Global News Podcast - Trump hits India with 50% tariffs
Episode Date: August 27, 2025Steep tariffs have been imposed on India by the US, doubling an existing duty, as President Donald Trump seeks to punish India for buying Russian oil and weapons. The Indian Prime Minister, Narendra ...Modi, has called it economic coercion and is urging Indians to buy more locally produced goods. Also: there's a growing diplomatic row between Denmark and the US over reports of covert influence operations in Greenland; we have a report on how some people are exploiting emotions surrounding the Holocaust by creating fake images produced by AI to earn money; the role of peat in boosting a country's natural defences; and the successful launch of SpaceX's tenth test- we get a former NASA employee's view on Elon Musk's efforts to go to the Moon and ultimately Mars.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 on Cretacean at 13 hours GMT on Wednesday, the 27th of August.
These are our main stories.
Donald Trump hits India with 50% tariffs for buying Russian oil.
There's a growing diplomatic row between Denmark and the US
over reports of a covert operation in Greenland.
And Germany's cabinet puts forward plans for voluntary military service,
which could eventually pave the way for.
conscription.
Also in this podcast, we have a report on how some people are exploiting emotions surrounding
the Holocaust by creating fake images to earn money.
And...
SpaceX completes a successful test flight of the world's most powerful rocket, which NASA hopes
will return astronauts to the moon.
We start in South Asia, where U.S. tariffs of 50% on goods from India have come into effect as Donald Trump punishes the country for continuing to buy Russian oil and weapons.
India, one of the U.S.'s strongest partners in the Indo-Pacific, is amongst the countries being hit with the highest tariffs in the world.
The Indian Prime Minister Narendra Mordi has called it economic coercion and is urging Indians to buy more locally produced goods.
Vishwanshu Agarwal is the director of a textile manufacturer.
in Mumbai. He said his company would be forced to look at new markets, but the higher levy
was already making things tough. You know, with this 50% tariffs, especially US customers, they
can't absorb these kind of margins in our industry. And they are definitely looking for
alternatives. So, you know, orders haven't been coming in lately. And things are not good.
Orders are drying up. And things are not very good at the moment. We are doing currently,
being slightly larger and more, this is impacting us a little more. We are also.
offering some discounts to the customers to sort of navigate through these tough times.
So the contingencies that we are looking at are the usual markets, the bigger markets,
the economies like UK, and even emerging markets like South America and UAE,
we are looking to try and build a relationship with them and work with them.
Our correspondent in Mumbai, Archina Shukler, told us businesses had been hoping the 50% levy would be averted.
They were announced a couple of days ago, but most businesses were hoping that there would be some sort of a truce, a resolution,
or some conversation around the trade deal
and at least the extra 25% tariffs would go away,
but that hasn't happened.
So to some extent, it was a surprise and a shock
that India would become the highest taxed nation by the United States,
but then businesses are also adapting to it
and trying to ensure that there is some sort of semblance
in their factories.
They're trying to look at alternate markets now,
although nothing will happen overnight.
So in the short to midterm,
there will definitely be a large impact
And will this turn out to be some game of chess?
What's the political impact of this particular move?
Will India buy less oil from Russia or do they frankly double down?
Well, India buying less oil is not right as part of this strategy at the moment from the Indian government, it seems.
You know, New Delhi has been buying cheaper Russian oil to bring inflation down in India, keep prices low, make energy security.
But also, you know, prices are a very politically sensitive subject here.
there are crucial state elections approaching.
So right now, India may not want to look for other options
which may increase energy prices here in India.
But at the same time, there is also a sense here within India
and in the government to not buckle under the pressure.
You know, across bureaucrats and businesses,
there isn't understanding that this is a pressure tactics from the United States.
President Trump wants his deal to go through for India to open up the agri-markets
and for also, on a political term, be the strong man, and hence, India should not buckle.
And we've seen India has actually been very strong as far as their stance is concerned,
saying that these decisions of buying oil have been commercial in nature
and that it is their sovereign right to decide where they buy oil from.
And they will continue to also protect the interest of their farmers.
Our business are hoping there is more truce and talk.
Our correspondent Archina Shukler reporting from Mumbai.
To Greenland now, where there are.
reports that would not be out of place in a Cold War spy thriller.
At least three US officials close to President Trump
have been accused of conducting covert influence operations.
Greenland is an autonomous territory of Denmark
and the Danish foreign minister has summoned a senior US diplomat in Copenhagen
to discuss the allegations.
Since returning to the White House in January,
President Trump has repeatedly said
he wants the strategically located resource-rich island
to be put under US control
and has refused to rule out using military force to secure it.
I got more details from our reporter in Copenhagen, Adrian Murray.
The summonings follows a report from Denmark's public broadcaster DR.
They put that out this morning, having spoken to several different unnamed sources
and people within Danish intelligence and government and authorities.
And that suggested that at least three US citizens,
so not officials, but citizens, have been conducting covert information.
operations in Greenland. And it said that the aim of this was to infiltrate Greenlandic society
and promote independence away from Denmark. Now, they did give details of how one American was
compiling a list of Greenlanders who would potentially back the US and also with the aim to recruit
for a succession movement. Now, it's all the stuff of sort of spy novels there. The report didn't
name the three men, but it said that they did have previous ties to the White House. So it's not clear
that there's any link today. It also said they're unable to clarify who the men were working for
and whether they were under orders or acting independently. But of course, you know, this is all
very serious. The foreign minister has summoned the U.S. top diplomat. The Trump's pick for
ambassador, he's not in post yet. So Mark Stroh was called. And this is in diplomatic terms,
summonsing an ambassador is a very, very serious reprimand. And this is the second time that this has
happened this year, because it also happened back in May following that Wall Street Journal
report, which also alleged that US intelligence agencies have been told to focus their efforts
on Greenland. And do you know how this was carried out, maybe via social media or using bots?
Denmark's intelligence services have commented, and they've said that, you know,
Greenland is being targeted by various kinds of influence campaigns. They had warnings around
the election time that, you know, social media might be exploited, but that didn't really appear
to come to a large extent. I mean,
What we're seeing now, according to the DR report anyway, is that these seem to be compiling lists and contacts.
It's not clear that this is a social media campaign.
But PUT, that's the intelligence service, they say that these influence campaigns, they are designed to create discord.
And it could be that they're trying to exploit sort of existing disagreements between Denmark and Greenland.
Adrian Murray in Copenhagen.
There's a splashdown.
You can hear the elation and relief as the latest SpaceX rocket known as Starship lands safely after a successful test run.
And the reaction was justified.
That was the third launch attempt for the 10th test flight.
It comes after a string of failures with one rocket exploding on the launch pad.
A Starship spacecraft had achieved a clean flight since November last year.
It marks a step forward in the development of a craft that could one day return humans to the moon.
and if SpaceX is found that Elon Musk's vision is realized, ultimately Mars.
James Koppel spoke to Keith Cowing, a former NASA employee and the editor of the American Space
Program blog, NASA Watch.
He asked him how the launch went.
Well, SpaceX needed to have a good flight, and apparently they had pretty much of what
they expected to do.
The rocket took off.
The first stage came down the way it was supposed to.
The second stage went into space, tossed out some practice satellites, and came back
to Earth and landed right in front of a camera, although it looked a little weird in terms of
the color and it got a little toasted. So I think they're going to probably have to look into
that. But this is the sort of flight they needed and they got it. And we had postponed launches
on Sunday and Monday. What didn't go right then? And what can we learn from that, do you
think? Well, Sunday it was an issue with an oxygen hose, a little gas leaking and like
that's like Rocket Science 101. No leaks of oxygen on the launchback.
So they had to work on that.
And then last night, they were ready to go,
but the weather at the coast of Texas didn't cooperate,
so they had to call it off literally about a few minutes before they were going to launch.
So tonight everything worked, and the sky was nice and clear, and they took off.
Yeah.
You did say, though, they got a little bit toasted.
I mean, that sounds to a non-specialist, slightly worrying.
Well, yes, spacecraft going up is one thing.
Coming back through the atmosphere is another because there's a tremendous amount of heat.
Now, we've done this, obviously, people come home from space multiple times.
But this is a new spaceship, and they're testing it out.
They deliberately pushed it beyond what they expected to ever see,
just to see how far they could push it.
And some things were toasting a piece of the end,
looks like it blew off and so forth.
But it came back into Earth's atmosphere, flew like an airplane on a glider,
and then it landed, or almost, it pretended to land on the ocean.
But you couldn't help but notice that the underside of it was orange
and the front end was white.
And I don't think anybody's ever seen that before.
So we'll be waiting for that explanation.
Yeah, as a space boffin, what would your best guest be?
I don't know.
Honestly, it looks like some of the heat tiles may have burnt off.
I'm not sure.
What SpaceX is under a little bit of pressure to get this one right
or at least show some progress?
Yeah, and of course the issue here is sort of when you have a government rocket like NASA,
they spend a lot of money and they take years and years
and we'll make sure it's perfectly right.
When they launch it, it works, and they waited a long time before they do it again.
Whereas with SpaceX, it was launch as often as you can, and every time you encounter a problem, you fix it.
What you get is you get your answers quicker than you might otherwise have gotten.
And broadly, the big picture here, Elon Musk, SpaceX, pretty keen on going to the moon, maybe to Mars in short order.
How are they getting on?
How's that objective looking?
It's one thing if you want to spend a lot of your money on a rocket and you're going to
use it to put satellites in space.
They sure have demonstrated they can do that today.
And that's one thing that SpaceX will be doing to make money is launching communication
satellites.
But the other is NASA has given them some money to take a version of this rocket and use
it as the way that we're going to land astronauts on the moon in 2027.
A year and a half or maybe two years from now, that's a pretty hefty target to try and reach.
So that was something that people are still questioning.
But again again during Apollo, we had our problems and we still managed to make a deadline.
So they really had to show that they can fix the problems they've had before and they've done that.
But there's a long road ahead.
And as far as going to Mars, I think we need to go to the moon a bunch of times
and launch a few hundred times with people from Earth before we consider doing that.
But, you know, if you launch once a week, it can get there pretty quick.
Former NASA worker Keith Cowing speaking to the BBC's James Coppinal.
Over the past couple of months, AI generated pictures and stories about the Holocaust
have been flooding social media platforms and getting thousands of likes, comments and shares.
During the Nazi period, 6 million Jews were systematically murdered,
as were many other people because of their ethnicity and race, including the Roma.
The creators of these posts exploit the emotions attached to the Holocaust to generate engagement.
Our correspondent Christina Falk was able to make contact with a group profiting from these fake
images and getting paid through Mehta's content monetising program.
It was an emotional response. It wasn't until I started reading some of the comments
that I did question it. It wasn't, this is AI driven. It wasn't like that because it was
beautifully written. In early June, Jane B from England commented on a Facebook post about a young
girl called Miriam Gold, who was killed in the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp. The picture is
black and white, and shows a dark-haired girl knitting while looking into the camera.
What Jane didn't know then is that this Miriam Gold, the post-described, never existed.
What she saw is commonly known as AI Slop, a type of post, typically of an AI-generated photo
and it's flooding every social media platform.
This really is instrumentalization, manipulation, distortion.
This is Pavel Savitsky, the spokesperson for the Auschwitz Memorial.
It can damage the trust that people have in what they see
because we already started getting comments on our Facebook posts
that, oh, this is an AI-generated photograph.
Pavel says to be careful when seeing photos from inside the camps.
The perpetrators didn't take photographs.
Taking pictures for the prisoners was extremely risky
and in the story of Auschwitz.
We only have four photographs.
Jews risked their lives to take few pictures
so that people could see what happened there.
And here we have somebody making up the stories.
This is not a game.
Pavel tells me that he and the Memorial have been dealing with AI slop for a while now.
As part of this, he even reached out to Meta, Facebook's parent company,
who said the posts do not violate their guidelines, but...
The only thing they could look into is that there are some administrators of these profiles.
These posts stayed up, until we put these accounts and similar ones in an email to Meta.
A day after, we noticed that some of the accounts and pages we sent them had been taken down.
And we also saw that they now had taken down the post-the Auschwitz Memorial flagged in the first place.
And then we got this statement.
We removed the pages and groups shared with us and disabled the accounts behind them for violating our policies on spam and inauthentic behavior.
Behind a lot of these posts was a network based out of Pakistan.
We tracked these accounts and mapped.
every Holocaust AI image that we could find.
The creators communicated and shared tips on public Facebook profiles and groups,
which showed that they were being paid through META's content monetization program.
This is Facebook announcing the program in December last year.
A new program that makes it easier for creators to earn money on Facebook on more content.
META rewards engagement in their content monetization program.
Whilst they are not intentionally encouraging users to post false stories of the Holocaust,
The creators post this sort of AI slob to get higher rewards.
The key is traffic.
It needs to be active and related to the content you are posting.
This is Fasal-Riemann, who is part of the Pakistani network.
The more views you get, the higher your earnings will be.
They buy Facebook pages, set them up with followers,
enroll them in the content monetization program,
and then often sell them on for profit.
Others, then fill these pages with AI-generated content.
One page can have earnings up to $1,60 US dollars per month.
And often, these creators own multiple pages.
In Pakistan, where the average monthly income is $294 U.S. dollars,
this has become an alternative way to earn a living.
We challenged him on the harm he could be causing with his actions.
He says these are all publicly available pictures he is using.
The choice of themes is based on what will perform well in countries in Europe, the UK and US,
as views from these areas generate the most money.
He also adds that Facebook currently does not allow any pages from Pakistan to be enrolled,
so the creators disguise their identity with softwares like VPNs.
AI slob is everywhere on social media, even if you don't follow these pages.
During this investigation, I kept checking my phone.
Facebook timeline, which is now filled with AI slob about the Holocaust, often posted by
accounts I had not even come across before.
Christina Falk reporting.
Still to come?
Speedlands have actually always been a major defense instrument.
Already the Greek and the Romans used it.
We hear from one academic who believes Pete Boggs should be reharnessed to strengthen a country's natural
defenses.
Pakistan's Punjab province has called in the army to help rescue people from areas devastated by floods.
It comes after India warned Islamabad that was releasing water from major dams upstream,
acknowledging this would flood parts of what is Pakistan's most populous province and its breadbasket.
Sealkort city in Punjab has seen its wettest 24-hour period in nearly half a century.
So far, more than 800 people have been killed.
in Pakistan by monsoon rains since June. As a day, Mashiri reports from Narwal.
The damage, the devastation, it's already here. Our team has seen it. Hundreds of more rescue
boats have been deployed. One official told us they're racing to save casualties.
Now, in Narawal, this district is heavily affected and that's because it's near the river Ravi
that has swollen. There are dangerous levels of water there. As India had warned there
would be after they released water from some of their major dams, that's
That's what happens when reservoirs are overwhelmed upstream in India.
It can cause heavy flooding here in Pakistan.
Add to that, the heavy range that have been pounding the country this week.
Cialcote, as you mentioned, has seen extreme flooding.
That's an urban area, and so homes, buildings, cars are submerged.
And rescuers are not only evacuating people, but also their livestock.
This is a country where more than 40% of people live below the poverty line.
And so these floods are ruinous to so many families.
And that's why many people we've spoken to in the past two days have told us they're refusing to evacuate.
The government, rescuers have set up shelters on higher ground.
But officials have told us that the majority of people who do choose to be evacuated tend to go and stay with friends and family.
They aren't comfortable staying at those shelters.
And when I say that some people are refusing to evacuate, it's really large proportionate.
of people. In fact, the village that we visited is a village of about 3,000 people. It's about
two hours from Lahore, which is the second most popular city here in Pakistan. Now, while
there are 3,000 residents there, about half of the residents were refusing to evacuate. So that
shows you how many people are at risk when there's extreme flooding like this.
Azaday Mashiri reporting. In the Indian city of Mumbai, recent restrictions on
feeding pigeons have generated protests and even clashes with the police.
The new rules upset animal lovers and members of the Jain community
who see it as their ethical duty to feed the birds at special sites called Kabuturkaners,
which basically means pigeon feeding.
Now the government in Maharashtra, the country's most second populous state, which includes
Mumbai, is looking at whether it's possible to continue to feed them in controlled circumstances.
So why all this fuss about the pigeons in the first place?
I asked a reporter Charles Haverland.
Well, of course, pigeons do suffer from a rather unfortunate reputation in many countries,
not just India, sometimes known unflatteringly as flying rats.
I suppose what it comes down to is that the detritus and feathers from the birds
and other things they leave behind can cause illnesses,
sometimes respiratory illnesses, sometimes other kinds of forms of poisoning.
Last year, doctors explicitly linked the death of a boy aged 11 in Delhi,
not Mumbai, in Delhi, to having had contact with pigeon droppings and feathers.
And there's also ecological arguments that pigeons have displaced smaller birds like the house sparrow.
In other words, that pigeons whose numbers have boomed more than any other bird in India
are simply kind of being, there is actually an overpopulation of these birds.
And those are some of the reasons that these Kabutarkanas, as you mentioned, have just been sealed off.
So then I guess what's the counter-argument, what's the opposition to this?
Well, you mentioned the Jain community, an important religious minor.
in India, who have a very, very ethics-based attitude to all animals.
And specifically pigeons, they say that feeding the birds is an ethical requirement.
This transcends religious divisions.
There are reports, recent BBC features have interviewed members of the Muslim community,
talking about the way that they see these birds as very innocent and want to protect them.
They've also been seen by some as a kind of symbol of Indian cities,
also often featuring in Bollywood movies, etc., often actually being fed.
Yeah, there's that iconic scene in Nile, Dulhalla, Dulhange, isn't there,
from 25 plus, what, nearly 30 years ago now, yeah.
That's right.
Pigeons are, of course, a familiar presence on squares and balconies
and even on air conditioners in Indian cities.
So, yeah, there's a whole cultural dimension to the birds as well.
So I guess what could the committee do?
What's the approach that they're likely to take?
Well, the committee is 13 people, I think, includes both health and animal welfare and Mumbai city officials, and presumably in Puneh and other Maharashtrian cities as well.
And they're going to consider whether controlled feeding of pigeons in Indian cities can be permitted without compromising human health.
And it's been tasked with framing rules and guidelines.
And there are complexities now because the feeding sites have been suspended, not necessarily closed permanently, but then pigeons have now moved to surrounding streets.
apparently one particularly busy 300-meter stretch in the Mumbai suburbs waiting for food in new
places. That's led to traffic disruption, risks of accidents. So there's just a host of problems
that they're going to have to tackle it. It's not going to be easy.
Charles Havelin reporting. Conscription in Germany was officially suspended in 2011 under then-Chancellor
Angela Merkel. But today Germany's cabinet has approved draft legislation that would introduce
voluntary military service and could eventually lead to conscription if recruitment goals are missed.
As NATO seeks to strengthen its defenses following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the German
government wants to boost the number of soldiers it has available. There are currently around
182,000 soldiers in the Bundeswehr and 49,000 reservists. The aim is to have at least 260,000
troops and to triple the number of operational reservists. Our correspondent in Berlin, Bethany Bell,
has the details. According to this draft, what they want to do is to send an online questionnaire
to all men and women over at the age of 18 in Germany. Men will be obliged to fill out this
questionnaire for women. It's voluntarily. And that will show whether they have an interest
in volunteering for military service. And then those who are deemed to be suitable for military
service will be invited to take part. But the government says that it will remain voluntary as long
as possible. However, if the security situation changes, if they don't get the numbers that they
want to see, then they could make conscription compulsory. This is something that will be
complicated for some Germans. You know, there's been an enormous emphasis on
not being a militaristic place. People have been brought up to have ideas of peace.
However, others will feel that it is important to contribute to their country.
The interesting thing as well that this is something that is including women as well as men.
Bethany Bell. The former Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, has been declared a flight risk
and placed under round-the-clock surveillance. He's currently awaiting a verdict in his criminal trial due from next week.
He's accused of trying to overturn that result of the 2022 presidential election.
A Latin America correspondent, Will Grant, reports.
In the latest escalation in Jaya, Bolsonaro's coup-plodding trial,
Brazil's former president has now officially been declared a flight risk by a federal judge.
The step comes after police apparently discovered a draft letter
in which Mr Bolsonaro appealed to Argentina for asylum.
His legal team says the letter wasn't evidence that he is a flight risk.
Under the decision, the Supreme Court Justice, Alexandre de Morais, ordered police to put the former right-wing leader under full-time surveillance, placing officers around his home to ensure he was complying with the restraining orders against him.
It's a step which is sure to anger his supporters, including in Washington.
Mr. Bolsonaro can count on strong support inside the Trump administration.
In July, the U.S. imposed a series of sanctions against Justice Morais for alleged human rights abuses.
The government of Brazilian President Lula de Silva also says the US has revoked the visa of the justice minister, Ricardo Lewandowski, something Washington is yet to confirm.
Former President Bolsonaro faces up to 40 years in jail if he is found guilty in his coup-plotting trial of trying to overturn the result of the 2022 election and cling on to power.
Will Grant.
A report by Human Rights Watch has accused security forces in Mauritania of serious human rights violations.
against migrants. It says these have been exacerbated by the European Union and Spain,
continuing to outsource migration management to Mauritania. This report from Guy Hedgeco.
Human Rights Watch alleges that between 2020 and early 2025, Mauritania had pursued what it
called an abusive migration control playbook, with security forces, military and border control
personnel, raping, torturing and extorting migrants, as well as using inhumane detention conditions.
Mauritania has become an increasingly common departure point for African migrants trying to reach Europe via Spain's Canary Islands by boat.
Nearly 47,000 people reached the islands last year after making the extremely dangerous crossing.
The report said that the outsourcing of migration management to Mauritania by the EU had encouraged the abuses,
which it said had in some cases been witnessed by Spanish security personnel.
In 2024, Mauritania signed a new migration partnership with the EU
in exchange for €210 million in funding.
The Mauritania government said it rejects allegations of violations of migrants' rights.
Guy Hedgekoat reporting.
Pete Boggs, which store vast amounts of carbon,
have long been an invaluable weapon in the fight against climate change,
but a Dutch academic says they could also be a cost-effective shield
against a different kind of threat,
a potential military invasion by Russia.
Professor Hans Houston is now calling for drained wetlands to be reflunded
to strengthen natural defenses and reduce carbon emissions.
Peatlands have actually always been a major defense instrument.
Already the Greek and the Romans used it
and that in the past a lot of these peatlands have been drained
for agriculture and for forestry.
But that specifically the wet peatlands are,
really difficult to pass. So our idea is that while we anyhow have to rewet the Piedlands
for climate change mitigation purposes, we can as well also rewet the Piedlands near the borders
as an extra defense line. In 2022, of course, the Russians came from the north across the Pripia
marches. These marshes have always been a major defense line. And actually when these Piedlands
were drained in the 1970s, 1980s. It was the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union that protested
most. And that's the idea now to rewet these peatlands again, to restore actually the natural
defense line that existed. You can compare them more or less with a minefield. A minefield is
not inaccessible, but it is dangerous to walk there. You have to be very careful. A wet peatland
is walkable. You can walk across a peatland, but it is not easy.
So you do not have rapid progress.
The more heavy vehicles like trucks and tanks, etc.
They cannot move across a natural peatland is 95% of water.
It is wetter than milk.
It is wetter than beer.
You do not drive a car across a lake of milk in the same way you cannot do it with a wet peatland.
So it makes it very difficult to pass peatlands with heavy machinery.
The wetter, the more difficult it becomes.
Peatlands are actually pure carbon.
The peatlands of the world, although they cover only 3% of the land surface of the world,
it contained twice as much carbon than the entire biomass of all forests.
The drained peatlands of the world are responsible for 5% of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions.
So that's much more than all global air travel.
So you can stop these emissions by rewetting them.
So we have a really win-win situation.
You rewet petalans for defense, and you also gain a lot for climate change mitigation.
for biodiversity conservation.
Professor Hans Jusen.
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 episode
or the topics covered in it,
you can send us an email.
The address is Global Podcast
at BBC.co.uk.
And you can also find us on X
at BBC World Service
and the hashtag is Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Russell Newlove
and the producers were Marianne Strawn
and Chaz Guyagab.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Uncle Dusan.
Until next time, goodbye.