Global News Podcast - Trump 'very angry' with Putin over Ukraine
Episode Date: March 30, 2025President Trump shifts his tone towards Russia, criticising President Putin. Also: the Red Cross is “outraged” after eight of its medics were killed by Israeli fire in Gaza, and the use of a more ...ethical AI in Hollywood.
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Andrew Peach and in the early hours of Monday 31 March these are our main stories.
President Trump says he's very angry with Vladimir Putin after weeks of trying to negotiate
a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine.
The extent of damage in Myanmar becomes clearer days after a devastating earthquake.
We'll hear from the BBC's Burmese service.
There were a number of bodies under the rubble, which I can smell.
Nearby a Buddhist monk is holding prayers with families of those who have died. Residents
can't go back to their homes and are living on the streets.
The Red Cross says it's outraged at the deaths of eight of its medics killed by Israeli fire
in Gaza.
Also in this podcast...
This is Dr Kildare.
Could you please check for me?
I think there's been a mistake on the new service assignments.
The king of the mini-series, Richard Chamberlain, has died.
President Trump has seemingly changed his tone in new comments about Vladimir Putin,
according to a US network
who are reporting him saying he's very angry with him for questioning the credibility of
Ukraine's President Vladimir Zelensky.
NBC News say Mr Trump was furious with the Russian leader over his suggestion a temporary
administration should be installed to replace Mr Zelensky and that he's threatening to impose
50 percent tariffs on countries buying Russian oil
if Russia doesn't agree a ceasefire in the next month.
Our diplomatic correspondent James Landales in Kyiv told me more about Mr Trump's comments.
It's almost out of the blue.
We had one remark from Mr Trump last week where he told a news agency in the United
States that he felt that Russia was possibly dragging its feet
and said that that's what he would do in their place
because that's the sort of thing that he sometimes did in deals
when he was still in business dealing in property and elsewhere.
So that was the first time we heard a slight criticism from Mr Trump.
This is now much further and a proper threat from the Americans
because Mr Trump is now saying, look, to Vladimir Putin,
if there is no deal over the Ukraine ceasefire
within a month, and he believes that it's Russia's fault
that there's no deal, then he is threatening
to target Russia's economy, specifically by imposing
50% tariffs on goods entering the United States
from countries buying Russian oil, and that's
largely China and India.
So the question now is how Russia responds.
Now he's had some success using this tactic of economic threats with other countries,
but you wouldn't have thought that, especially when it's done publicly, Vladimir Putin was
about to roll over.
Well look, Russia's economy is not strong at the moment and the cheap energy that is being bought
by China and India is doing a huge amount to fuel Russia's economy and its war effort
at the moment.
You've got to remember that we're talking 30-40% of the economy is now devoted entirely
to fighting this war in Ukraine.
So as a war economy it needs to be able to sell its fuel and its energy
overseas so it can buy foreign currency so that it can then trade in other
goods especially weapons and dual use items such as drones that are so vital in
this war. So it's possible Mr. Putin will have to respond to this but you know we
shall see. And Donald Trump's tried to soften up both sides
and get them to the negotiating table.
He's told the world he wants there to be a deal.
I wonder what Donald Trump's going to do if he doesn't get his way.
That is the thing that is worrying a lot of people here in Kiev,
because their fear is that if the Americans find this whole thing
grinds into the sand, and just
a couple of days ago one of the chief Russian negotiators said publicly that he thought
that these talks could drag well on into next year, if that's the case then the fear in
Ukraine is that the Americans will just lose interest.
And in that circumstance then potentially Ukraine will find itself abandoned by the
United States,
having to rely entirely on support from Europe, which may not be enough to allow it to hold
off the Russian war machine.
James Landell, our diplomatic correspondent with me from Kyiv.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says military pressure on Hamas since the
collapse of a truce earlier this month is working.
On Saturday, mediators between
Hamas and Israel submitted a new proposal on the resumption of a ceasefire. The Israeli
government then submitted its own counter-proposal. Meanwhile, the Palestinian Red Crescent says
the bodies of 14 rescue workers had been found in Gaza after their ambulance convoy was fired
on by Israeli forces last week. Our correspondent in Jerusalem, Dan Johnson, gave my colleague, Gita Guru Murthy, the details.
This was a rescue team that was caught in Israeli firing early last Sunday morning in Rafah.
These were rescue workers who'd been sent to the scene of shooting involving the Israelis and Hamas vehicles. The Israeli
military has admitted that it regarded these vehicles as suspicious
as they approached the troops following that firing on the Hamas
vehicles. So Israel's military has admitted that it did target these
ambulances and a fire engine. It is not just the Palestinian red
Crescent paramedics who were caught up in this. Eight of them, whose
bodies have now been recovered, but also five members of the Gaza civil defence and one UN worker. All those bodies
have been recovered today. They said they found them buried in sand,
some of them showing signs of decomposition. There is a ninth
paramedic who was caught up in this, who is believed to have been
arrested and detained by the Israelis. The Hamas authorities have described the killings
as a war crime and it is something that Israel is still investigating.
And just tell us more about the significance of Benjamin Netanyahu's comments on Hamas
and the military pressure on them.
Yeah, there's been intensifying military activity around Raqqa over the last week, but that
comes on top of the renewed airstrikes by the IDF that we have seen across Gaza for the last 12
days. More than 900 Palestinians have been killed since the end of
that ceasefire and the renewal of those airstrikes. There is hope
perhaps over the next few days of a new ceasefire deal that could see
more hostages return to Israel and Palestinian prisoners
being released in return for a 50-day ceasefire. It is something
that the Hamas leadership has signalled its willingness to accept.
The Israelis have confirmed it is something they are looking at,
but they haven't made an agreement yet. They have put some
counterproposals, which we don't have the detail of. Part of the deal
would also see aid returning into Gaza, because that is something
that has been blockaded
for the entirety of this month.
And we're told the aid situation on the ground
is getting desperate.
Benjamin Netanyahu has been saying
that he will only negotiate under fire now,
having returned to military action in Gaza.
He wants to put pressure on Hamas and on the Palestinians,
but the hope is that they can now get round the table
with the negotiators from Qatar
and Egypt and reach a deal that would at least see a ceasefire for the next six weeks or
so.
Dan Johnson in Jerusalem.
Rescuers are in a race against time to find survivors from Friday's devastating earthquake
in Myanmar, which has now killed at least 1,700 people.
In Mandalay, near the epicentreentre people are still being pulled from under collapsed
buildings after almost three days in the rubble. International humanitarian workers are continuing
to arrive but concerns are growing that the military regime shows no intention of stopping
its attacks against rebels in earthquake hit areas. Our correspondent Nick Beek is monitoring
developments from Bangkok. They are still taking in the horror, the death all around.
Ulae Tain Monastery in Mandalay has become a burial site.
One of the monks shows a photo of where 180 students were sitting their exams when the
earthquake hit. It's feared dozens of them died. Many young Burmese men
and women join Buddhist monasteries to bring good fortune. Nearby, San Nwe A says she just
wants to hear her brother's voice again.
Power is down in many places. The military hunter already restricted the internet, so working out the scale of
this disaster is difficult. But we made contact with 30-year-old market seller Mei and her
mum who are both in Mandalay.
7.7 magnitude is the largest quake we have ever experienced in our whole lives. We just
escaped death.
Their line then dropped, so we asked Mei to send a video.
We are in acute difficulty and still haven't got any aid. I am now outside of the city
and staying under a hut. Most hotels and tall buildings are in ruins and lots of people
are under the rubble. The tremors never stop.
Many of the 1.5 million living here are sleeping out in the open, fearful of what more may
come.
Hello. Hello.
A sign of life. Remarkable stories keep emerging.
This man discovered in the capital, Napador, by local and Singaporean rescuers. After 40
hours trapped, freedom.
But freedom is relative in military-ruled Myanmar.
Although international aid is arriving, it's feared the generals will keep it all for only the areas under their control.
Well, as you heard there, the devastation is intense in the capital, Napier-Dor,
a city purpose-built by the military government in Myanmar to replace Yangon as the political centre of the country.
Access to the area is extremely limited, but the BBC Burmese service correspondent, Hetet
Nangjor, has seen some of the damage first-hand. His words here are translated and voiced by
one of our producers.
I'm in Myanmar's capital, Neibidol, at the Kayi housing estate in Zabul Didi township.
This was a four-storey building with housing for civil servants. The ground floor
has completely sunk into the ground, and the entire structure has cracked. The first, second
and third floors have collapsed into each other. There were a number of bodies under the rubble, which I can smell.
Nearby, a Buddhist monk is holding prayers with families of those who have died.
Residents can't go back to their homes, and they're living on the streets and in their
vehicles.
Napidaw is also where the jailed former leader Aung San Suu Kyi is being held after her elected
government was ousted four years ago in a military coup. Her son, Kim Aris, told the
BBC that he hasn't had any confirmation about his mother's wellbeing since the quake.
At least the last two years nobody's seen her and prior to that, well to the best of
my knowledge, she's basically been held in solitary confinement.
She's not allowed to mingle with the other prisoners.
Whilst I've had some practice in being separated from her over her 15 years under house arrest,
it's very much different now that she's been in prison for the last four years.
Now, across the border in neighbouring Thailand, officials say the number of dead at a building
site in Bangkok has risen to 18, with almost 80 people still missing.
Rescuers are working around the clock to find trapped construction workers where a skyscraper
collapsed.
Families are still gathered at the site, hoping for news of their loved ones.
Kanika's husband, Yothin, was the chief electrician
on the 24th floor.
I want him to be safe. No matter how many days, I will wait for us to go home together.
His family are very worried. So many of them are here with me today to give me support.
I will keep fighting.
Our correspondent Nick Marsh is watching the rescue effort. Workers still continue to stream in and out of this disaster zone,
trying desperately to find any sign of life whatsoever.
We've seen hundreds and hundreds of emergency workers pretty much wherever you look,
from all kinds of different organisations, armed forces, volunteers, to
trying to help hand out food and water to anyone who needs it. Everyone here clearly
wants the same thing. They want to find people alive, buried under vast mounds of rubble
of what was supposed to be a new government office but clearly something that was reduced
to rubble within a matter of seconds after that earthquake hit Myanmar on Friday. It's
been more than 48 hours now since that initial earthquake. There hasn't been any good news
from this site here in Bangkok. Relatives that we spoke to say they haven't given up hope,
but the chances of survival of these dozens of workers
who still remain trapped get lower and lower
as the hours go on.
Nick Marsh in Bangkok.
And still to come on the Global News podcast.
There's nothing more fundamentally unique
than human taste and creativity. That's the essence News podcast. There's nothing more fundamentally unique than human taste and creativity.
That's the essence of it.
What AI should do is essentially make different parts
of this easier for those taste makers.
Championing more ethical,
artificial intelligence in Hollywood.
Good Bad Billionaire is back.
Yes, the podcast uncovering the lives and livelihoods of some of the world's richest
people is back for a new season.
I'm Simon Jack.
And I'm Zing Zing.
Join us each week for a closer look at the lives of some of the world's billionaires.
From Minecraft creator Marcus Person to basketball star LeBron James.
Zing and I have more intriguing billionaires lined up for a new season.
Good, bad billionaire from the BBC World Service.
Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
Syria's interim president, Ahmad al-Sharah, has announced a new government.
And the former member of al-Qaeda and an ISIS affiliate has once again demonstrated the
extent of his transformation by including ministers from a range of backgrounds.
There's a Christian woman and Alawite, a Druze, and a Kurd.
At the ceremony to square in the ministers, Mr al-Sharah said it was a step towards building
a stable future for Syria.
This moment is a declaration of our shared will to build a new, strong and stable state,
one that places the interests of the nation and its citizens at the forefront of its priorities
and works to restore life to every corner of our beloved country.
Together we will build a homeland worthy of all our sacrifices.
So how significant is this moment? Daring Khalifa is a senior advisor at the International Crisis
Group based in Cairo. She told my colleague Owen Bennett-Jones how Mr Al-Sharah's cabinet
picks are being viewed in Syria. It is Al-Sharah signalling one more time that he has moved away from his jihadist past.
He hired a very impressive bunch of people, not just in the diversity of their ethnic
and sectarian backgrounds, but also their political affiliations.
We're seeing former ministers that were serving under the Assad regime.
We're also seeing symbols of the Syrian revolution, including the former head of the Syrian civil
defense who is adored by millions of Syrians as symboling the Syrian revolution and the
resistance, if one can describe it as such. I mean, the new cabinet is quite diverse,
yet pretty weak when it comes to the gender diversity. it's only one woman. But aside from that, I think the group
is pretty much a group of specialized technocrats who signal to the Syrian population, but also
to the outside world, that Shara is intending to have more inclusive and diverse government.
Though the main question remains, how much is he going to be willing to empower these folks in that stage. Yeah, just pick you up on that point you made there about
impressing the Syrian people in the outside world. Do you think Western writers and journalists tend
to say, oh, he's trying to impress the West? Is that just a sign of Western arrogance? Actually,
this is more about internal Syrian politics, do you think, or not? I do think the over-focus on what he's signaling to the West misses how much he also cares
and is receptive to internal pushback and feedback.
So a lot of the decisions he has been making, not just since he became president, but also
when he was ruling northwestern Syria for the last few years, came as a result of
him trying to pursue this balancing act between kind of signaling to the outside world, not
just the West, but also the Arab world, Turkey, and the region, and being responsive to internal
domestic pressure on a lot of things.
But it is understandable that Western media cares more about what he's signaling
to the West. But again, he's, I think, has shown a lot of political savviness in terms
of this balancing act.
What do you think his jihadist colleagues are making of this? I mean, many of them must
be saying this is not what we fought for.
Yeah, I mean, he's been having an extended fallout with some of the hardliners.
This hasn't just manifested in the last few months, but again, it's been years of this
gradual kind of shift away from the more hardline jihadist colleagues, base kind of people operating
out of his base as well.
So he's not very receptive to push back from the hardliners or he hasn't been yet, but
you're absolutely right to point out that we're seeing a lot of muttering from the more
hardline elements, but also the populist elements we're seeing.
He is rewarding former regime ministers and he's rewarding minorities who in their views
have sided with the regime instead of rewarding like the overwhelming majority Sunnis in Syria. But thankfully, so far, we have not seen him cater to them.
Darren Califfa from the International Crisis Group.
A BBC investigation has found the UK visa system is being undermined by scammers who
are swindling migrants out of thousands of pounds by promising them
jobs in the UK which often don't exist.
Exploiting the desire of millions of Africans to migrate to Europe, these agents fuel an
underground trade in UK work papers.
For BBC Africa I, Oluwunka Ala reports.
Dreaming of working in the UK?
Visa sponsorship, nice and home jobs, are your tickets in?
We help you get a care job in the UK.
Those are social media adverts for agencies claiming to help migrants from Nigeria arrange work visas for the UK.
Some are legitimate, but others make promises that are too good to be true.
Earn above 18 million naira in the United Kingdom without a degree.
That's an advert from a UK-based agency, Careeredu.
It's run by Dr Kelvin Alaneme, a Nigerian doctor
who has worked in the UK's National Health Service
and says he's helped thousands of Nigeria move to the UK.
One of them is a young man called Praise, who I first spoke to on the phone from Nigeria.
When I came in there was no job, there was no pay, there was nothing.
Praise paid Dr Alana Mase Agency around £10,000 for a job in the UK, thinking he was going
to work in a care home.
The excitement turns to confusion.
That turns to further confusion
because at that point your employer is not forthcoming
with information on where you're going to work.
The package Brace had paid for included something called
a Certificate of Sponsorship, or COS.
Migrants need this certificate to get a visa, as it proves that they have a guaranteed job waiting for them.
They shouldn't have to pay for this at all.
Charging for a job is illegal in the UK. Praise had been scammed.
When he arrived in the UK, there was no rule for him.
I was running out of money. He eventually found another company to sponsor his visa.
The man who arranged the deal, Dr. Aloneme,
is still very much in business.
We sent an undercover journalist to pose
as a potential business partner with connections to care homes,
willing to hire workers from abroad.
Dr. Aloneme offered to pay thousands of pounds
for each vacancy.
He appears to offer to make our reporter a millionaire.
Just get me girls.
Okay.
I can make it in there now.
He said he will sell the vacancies
to candidates back in Nigeria.
He knows what he's suggesting is illegal. So the people know that they're not supposed to be paying,
but they're paying because they understand?
Yes, they are paying because they know it's most likely they own little.
I reviewed the footage with Carla Thomas,
who used to work for the UK Home Office and
is now an independent immigration adviser.
My opinion is that the government did not realise how right this area was for abuse
and exploitation. And agents such as this distort the system. They make the system seem
untrustworthy. They make the system appear
to be one that's weeks of criminality.
Dr. Alaneme says his company only offers legitimate services, does not provide jobs for cash,
and is not a scam. He says he passed on praise its money to a recruitment agent for transport,
training and accommodation.
The Home Office told us it had announced robust action against employers who abuse the visa
system and that it will ban businesses who flout UK employment laws from sponsoring overseas
workers.
And you'll find the full BBC Africa Eye documentary, Stranded Exposing the UK's Immigration Scammers,
on the BBC Africa YouTube channel.
Now companies go to great lengths to prevent their data being accessed by hackers who'll
stop at nothing to exploit people online. So news that a major dating app provider has
been storing users' pictures without password protection has raised alarms.
Researchers discovered nearly one and a half million pictures across five kink and LGBT
dating platforms were vulnerable to hackers and extortionists. Here's our cyber correspondent Joe
Tidy. Well there are five platforms in total, five apps all made by this one company BDSM People,
Translove, Chica, P Pink and Brish and all of these
apps are specialist dating apps so they are some of them are kind of like fetish
and some of them are LGBT as well and the issue here of course is that they
haven't secured their photo storage. When you go on the app, luckily now it's fixed
so I can tell you the process that the researchers found, but they downloaded
the code for these apps and inside the code there's this thing called hidden secrets which is where sometimes
app developers make a mistake, for example in this case they left the URL, the address of that
storage bucket, so when the researcher clicked and went to that bucket they found to their surprise
and shock and horror that there was no password protecting this. The kind of shocking thing about this story though is that MAD Mobile, they
were warned by this hacker on the 20th of January. He did what's called a
responsible disclosure so he said look you know this is what I found, this is
how I found it, this is what I think you need to do to fix this. Didn't receive a
single response and sent another further I think it was four or five email
messages and tried to get them on social media, absolutely nothing from them. It was only on Friday after
I emailed them that they got back and said, oh wow, sorry about this, yes we thank the
hacker and we have fixed this and we're looking into it. Bear in mind of course there are
850, maybe 900,000 people using these services across the suite of apps that this company
runs.
Users shouldn't maybe be too worried because the alert has been raised by what are known as
ethical hackers rather than people with ill intent. But even so, this is an astonishing
data breach. It is, absolutely. It's shocking and the company is trying to play it down as not a
data breach. But you know, by all int intents and purposes this is a breach because those photos were private photos sent by the members some of them
were profile photos some of them were even pictures that have been removed
from moderators so this is exactly the kind of stuff that should be kept under
lock and key. The users of these app shouldn't be worried at this stage in
this instance it was an ethical hacker who discovered the vulnerability first
but the issue here of course is that we don't know for sure whether the ethical hacker was the first one to spot this because
there could be other people out there who maybe saw it as well. That's the thing about
these kind of situations, you just don't know who was there first.
Joe Tidy with Alex Ritzen. Two years ago Hollywood's strike shut down the entertainment industry
as actors and writers demanded protection from artificial
intelligence or AI. Now the technology is increasingly being used in movies and TV shows
and one Hollywood company says it will avoid breaking copyright laws by working only from
licensed content. From Los Angeles, here's Reagan Morris.
Inside a Hollywood sound stage once used by silent film stars Mabel Normand and Charlie Chaplin,
filmmakers and executives are marveling at what many consider their biggest threat, AI-generated video.
This is another key feature that we're building, is the ability to take a scene and change the camera angle
and be able to see different angles and zoom in and zoom out.
Artificial intelligence can generate stories and video footage without writers, actors or camera operators.
And many in Hollywood are terrified that the technology will replace them.
The company Moon Valley says it's the first AI studio created by and for filmmakers.
Naeem Talukdar is the company's co-founder.
We don't believe that you're gonna type in a few words and generate a movie.
That's the reason we started this company is that's how everybody else
has been approaching it is everyone, anyone with a phone will become James
Cameron and we think that's an utterly ludicrous way of approaching this is
there's nothing more fundamentally
unique than human taste and creativity. That's the essence of it. What AI should
do is essentially make different parts of this easier for those taste makers.
Hollywood is toying with the technology, often to controversy. The Oscar-nominated
films Amelia Perez and The Brutalist used AI to alter voices. Adrian Brody won best
actor even with the help of AI to fine tune his Hungarian accent.
Listen to me. Come. Listen to me.
But AI has a huge copyright problem. In order to learn to generate unique footage, the computers
need to study existing videos and art. So it would be problematic for a company like
say Disney to profit from a movie made with AI mimicking and manipulating the work of need to study existing videos and art. So it would be problematic for a company like,
say, Disney to profit from a movie made with AI mimicking and manipulating the work of
its competitors. Moon Valley created their AI using paid-for and legally licensed footage
from independent producers.
Ultimately, if the creators win, then we win. And so what we want is other companies to
start doing this too. We want other companies to come to these creators and also start licensing.
Because right now they're just going and scraping all of their data and doing it for free.
We are learning about new allegations that an artificial intelligence company stole the
voices of two actors.
Tech companies are facing multiple lawsuits from writers, actors and news organizations
alleging their work was stolen to train AI without their consent.
Google and OpenAI said they should be able to use intellectual property as a matter of
national security.
In letters to the Trump administration, the company said without the copyright law exceptions,
they would lose the race for AI dominance to China.
Tech stocks plummeted Monday as investors raised concerns about advancements in Chinese
artificial intelligence.
In a response letter to the U.S. government, hundreds of creators, including Ben Stiller,
Cate Blanchett and Sir Paul McCartney, said multibillion dollar companies were trying to exploit them
and weaken copyright protections for their creative work.
Filmmaker Bryn Mooser also signed the letter. As Moon Valley's co-founder,
he says it's possible to both protect intellectual property and be competitive. filmmaker Bryn Mooser also signed the letter. As Moon Valley's co-founder he
says it's possible to both protect intellectual property and be competitive.
We've all fought very hard for copyright laws. Nobody wants to see their work
stolen to have somebody else profit from it and at the studio level there is
rightly so legal resistance against putting something that was generated on
AI on the final screen.
AI is already very visible on the small screen with dancing flowers and fake videos of famous
people frequently shared on social media. But when it comes to the big screen, it's
likely we will all see more work made by AI coming soon.
The American actor Richard Chamberlain, best known for the TV series Dr Kildare and the
Thornbirds, has died in Hawaii at the age of 90.
Lisa Mazimba looks back at his life.
This is Dr Kildare. Could you please check for me? I think there's been a mistake on
the new service assignments.
Dr Kildare both made and marred Richard Chamberlain's acting career. It rescued him from TV western
bit parts, brought him global recognition and
a host of adoring female fans. But it also typecast him.
A move to England in the late 1960s saw him re-emerge as a serious stage actor, including
the role of Hamlet.
Well, I am no bully and as an untended priest I fight only when I must. But you have compromised
a lady.
He buckled his swash in Richard Lester's
1973 film the three musketeers every piece of wire I put in that building is strictly up to code inspected
He played the villain as the engineer whose penchant for dodgy wiring set off the towering inferno
You live in a dream world ideal in realities
The seawall is here. I can just glimpse it from my window.
But he failed to break into Hollywood and returned to TV movies like The Count of Monte Cristo
and The Man in the Iron Mask. You call it 50 degrees, I say two points more north by northeast
and dig to the seawall about a hundred meters. Are we going with him? In the 1980s, he was dubbed king of the mini-series
with parts as a 17th century sailor
in James Clavell's Showgun.
When you were a little girl, you were like my own child.
And then, as the Roman Catholic priest,
attempting unsuccessfully to resist sexual temptation
in the Thornbirds.
You can have me now.
You can marry me. You love me?
But I love God more.
Because these two people really, really loved each other on every level.
I think they were what you'd call soulmates among other things.
They had an extraordinary relationship and yet they were forbidden to each other.
I'm sorry, you're leaving. It would have been nice to see you around.
He made guest appearances in a number of TV shows including Brothers and Sisters in which
he played a gay character.
I wish there was something I could say.
He'd come out in 2003 after hiding his sexuality to protect his status as a matinee idol.
I'll take the responsibility. Call Dr. Gillespie's office. his status as a matinee idol. Richard Chamberlain perhaps never achieved the success his acting
talent deserved. He never quite managed to shake off the white coat, the stethoscope
and the smooth bedside manner of Dr Kildare.
Lee Zimba Zimba on the life of Richard Chamberlain.
And that's all from us for now. There will be a new edition of Global News to download
later. If you'd like to comment on this edition, do drop us an email globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk
or on X you'll find us at BBC World Service. Just use the hashtag globalnewspod. This edition
was mixed by Caroline Driscoll, the producer was Isabella Jull, the editor
is Karen Martin.
I'm Andrew Peach, thanks for listening and until next time, goodbye. Available now on the Documentary from the BBC World Service.
Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese militia group, has been battered by its war with Israel.
Now even some supporters are questioning its purpose.
So is this a turning point? Join me, Hugo Bashega, as I travel to the heartland of the movement to find out.
Listen now by searching for the Documentary wherever you get your BBC podcasts. movement to find out.