Global News Podcast - Trump and Netanyahu meet again in push for Gaza ceasefire
Episode Date: July 9, 2025President Trump and the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, have met for a 2nd time to discuss efforts to reach a ceasefire in Gaza. Also: King Charles and president Macron toast “ever clos...er” UK-France ties.
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This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Julia McFarlane and in the early hours of Wednesday the 9th of July these are our
main stories.
President Trump and the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have been holding another
meeting in the White House to discuss efforts to secure a ceasefire and hostage deal in
Gaza.
The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for two of the Taliban's top leaders, accusing them of persecuting women and girls in Afghanistan.
King Charles has said the relationship between the UK and France is vital for preserving
peace in Europe, as France's President Macron attends a state banquet at Windsor Castle.
Also in this podcast, it's a best-selling memoir which spawned a star-studded movie,
but is the story just too good to be true?
We lost everything.
Our home, our livelihood.
Maybe we should just follow a line around the coast.
We hear from an investigative journalist who says the salt path isn't all it claims.
We begin in Washington. And as we record this podcast, President Trump and the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have been meeting again to discuss efforts to reach a ceasefire in Gaza, a day after the two leaders had dinner at the White House.
Earlier, Mr Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, suggested an agreement between Israel
and Hamas was close. Our North America correspondent, Peter Beaux, reports.
This latest meeting between President Trump and the Israeli Prime Minister appears to
be a last-minute addition to Benjamin Netanyahu's schedule during his visit to Washington. Earlier at a Cabinet meeting Mr. Trump said the plan was to talk almost
exclusively about Israel's war in Gaza which he said they had to get sorted.
Steve Witkoff, the US Special Envoy to the Middle East who was also at the
Cabinet meeting said it was hoped an agreement will be reached by the end of
the week. He added that it would involve a 60-day ceasefire, with 10 hostages being released, along with
the bodies of nine others.
Progress towards a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has proved elusive for mediators
during talks in Doha.
But it's been reported by the US news website Axios that a Qatari delegation met officials
from the White House hours
before Mr Netanyahu's arrival for his latest meeting with the president.
Unlike last night's dinner, news outlets have not been invited to attend the
meeting. Peter Bowes. Meanwhile international lawyers have raised
concerns about a new Israeli proposal for the relocation of Palestinians in
Gaza.
Israel's defence minister Israel Katz has laid out plans to move civilians in the territory
to a camp in the city of Rafa.
Our correspondent Nick Beek reports now from Jerusalem.
Talks may have restarted to find peace in Gaza, but war cannot be escaped, nor the Israeli bombs. A family
grieves for baby Yakin and her parents, all three killed in an airstrike. Mohammed is
the baby's grandfather.
Was she bombing Israel? A five-month-old baby targeted by a warplane? What ethics are they talking about?
What ceasefire or negotiations are they talking about?
If a 60-day ceasefire is agreed, Israel's defence minister believes it can be used to
create a so-called humanitarian city on the ruins of Ra'a in the south of the territory.
Israel Cats is reported to have ordered the army to make plans to transfer
all Palestinians in Gaza into a new camp. Critics within Israel have condemned it as a ruse to
ultimately force the whole population out of Gaza. The British human rights lawyer, Baroness Kennedy,
went further. I have now moved to a position where I believe that we're now witnessing a genocide
taking place before our eyes and I was very reluctant to go there because the threshold
has to be very high. There has to be specific intent for genocide but what we're now seeing
is genocidal behaviour. Israel has consistently rejected the charge of genocide and says its
ongoing mission in Gaza is to bring home the 50 remaining
hostages and to destroy Hamas. But Israel has also paid a price for its resumption of
military activities in March which broke a previous ceasefire. Five more IDF soldiers
were killed in an ambush. Hamas may be severely weakened but it is not defeated. Nick Beek
At least three crew members of a Greek cargo ship have been killed in an assault off the
coast of Yemen. The EU military force in the Red Sea said at least two others were hurt,
including a Russian who lost his leg. Here's Elettra Naismith.
The Eternity Sea was surrounded by speedboats firing sea drones and rocket-propelled grenades.
Its bridge and engine room were completely destroyed before the mostly Filipino crew
were rescued by a passing merchant vessel.
The US Embassy in Yemen blamed Houthi fighters for the attack, which is said was the most
violent yet.
The critical waterway has been calm for months, but this is the second attack in as many days
on ships whose sister vessels have called at Israeli ports. It's raised fears of a renewed Red Sea campaign by the
Houthis in support of the Palestinians.
Elettra Naismith
The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for two senior Taliban leaders
in Afghanistan, accusing them of persecution of women and girls. The crimes are alleged to have happened after the Taliban seized power in the country and
continued until at least January this year.
The ICC judges said girls and women had been severely deprived of their rights to education,
privacy and family life, as well as freedoms of movement, thought and religion.
Our South Asia regional editor and Barisan
Ettarajan told us more.
This is a very significant development, especially for those who've been fighting for the rights
of women and girls in Afghanistan. Now the International Criminal Court has issued arrest
warrants for the two leaders. One is the supreme leader of the group, Haipatullah Akunzada and the Taliban chief justice Abdul
Hakim Hakani, and the court accuses them of committing gender-based persecution.
Now, what the judges are saying is that while the Taliban have imposed certain rules and
prohibitions on the population as a whole, they have specifically targeted girls and
women by reason of their gender,
depriving them of fundamental rights and freedom. We don't know how these Irish warrants can be
implemented because the Supreme Leader, he is very secluded, is elusive, he remains in
southern Afghanistan and he doesn't travel much. Now, this raises a question in case if the ICC goes beyond
this and issues a risk warrants for other leaders, in case if some of the Taliban foreign
minister or the home minister, then it could be a problem because some of the countries
which are signatory to this ICC, they are bound by the rules by taking them into custody.
But as far as these two leaders are concerned, there is no indication
they'll be traveling anywhere very soon.
And how has the Taliban themselves responded to the news of this arrest warrant?
The Taliban, they have reacted very sharply. What they are saying is these announcements have no impact whatsoever
on the firm resolve and Sharia-based position of the Islamic Emirate and we do not recognize any institution under the name of an
international court nor are we accountable to it or bound by its
decision. So that's a very defined message. So it comes just a week after
Russia sort of recognized a Taliban by having a diplomatic
person in Moscow.
So this is, I mean, when they are trying to get international recognition, and that's
what they have been demanding from the community.
The money of the previous Afghan government in the Western countries should be returned
and they should be given recognition.
But the Western countries and the human rights groups have been saying that unless the rights
of women and girls are restored, the groups have been urging that they should not be given
any recognition until they restore the rights of women and girls.
And Barisan Atarajan.
Here in Britain, King Charles has told a state banquet for the French President Emmanuel
Macron that the relationship between the UK and France is essential for preserving peace
in Europe. Speaking at Windsor Castle west of London, the King said both countries faced a
multitude of complex threats and would face them together. Our diplomatic correspondent James
Landale reports on the first day of President Macron's three-day visit.
In the bright Windsor sunshine, President Macron was greeted with all the pomp demanded
of his rank. There were marching bands and a guard of honour.
As he and the King paraded through the town in an open carriage, followed by the Queen
and Mrs Macron, the streets thronged with cheering crowds.
Britain and France may have much in common, a sea, a tunnel, nuclear weapons and permanent
seats at the UN Security Council. But they've also been divided over Brexit and a defence
pact with the US and Australia that excluded France, wounds that still linger in the minds
of French diplomats. And there remain differences of nuance,
how to manage Donald Trump, when to recognize a Palestinian
state, and how to stem the flow of illegal migration.
In a speech to MPs and peers, President Macron
said Britain had to address the pull factors that
encourage a third of people entering the EU
illegally to try to go on to the UK.
France and the United Kingdom have a shared responsibility to address a regular migration
with humanity, solidarity and firmness.
The decisions that we will take will respond to our aims for cooperation and tangible results
on these major issues.
But today was all about Franco-British unity, the defence of Ukraine, the shared military cooperation,
the people-to-people contacts.
At a stake banquet this evening, the King said both countries
faced complex threats, but must tackle them together
as friends and allies.
I firmly believe that the relationship between the United Kingdom and France is essential. and allies.
Friendship between Britain and France is vital, he said, if the liberties and peace of Europe
are to be preserved. The King also spoke of a thousand years of shared history and culture.
To that end, President Macron announced the Bayer Tapestry would be loaned to the British Museum next year for the first time in 900 years.
The fact it records a successful French invasion of these islands did not go unnoticed, but it did not seem to matter.
And that, it would seem, was the point.
James Landale.
It's a multi-million best-selling book and has been adapted into a film featuring the
stars Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.
Are you walking the path?
Yes, we are.
That's a long old hike.
Yeah.
Retired, are you?
The Salt Path is the story of a couple who decide to walk England's thousand kilometre
southwest coast path after their home is repossessed. The path is the story of a couple who decide to walk England's thousand-kilometre southwest
coast path after their home is repossessed.
Now the author, Raina Wynn, has been accused of fabricating or giving misleading information
about some elements of her memoir.
An investigation by the Observer newspaper in Britain has suggested that some of Wynn's
claims about her husband's illness and the events that led to the couple losing their home were misrepresented.
Rayna Wynn has denied the accusations.
Evan Davis heard more from the journalists behind that investigation.
Chloe Hajamafeu.
I started out with a load of documents from the land registry
and then through lots of phone calls what I discovered was that
Rayna and Moff Wynn's real names are Tim and Sally
Walker. And they lost their home actually, because Sally Walker was accused of stealing
tens of thousands of pounds from her employer, who was an estate agent in this North Wales
town where she was a bookkeeper. They accused her of stealing over 60,000 pounds and she was arrested and questioned
by the police and then subsequently borrowed 100,000 pounds from a rich relative of Tim
Walker's, her husband's. And that 100,000 pounds was used to pay back the money that
was missing from the estate agent and cover legal costs. But then it went on their house
essentially as a private mortgage. And when their rich relatives' business went bust,
the people he owed money to took over that debt and tried to recover it.
And eventually the courts foreclosed on their home
and gave it to the people they owed the money to to recoup their debt.
But the Walkers then essentially did lose their house, as they said,
but under very, very different circumstances,
when in effect Sally Walker was accused of criminal behaviour.
Right. And indeed, you've also been examining the condition which in the memoir Moth, the
husband, Tim Walker, is living with. And you find his experience there has been unusual.
When I spoke to neurologists who specialise in this condition, they say they've never
come across anything like this. They've never come across anyone who's lived as long as Moth. The usual life expectancy
with this illness from onset of symptoms is six to eight years. It's tragically short.
And Moth has been around for 18 years with this condition. He's not got any visibly acute
symptoms. Whereas people with that condition towards the later stages are very visibly
unwell. Their body isn't responding. Quite often they have a lot of difficulty with speech
and towards the end of their lives they need 24-hour care. So neurologists that I spoke
to were really skeptical. They said, maybe he's been misdiagnosed. But in the books we
hear that he's had lots of trips to the doctor and we don't hear anything about a misdiagnosis. I cannot prove that Moth or Tim Walker doesn't have this condition. His medical records aren't
public and nor would it be right for me to go digging into them. But he has made the
details of his condition very public. I think it's right and proper now that we do raise
questions.
One reaction to a memoir is, does it really matter whether it's true or not
true? I mean you know it is a description of a couple making a journey. A lot of people found
it very inspiring and I don't know whether the truth matters. All the way along this book has
really been sold as a true story that has been one of the major headlines behind it and also
you know in very big letters in the trailer of the movie that's recently come out, which is supposed to be the true story of this couple. And I
think firstly, in this day and age when truth is under assault anyway, people have really
been affected by this book. They've opened their hearts to this couple. And I think telling
the public that it's true in that way and putting that centre stage, it does hurt the
bigger picture of truth.
Investigative journalist Chloe Hajimoffeo. And in a statement,
Raina Nguyen described the Observer article as highly misleading and said
she and her husband would be taking legal advice.
Still to come on this podcast.
When a small town in Italy announces that they're putting their houses up for one euro,
they are flooded with emails.
The tempting offer of a cut price home in Italy. So what's the catch?
Here in Britain, an inquiry into an administrative computer scandal at the post office, which
led to thousands of its employees being wrongly accused of stealing from company accounts,
has published its first report. It outlined what it described as a disastrous human toll
and criticised the post office's attitude. The software was used to manage transactions and accounts.
However, it contained significant faults that led to false accounting data,
causing the local managers of the post officers to appear as if they were responsible for financial shortfalls.
The inquiry's chair, Sir Wynne Williams, said the findings were profoundly disturbing
and more than 13 people may have killed themselves due to the scandal. Secretary's chair Sir Wynne Williams said the findings were profoundly disturbing and
more than 13 people may have killed themselves due to the scandal.
Many thousands of people have suffered serious financial detriment.
Many people have inevitably suffered emotional turmoil and significant stress in consequence.
Many businesses and homes have been lost,
bankruptcies have occurred, marriage and families have been wrecked.
Well our correspondent Rob Watson told us more about the report.
It's been described, Julia, with good reason as the biggest miscarriage of
justice in British history which I think gives you a sense of why it's such an important story. It's also important because the
sub-postmasters, the people running the 11,000 or so branches of the post office
up and down the country where you take parcels or maybe cash your state
pension if you're elderly, were and still are often at the centre of community
life, particularly for those not particularly good at doing things online
or digitally, Julia. Anyway, over 900 of these postmasters were wrongly accused of stealing
money, some of them imprisoned, thousands more used their own money to balance accounts,
and all of it due, as you were saying, to a problem with a new software system which
the post office denied for years and years. And what this report does is highlight just
the sheer scale and depth of the suffering of these people from bankruptcy to health
problems, addictions and even suicide. And we heard a little bit about this from
the inquiries chaired just then it wasn't just the sub postmasters who were
affected but their families too. Yes in addition to the thousands of postmasters
affected and it was thousands, this report
considers for the first time the harm done to their children and wider families. And
it's hard not to be shocked, Julia, by the stories of family heartache and break-up,
even cases of children being taken away from their parents' young children when they
were put in prison for theft they hadn't committed. So what this report has suggested and the government has approved the idea is that
for compensation payments to family members, especially children whose life
chances were affected by the post office's behaviour, although how they're
going to prove that won't be easy. In summary really, Julia, this is a scandal
that is far from over both in terms of the issues of compensation and of
course the possible
prosecution of senior officials at the post office allegedly responsible for this massive
miscarriage of justice.
Rob Watson.
Officials in Nepal say at least eight people have been killed and 20 are missing after
flash floods on the border with China. 11 people are reported to be missing on the Chinese side.
This was the sound of the torrents of water
which flooded the area around Rashwagadi.
The floods also swept away the Nepal-China friendship bridge
which spans the Sun Kosi River,
forcing all bilateral
trade moving through that route to be halted. Navin Singh Khadka is our environment correspondent.
I asked him what we knew about the situation there.
Very early in the morning, there was a sudden rise in the level of this river. It comes
in from Tibet and flows through Nepal and ultimately mixes with the Ganges in northern
India. So this had swollen quite significantly and then it swept away this key trade bridge between
China and Nepal. Around four hydropower stations in Nepal have been damaged and
not to talk about debris being swept down and as a result in many parts
instead of water you'll see this brown sludge which means there's a huge loss to
the aquatic life in the river. And also this threatens critical infrastructure like barrages,
dams, downstream.
And there's this quite acrimonious war of words that suddenly erupted over this.
Rather than arguing with each other, I have seen two different versions. The Chinese media
have categorically said that there was this incessant rainfall in northern Nepal
and they've also said this is very common during monsoon and that's why there was this floods.
But when I checked with the Nepalese authorities, what they have told is there was no rainfall as such,
neither in the Nepalese side nor towards the border area in the Chinese side in Tibet.
So there's this question, what caused the floods?
Now what they've also told me is there was no early warning and therefore some experts are saying
this might be a case of glacial lakes bursting out in Tibet which has happened in the past but
satellite imagery is it's full of cloud as of now so it needs to be clear up and then we'll know what
exactly happened. In Nepal it's mountainous area, it's prone to flash flooding,
but it's apparently getting worse every year.
You talked about Nepal's topography, Nepal's geography.
It's the same thing across the border in China.
So all this glacial melting, palm-up-firsts hoeing,
and then that triggering landslides,
mountains coming down, you know,
and blocking rivers and so on and so forth.
Tibet, for instance, is one of those places which has seen expansion of water bodies.
Just when, because of global warming, we are seeing water bodies disappearing elsewhere
and drought and desertification. But Tibet, we're just seeing the opposite picture. There's this
massive expansion of water bodies because there's this fast melting glaciers, all these snow-filled ice packs
they are melting and as a result what happens is a small trigger, any avalanche, anything
happens falls into those lakes, they tend to burst out.
Again we are not saying that was the reason but these are things that cause floods downstream.
Therefore experts say all these risks are to be monitored and then there has to be this
trans-boundary management
of river systems, early warning and so on and so forth, particularly where you have
critical infrastructure downstream.
Navin Singh Khadka
A court in Pakistan has ordered YouTube to block or remove 27 channels accused of violating
a controversial law against fake news. Several of the accounts belong to prominent local journalists.
Others are linked to the party of the jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan.
From Islamabad, here's Azadeh Mushiri.
Asad Ali Tawar is a well-known YouTuber and activist in Pakistan
and highly critical of the government.
The country's cybercrime unit is accusing him and 26 others
of allegedly spreading provocative
and derogatory content about state institutions and officials.
Mr. Taw has told the BBC that YouTube has already contacted him and warned that if he
doesn't address what it called a legal removal request, then it may comply without any further
notice.
The government has previously said the law is aimed at hate speech, misinformation and any content that could incite violence.
But rights groups such as Amnesty have called it draconian.
As a day, Ms. Shirey.
Now, ever thought about escaping to the Italian countryside?
It's a scheme that's been running for several years.
Small Italian towns are selling dilapidated old houses for one euro in the
hope of attracting international buyers and stimulating economic growth.
So, how's it been going?
Guardian journalist Lauren Markham, who was herself tempted to take up the offer, has
been investigating.
Lauren Markham, Guardian Journalist
When a small town in Italy announces that they're putting their houses up for one euro, which is generally the
starting price, they are flooded with emails. Hundreds, if not thousands, of people inquire.
So it's incredibly popular. Certainly once people understand the catches, and there are a number,
they don't always follow through. Every town does it somewhat differently, but generally there is
some commitment that you're required to make to restore
and renovate whatever property you're buying. Some towns require some kind of residency in Italy so
that it's not just, for instance, a vacation home. Some towns really are looking for people not just
to fix up these tumbledown properties, but really bring life back into depopulating towns. You know, people who will buy the food and attend the events and help restaurants stay open
or new ones open. Some places have actually asked that if you come, you launch some sort
of business or some sort of social enterprise for the communities.
Yeah. What are local residents making of this influx of foreign buyers?
It really depends place to place. And I would also say it depends on when in the lifespan
of the one-year house scheme you talk to them. Often at the beginning, there's a lot of suspicion.
I talked to the mayor of one town and some folks from that town who recounted that at
the beginning, a lot of residents felt like, oh, you're selling off our properties like
they're nothing. You're making us a discount town. I think in general, that suspicion has ceased
now that those properties are sold, new life is in the town, businesses that were on the brink of
collapse are able to run. So I think for the most part, there is a sense of toward the completion,
many people seem to feel, even the neighbors, relatively happy
that the house next door is not kind of falling to ruin. But at the same time, I think that
there is a sort of forlorn sense that this era of our town is gone, that these new people
are ushering in a new era, which even if there's like hope and optimism around that, there's
also of course, I think a sense of mourning.
It's also not just Italy, there are other countries experimenting with similar schemes,
aren't there?
Yes, Greece has sort of flirted with the idea. Japan is selling homes. I mean, if you're
on Instagram, I would be surprised if you haven't at some point come across the like,
this town in Spain will pay you, you know, 5,000 euro to live there if you have a
child. So it's happening all over the place. We are facing a global population decline.
These rural towns have a hard time keeping their young people and attracting people to move there.
So they're looking abroad to sort of say, okay, can we get the remote worker or can we get somebody
who has money or can we get someone who has a flexible life and can live half the year here to help keep our town afloat? Lauren Markham.
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 any of the topics covered in it,
you can send us an email. The address is globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk. You
can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag globalnewspod.
This edition was mixed by Caroline Driscoll. The producers were Liam McShepery and Alfie
Haberschen. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Julia McFarlane. Until next time, goodbye.