Global News Podcast - Thai court removes prime minister over leaked call
Episode Date: August 29, 2025Thailand's prime minister has been removed by the constitutional court, plunging politics into turmoil and dealing a blow to Thailand's most powerful political dynasty. Paetongtarn Shinawatra was dism...issed for violating ethics in a leaked June phone call, where she could be heard calling Cambodia's former leader Hun Sen 'uncle', and criticising the Thai army, amid worsening border tensions with Cambodia. We’ll also get the latest from Gaza, where the Israeli military has recovered the body of a hostage; we’ll hear about the dangerous conditions in El-Fasher in Sudan; and the aftermath of deadly strikes on Kyiv in Ukraine. In Pakistan, the government of Punjab launches large flood rescue operations; the Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni expresses outrage after a website posted pornographic and altered images of women including herself; in the United States, new trade tariffs begin on packages coming from abroad; the BBC speaks to Rohingya refugees deported from India. Also: how studying an 800-year-old oak tree could help save tomorrow's forests, and South Korea’s new approach to tackling crime, using hologram police officers. 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 Valerie Sanderson, and at 13 hours GMT on Friday the 29th of August, these are our main stories.
In Thailand, the Prime Minister, Petongtan Shenawat, has been removed from office by the country's top court.
This was her reaction.
I accept the constitutional court's verdict.
As a Thai citizen, I would like to reiterate that my intentions were for the benefit of the country, not for personal gain.
So what happens next? Israel says it's ended humanitarian pauses in its fighting in the Gaza Strip.
Italy's Prime Minister, Georgia Maloney, demands action against whoever posted fake images of her and other prominent women on a porn website.
Also in this podcast, how studying an 800-year-old tree could help save tomorrow's forests.
And South Korea's unusual approach to tackling crime.
But first, what now for Thailand after the Prime Minister has been removed from office by the country's top court?
She was dismissed over a leaked phone call with Cambodia's veteran leader Hun Sen during recent border tensions between the two countries.
The conversation was seen by critics as being too cozy and she was subsequently suspended.
Ms. Petong-Tern insisted she'd done her best to act in the national interests.
I accept the Constitutional Court's verdict.
As a Thai citizen, I would like to reiterate that my intentions were for the benefit of the country,
not for personal gain, but for the lives of the people, including civilians and soldiers.
The Court's decision plunges the country's politics into turmoil
and has dealt a blow to its most powerful political dynasty, the Shinawatt family.
A South East Asia correspondent Jonathan Head explained the Court's decision.
Well, the court said that it accepted the complaint that she had violated ethics.
Now, that's a very broad definition in the Constitution.
But specifically, it was a very embarrassing phone conversation.
It was clearly never meant to go public.
The Cambodian strongman Hun Sen leaked it very deliberately to cause a crisis, which is what happened.
And it's probably had a big impact on the border war.
But in it, she appealed to him because Kunsen and her father, Taxen,
who's the real power behind her party and her government, have been longstanding friends and business partners.
So she appealed to him in the name of that friendship
to put aside their tension on the border
and the spats between their troops
and tried to find a way through
and she was very conciliatory to him, very respectful
and she also criticised one of her army commanders,
the man who actually commands Thai troops on the Thai-Cambodian border
saying he's actually in the opposition,
he opposes my government, he's difficult,
I'm having a problem with him.
So once Hun Sen leaks that, which is pretty shocking,
it's quite rare for heads of state or heads of government
to do that in this part of the world.
It really caused an enormous uproids.
It painted Petontan as inexperienced.
I mean, she's young.
She had no politically experienced
before she became prime minister last year
and has having poor judgment
and being outplayed by this wily old veteran
and of being disloyal to her own troops.
So this court has ruled many times
on very, very trivial matters
and dismissed prime ministers,
it's dismissed governments,
it's dissolved parties.
But I think in this case,
many ties felt this was a bit more serious
and the judges clearly found it was serious enough
to make her unsuitable for high office.
What happens in Thailand now?
It's pretty chaotic, to be honest.
I mean, nothing's really been settled in this country since the election of two years ago,
which was won, or the most seats were won by the most youthful and reformist party.
Most Ties wanted that.
But the unelected Senate stepped in and blocked that.
So Ms. Petontan's party, Perto, which came second, cobbled together a coalition
with many of her former conservative opponents, with a promise to revive the economy.
It's a difficult global environment. Thailand's economy is in a long-term structural stagnation as well.
So they failed to do that too. Now this border war has blown up. It's given a lot of weight behind nationalist, conservative opinion, and old accusations that Ms. Petontan's family, the Shinawap family, put their business interests with Cambodia before those of the nation have surfaced and really weakened her party.
And I don't think it's going to be easy for Thailand to cobble together a stable government. They've got a very limited number.
of candidates that are allowed by the Constitution.
The current coalition has a very slim majority.
It's very likely that within a few months
they will be forced to call another election.
But this is a polarized country.
It's fragmented between different political views.
It's not clear that even an election would deliver stability.
Jonathan Head.
Israel says its attack on Gaza City is in its initial stages
and its ended humanitarian pauses in fighting in the area.
It also says its forces have found the body of an Israeli
who was killed in the October the 7th attack,
by Hamas. He died trying to defend his kibbutz, and his body was taken into Gaza.
Here's our Middle East correspondent, Yoland Nell.
First of all, I mean, the discovery of the body of Ilan Weiss, he was 56 years old,
the head of the security squad in his kibbutz, when he was killed in those Hamas-led attacks
in the 7th of October, 2023. The Israeli military is also saying that it has findings
related to the remains of another hostage retrieved from Gaza.
and an identification process is going on.
Prior to this, there were 50 hostages believed held in Gaza,
20 of whom thought still to be alive.
The hostages and missing families forum did come out with a statement
about the remains of Elaine Weiss being brought back,
saying that this brought some comfort to his family
after 692 days of waiting in the nightmare of uncertainty.
And they also repeated their call for a ceasefire deal for Gaza
that would bring back all of the remaining hostages.
Meanwhile, in Gaza City,
what we've been hearing from witnesses, actually,
is that in the past hours,
there have been more intense airstrikes,
just initial reports coming through of that.
Meanwhile, the Israeli military making this declaration
that Gaza City was now a dangerous combat zone
and that it was suspending these tactical pauses in fighting
that were introduced about a month ago
to get more aid in just for Gaza City.
all seen as being part of the preparations for a bigger operation to conquer Gaza City.
The UN's humanitarian office has put out some new figures saying that since this new
operation was announced, about 60,000 people have been newly displaced in the Gaza City area.
Yolan Nell. Yet more stark warnings are emerging about the city of El Fasha in Sudan,
which has been under siege by the paramilitary group, the RSF, for more than a year.
Amid reports of squalid conditions and starvation were now hearing that civilians are increasingly being targeted in attacks.
Dr. Mohamed Faisal Hassan, from the Sudan Doctors Network, gave us just one example.
Three days ago, they targeted the South Fasher Hospital, which is one of the big hospitals that serves a big Kashman here in North Darfur.
And this resulted in a massive massacre as well for patients and the medical.
come staff. James Copnell presents Newsday here on the BBC World Service and is a former
Sudan correspondent. So the rapid support forces have been besieging El Fashe for 500 days, a bit more
than 500 days now, and the accusation has always been not just disregard for whether civilians
are killed, so you see a shelling of civilian areas, but increasingly and often targeted
attacks on people they consider a threat, including civilians from ethnic groups, they feel
they are in conflict against. So we've had the deaths this week of dozens of civilians from
shelling, but also of people trying to flee El Fasha, civilians, including children, who've
been killed by the RSF. And both major participants in Sudan's war have been accused of
atrocities and abuses, but overwhelmingly the RSF has been accused of more of those, including
what the UN believes are credible accusations of genocide elsewhere.
in Darfur. And who are the targeting specifically? The targeting, well, are considered
Africans in Darfur. So you have Arabs and Africans. The RSF forces come mainly from an Arab
Sudanese group, but have often been in conflict with the Zagawa, the For and the Maselite,
which are considered African ethnic groups. And you have been speaking to a former
Sudanese politician about this, haven't he? Yeah, this is Adid Abderman Yusuf,
his former governor of central Darfur state. He works now with the people-to-people NGO,
which has people inside El Fasher, and he's extremely concerned about the situation there.
Over the last few days, these assassination of civilian, those who try to escape, and they
cut them, and then they kill them. Everybody has seen this killing, calling people by the name
of their ethnic group and then they shoot them
to kill. So the civilian population
in El Fashe's, they are paying the heaviest price of all of this.
So this city, El Fasher, has been under siege
for more than a year. The situation there must be
pretty desperate. Yes, because it's
incredibly hard to get food and other supplies
in. So we've talked to people who are eating
animal fodder, products intended to feed
animals. That's the only way they can survive. I talked to one guy Taha a few weeks ago. He said,
I'm not sure if I'm going to make it to the next week. I've tried to speak to in recent days.
I simply haven't been able to get hold of him. Members of his family have died of starvation.
So civilians face this incredibly hard choice. They are starving to death within the city. Food is
running out. The UN can't get aid convoys in. But if they leave, they run the risk of being killed, too.
It's an awful dire situation, and Sudanese from El Fascia and elsewhere are saying desperately
that there needs to be some sort of action, the international community needs to get involved.
So far that's not happening.
And why is El Fasha strategically important to both sides?
It's the last major city in Darfur that is still under the control of the Sudanese military,
which has been fighting against the rapid support forces, the RSF, this paramilitary group for the last two plus years.
The RSF has most of the rest of Darfur.
It's originally, its fighters are originally from Darfur.
And it wants to control that whole region.
And the Sudanese army wants to say, no, we can maintain a foothold in this major place.
It would also open up to the RSF new supply routes, new economic possibilities too.
But I think it's mainly the symbol of this major city still in the control of the army
in which the RSF is desperate to take.
James Copnell.
EU foreign and defence ministers are meeting in Copenhagen
where they're discussing Ukraine.
It comes soon after the heavy Russian strikes on Kiev
that left 23 people dead, most of them in an apartment building that collapsed.
Here's the lead EU spokesperson, Anita Hibber.
Putin understands only one word and this is strength.
So we will do anything in our power to increase our pressure on Russia
until now we had 18 sanction packages
we're now working on the 19 sanction packages.
So we will do everything in our power to ensure Ukraine remains strong
and Putin comes at the negotiation table
and also the most importantly, the killing stops.
The rescue work at the block is now finished,
but the morning goes on.
Here's Katie Watson, who's in Kiev.
The recovery operation at that block of flats
that saw 22 people die, the 23 who died in that massive air strike on Thursday morning,
That has now finished.
There are still eight people missing.
But, you know, people here are still reeling from what happened in the early hours of Thursday morning.
President Zelensky has once again called for strength,
not just words from allies, to try and bring an end to this war.
There's been diplomatic outcry.
Of course, the EU delegation building here in Kiev was damaged, as was the British Council building.
So, you know, a resounding criticism of what happened.
these Russian attacks.
But on the ground, speaking to those residents and neighbours
watching the recovery operation yesterday
after a missile hit a low-rise residential building.
There was a lot of disbelief, a lot of shock.
People telling me that they see this
and they never think it would happen to them, but it does.
One lady told me of just the cruelty of it
that these drones and these missiles,
there was a barrage of them coming in,
simultaneously in different directions, and it was just incomprehensible, very difficult to try
and get their head around what had happened. So I think people were, yeah, were very much in shock
trying to get an understanding of exactly, of course, what this means for potential peace.
Because, of course, Ukrainians here were wary of whether any peace could come from this flurry of
diplomatic talks. There was optimism. But now that's been undermined by what we saw with
those attacks early yesterday morning.
That's the view in Ukraine. Let's hear from Moscow.
Here's our Russia editor, Steve Rosenberg, on whether there are any prospects for peace.
If you look at the last six weeks or so, you know, there's been so much talk, so much diplomatic activity and so little progress.
You know, we've gone from Donald Trump's 50-day ultimatum to Russia to stop the war or face new sanctions to a 12-day ultimatum, then a 10-day ultimatum, which turned out to be no ultimatum, no deadline at all, really.
Instead, we got this US-Russia summit in Alaska, which did not bring an end to the war in Ukraine.
The Kremlin again rejected the idea of a ceasefire from Alaska.
Then we went to Washington and that meeting of President Trump, Zelensky and European leaders,
talk of a possible, even probable Putin-Zelensky summit until the Kremlin poured cold water on that.
And then yesterday, yes, that massive Russian attack on Kiev.
I imagine Russian officials will be satisfied by the...
initial and rather subdued response from the Trump administration to that attack.
The White House press secretary saying that President Trump was not happy by the strikes but also
not surprised by them. So it appears right now that we are no closer to peace.
Steve Rosenberg, the government of Punjab says it's launched one of its largest rescue operations
in years as more than a million people have been affected by floods in Pakistan's most
populous province. Hundreds of thousands of residents have been evacuated so far in Punjab and more than
800 people have been killed across the country since monsoon rains started in June. The BBC's
Pakistan correspondent Azadamishir reports from Lahore. I'm in a luxury residential neighborhood
in Lahore and when people moved here they were promised beautiful parks, a scenic view of the
Ravi River and new build modern homes. But looking at it now, the river has completely swollen and
submerged several homes. Thousands of rescuers have been deployed to areas like these. And across
Punjab, there are 1,700 villages that have been flooded. So rescuers today are still traveling
back and forth across the Ravi River to help anyone who is still stranded, anyone who refused to
evacuate before. When families do come back, many will find their homes wrecked, just like the
ones I'm looking at now. The government has pledged financial support for people who have been
affected by the floods, but this isn't the first time families in Pakistan are seeing their
lives upended, having to start all over again. And scientists are warning it won't be the last time
either, that climate change is intensifying the monsoon rains that the country has to go through
every single year. In the immediate future, officials are warning that more rains are coming
and with it more damage, more lives at risk.
As a day, Meshiri.
Still to come in the global news podcast?
It looks just like a regular person and when I see it at night, it really feels like there's a
police officer standing next to me.
The unusual police officer deterring crime in South Korea.
From today, any packages entering the US that are worth more than $100 will be subject to tariffs.
So bad news if you're a small business owner who sells to the states,
great news Donald Trump would argue, if you're an American business.
It's because a rule which used to exempt goods valued at $800 or less from border tax has been removed.
This was already in force on packages from China and Hong Kong,
but now will apply to the rest of the world.
Our Asia business correspondent is Surinjana Tuari.
It was really a loophole that's allowed billions of dollars of goods
to enter the US GT free.
It's very old, been around since 1938.
And in recent years, it was largely used to foster small business growth
on e-commerce marketplaces.
If you can imagine businesses around the region,
especially here in Australia and in Asia, you know, selling two American customers on things like Etsy and eBay.
But earlier this summer, President Donald Trump said he would eliminate the waiver that allowed those goods worth less than $800 to enter the U.S. duty-free.
And now the exemption has gone away completely as of today.
So what effect, Sorenjana, will this have, do you think, on global trade?
Well, we spoke to a lot of small business owners, you know, one maternity company that was based in maternity clothes company that was based in Australia.
And he said because there's been so much chaos, there's been so much uncertainty about who will pay the duties,
the Australia Postal Service has actually stopped these parcels going into the US at all.
So that means that he's having to look for new markets and he's having to redirect a lot of his deletrect.
and essentially he was saying that he's not going to be able to market his goods to American
customers as a result. But more broadly, I think there is still a lot of confusion around Donald
Trump's tariff's policy. And this is just another example of it. And you mentioned the Chinese
and Hong Kong exemptions. They were removed earlier this year. And that really affected
e-commerce sites, big Chinese retailers like Timo and Shane from being able to deliver their
to US customers. So this is likely to have a big impact for many types of businesses around the world.
And crucially, what effect is this going to have on consumers, particularly in America?
Yeah, well, we're already hearing that one South Korean skincare brand has actually just across the board
adding 15% surcharges to its deliveries. So essentially, it's going to become, things are going to
become more expensive because while the receivers generally pay these tariffs and these extra,
taxes, at some point these businesses are going to have to pass the money onto the costs
onto the customers. So we've heard from a lot of really big companies, Adidas, Nike, all saying
they're going to have to increase prices in order to be able to navigate these new tariff policies.
And it seems that the only person that can really pay in the end will be the customer.
Suranjana Tuari.
Italy's Prime Minister Georgia Maloney says those responsible for publishing doctored images of herself
and other prominent women on a pornographic website must be punished with the utmost firmness.
Georgia Maloney spoke of her disgust, telling an Italian newspaper
that women should immediately report images posted online without their consent.
A correspondent in Rome, Sarah Rainsford, told me more about the website.
It has closed itself down, in fact, but this is a website that's existed for 20 years.
years. And there was very recently, in the last few days, an explosion of outrage when it was
discovered that the site, an adult website, a pornographic website, was displaying doctor's images
of very well-known female figures here in Italy, including the Prime Minister, including a number
of opposition politicians, celebrities, influencers, using images that have been stolen in many
cases from their personal social media accounts or taken from public images posted online at public
events. And then those images were altered before being posted online alongside some obscene captions,
very vulgar commentary and sometimes violent commentary. In some cases, I've been told,
incitements to rape. So extremely serious allegations about this website. It has now taken itself
offline. There is a police investigation, but the website says with regret that some users had been
abusing the platform. They said it was set up with the best possible intent, and it was for the
sharing of content, supposed to be a safe space, but they are claiming that that space was
misused. But certainly those who were targeted, the women who were featured on the website,
are outraged. There's been a huge amount of coverage of what's happened here in Italy.
And as you mentioned, the Prime Minister herself has expressed her disgust and said that those
responsible need to be dealt with. And are they going to be held accountable those responsible?
Well, there is an investigation. As I say, the website has been closed.
but it's not an isolated case.
There was, in fact, just a few days ago
another big noise about a Facebook group known as My Wife
when it was revealed that men who were using that site
were posting pictures of their partners,
very explicit, obscene pictures in many cases of their partners,
again possibly altered and certainly shared
without the consent in many cases of the women who were featured.
And the outrage, again, over that led by celebrity figures
here in Italy. Cultural figures and politicians forced META to close down that Facebook group.
But I think, you know, there is a real focus now on those kinds of platforms, the kind of
images that are being shared and the fact that that's being done in many cases without
the consent of the women involved. So a real focus on trying to identify who's responsible
and trying to stop it and also calling for women who find their images being shared to report
that to police. Sarah Ridsford, the BBC has spoken exclusively to some of the Rohingya refugees
who were deported by the Indian government
and dumped in the sea just off the coast of Myanmar,
a country in the midst of a brutal civil war.
The Rohingya, a predominantly Muslim ethnic minority,
face violent persecution and genocide at the hands of Myanmar's military government.
More than a million Rohingya have fled to neighbouring countries, including India.
In an exclusive interview, the refugees recounted how they were taken and left at sea
at the hands of Indian authorities.
The BBC's South Asia correspondent Samir Hussain reports from Delhi.
Hello, hello.
A group of seven men appear on my screen.
They're all sharing a mobile phone.
We were so helpless.
And we were waiting for someone to come.
They're desperate to tell their story,
how they were thrown in the sea and ended up stranded in Myanmar,
a country they fled in fear.
of violent persecution.
We don't feel secure in Myanmar.
This place is completely a war zone.
That's Sayyed Nur, and he's one of 40 card-carrying
UN-recognized refugees living in Delhi
who were put on planes to the Andaman and Iqobar Islands,
then put on a naval vessel in the Bay of Bengal,
headed towards Myanmar.
14 hours later, they were told to board smaller boats.
They brought four light boards, and we were brought to two light boards, 20 people in each board.
Our hands were bound in that light boards for more than seven hours.
They asked us to jump off the light board one by one, and we swim around 100 plus meter to get the seashore.
When you got on the bus to go to the boats, who took you on the bus?
Yeah, the same Navy.
How do you know they were Navy?
We know that because of the Basque inscription like Barthianawasena.
The Hindi word for Indian Navy.
Then, he says, one by one, they were pulled aside on the boat and questioned by Indian authorities.
They would call someone and talk in Hindi, and they will even say something like,
why didn't you become Hindu?
They questioned to Christian.
Rohingya Christians, why did you convert Muslim to Christianity? Why didn't you become a Hindu?
And even they treated us to uncover our parents to confirm whether we are circumcised or not.
And they said, why did you come to India? And why didn't you choose another country instead of India?
Despite being registered as UN refugees, the Indian government says the more than 20,000
Rohingya refugees living in India are illegal immigrants.
This is a matter of life and death for these people.
Tom Andrews is the UN's special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar.
I've been receiving reports of refugees being detained, interrogated, mistreated.
These are people who are not in India because they want to be.
They're there because of the horrific violence that is occurring in,
in Myanmar. They literally have been running for their lives.
We put these allegations to the Indian government, who did not respond to our requests for comment.
I'm walking up the stairs of a four-story building in the Vigasboudi neighborhood in Delhi.
I'm going to meet with Nourl Amin. He's 24 years old.
Nourl Mimin's parents, two brothers and sister-in-law, are among the 40 deported.
refugees now in Myanmar.
We are humans, not animals.
How can you just throw people into the sea?
In my heart, there is only this fear that the Indian government will also take us and throw
us in the sea at any point.
India's Rohingya community already existing on the margins are now living in fear,
not welcome in their home country and not wanted in the country where they sought refuge.
Samira Hussein
Scientists are decoding the DNA of some of the UK's most ancient oaks
in order to understand the genetic secrets of the tree's success
Oaks can live for centuries withstanding climate change and disease
Conservationists say gleaning that knowledge will help restore Britain's woodlands
Our environment correspondent Helen Briggs went to see the first sample
being taken from the Druids oak in south-east England
I want to pull all that taught?
Hang on, Ed, it's caught there.
Very good.
This picturesque woodland in Buckingshire
is home to a very impressive tree.
Over nine metres in good.
Nine metres, 20.
For hundreds of years, the so-called Druid's Oak
has withstood droughts, storms, heat waves and more.
Sort of top 100?
Yeah, one of the biggest trees in the UK.
And today, the Mighty Oak is being measured up
and getting a DNA test that could unlock the secrets
of its superpowers. It's extreme resilient, its ability to withstand.
This is Dr Ed Pine, a conservation scientist for the Woodland Trust.
So we know trees like this are survivors. This tree's been standing in the same place for
800 years, maybe 1,000 years. But we don't know what enables it to be so successful
compared to other trees. Is it just that it's got lucky? Has it led a stress-free life?
Or is there something special about the genes of this tree? Is there a secret to longevity
within its genome, and we're hoping to really dig into that and find that out.
If you get very close, you can see it's all hollow inside,
and that's a great place for wildlife.
A single oak can support hundreds of different species of plants and animals.
And that's why there are growing concerns for these majestic living giants,
many of which have no legal protection.
If you lose an ancient oak tree, you lose the wildlife.
My name's Emma Gill Martin
and I work for the Arborocultural Association.
Ancient trees like this, they're historical and cultural
monuments I would call the monuments of nature
and they inspire a sense of wonder in all of us I think
but this project will allow us to tease out
what's so special about ancient trees
and help us to make the case for them to be better protected.
Meanwhile in Mochus Park
Nature Reserve in Herefordshire
unwanted conifers are being removed
and oaks put back into the ground
to encourage a diversity of wildlife.
Acon's really easy to grow.
Anybody can do it.
Tom Simpson is Senior Reserve Manager for Natural England.
So this tree's about 16 years old
and it was one of the trees
which was grown on from acorns
collected from the 800-year-old trees in the park.
We're seeing a really sort of a boom
in the bird population here.
So we've got meadow pipits, tree pippets,
wood warblers coming up.
up here. We've got spotted flycatchers as well. So in the short period of time,
in that 16 years of restoration, we are really seeing the sort of nature recovery up on this
site. That report from Helen Briggs. A new police officer in South Korea has managed to cut
crime on his beat by more than a fifth. It would be impressive for a real police officer.
It's even more impressive for a hologram. Will Chalk has the story.
And like every night, South Korea's first holographic police officer is on duty.
His beat is a local park, projected from behind onto a life-size acrylic panel.
From a distance, he does look eerily real.
Choi in Jung lives nearby.
It looks just like a regular person, and when I see it at night,
it really feels like there's a police officer standing next to me.
And that makes me feel safer personally.
The hologram is the brainchild of police officer Kim Suhuyi.
My family and friends often told me that they would avoid passing through the park
because it felt too scary.
But as you know, it's impossible for CCTVs or police officers to be stationed everywhere 24-7.
That's when I thought if we could create a visible police presence, it might help.
So we decided to introduce the holographic signboard police officer.
Every two minutes between.
between 7 and 10 p.m., the hologram will pop up.
He's in a busy area with lots of bars,
and with bars often come late-night crime.
But the hologram's been surprisingly effective.
Kim Hjun-Don is another police officer from the team.
After introducing this holographic officer,
crime rates dropped by approximately 22%.
The biggest impact was on impulsive crimes,
such as drunken violence or disputes.
Since these crimes are triggered by sudden bursts of emotion,
It's usually very difficult for officers to intervene beforehand, which makes prevention challenging.
In that sense, the visual message that the police are always watching helped raise awareness and acted as an effective deterrent.
Pre-intervention, or the idea that someone is always watching, might be an unnerving concept for some,
but it seems in this case just reminding people on their way home from a night out that actions have consequences
has nudged their behaviour in a more acceptable direction.
We'll chalk.
And that's it 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, 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 James Piper and was produced by Charles Sanctuary and Isabella Jule.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Valerie Sanderson. Until next time, bye-bye.