukrainian link here,
but investigators publicly are saying they're examining different theories,
including that the Ukrainian secret services may have been behind us.
Steve Rosenberg in Moscow.
Let's go to the border conflict between Thailand and Cambodia now.
Fighting's been continuing there,
even though the two sides signed a peace agreement alongside Donald Trump in October.
And now Thailand's foreign minister has said that pact was rushed through by White House officials
so that it could be signed by President Trump when he visited the region.
That admission, just as the two sides say, they're going to meet for a fresh round of talks.
A Southeast Asia correspondent is Jonathan Head.
I asked him how much stock we should put into this next round of negotiations
when we've just heard the reported situation around that last deal that was signed.
Well, I think the ties know that they've got to stop at some point.
I think what's been more surprising is that Thailand has been willing to ignore Donald Trump's pressure completely.
I mean, they've snubbed him.
He claimed to have got a ceasefire a week ago.
And the ties said that's absolutely not true.
They said they don't have to listen to anyone.
As you heard, the Thai foreign minister
Searsak has just effectively reprimanded the Americans
in his very polite diplomatic way.
He's a very diplomatic man for rushing the big announcement they made in Kuala Lumpur.
We all knew when we covered that.
It was being done for show for President Trump
that the ties were very unhappy with it.
And in effect, what the foreign minister is saying is
we will do it in our own time.
But there will be this meeting between the commanders,
the military commanders on both sides
under what's called the General Border Commission.
This is an already established bilateral.
process where they can sit down
actually on the border and start
working out their differences and I think that
will be the point at which Thailand will
start to scale down. The Thai military
has gained small amounts
of territory but given itself significant
advantages up on the sort of mountainous northern
border of Cambodia. It's pushed
Cambodian forces back. It's inflicted
really quite a lot of damage on Cambodian
infrastructure if the Thai
intention was and we've kind of heard that
sentiment from some of its military commanders
to teach Cambodia a lesson
for in its view for failing to observe the previous ceasefire,
I think they probably figure they've reached that stage.
But this is pretty profound stuff for ASEAN.
I mean, in 58 years of history,
ASEAN member states have never fought each other like this before.
The whole organisation is built on the premise
that you manage your differences peacefully,
and they've done it for 58 years.
So the ties in particular with this rather aggressive approach
in this round of fighting
have really gone against that ASEAN spirit.
Cybercrime, in which criminals targeted individuals or companies, is a growing problem across Africa.
Often it's done by sending malicious links and emails or text messages.
Now, a huge police operation codenamed Operation Sentinel across several African countries
has led to nearly 600 arrests and the recovery of millions of dollars.
Our correspondent in Johannesburg, Mayeni Jones, told us more about it.
It was coordinated by Interpol, which is the...
the International Policing Organization.
And it involves 19 African countries
that range from kind of South Africa,
which is the continent's most,
industrial countries to less developed countries
like South Sudan, the DRC, Republic of the Congo.
And basically, they focus on three main areas.
So one of them is what they call business email compromise
when somebody kind of impersonates a senior person at a company
and tries to get employees at that company
to wire money or share sense.
sensitive information. They also looked at digital extortion and ransomware, which is when some
software is deployed to an organization's computer system locking them out, and then you have
to pay the criminals money in order to get access to your system again. And the reason why
they focused on those three areas is because these were identified by Interpol as being the kind
of biggest growing threats across the continent. So can you tell us more about that? It sounds like
Interpol's dedicating a lot of resources to tackling cybercrime in Africa.
How serious a problem is it?
Yeah, they say that it's a really big growing problem in Africa,
that it accounts for what they estimate to be 30% of all reported crimes in East and West Africa.
And so it's something that they're taking very seriously.
And also by its very nature of cyber crime, you know,
it doesn't just affect people on the continent.
It could affect people all over the world.
So in their rationale, they kind of say we need to kind of quote.
agencies, policing agencies across the continent and beyond if we're going to try and stop
these crimes from being carried out.
And what countries specifically are really involved in this?
Or where are these operations really located?
So, yeah, it's a really wide range of countries.
So, for example, they've given a few examples of some of the issues that they tackled.
There was one that was a kind of a cyber fraud network that was operating between Ghana and
Nigeria. And apparently they managed to defraud more than 200 victims and, you know, steal
over $400,000 US dollars. And basically what they would do is they would mimic well-known
fast food brands. They would collect payments from users thinking that they're ordering their fast
food, but then the orders would never come. And so 10 suspects were arrested for that,
in that case in Ghana. And they said over 100 digital devices were seized. So that's one example,
but they've also, you know, tackled cybercrime in Senegal, in South Africa, in Benin Republic.
So it's kind of spread all around the continent and it shows just how widespread this problem is becoming.
Miami Jones in Johannesburg.
And you can hear more on that story with Myeni and me on YouTube.
Just search for BBC News, click on the logo, then choose podcasts and Global News podcast.
There's a new story available every weekday.
Now, what can we do about the issue?
effects of climate change, especially in those places which are most vulnerable. One answer
in recent years has been to try to take those deemed responsible to court. And today, in what
could be a landmark case, a court in Switzerland has said it will hear a case in which four
residents of an island in Indonesia are taking against the Swiss Cement Company, Holson.
Isabella Kaminsky is a climate change journalist who's following the case. My colleague Tim Franks
asked her why the islanders are targeting a cement manufacturer.
The cement industry is a huge driver of climate change.
It's a very, very carbon-intensive process.
And that's from two reasons.
The way you gather your materials, mainly limestone and put them in huge kilns,
which are treated to really high temperatures.
And that heating is usually done using fossil fuels,
so that releases emissions.
But on top of that, the chemical reaction that takes place inside also releases carbon dioxide.
And so estimates vary, but some of them suggest that cement production
could be up to about 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
So it's a huge, huge contributor.
I can understand it's an unarguable case as far as scientists are concerned
that man-made climate change is leading to terrible effects on people's lives right now.
And this is an island in Indonesia, which is suffering and is at greater risk.
But is it clear what legal hurdles the plaintiffs will need to surmount to prove that
this particular Swiss cement company is responsible for the misery that awaits them?
They have to prove a chain of causation between the Swiss company's actions
and the consequences on their island, of flooding, of rising sea levels and all the other
impacts they're going to have. And they're doing that by saying, look, whole team has generated
this amount of human gas emissions. These emissions are a certain proportion of global emissions
that has contributed to climate change
and climate change is what is affecting us.
And they've got a growing body of evidence
to be able to back up those claims.
Now, various people have tried to make that case in court,
but no one's yet succeeded.
So we don't know yet if a court will buy that argument,
but we know that there have been several legal cases
in other countries where courts have shown themselves
to be quite sympathetic to the principle
and suggested that the reasoning is pretty sound.
In addition to seeking damages, I understand that the plaintiffs are demanding a greater reduction in the company's greenhouse gas emissions.
I mean, Holstim has given us a statement today saying that it's fully committed to reaching net zero by 2050 and it's shown its commitment over the last two decades.
Presumably, that is going to be central to their arguments, although in fact I think they're also appealing against whether it is.
is an admissible case. I'm sure the courts will be looking at their track record and their
commitments, but that isn't really what's central to this case. In court, what Hort seems
been arguing, firstly, it says it doesn't think this is a matter for the courts, that it's really
up to politicians to legislate on this issue, which many other companies have argued as well.
But in court, it's been saying if it were forced to cut emissions, then other companies would
just come in, fill that market gap and overall emissions wouldn't go down. And that actually
its emissions are a small drop in the ocean. We know that other courts,
have roundly rejected that in several cases and said, actually, even the smallest contributor
is part of the bigger problem and you can't just brush that away. How they'll deal with
companies' broader commitments has yet to be seen. I know those subject to the predations of climate change
say it's urgent, but from what I understand it took three years even for the court in Switzerland
to decide that it was going to take on this case. So presumably there's unlikely to be any
rapid conclusion to it. That's absolutely true. These cases are.
slow. They're not a substitute for policy and change on the ground. But they can help to draw
attention to the problem. And perhaps one day they can help people who need the compensation for
real tangible changes which are being made to their lives in negative ways. Environment and
climate change journalist Isabella Kaminsky. Still to come in this podcast. I've just been thinking
and I've come to a very important decision. These are the wrong sort of bees.
A very special bear, Winnie the Pooh turns 100.
This is the Global News podcast.
Despite back-and-forth diplomacy in recent weeks
aimed at halting Russia's war on Ukraine,
there's no sign of the conflict ending,
and Ukrainian troops are about to spend a fourth Christmas on the front line.
So to boost the mood,
many Ukrainians and people elsewhere,
are taking part in a secret Santa scheme,
allowing people to send gifts to soldiers.
Toby Luckhurst reports from Kiev.
Video is posted online by the secret Santa scheme
show Ukrainian soldiers, battle-hardened men in well-worn uniforms,
tearing into presents and beaming with joy.
You can see how many.
how much these presents mean to them.
The scheme was the brainchild of Arslan, a 27-year-old living in Kiev.
He started the program in 2022, the first year of Russia's full-scale invasion.
It's now gone international, with people in more than 30 countries
organizing gifts for Ukrainian soldiers.
People can sign up for the scheme through a telegram chat box,
and they're then matched up with someone at the front who will receive the gifts.
But Arslan admits it's getting tougher to find people willing to take part.
Every year the situation is going a little bit harder because emotionally people are tired
and I need to do more marketing things.
People are tired.
Yeah, yeah.
And not just people if we are tired, so how tired are the soldiers?
But this is the main reason we should do.
So rare and front line are all together to win this war.
Well, it's not the first place I would come
if I were buying a Secret Santa gift
It's a mountain and outdoor supply shop
In the north of Kiev in the Oberlin district
Surrounded by boots, wet weather gear, tents
We've come here with Irina
Who's taking part in the Secret Santa program
She's been matched with a soldier
And she's come here to buy him something he could really use
My defender or soldier, his name is Alex.
He just wrote that he wants something warm.
The shop assistants here are all very helpful.
All of their husbands are serving at the front,
so they get regular feedback on what's best to keep people warm and dry.
And it turns out, I can be quite helpful too.
We have size 52. It's ML, and he's 1 meter and 80 centimeters.
It's like you?
Do you want to use me as a measure?
Why not?
Irina says she plans to add in some coffee, sweets and a power bank to her Secret Santa gift.
But the clothes are the most important part.
I hope that it will help for someone to survive.
Hello.
To find out how soldiers view these gifts, we spoke to Vlad,
currently serving in Ukraine's eastern Donbass region,
the main focus of Russia's invasion.
He and his unit have taken part in the Secret Santa program.
twice already. He says, with things tougher than ever now on the battlefield, gifts like these
can be a vital boost. The state of morale is tough now. The enemies pushing us from all sides.
Presents from Secret Santa are something that lift troops' spirits, so of course we're waiting
for our gifts. He's worried it'll be a rough Christmas. He says the Russians always try to disrupt
holidays with attacks, so the troops can never really relax. But Vlad insists he's not just going to
receive gifts. He's sending some home too.
Of course, I'm buying my family something.
How can I leave my girls without any gifts for the new year?
I'm planning to give my wife a chain and my daughter little earrings.
Toby Luckhurst in Kiev.
It's been a theme of 2025, gold hitting record prices, and it's just happened again.
So is this a sign that the world is on Tenderhook?
waiting for a possible banking collapse or something more innocuous.
Our business correspondent is Thea Leggett.
Well, Celia, the latest record was a little above $4,420 an ounce.
That's 68% higher than the price at this time last year.
And that's the biggest annual increase since 1979.
So that gives you an idea of just where gold has been going this year.
And there's a lot behind it.
There are immediate factors and there are longer term factors.
So the immediate factors, gold's price tends to rise. People move into gold when other assets like shares and bonds aren't performing well or aren't likely to perform well. And that's part of the context here. The United States has just cut interest rates. Further cuts are expected next year. That reduces the comparative disadvantage over gold, which obviously doesn't pay you a return. There's wider economic pessimism, which the interest rate cuts are linked to, which suggests that companies won't be making such
good profits in the coming months, and therefore returns on shares won't be as strong.
And of course, there's all the geopolitical uncertainty that we've got at the moment.
Most recently, the blockade on Venezuela, but also the conflict in Ukraine, the ongoing rivalry
between the US and China, uncertainty over US trade policy.
I could go on, but times of uncertainty, gold is seen as a solid and stable asset.
You can hold it, you can put it in your vaults.
Its value doesn't tend to decline long term, so you've got that.
So all of that has been helping to push up the gold price, but it's not the only thing.
The other thing that's been going on for a few years now is central banks around the world have been buying gold.
And they've been buying gold potentially because they're worried about assets being frozen by sanctions and that kind of thing.
So Russia and China are among some of the biggest buyers of gold.
And when you have a relatively finite supply, which we have with gold, if central banks buy up a lot of it, there's less to go around for everyone else.
So when everyone else moves into gold, there is a shortage and the price goes up.
And that's what we've been seeing over the past year.
OK, so a lot of play when it comes to gold, a lot of things coming into play there.
What about other precious metals?
Well, silver has also been rocketing.
In fact, I think the price of silver's up about 138% over the past year.
And that again, part of it is it's a solid and stable asset.
It's a commodity that you can move into when other assets aren't doing as well.
But there are also a number of industrial uses of...
precious metals as well. And when you get the combination, this is what appears to be happening
with silver, of increased industrial usage plus people moving into it as a relatively safe
asset, then again the price will go up. Theo Leggett. Well, as Theo mentioned, the global
economy faces increasing uncertainty. Even big brands with decades of success behind them are
feeling the pinch. One of them, the American whiskey maker Jim Beam, says it's going to stop producing
bourbon at its main distillery for all of next year. That decision comes in the midst of President
Donald Trump's trade war with Canada, which has contributed to a significant decline in sales of
American alcohol across the border. Surinjara Tawari is our business correspondent, and she tells
us what else led to the decision. There's a few things at play, but it does seem that Jim Beam,
which is one of the largest makers of American whiskey globally, is one of the casualties of
Donald Trump's trade war.
Now, the distiller has said that uncertainty over trade,
the inability to plan its business,
has impacted its own business and operations,
and that's one of the reasons it's pausing production for the next year
at its main distillery in Kentucky.
Now, there are other things as well,
like, for example, this whiskey is made in barrels,
and there is basically an oversupply of,
these barrels in the state of Kentucky. And they are taxed at a higher rate the older they get. So when
you think about aged whiskey, they actually become more valuable the longer they stay. But one of the
reasons there is this oversupply is because of lower sales. People just aren't buying whiskey. Now,
one of the reasons, yes, again, is tariffs in the trade war. It's impacted demand and people's
ability or desire to spend money on things like alcohol.
But we're also still living in a cost of living crisis.
Prices are still high.
And therefore, again, people, consumers are pulling back on spending on things like alcohol.
Okay. So can you give us a rundown then?
These big brands, what kinds of tariffs are they facing at the moment?
Yeah, so what's happened with Donald Trump's trade war ever since he announced those Liberation Day tariffs back in April is all these countries and negotiators have been trying to.
bash out some sort of deal to agree on a tariff. But in the meantime, these businesses,
they're not able to plan their next year or their following year supply. And some industries
like, you know, distilleries and alcohol makers, which take the production process takes years,
also automakers, plane makers. All these manufacturers, they have to plan years in advance. So
all of this uncertainty has just caused this chaos. But there's another thing really,
affecting this industry liquor. And that's the sort of spats between particular countries. For
example, the US and Canada, they've had a big trade spat and in response, many Canadians decided to
boycott American liquor in protest. And some provinces are still banning American liquor from their
shops. That's having a big impact on sales for America, which is Canada's biggest trading partner.
Surinjara Tawari.
And last, it's almost a century since the publication of A.A. Milne's first story to mention Winnie the Pooh.
A short story about a bear who likes honey and the wrong sort of bees.
Here's part of that story, read by the playwright Alan Bennett.
I've just been thinking, and I've come to a very important decision.
These are the wrong sort of bees.
Are they? Quite the wrong sort.
So I think I shall come down.
How? asked Christopher Robin.
Winnie the Pooh hadn't thought about this.
If he let go of the string, he would fall, bump.
And he didn't like the idea of that.
Children's author Frank Cottrell-Boyce and the writer James Campbell
have been speaking to Nick Robinson about how the first story came to be published.
It was essentially a teaser after the huge success of the first Winnie the Pooh book
when we were very young in 1924.
They'd hoped to bring out the Winnie the Pooh book in 2025.
but there were various delays. Evening news, which was then London's larger circulation paper,
offered to print a story. Winnie the Pooh and the Bees, as Alan Bennett was beautifully reading,
was the story chosen. And it made a really big splash. It was right across the evening news on
Christmas Eve, so in two days' time, Christmas Eve, 1925, and then repeated the following day,
the BBC, then of course the British Broadcasting Company, an independent,
independent companies it was in those days, broadcast the story to all of its listeners on the
home service on Christmas Day afternoon. So it was a really big splash. It was equivalent to
perhaps one of the Harry Potter launches today. And it really set the scene. And of course,
it was the first story where the name Winnie the Pooh appears. Although the bear had appeared
in when we were very young under the name of Teddy Bear, this is the first name. And we have loved
the bear, but all the other characters ever since, Frank. I mean, Winnie the Pooh is one of those things
Like, you've already mentioned Harry Potter, where you could be a Gryffindor or a Grafenclore or whatever.
And I think the same with little women.
People decide whether their Meg or their Joe or the Beatles.
You decide whether you're John or your poor.
But it offers this sort of range of options.
Are you a miserable e-ore?
Are you a too bouncy tigger?
Or are you a...
Pooh is more complicated than all of them, but poo is easy to identify with...
He's called a bow with very little brain, but he's often solving problems.
He's actually quite clever.
What's fascinating, James Campbell, is that it crosses cultures, doesn't it?
When you first read, it's very, very English.
But it isn't in its appeal, is it?
Absolutely not.
And interestingly, I'm talking to you today from Australia,
and I've been in Singapore a few weeks ago,
and I was absolutely fascinated by how much Winnie the Pooh material is on display,
is up for sale.
Here in Australia, sales of Winnie the Pooh books are 60% up on last year.
Harper Collins' new Sintin of Editions are walking off.
off the shelves like Hot Lamingtons. It's absolutely extraordinary. And it's quintessentially
English. I say English rather than British, I think it is. But yet it appeals universally across
the world, I think because it is completely timeless. It has for us this wonderful feeling
of childhood, innocence and kindness and generosity. Children's author Frank Hottra Boyce
and the writer James Campbell. 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 produced by Stephanie Tillotson and Peter Goffin.
It was mixed by Andy Mills.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Celia Hatton.
Until next time, goodbye.
Thank you.
