Global News Podcast - Tanzania: Hundreds feared dead in post-election violence

Episode Date: November 1, 2025

Diplomats in Tanzania say there's credible evidence at least five-hundred people have been killed in days of clashes between protesters and security forces over disputed election results. The protests... broke out after the President's main challengers were excluded from the ballot. A senior opposition politician told the BBC that police and foreign mercenaries were killing "with impunity". Tanzania's foreign minister has denied reports of widespread killings. Also: US judges rule the Trump administration must maintain food aid for millions of Americans, despite the government shutdown. The Israeli judge who has resigned after revealing evidence that a Palestinian prisoner was sexually abused. Scientists create a single anti-venom that protects against 17 different poisonous snakebites. And Egypt's long awaited billion dollar Grand Museum finally opens its doors.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

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service. Hello, I'm Paul Moss, and we're recording this edition in the early hours of Saturday, 1st of November. Diplomats say there's credible evidence that hundreds of people have been killed during post-election violence in Tanzania, an allegation the government denies. US judges have ordered the Trump administration to continue funding a program which feeds millions of poor Americans, despite the government's shutdown. Also in this podcast, when the Tutankamun collection opens,
Starting point is 00:00:38 the whole world will come back because this is the most famous king of all antiquity and the most intact tomb. Egypt's long-awaited billion-dollar museum finally opens its doors. There was a time when Tanzania was seen as a beacon of relative stability, in East Africa, indeed on the continent as a whole. While other countries succumbed to bitter ethnic conflict, Tanzania was largely spared. And while it may not have been a perfect democracy,
Starting point is 00:01:10 there were elections, results were respected. But when Tanzanians went to the polls this week, several opposition parties had been banned, and the announcement that President Samir Hassan was in the lead and likely to be re-elected was greeted by widespread protests, protests which the opposition say, were viciously put down. John Kitoka is a spokesman for the Chedema Party and is one of those who's made the claim of widespread death at the hands of Tanzania security forces and perhaps others who were helping them.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Our own reports indicate that more than 500 people have been killed by the police. But there are also elements that considered it to be mercenaries from a neighboring country who have actually been hired to kill out the massacons. Over the past 48 hours, they have been shooting anyone who is protesting. We can provide evidence of dead bodies. We can provide evidence of those perpetrators of human rights violations in the country. And why is it that they have shut down internet? What are they trying to hide? Tanzania's foreign ministers insisted these claims are hugely
Starting point is 00:02:26 exaggerated. But then when Mahmoud Tabit Kondo spoke to the BBC programme Focus on Africa, he seemed to admit that he didn't actually know what had happened, suggesting that no one else did. Nobody can state how many were injured, how many
Starting point is 00:02:42 suffered, or how many properties were burned. We are continuing to receive also the reports of the vandalised properties, private properties. I'm struggling to believe that, Minister, because I believe as government you have the capacity, the resources, they are government hospitals that can tell how many people have been brought in injured.
Starting point is 00:03:00 There are security agencies that also carry out these jobs. Have they not given you a rough figure that you can help us with? No, at the moment there is no rough figure. You are very right. The government is very capable. We don't want to provide the figures today. It's been hard to get any on-the-ground reports from inside Tanzania. But the BBC's Victor Kenani is on the Kenyan border, hoping to get into Tanzania.
Starting point is 00:03:22 He gave his reaction to the latest allegations of a crackdown. They are staggering and worrying at the same time. And looking at the protests that were happening in major cities across Tanzania, most of these people are most likely killed during the protest. But there's talk that then there is a crackdown that happens as soon as the night enters. And we've been speaking to some of the people here. And they're worried that they have seen Tanzania military and they're not sure what will become of the night.
Starting point is 00:03:51 Because the army is said to be going door by door and picking them up. especially young people who are thought to be part of the protests. And people are worried now that what will become because there's literally very little opposition and that has been expressed by the different civil societies, expressed by different nations saying they are worried about what is going on in Tanzania in terms of the high-handedness of the government
Starting point is 00:04:16 against critics, against the media, and even against the opposition. Victor Canani. Now here's a statistic for you. One in every eight Americans receives food stamps. Government-funded assistance, which allows poorer people to access free food from grocery stores and supermarkets. And for the tens of millions dependent on the scheme, it was obviously a blow when the US government announced no more credit could be issued until a budget deal had been reached, something Congress has been arguing about for weeks.
Starting point is 00:04:48 Jessica Alessaya and Taya Iglesias were both recipients of food stamps and went on to found a food charity. It's important that we remember that humans deserve to have food and water and housing and medical care for free. There's so many other things that you could have pulled back on, you know, cut off other than people's food source when they have none. La Monica Jones is a policy expert on hunger in the U.S. She says any cuts to food stamps, also known as SNAP payments, would affect children especially. We know that households with children are the highest percentage of SNAP recipients in the country. And so you think of the benefit that those SNAP allotments, as we're going through several waves of the pandemic, we're still dealing with price inflation, we were dealing with supply chain shortages, food is a basic human right.
Starting point is 00:05:43 However you align yourself politically, people still need to eat. It seems the fears of Lomonica Jones and others may turn out to be unnecessary. A federal judge in the U.S. has ordered that the SNAP program, continue using emergency funds if necessary. To find out more, I spoke to the BBC's Pratikisha Gildial and asked, first of all, what the judge actually said. There were actually two different judges who issued their rulings pretty quickly, one after the other, one in Massachusetts and the other in Rhode Island,
Starting point is 00:06:16 both responding to lawsuits that sought to block the US government from suspending this food benefits program, which was brought by six. cities, non-profits, unions, and even a dozen democratic states. One of the judges called the decision arbitrary. He said that this decision is just going to cause irreparable harm if it hasn't already to many people and the terror it may be causing to some people the fact that they may not be able to buy groceries. And therefore, the government must release as soon as possible and at least partially
Starting point is 00:06:54 some of the contingency funds that it has because the government had argued specifically the agricultural department which is responsible for the rollout of this had said that it has insufficient funds to pay benefits to over 40 million low American Indians because they cost up to $9 billion per month but the judges disagree. So the judges have said that the system must continue
Starting point is 00:07:21 even with emergency funds. But Donald Trump's administration has in the past had a reputation for defying court orders, or at least delaying implement them. What does it look like this time? That's absolutely correct. There are so many lawsuits. Everybody seems to have lost count, and this is yet another one. Well, in a truth social post, the president did seem to say it would be his honor to go ahead and issue these funds or help in the release of this. these funds, but he said he needs a little more legal clarity. How are the judges proposing
Starting point is 00:07:58 they roll this out? So he said he's instructed his lawyers to get a little more information about how this can legally be done because the Department of Agriculture is still saying it has insufficient funds. And there are experts who say that even if the government uses the contingency funds, they might only be able to cover about 60% of the beneficiaries because it costs about 9 billion pounds per month, like I said. Perticcia Gildial. There was widespread revulsion and anger when a video was leaked last year, which seemed to show Israeli soldiers sexually abusing a Palestinian detainee.
Starting point is 00:08:37 It was broadcast on Israeli television, and five soldiers were subsequently charged. Now the country's chief military lawyer has resigned after admitting she leaked it. Yifat Tomah Yeroshami said that this led to her being accused of faith. terrorists over her own troops, and that she was threatened for what she said was simply standing by the rule of law. Sebastian Usher in Jerusalem has been following the controversy. A criminal investigation was launched earlier this week into the leaking of the video, very much as far as the Israeli government and ministers were concerned, focusing on her. Major General Yifat Toma Yeroshami, the Israeli defense minister, Israel Katz, said that she would not
Starting point is 00:09:22 be allowed to return to her post. She had been suspended since her investigation was launched. She then issued a resignation letter in which she said that she took full responsibility for anything that was given to the media from the unit. She didn't specifically say that she was responsible for leaking that video, but she said that it was her responsibility. She said also the reason for allowing the video to go out was to counter. those who were attacking the legal apparatus within the army for pursuing this.
Starting point is 00:09:58 There have been big protests against these revelations. And many on that side had essentially said that it was a fabrication. So that's why she said that this video was released. And said, what's the wider reaction been to the resignation, but also to this news and the leaking of this footage? If you're on the right and you essentially believe that the gun, love should be 100% off since October the 7th, then it's seen as entirely wrong and unpatriotic. And the Israeli Defence Minister, Israel Katz essentially described it as a blood
Starting point is 00:10:36 libel against the Israeli army to allow such information to circulate. If you're on the other side, the more leftist side, then you believe that she did the right thing. It again reveals the chasm politically that there is in Israel. If listeners remember, before the Gaza war, the biggest protests in Israel were about trying to protect, according to those on the streets, the Israeli legal system from what they saw as moved by the Netanyahu government to limit and restrict its ability to act as a kind of guard over potential abuse. Amad is essentially what she did. I mean, I've spoken to people who said, you know, she's essentially being dismissed and, you know, she's essentially. you know, treated as a kind of outcast for finally doing her job. I think what is very likely to happen
Starting point is 00:11:28 is that the government, the Israeli Defence Minister, who has the final say in this, will ensure that the person who next takes this position will be someone that they believe is on their side and will not do the same thing. Sebastian Asha speaking to Ankara Desai. Madrid's regional government says it'll put money into a new movie by the veteran director Woody Allen,
Starting point is 00:11:52 to the tune of $1.7 million, but on one condition. The word Madrid must be in the film's title. It's a soft advertising move that Spain has used before. It gave money to the American director's 2008 film Vicky Christina Barcelona. But as the newsroom, Stephanie Prentice reports, a lot has changed since then. Vicky Christina Barcelona followed two American friends on a summer trip to Barcelona, using the city as a character itself, exploring emotional turbulence
Starting point is 00:12:28 amid Gaudi masterpieces and scenic coastal views. I am Pan Antonio, and you are... Christine N. This is my friend Vicky. The Catalan government gave Woody Allen more than a million dollars of the film's $15 million budget and said it made its money back several times over in tourism revenue. But that was almost two decades ago in... a pre-Me-2 world. Since then, Woody Allen has faced a resurfacing of sexual abuse allegations, allegations he's always strongly denied and wasn't charged for, but they have impacted his
Starting point is 00:13:04 reputation in the industry and made booking talent and financing films harder. His last project, Coudrechaunce, premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2023, where the red carpet was crashed by protesters chanting slogans about platforming rapists. Then Woody Allen, who's 89, said the romance of filmmaking had gone for him and alluded to retiring. Now, it seems he'll go again and is happy to accept Madrid's terms. They include Madrid being used in the title, featuring identifiable locations, and the film having its premiere at an international film festival. Over in the world of television, stories based around major cities have been praised by tourism boards. Emily in Paris, about an American girl's life in a romanticized version of the city, has been credited with driving younger crowds there.
Starting point is 00:14:05 Paris is the most exciting city in the world, and you never know what's going to happen next. And increasing foreign property investment. With President Emmanuel Macron telling variety he will fight to keep the show there. Sex in the City, which ran from the late 90s onwards, has been called one of the all-time great commercials for the city of New York. Have you seen the New York Times-style section? You know I can't handle hard news before noon. Boosting its reputation as a global fashion capital and driving international interest.
Starting point is 00:14:41 When life gets this confusing, Sometimes there's only one thing to do. Attend a fabulous party. With tour guides still taking hundreds of people a week to visit shooting locations like Carrie Bradshaw's townhouse. Back in Madrid, officials have said in a statement that a Woody Allen project offers excellent potential for impact and called it an ideal channel for promotion.
Starting point is 00:15:05 But it's not clear if any big stars are attached to the project and it will be audience numbers that decide if Madrid's decision to buy a starring role was worth the money. Stephanie Prentice. Still to come on the Global News podcast. We have developed a surprisingly simple mixture of particular type of antibodies that work across all copras and mambas and ring-health snakes. The single anti-venom that protects against 17 different snake bites.
Starting point is 00:15:41 It's taken two decades to build and cost more than a billion dollars. But now after countless delays, Egypt's Grand Museum is finally ready to share its treasures, giving visitors a glimpse into life in ancient Egypt. Such is the national pride about the building's official opening on Saturday that the government has made it a public holiday. Yelanelle has been to the museum for a sneak preview. Not far from where tourists flock to see one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Egypt is officially opening a cultural highlight of the modern age.
Starting point is 00:16:16 The vast Grand Egyptian Museum is one of the biggest museums globally, and it's packed with 100,000 artefacts. It's expected to bring millions more tourists, and guide Ahmed Sadiq is in no doubt about what's about to become the main highlight. When the Tutankhamun collection opens, then can you imagine? The whole world will come back and come back and come back many times because this is an iconic pharaoh, the most famous king of all antiquity and the most intact tomb. Visitors have already been able to go to most other galleries at the museum since last year. Some British tourists have planned their trips around this epic opening. We thought why not give it a try when we get here. It's a once in a lifetime opportunity. The old museum was pretty
Starting point is 00:17:06 chaotic and so hopefully the Grand Museum will be a lot easier to take in all the Tutankarmoon and all the treasures. It's nearly 20 years since a colossal statue of Ramsey's 2nd was moved in a complex operation from downtown Cairo in preparation for the new museum
Starting point is 00:17:32 it's been that long in the works. revolutions, an economic crisis, COVID and regional wars have all added to delays. But now the full opening has brought a sense of national pride. Having been in charge for this project for four and a half years, it's a great moment. It's a great moment to see the Egyptian people happy about it. Egyptologist Dr. Tariq Tafiq Tafiq is a former director-general of the Grand Egyptian Museum. He's also overseen important restoration works by Egyptian experts on. site and had a hand in designing the new setting for Tudan Karmun and all of his more than
Starting point is 00:18:10 five and a half thousand treasures discovered by British archaeologist Howard Carter. Tutankhamun puzzled me for a moment because I had to think, how can we show him in a different way? So I had the idea of displaying the complete Tutankan Amon, which means nothing remains in storage, Nothing remains in other museums in Egypt from the tomb and you get to have the complete experience the way Howard Carter had it over a hundred years ago. But while Egyptian law ensured that Tutankham finds stayed in Egypt, there are key historic artefacts that are missing from national collections.
Starting point is 00:18:54 Prominent Egyptian egyptologists, including Dr. Monica Hanna, say this is the time to demand their return from Europe. On the occasion of the inauguration, Egypt should start asking officially for the restitution and repatriation of the different objects that were looted in the 20th century and the 19th century as well. Important objects for the history of Egyptology, such as the Rosetta Stone and the Basta of Nefertiti, need to be part of the display of museums in Egypt.
Starting point is 00:19:27 For now, the British Museum says it's not received a formal request from the Egyptian government for the return or loan of the Rosetta Stone. But with the opening of the Grand Museum, Egyptians have an impressive new attraction to showcase more of their ancient past. Yelan Nell, and from that grand opening in Egypt to a Berlin institution that is closing its doors for good this weekend. Schfutz is one of the oldest gay nightclubs in Europe, but filed for bankruptcy earlier this year.
Starting point is 00:19:57 The German capital has long been considered a great party city, So has gay and lesbian culture in Berlin changed, or is it the city itself? We're going to hear from Emiko Gay, a spokesman for the Union of Berlin clubs, but first, one of Schwartz's most famous residents, the drag queen, Gloria Viagra. It's the oldest gay club in Germany. I had my coming out there. My drag career started there. And it's always been like the place for subculture, for free queer movement.
Starting point is 00:20:38 So it's so sad that it's closing. Amiko, I mean, obviously it's been a place for dancing and parties and gathering. But it's also had quite an importance in the activist movement as well for LGBT communities. Yes, so all the subcultural spaces that host queer events and our safe spaces for queer and LGBTQ communities are extremely important to Berlin, to the cultural life, to the social life. They have political importance. And in the past years, a lot clubs in general were closing in Berlin. There's ongoing gentrification and eviction of club spaces. It's hard to find new spaces. So those spaces are extremely important and it's a big loss when they are closing down.
Starting point is 00:21:24 Is it mainly a financial issue, Gloria, or do you think that people are just going out less generally. There's the culture changed. I think time changes because Berlin was always known a little like rough, but always lovely. And now people are like even attacking or throwing like stuff bottles and cans just over the streets and stuff. So it became rougher, yeah. Is there a hope, though, that there will be a chance that you can rebuild, maybe something smaller again and start again? I hope so. I really hope so because,
Starting point is 00:22:00 Now, yeah, I mean maybe, yeah, in a smaller space because this space was really huge and maybe that's also has been a problem, especially after the pandemic. And, well, hope is what we live for. And Miko, I mean, something that only becomes fashionable and trendy when trendy fashionable people say it is. Could this be a spark to maybe start somewhere else? All this issue that we're talking about is not a matter of trend or reputation or being popular. it's really an economic situation. The city has completely changed.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Everything has been sold out and commercialized to a massive scale. So the art and culture scene, also the funded art and culture scene, is struggling massively. So this is also, I think, a bigger political decision to make. What kind of city do we want to live in? Because right now we are building on a massive scale offices and hotels and all art and culture is being evicted. But Berlin relies on that so much, not only for just because, it's like a social scene and a cultural scene, but also economically. It's the reason why people
Starting point is 00:23:03 move to Berlin, why tourism is coming to Berlin. So it's also extremely stupid to let the scene die. Emiko Gaij, and before her, we heard from the drag queen, Gloria Viagra, both speaking to Rebecca Kesby. If you get bitten by a venomous black mamba snake, you've probably got just hours to live. But the problem of snake bites is particularly acute in remote parts of Africa, where even if you can get hold of anti-venom, you need to know exactly which kind of snake bit you. But now, as Terry Egan reports, scientists have found a general antidote, which they hope could save countless lives. Snake bites are a global problem. In sub-Saharan Africa alone, up to 300,000 people are bitten every year, and over 7,000 die. Even if someone doesn't die, they may need to have a limb cut off.
Starting point is 00:23:56 Anti-venoms are crucial, but the trouble is they're not at all easy to get hold of in remote areas. And even then, you have to know which species of snake you were bitten by because the treatment will need to match that particular snake. A team in Denmark, though, has a solution. Here's Dr. Andreas Laustson. We started out listening to which snakes are the medically important ones that need to be neutralised in sub-Saharan Africa. we divided them into different groups and looked at what venoms are there, what toxins are in these venoms,
Starting point is 00:24:30 and how can we make the simplest cocktail of antibodies that can neutralize as broadly as possible? Coming up with antivenoms is a long and difficult process. It entails skillfully forcing the venom out of the snakes and giving it in small doses to a big animal such as a horse that can withstand the biochemical attack. The aim is for that animal to produce antibodies. which can fight the effects of the bite. To come up with their cocktail, the team here, though,
Starting point is 00:25:00 have used other big animals, an alpaca and a llama, and a variety of snake venoms all at once, from the Black Mamba, the Cape Cobra, and the Nubian spitting cobra, among others. We have developed a surprisingly simple mixture of a particular type of antibodies called nanobodies that work across all copras and mambas and ring-held snakes in Africa. So we used a lot of advanced techniques to study toxicity, to study how venom's varied across species,
Starting point is 00:25:31 and then we used methods in the laboratory where we simulated the immune system and developed this small mix of nanobodies. It's been shown that mice injected with the solution were largely able to withstand otherwise fatal doses of venom. The antivenom also substantially prevented the death of tissues where the bite occurred, something that can lead to amputation. The aim, of course, is to completely get rid of that problem of having to determine which kind of snake has bitten its victim. And the scientists are now much closer. Terry Egan reporting.
Starting point is 00:26:08 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.uk. You can also find us on X. At BBC World Service, use the hashtag Hash Global NewsPod. This edition was mixed by Philip Bull and the producers with Chantal Hartle and Guy Pitt. The editor is Karen Martin.
Starting point is 00:26:36 I'm Paul Moss. Until next time, goodbye.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.