Global News Podcast - Trump's military action threat alarms Nigeria

Episode Date: November 3, 2025

Donald Trump has suggested the US could deploy troops to Nigeria or carry out air strikes to stop what he called the killing of Christians by Islamist insurgents. Unfounded claims of a Christian genoc...ide in Nigeria have been circulating in American right-wing religious circles for months. A Nigerian presidential adviser said jihadists in the Muslim-majority north of the country were attacking all religious communities, but that Abuja would welcome US help in tackling the Islamist insurgents.Also: the sole survivor of the Air India plane crash has told the BBC that he feels he is the luckiest man alive. Officials in Iran warn the main source of drinking water for residents of Tehran is at risk of running dry within two weeks. Flight delays continue across the US, as air traffic controllers working without pay due to the government shutdown are now calling in sick. The Maldives brings in the world's only generational smoking ban, and cricket fans across India celebrate the women's national side winning their first ever World Cup. 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. Vanity Fair calls BritBox a delicious streamer. Collider says everyone should be watching. Catch Britain's next best series with Britbox. Streamer claim new originals like Code of Silence. You read lips, right? Anne Linley, based on the best-selling mystery series. Di-I, Linley. Take it from here.
Starting point is 00:00:23 And don't miss the new season of Karen Piri coming this October. You don't look, let, please. I'll take that as a compliment. See it differently when you stream the best of British TV with Britbox. Watch with a free trial today. America is changing. And so is the world. But what's happening in America isn't just a cause of global upheaval.
Starting point is 00:00:44 It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere. I'm Asma Khalid in Washington, D.C. I'm Tristan Redman in London, and this is the global story. Every weekday will bring you a story from this intersection, where the world and America meet. Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts. This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Jean-Aulil and at five hours GMT on Monday the 3rd of November, these are our main stories. Donald Trump says he won't rule out airstrikes or deploying American troops to protect Christians in Nigeria,
Starting point is 00:01:25 who he claims, without proof, are being slaughtered by Islamist. extremists. Delays increase at American airports as the US government shutdown enters its second month. Also in this podcast, we won the World Cup for the first time in history and I feel really good about it. And the stadium was completely full and the environment, it was too good. Indians celebrate after their team win the women's cricket World Cup for the first time. Donald Trump was re-elected president on a pledge to bring peace and end U.S. involvement in foreign conflicts. But now a day after threatening military action against Nigeria over what he says without proof is the mass slaughter of Christians by Islamist extremists, he has doubled down on that threat.
Starting point is 00:02:21 He told reporters on Air Force One that the U.S. could send troops to Nigeria or carry out airstrikes there. They're killing record numbers of Christians in Nigeria, and they have other countries very bad also. You know that part of the world very bad. They're killing the Christians and killing them in very large numbers. It's not going to allow that to happen. The U.S. President's words have caused great alarm in the vast African nation, which has a Muslim majority north and a Christian majority south. Nigeria denies that Christians are being targeted more than any other group.
Starting point is 00:02:58 It's tried to play down Mr Trump's threats by saying it would welcome US help in fighting Islamist insurgents, but that America must respect its sovereignty. Daniel Bawala is an advisor to the Nigerian president. If it is a joint action with the Nigerian government, then that's fine, because Nigeria is a territorial country, right? It's a sovereign country. And I don't think diplomatically it will be right to invade a country without collaboration with that country, especially if that country is your partner in the fight against.
Starting point is 00:03:28 insurgency. Where you see that kind of intervention is where there is an intelligence assessment that that country is in fact the one fuelling the crisis from which the Americans wants to intervene. This is going to be case with Nigeria. Our Africa analyst, David Bamford, told me more about Mr. Trump's comments. In Air Force One, he was telling reporters that he did not rule out sending troops to Nigeria or carrying out airstrikes to protect what he said, Christians who were being killed in large numbers by the Islamist insurgents. He wasn't very specific about when or how that might happen or whether he really means this, but it will be a quite significant thing if he was to
Starting point is 00:04:10 actually send ground troops into Nigeria. And the Nigerians are saying that this is not true, that Christians are not being targeted any more than any other group. So what is behind this? Why is Donald Trump saying these things? For months now, the evangelical groups in the US have been coming up with this idea that the Islamic insurgents are killing large numbers of Christians in Nigeria. This has been egged up by the Defence Secretary. Pete Hegeseth, who's talked about imposing some faith-based security in Africa, Senator Ted Cruz, groups like Open Doors, which have been calling for American intervention. But the problem is that Nigerian politics is a very complicated thing. And the Nigerians are saying that it's not Islamist insurgents that
Starting point is 00:04:58 are particularly killing Christians. The Islamist insurgents in northern Nigeria are killing all sorts of communities and there are only a very tiny number of Christians who actually live in northern Nigeria. And so it's a very difficult balancing act for the Nigerians because they're trying to say that they welcome any US help, but that they shouldn't infringe their sovereignty. As you say, they are acknowledging they have a problem with Islamist insurgents, but just not Islamist insurgents, particularly targeting Christians. It is true that the Nigerians themselves, the Nigerian military, have been totally incapable of dealing with the Islamist insurgents in northern Nigeria. And they've been saying that actually they would potentially
Starting point is 00:05:41 welcome some American help in dealing with that issue. The problem is that what President Trump is talking about, the Christians, that's just not happening there. There is a different battle going on in central Nigeria, and that involves bandits attacking local communities. And as it happens, the bandits, they're Fulani's who happen to be Muslims, who have cattle, and they're attacking pastoralist farmers who happen to be Christians. But that's an argument about water shortages. It's nothing to do with religious or Islamist insurgency. David Bamford, the lives of millions of Americans are increasingly being disrupted by the US government shutdown, which began more than a month ago after Democrats and Republicans failed to agree a funding bill. But despite the
Starting point is 00:06:30 hardship caused to federal employees or people who rely on food aid, both sides in Congress continue to dig in their heels. Chantal Manuel from Sarasota in Florida is one of more than 42 million Americans whose access to food stamps is at risk. I think that crime rates will probably go up because, I mean, what are you going to do? Let your child starve? No, I doubt it. I wouldn't. I don't feel like they would make the decisions that they're making if it affected them the way it affects us. If they were the ones that was going to be affected by how they got to eat that night or whatever, then they would not be making these decisions. Then there are the government employees who aren't getting paid. These federal workers spoke to us out of
Starting point is 00:07:17 Food Bank in Washington last week. It's been a huge hassle. This upcoming month is going to be a struggle for us. That extra food makes a difference more than you realize. I do have a daughter at home. She's a year old. She's eating real food. She's not on formula. I still
Starting point is 00:07:33 go into the office. Not get paid. It feels like slavery. The uncertainty is a lot in regards to families. We're coming up on the holiday season. Also not getting paid are air traffic controllers. Because they're essential workers, they're expected to come in regardless, but many have been calling in sick, with some saying that they've
Starting point is 00:07:53 had to get second jobs. This has meant widespread delays of airports, and the Transport Secretary Sean Duffy told CBS News that they will keep cutting flights rather than compromising safety. We're already stressed in that we don't have enough controllers in our system. And this shutdown, when we have staffing triggers where they're not coming in because they're funding their families and food on their tables, that makes it more difficult. because we're already short. They're making decisions to feed their families. I'm not going to fire our traffic controllers.
Starting point is 00:08:23 I have loved them and supported them as they're trying to go through this process and it's challenging for them. They need support. They need money. They need a paycheck. A North America correspondent, Peter Bowes, told us more about the deadlock. On Friday, the FAA, the Federal Aviation Administration, said nearly half of the 30 busiest U.S. airports
Starting point is 00:08:42 faced shortages of air traffic controllers, the cities of Nashville, Dallas, Denver, Austin, particularly badly hit Newark Airport today, just in the last few hours. Facing delays, passengers facing delays of about two hours. That's one of the worst affected areas. That's the airport that serves the New York area. The impact has been patchy, though, over the last few days. I flew from Los Angeles to Washington last Friday.
Starting point is 00:09:08 Didn't experience any problems, although that may have been because it was Halloween and some people were taking the day off. but generally speaking, and the FAA expanded on this in its statement saying that after 31 days without pay, air traffic controllers are under immense stress and fatigue. And it does seem inevitable that more of them will be calling in sick as the days go on. And Peter, I mentioned in the introduction people are missing their food stamps as a result of this government shut down. Which other areas are affected people everyday life? Well, that's one of the key areas, the food stamps, issues, the fact that the assistance program is now devoid of funding,
Starting point is 00:09:48 but also more generally on health care, the beginning of November, marks the beginning of the sign-up process for health care under the Affordable Care Act, sometimes referred to as Obamacare. The government deadlock over whether to extend health subsidies, which is really at the heart of the dispute and why Congress is deadlocked at the moment, but the uncertainty over that means that as people are, contemplating and considering signing up for healthcare over the coming months, they're realising that it's going to cost them so much more,
Starting point is 00:10:23 although that isn't certain because this dispute involving the Republicans and the Democrats who are deadlocked hasn't been resolved yet. And Peter, is there any sign that either side is going to back down with regards to that? No sign at the moment, but clearly someone will have to back down. I think just as they were a month ago, both sides are blaming each other. the Republicans are still insisting on what they're calling a clean funding measure with no strings attached. So, in other words, no extra issues. The deadlines, the Democrats, want to extend those healthcare subsidies.
Starting point is 00:10:57 They're due to expire at the end of the year. And they're sticking to their guns on that. And what about the voters? Who are they blaming for this? Does it really go along party lines? I think generally speaking it does go along party lines. Opinions polls do suggest that, more Republicans are getting the blame and that includes the president than Democrats.
Starting point is 00:11:18 Although what I've sensed over the last few days is that when these issues begin to affect individuals, I think some people have sailed through the last month and haven't really felt the effect. But now it's beginning to hit home with more people and that is focusing people's minds in terms of who they blame. Peter Bose. The sole survivor of the Air India plane crash
Starting point is 00:11:39 has told the BBC that five months on he's still struggling to come to terms with a disaster. In June, a flight to London from Ahmedabad crashed within seconds of taking off. All but one of the 242 people on board were killed, along with 19 victims on the ground. While Viz Vash Kumar Ramesh did survive, he's still grieving for his brother who was on the same flight. He's been speaking to Nabtaj Johal in his home city, Leicester, in England.
Starting point is 00:12:11 A man walks away from a plane crash that has killed everyone else on board. Onlookers are stunned. How Visfar Kumar Ramesh survived is a question no one, not even he, can really seem to answer. It is my colony. What can I say that?
Starting point is 00:12:38 I'm only one survivor. An AI India flight heading for Gatwick has crashed to moments after taking off. Things are still smoking around us. It's really hard to breathe here right now. The Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad in June killed 241 crew and passengers and 19 victims on the ground. Sat just a few seats away from Vizvash Kumar
Starting point is 00:13:00 was his brother, Ajay, who also died. In the aftermath, Vizvash Kumar was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He's now returned to his home in Leicester. Thank you. The BBC and other media were invited to the home of one of his advisors for his first interviews in the UK. The two advisors sat next to him and a documentary crew were also present. Viseach Kumar.
Starting point is 00:13:28 Thank you for speaking to us. During our interview, there were questions he couldn't answer. When did you realise when you were on that flight that something was wrong? it is very painful for me to explain that happen still I can't say anything about that now do you feel like you are the luckiest man alive yes it is medical in it is that difficult because on the one hand you say you believe you are the luckiest man alive
Starting point is 00:14:06 on the other hand I'm lucky as man but But also, I lost everything. I've lost my brother, isn't it? My brother is my backbone. What have the last few months been like for you and for your family? I don't like to talk with anyone else. I just sit in my room and alone. My wife, my son, I'm not talking with anyone.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I just like to learn in my house. Visvash Kumar says he's also struggling with his physical injuries and hasn't been able to work or drive. One of his advisors, Sanjif Patel, a community leader in Leicester, says they want to put pressure on Air India to provide more compensation to meet his immediate needs. What we want to do is speak to Air India and not somebody down the chain who's processing paperwork.
Starting point is 00:15:01 So they can understand the real impact and put in real support for this family that's suffering. He is at the moment a number on a spreadsheet. His other advisor, Rad Seeger, a former lawyer, says the airline have so far treated him appallingly. Three times we have issued an invitation to them to come and sit with us collaboratively and work together to try and help Viswash Kumar
Starting point is 00:15:27 and his family through this ordeal. Three times they've either ignored us or turned us down. In a statement, Erindia, which is owned by Tata Group, said, we are deeply conscious of our responsibility to provide Mr. Ramesh with support. Care for him, and indeed all families affected by the tragedy, remains our absolute priority. Senior leaders from across Tatar Group continue to visit families to express their deepest condolences. An offer has been made to Mr. Ramesh's representatives to arrange such a meeting.
Starting point is 00:16:01 Honestly, I need to get him to rest. Vizvashkimar was led away by one of his advisers for arrest before his next interview. This man, whose miraculous escape amid a horrifying tragedy, fascinated the world, is still counting the cost of survival. That report by Navtage, Johal. It's not the White House, but being mayor of New York is one of the highest profile jobs in US politics. And this year's race has got even more attention than usual, Because a candidate who at the start of the year was a complete unknown
Starting point is 00:16:35 has surged to the top of the polls. Now America is waiting to see whether Zoran Mamdani can beat the veteran Democrat, the former governor, Andrew Cuomo, to become the city's first Muslim mayor and the youngest in over a century. Curtis Lua is their Republican rival. Sunday was the last day of early voting before the highly anticipated election day on Tuesday.
Starting point is 00:16:59 Stephanie Prentice reports. New York is America's biggest city and witnessing its biggest race in recent history. Not the marathon, but the sprint to become mayor of a metropolitan area with an economy bigger than $2 trillion. The frontrunner in the polls is the Democrat Zaharan Mamdani, notable for his age, 34, his potential to be the first Muslim mayor of New York City,
Starting point is 00:17:27 and the speed at which he's gone from an unknown city council member to running against season politicians decades his senior. Every take is going to be. He's used social media to amass an army of campaign volunteers. His campaign has galvanized younger voters. You want a photo, brother? And his major pledges are crowd-pleasers. We are going to freeze the rent for more than 2 million rent-stabilized tenants.
Starting point is 00:17:53 We are going to eliminate the fare on every single bus line. And we are going to create universal trust. child care at no cost to parents. Andrew Cuomo is running as an independent and lost to Mr. Mamdani in the Democratic primary. Yeah, it sounds good, flying buses, free food. It is all untrue. There is no Santa Claus. He's also reminded voters in a city with a significant Jewish population of his rival's
Starting point is 00:18:24 pro-Palestinian stance and comments around Israel during a debate, seen as a major misstep by some. And just yes or no, do you believe in a Jewish state of Israel? I believe Israel has the right to exist. As a Jewish state? As a state with equal rights. He won't say it has a right to exist. Andrew Cuomo has the big money behind him and is running on an experience ticket, including tenures as governor of New York. But his experience did involve resigning in 2021 amid a sexual harassment scandal. He's always denied wrongdoing. I didn't realize the extent to which the line has been redrawn.
Starting point is 00:19:07 There are generational and cultural shifts that I just didn't fully appreciate. The Republican nominee, Curtis Slewa, is the most fiscally conservative and law and order candidates of the three. He's polling last but is expected to create problems for Andrew Cuomo by splitting votes. I think he's terrible. He's a communist. We know where President Trump stands. The last thing we need is a communist. He's warned that if Zahran Mamdani wins, he may withhold federal funds. Frank Morano is a Republican councilman for Staten Island in New York working on Curtis Slewa's campaign.
Starting point is 00:19:49 We asked him if that would be fair. Curtis's view, and certainly my view, is that federal funding decisions shouldn't punish citizens for who they voted for. If New York shows it can go. government itself responsibly, and funding follows. Whatever follows, after Tuesday, the outcome is being watched as a signal of broader party dynamics in the US ahead of next year's midterm elections. That report by Stephanie Prentice. Still to come in this podcast?
Starting point is 00:20:18 People don't come to the Maldives because they are able to smoke. They come for the beaches, they come for the sea, they come for the sun. As the Maldives becomes the only country to bring in a generation. smoking ban, could the move hurt its lucrative tourist industry? America is changing, and so is the world. But what's happening in America isn't just a cause of global upheaval. It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere. I'm a smachalid in Washington, D.C.
Starting point is 00:20:55 I'm Tristan Redman in London. and this is the global story. Every weekday, we'll bring you a story from this intersection, where the world and America meet. Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts. You're listening to the Global News Podcast. Let's turn now to the shaky, fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, with a group saying it's returned the remains of three more hostages from Gaza.
Starting point is 00:21:27 The Israeli military said it received the coffins from the Red Cross. If the remains are confirmed to be the three dead hostages, that would mean eight more still remain in Gaza. Israel has accused Hamas of being too slow to return the bodies of the dead, but Hamas has pointed out that it's extremely difficult to retrieve bodies from underneath the huge piles of rubble in Gaza. Sebastian Usher in Jerusalem gave us this update. Hamas has handed over three more bodies to the race.
Starting point is 00:21:57 cross, which it says belong to deceased Israeli hostages. They are now with the Israeli army. There will be a forensic examination to see if they are the bodies of hostages. It hasn't always been the case. If it turns out that they are, then the numbers of dead hostages to be returned will go down to eight. The Israeli authorities believe that Hamas has been drawing this process out, that it could have recovered the bodies and handed them over more quickly, but certainly the fact that they continue to be given back to the Israeli army does give a sense that there is some continuing momentum over this. I mean, we had two or three days ago, we had major Israeli strikes the deadliest on Gaza since the ceasefire began. Things have
Starting point is 00:22:44 quietened down to some extent since then. I think it would be far too much to say that trust is building between the two sides, but certainly if the issue of the dead hostages is resolved by the return of all of them within the coming weeks, that will go a long way towards paving the path towards the second stage of a ceasefire, which is when it becomes existential for Hamas, when the very existence of Hamas, the demands for it to disarm, the demands for it to play no further role in governance in Gaza become paramount. That's why I think there are these strong feelings, not just in Israel, but outside, that they have perhaps. perhaps been drawing this out to try and shore up their position in the part of Gaza where they still
Starting point is 00:23:31 hold control. Sebastian As Iran grapples with its worst drought in decades, there's been a warning that drinking water could run dry in its capital in the next two weeks. The director of Tehran's water company is reported by state media to have said that a key dam that provides drinking water for the city of 10 million people currently only holds just 8% of the water it should. In recent weeks, supplies have been cut to several neighborhoods in a desperate bid to try to conserve water. I got more from BBC Persian's Environment Reporter, Siavash Adelan. The situation is very bad.
Starting point is 00:24:10 The day zero scenario, which means the country completely, or a particular city completely, running out of water, has been looming since summer began. The country has seen very low rainfall compared to previous years. in the capital it's been about 20% less than the year before and some other parts of the country over 80% less. The dams are running dry and the authorities have been trying to manage somehow to avert a day zero scenario. And now everyone was expecting more rain to fall as the new season began. But there hasn't been any rainfall and none is predicted to occur until towards the end
Starting point is 00:24:54 of fall. And critics of the government are saying this isn't just about a drought, however bad it is this year. It's also about government mismanagement of water resources. Yes, there's always this argument isn't there about how much of an environmental issue, be it water resources or deforestation and so on, as a result of climate change and global warming and low rainfall and how much is it, you know, how much is it stem from mismanagement? Not to mention the fact climate change and and low rainfalls itself can argue to be a result of mismanagement on a global scale anyway. In Iran, obviously, mismanagement on a local and national level has exacerbated the problem. A lot of Iran's lakes and seas have dried up as a result of climate change,
Starting point is 00:25:42 but more so as a result of certain policies that are driven not by, you know, sustainability concerns, but rather people trying to make profits out of the, out of a particular water policy, what we call the water mafia. And it's really hard to imagine a city like Tehran with 10 million people running out of water. We've already seen some neighborhoods having supplies temporarily cut off as the authorities try to deal with it. Yes, this has been the case all throughout summer.
Starting point is 00:26:16 They've tried to bring down consumption between 10 to 15%. And they've managed to do that throughout summer with the anticipation that rainfall will occur as we approach the autumn season. But that has to happen yet. In Iran, there is no sense among the public like it was in those other cities that really the situation is bad. There's a lot of misinformation, a lot of disinformation going on. A lot of people don't know what to believe.
Starting point is 00:26:43 Sylvash Ardlan. Now to a world first and the Indian Ocean Archipelago of the Maldives, which this weekend became the only country on earth with a generational. smoking ban so that anyone born after January 2007 will not be able to buy or use tobacco products anywhere on any of the islands. The measure also applies to visitors. Amad Afal is the vice chair of the country's National Tobacco Control Board. One argument against this type of age-related ban is that it could push young people towards unregulated and maybe even more harmful forms of smoking. Tim Franks put this question to him.
Starting point is 00:27:25 We do understand people who say this particular negative aspects on this. Yes, we also do understand some countries where they have heard, for example, in Bhutan, some issues initially related to such trade as well. What we feel for the Maldives, though, is we are a smaller country. We have an advantage in terms of controlling a lot of what we import. we have also been putting in other regulations such as smoke-free places and it's been just one year since we put a ban on all electronic cigarettes and vapes as well. I'm just going to ask you about that because, I mean, you're not unique in banning vapes and e-cigarettes.
Starting point is 00:28:08 There are a few dozen countries that do that. For a lot of countries, though, and a lot of public health specialists, they're rather unconvinced by that move because actually clearly vaping carries some health downsides because it can be addictive. But it's also public health professionals say that it's a really important way in which you can get people to quit smoking and that its health harms are far fewer than smoking. I just wonder whether you are concerned at all
Starting point is 00:28:42 that perhaps it's a move that could backfire. No, actually I'm not concerned about this. particular notion. I very firmly believe this was actually a good step that is taken towards a generation of tobacco-free citizens because these new stylish gadgets are not necessarily harmless, but they are tactics of the industry to approach the younger generations to uptake an addictive process, which definitely harms their health. You are a country that is incredibly reliant on tourism. I wonder if you're a all concerned that perhaps by having generational ban on smoking, but also your restrictions on
Starting point is 00:29:24 the use of e-cigarettes and vaping, whether that might put people off from coming to the Maldives and therefore perhaps hit your budgets? Well, that could be used as a scapegoat. People don't come to the Maldives because they are able to smoke. They come for the beaches, they come for the sea, they come for the sun and they come for the fresh air. Despite all these regulations, there has been no single cancellation of a tourist arrival. But we have actually had a growth in the arrivals of tourists over the last one year and we are projecting more than 2 million in the next year. That was the vice chair of the Maldives National Tobacco Control Board,
Starting point is 00:30:05 Ahmed Afar. After consecutive defeats early on in the Women's Cricket World Cup, India's cricketers were on the brink of being eliminated from their home tournament. But in a remarkable turnaround, they ended up celebrating their first World Cup title after beating South Africa by 52 runs in the final in Navi Mumbai. John Wilkinson looks back at a historic day for India. India! India! India! A cricket-mad nation, which until recently had hardly given any opportunities for female players to develop,
Starting point is 00:30:44 now has a team of women's star players to inspire the next generation. India had lost three times in the group stage of the World Cup and qualified for the semi-finals in fourth, but they've ended up as the first new name on the trophy since the year 2000. Powered by Smretti Mandana's 434 runs, the second best at the tournament, and the World Cup leading figures of Deepty Sharma with 22 wickets. The team found a way to hit form at the perfect time.
Starting point is 00:31:14 In again. This is sliced in the air. Could be a catch. Yes. Taken by the captain. Harman Precour takes the catch that sees India win the World Cup. Attendances in India and the co-hosts Sri Lanka weren't always impressive, but the showpiece event was played in front of a raucous sold out 45,000 strong crowd in Navi Mumbai. These fans said the win was significant. We won the World War II for the first time in history. and the stadium was completely full and the environment, it was too good. Sheafali was the start of the game today.
Starting point is 00:31:50 She scored 87 runs. She took three wickets. She definitely nailed it today. So extremely happy that finally win the World Cup, Women's World Cup. I'm extremely happy. Finally win the World Cup. As for South Africa, they end up runners-up for the third global final in a row. Laura Woolvart's century wasn't ultimately enough to help them take that final decisive step. A watershed moment then in the growth of the game in India. All-round Ammanjot
Starting point is 00:32:20 Khor has vowed that they will dominate all over the world. More significantly though, perhaps, the droves of men, boys, women and girls in Navi Mumbai, all wearing shirts with the names of Harman Prit, Schmerti Mandana and other members of the World Cup winning team, the names of new stars for a generation. John Wilkinson. 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, you can send us an email. The address is Global Podcast at BBC.co.com. This edition was mixed by Rosenwin Dorrell and the producers were Guy Pitt and Carla Conti. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm
Starting point is 00:33:03 Jeanette Jalil. Until next time, goodbye.

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