Global News Podcast - US and Iran hold crucial talks mediated by Oman
Episode Date: February 26, 2026Iran's president says Tehran isn't pursuing nuclear weapons and has no intention of doing so, as a third round of crucial talks with the US continues in Geneva. Also: former US secretary of state and ...first lady, Hillary Clinton, appears before a Congressional committee investigating the late paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un says his country "could get along well" with the United States, if Washington recognises Pyongyang as a nuclear power. US condemns the use of drones by both sides in the conflict in Sudan. And a new study reveals why some older people's minds are as sharp as they were when they were young.
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People shaping our world from all over the world.
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From global leaders.
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The US President Donald Trump.
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Anthony Hopkins. The interview from the BBC World Service. Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
This is not the future we were promised. Like, how about that for a tagline for the show?
From the BBC, this is the interface, the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world.
This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews. It's about what technology is actually doing to your work and your politics, your everyday life.
and all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson, and at 16 hours GMT on Thursday the 26th of February, these are our main stories.
US and Iranian negotiators are in Geneva for talks widely seen as the best chance of preventing a military conflict.
Bill and Hillary Clinton prepare to give evidence to Congress about the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un says he could get along well with the US if the communist state is recognized as a nuclear power.
Also in this podcast.
While a tree grows, it consumes carbon dioxide and it stores it in the tree for as long as these buildings are standing.
why Europe's construction industry is turning to wood to cut carbon emissions.
Iranian and American officials have been meeting again in Geneva
for what are being seen as crucial talks about Tehran's nuclear program.
It comes as the United States continues to strengthen its military presence in the Middle East,
with a number of countries urging their citizens to leave.
In his state of the Union address on Tuesday,
President Trump said he would never allow what he called the world's number one
sponsor of terror to have nuclear weapons. But Tehran insists it has no intention of building such a bomb
and that its program is purely for civilian purposes. Iran's president, Massoud Pasechkian,
said his orders came directly from the country's supreme leader Ayatolli Ali Khaminai.
Trump says that Iran must announce we will never have a nuclear weapon. The supreme leader
has stated that we will never have a nuclear weapon.
Maybe you can say that I'm like those politicians and I lie.
But the leader of a society, the religious leader of a society cannot lie.
When he says that we will never have a nuclear weapon, that means we will never have it.
Amman, which is acting as mediator, says the negotiations will resume on Thursday evening.
This third round is being viewed by some as a last chance for diplomacy.
Our chief international correspondent, Lee Doucet, is in Switzerland covering the negotiations for us.
Well, I'm speaking to you from outside the Omani residents here in Geneva.
You may hear the hubb of other journalists such as the interest and the significance of these talks.
There is a large contingent of media from around the world.
We saw the American convoy leaving here about an hour ago.
Then the Iranian delegation left.
What is really significant is that in all the other times when the Iranians and Americans met for mainly indirect,
but not completely, we understand they have been talking face-to-face as well,
They meet for a few hours and then they go their separate ways.
This is the first time that they're coming back.
The Omani Foreign Minister, Badere al-Busedi, who is the main mediator, said on social, on me on X, he said,
they exchange creative and positive ideas.
We're taking a break and then we're going to come back again.
And we understand they are trying to work on the details of some kind of a draft text of an agreement.
And I think the general assessment is that if it is just confined to the nuclear program of Iran,
in exchange for sanctions, a deal is difficult, but it is doable.
So the Iranians do respect the U.S. negotiators?
Well, they have very, very different negotiating styles.
There is so little trust between the two sides.
Bear in mind that Iran was involved in negotiations
with the Americans headed by Steve Whitkoff last year,
and it was just days before the sixth round of talks
that Israel attacked Iran, which triggered the 12-day war,
which drew in the United States.
And don't forget, the President Trump pulled out of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal in 2018.
So Iranian officials continue to say that we want to do a deal,
we're going to continue to negotiate, but we don't want to be, in their words, surprise.
And that's why they, like the Americans, are preparing for war,
if indeed it does come to war this time as well.
And also, there are very different individuals.
You have the Foreign Minister of Iran, who has more than a decade of,
experience on the nuclear file. He was very much involved in the last landmark negotiations,
which led to that multilateral deal. His deputy, Magitak Ravanchi, also has more than a decade of
experience. They know every part of these nuclear issues. Whereas Steve Whitkoff, who's
President Trump's golf buddy, President Trump's preferred envoy, you remember that when he first came
into the White House for a second time, he said, my envoys may not know about the height of the
mountains or the depth of the rivers, but they know how to.
to do a deal. Steve Whitkoff is a property dealer, just like President Trump was, and he has been
sent to do these deals. The Iranians are encouraged that this time it's not just Steve Whitkoff.
It's Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law, they see that as an even more direct link to the
president, and that he pays closer attention to the negotiations, and as I was told by a few
diplomats, that Jared Kushner takes notes, whereas Steve Whitkoff never did.
Leis Doucette in Switzerland.
The committee in the US Congress, which is investigating the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplice, Gailene Maxwell,
will hear evidence from two of the most important figures in American politics, Bill and Hillary Clinton.
She will give evidence on Thursday, while the former president will do so on Friday.
The Clinton's feature in the millions of documents released on Epstein, but this doesn't imply any wrongdoing,
and Mr Clinton said that he broke ties with him
before he was convicted of child sex offences in 2008.
Mr Clinton also denies any knowledge of the crimes of Epstein
who killed himself in 2019.
There are photographs of the former president in a hot tub with a woman
and a swimming pool with Maxwell.
The Democratic Congresswoman Yasamin Ansari
serves on the committee,
and she was asked if she thought Mr. Clinton knew about Epstein's behavior.
I really don't know. I'm just as disgusted when I see photos like that because I know everything that I know.
I mean, I hope not. But that's why this deposition is important and not that we'll get all of the information.
But that's why ultimately getting the entirety of these files in an unredacted form and ending this cover-up is so important.
The Clintons had initially resisted appearing before the Republican-led House Oversight Committee.
but they agreed after Republicans threatened to hold them in criminal contempt of Congress.
Mrs Clinton, a former US Secretary of State, told the BBC that they had nothing to hide.
With more, here's our North America editor, Sarah Smith.
This is a very, very big moment because these are the two most senior former politicians
to have been called in front of the Oversight Committee to give evidence.
It's a sign that the committee is managing to do its job in terms of speaking to the people,
people it wants to as they insist that they're conducting an investigation that ought to have been
done by the FBI, but that they're doing it instead. They've pledged to try and get justice for
victims of Jeffrey Epstein in a way that they think they've been failed by law enforcement.
Now, in terms of how much we will learn about Jeffrey Epstein and Gleine Maxwell's criminal
activities, that's a rather different question with the Clintons, because Hillary Clinton insists
she does not recall ever meeting Jeffrey Epstein and that she had only very glad to be
interactions with Galane Maxwell. Bill Clinton, though, of course, will have more questions
to answer when he has to sit for a deposition because he has been pictured multiple times in
photographs contained in the Epstein files, including pictures of him in a swimming pool and separately
in a jacuzzi with a woman whose faces blacked out. He flew several times on Jeffrey Epstein's
plane, so he'll have more to talk about. But for Hillary Clinton herself, she insists that the
only reason that she and her husband are being called to testify at all is to try and distract
from Donald Trump and the trouble he's in over the Epstein files and the ongoing claims that
not enough of the files have been released, that there are still millions of documents that
ought to be put into the public domain. It's happening behind closed doors, but it is being filmed.
And what's happened with similar sessions to this is that some hours after the deposition is
finished, the tape, the television pictures of it, are made publicly available.
So we may have to wait until the next day.
It might be 24 hours before we get to see in here.
Exactly what Hillary Clinton said.
It may be into the weekend before we can do the same for Bill Clinton's testimony.
But we ought to see all of it at some point, and quite shortly after the deposition,
we're likely to hear from members of the committee of what happened whilst she was giving evidence.
Sarah Smith.
Every five years, the ruling Communist Party in North Korea holds its Congress.
It wrapped up with a military parade.
in the capital Pyongyang.
And during the week-long gathering,
there was the usual roaring approval for the leadership.
Normally there are also vicious comments about the US,
but this time, at least at first glance,
the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un sounded somewhat more conciliatory.
He said that the two countries could get along well,
should Washington recognize Piyom.
Yongyang as a nuclear power.
Last year, Mr. Trump said he was 100% open to a meeting with the North Korean leader.
I asked our correspondent in Seoul, Jake Kwan, what else Mr. Kim had said?
Kim Jong-un also had said that he is going to make more nuclear weapons and missiles,
that his nuclear bombs are not going away anytime soon.
And then he also laid out some wish list of the weapons he wants to acquire in the next five years.
He said that he's going to have a nuclear submarine that can launch missiles from anywhere on Earth, that can hit anywhere on Earth, and also missiles that could hit enemy satellites in the sky.
So he laid out some of these ambitious plans, and at the same time he was saying to the United States that if you accept this as the path of North Korea, then we can get along.
We can do some talks.
And this is happening, as you said, there's some speculation that Donald Trump might be willing to see and sit down,
with Kim Jong-un again. Last time they did was 2019. And Donald Trump will be traveling to Beijing
in April this year. So there has been a lot of speculation that this might be the time the two
countries can restart the peace process. Any reaction publicly anyway from Washington?
Well, the Washington had said that they are open to talks, but I mean, this is something that
they repeat many times. Now, of course, the one that might be most joyed by this is South Korea,
which has been pushing for the two leaders.
Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un to meet as part of their peace process. But at the same time, North Korea
had singled out South Korea, saying that, you know, the relationship between the two countries is really
a foregone conclusion, that they do not consider South Korea as part of their brethren anymore,
that whatever South Korea has been trying to thaw the relationship with the North, they consider it
a mere deception. So South Korea was quite disappointed by this comment, and we heard from Seoul
that this kind of comment does not help, and yet they will keep trying to really thaw the relationship and make peace with North Korea.
Let's come back to that possible meeting with Donald Trump. When are we going to know if this could be real? And what could it achieve?
North Korea and the United States have some things that they could achieve from the other side. Of course, North Korea desperately wants to be recognized as a normal country that can hold these weapons, which of course is something.
that America traditionally has considered a no-go.
But for Donald Trump, this is an opportunity for him to, again, declare that he is a peacemaker,
that he had brought peace on the Korean Peninsula.
So if these considerations meet, maybe there is a slim chance of this meeting happen later this year.
Jake Kwan in Seoul.
One of the largest sources of carbon dioxide emissions in Europe is the construction industry,
the making of cement and reinforced concrete,
accounts for around 40% of CO2 emitted on the continent.
Flights make up less than 3%.
Research suggests huge reductions could be made by building in wood.
In Portugal, an influx of well-off foreigners and a shortage of houses and construction workers
is driving an increase in ready-made wooden houses, as Alistair Leithead reports.
On a little piece of land in remote rural Portugal,
Professor of Wood Architecture Alex Dariq has been.
big plans for his retirement.
This is where the house will be above our heads.
Oh, right.
On stilts.
It's a very steep hill, and there's a couple of old quark oak trees.
I want this wooden house to nestle amongst the canopies of these trees.
An abandoned piece of land on Portugal's wild western coast is not where you'd expect to find
the winner of Britain's top architectural prize.
Alex de Riker pioneered building in engineered wood.
This makeshift cover is keeping the wood dry and ventilated.
Uh-huh.
Oh, wow, okay, here it is.
This is the wood you're talking about.
Yeah, this is one piece of wood that's 13 metres long and 3 metres wide.
Wow.
I did an experimental house for an exhibition in Oslo called Naked House,
where the whole house was made of cross-laminated timber panels.
I basically cut the furniture from the walls.
So think table, cut from wall becomes window, which lights the table.
So the offcut is the furniture.
And now I've brought it here.
Right. So that's the house that you're going to put up here.
Critics say wooden houses are a fire risk.
But Alex isn't worried, despite a wildfire near miss a couple of years ago.
Ironically, wood is much better behaved in a fire than, say, steel.
And steel collapses suddenly at 500 Celsius,
whereas engineered timber, mass timber just charred and protects itself,
just like these trees here.
You know, the only trees after the fire are the cork trees
because they're the oak.
It's dense timber.
And the eucalyptus that calls the fire there are all, you know, it's tripped away.
Professor D'Reika is one of many new foreign arrivals to Portugal,
buying up an abandoned plot of land.
Locals have been leaving the countryside for decades.
And with a shortage of builders, wooden houses are a good option.
This is a two-bedroom house, 56 square meters.
It's made of three different modules.
We can step inside if you want.
One of the biggest suppliers in Portugal is Jula.
Amaro Santos showed me around the factory.
The homes leave here 95% finished.
One of the main adventures besides the sustainability,
it's the certainty that we can provide to the customer on budget, on time,
and with the quality that has been contracting with us.
This is not easy to have that result with regular and traditional.
methods of construction, for sure.
He says demand for modular houses is growing like a tide that can't be stopped.
With the labour shortage, it's easier to have people that are working here and living nearby.
On most part of the country, there is no labour. There is no people available whatsoever.
But the other question is what about the forests? Sweden's been making wooden houses
for decades. So I'm Sandra Frank and I'm one of the founding partners at Arvett.
developers in Sweden and we only develop in wood or wooden buildings.
Arvet built the world's first eight-story apartment block entirely out of engineered wood.
Sandra asked the factory how long that would take to grow.
And they said 44 seconds.
I realized that we didn't question using concrete or steel, which is also materials that you take
from the nature, but it never grows back.
While a tree grows, it consumes carbon dioxide and it stores it in the tree for as long as these buildings are standing.
Am has a 100-year-old law in Sweden saying every tree cut down must be replaced.
And today we are planting about four trees for each tree that you take down.
The Swedish forest is actually growing a lot every year.
Regulatory pressure to use biomaterials and the laws of demand and supply,
are driving a revolution here.
And even the big construction companies
are starting to see the wood for the trees.
Alastair Leithead.
Still to come in this podcast.
I guess I am interested in behaviour more than I am in telling stories.
Yes.
I'm interested in trying to get into the head of people.
We speak to the director of the Norwegian film
that could win big at the Oscars.
The interview.
The best conversations
coming out of the BBC.
One of the greatest tennis players in history.
Martina Navratilova.
People shaping our world from all over the world.
Music icon Stevie Wonder.
From global leaders.
The Brazilian president, Luisinacio Lula de Silva.
The president of Poland, Carol Novotsky.
US President Donald Trump.
To cultural icons.
Two-time Oscar winning actor, Sir Anthony Hopkins.
The interview from the BBC World Service.
Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
This is not the future we were promised.
Like, how about that for a tagline for the show?
From the BBC, this is the interface,
the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world.
This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews.
It's about what technology is actually doing
to your work and your politics, your everyday life.
And all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever,
you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast.
In Sudan, there's been an upsurge in drone attacks with deadly consequences.
This month alone saw more than 40 people, including children, killed in separate strikes.
Now, the US has condemned the rival factions for using these unmanned devices.
I heard more from our global affairs reporter Richard Kogoy, who's covering the story from Nairobi.
We've seen growing use of drones since the recapture of Vah Tum.
the military from the RSF.
And both sides, that's the Army and the paramilitary rapids of port forces,
have been using drones to strike against not just military positions,
but we've seen a focus on civilian populated areas like markets, homes,
comes further displaced and also targeting civilian infrastructure,
like bridges and also power stations.
So that has really been the major point of focus by both sides.
and these drones are Mojali sourced from outside of Sudan.
So there have been conflict of observatory groups,
which have been saying that most of them are Turkish-made
and are Chinese-made drones.
This is inevitable, though, isn't it?
I mean, they've proved what a cheap and effective tool they are in Ukraine,
and now they're going to be in every war.
It seems so because, as you mentioned,
I mean, these are widely viewed as low-cost assets,
and that we have seen an incremental use of drones,
not just in Sudan, but in other conflicts across Africa.
We saw that during the conflict in northern Tigra, in Ethiopia, in Somalia.
We've also seen that as well being used in the Sahel region, particularly in West Africa.
And it's not just by governments, you know, targeting positions by militants,
but we've also seen like jihadist groups have been using this to carry out attacks
in countries like Kabukina Faso in Mali, Cameroon and also in Nigeria.
So a very growing and a disturbing trend that we can say we have seen.
So briefly, Richard, what does the US want to happen?
and does it stand a chance?
Well, the US wants both sides to stop use of drone attacks.
Well, that's difficult, you know, just making that appeal and that call.
But then I guess it has to put pressure on countries that have been accused of us applying drones to both sides.
Richard Kegoy.
We heard earlier about US negotiators, Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner,
being in Geneva for crucial talks with Iranian officials.
But Ukraine is also on their radar.
And on Thursday, they'll be meeting a Ukraine.
team about post-war reconstruction. Keeve is hoping to attract hundreds of billions of dollars in funding
over the next decade to rebuild the country. Paul Adams is in the Ukrainian capital.
This is going to be very much an economic session. This is not a meeting of the full delegations
and we're not going to see meetings between the Russians and Ukrainians. They're going to be
meeting separately with Steve Wittkov and Jared Kushner, the U.S. mediators, to discuss primarily
Ukraine's economic future. Ukraine is looking to secure a package of support for the next 10 years.
It's thought to be something in the region of $800 billion to try and reconstitute this war-ravaged
economy and really put Ukraine back on its feet once a peace agreement is reached.
There's an awful lot of elements to thrash out about that, and that will be, I think,
the primary focus. There was some talk also that maybe.
they would be discussing the next round of prisoner swaps, and we might get word on that.
Separately, the Kremlin's economic envoy, Kiril Dmitriev, is also thought to be in Geneva today,
and he is also going to be meeting the Americans, because the Russians are also dangling the prospect
of huge economic investments that the United States and Russia could engage in together after the war,
with Kiril Dmitrieff talking about trillions of dollars worth of economic advantages.
and investments. I think a lot of economists regard that as a wildly inflated figure,
but it is part of Russia's effort to keep the Americans focused on what Russia would like to see.
Paul Adams in Keeve. Why are some older people's minds as sharp as they were when they were young?
Many of us find that our memory and cognition deteriorate as we reach old age. But some people,
so-called super ages, have brains that remain almost perfectly intact. A new study
out of the US has found that at the age of 80, these people have about twice the number of new neurons as a typical person.
In other words, they're continuing to grow new ones throughout their lives.
Tara Spears Jones is Professor of Neurodegeneration at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
She wasn't involved in this piece of research, but she spoke to James Menendez about the findings.
This is a really interesting paper, and they focused on neurogenesis, which is the production of new neural.
neurons. When I trained as an undergraduate and a postgraduate student over 25 years ago, the dogma
was you don't make new neurons. But over the past decade or so, now we understand that in some
parts of the brain, you do make new neurons. One of those parts is the hippocampus, which is what
this study was examining. It's really important for learning and memory and spatial orientation.
And what they found was that in people who were super agers, that is they had more of this
neurogenesis than in other people who were older and much more than in people who had Alzheimer's.
disease. So one of the things they're proposing is that making these new neurons in this part of
the brain might be boosting cognitive function in these people. And how were they able to test it then?
Was it comparing the brains of older people who seem to have great cognitive ability with those
who didn't or with younger people? How did it work? So what the authors did is they looked at
post-mortem brain samples from this relatively small group of people. They isolated individual nuclei.
That's the part of the cells that contains the DNA. And they looked at thousands and thousands,
of these individual nuclei from these dozen or so people.
And it's from the patterns of the gene expression that they can tell which cells were likely
to be newborn neurons.
This is a snapshot of dead brain, right?
So they couldn't prove for certain that these were newborn neurons.
But based on work in animals over the years, we know the pattern of expression of genes
that happens in these newborn neurons.
And so they were just then comparing that pattern of both gene expression and how available
the genes were for reading across these different groups.
So is it just luck then?
and if we become a superager?
Partly, partly it's luck in terms of the genes you inherit.
So in the wider fields, we know that about a quarter of the variability in cognitive decline
and cognitive ability in aging is due to your genes.
But there is some modifiable factors.
So not all of us can be super ages if we got really unlucky with our genes,
but all of us can boost our brain resilience a bit.
The most well-substantiated evidence goes to exercise, which you won't be surprised.
It's good for you.
Exercise boosts your brain resilience.
It boosts your vascular. It reduces inflammation, and both of those things are known to impact brain aging.
And it also directly boosts this adult hippocampal neurogenesis. So you make a chemical called brain-derived neurotrophic factor when you exercise, and that stimulates this neurogenesis in that part of the brain.
Is it possible that if scientists can identify the sort of genetic differences between super ages and people who aren't, that that could then at some point lead to genetic treatments for people who,
develop Alzheimer's or to prevent Alzheimer's? I mean, do you see where I'm going? Is that a possible
path? Yeah, it's a long-term path. But genetic treatments, I mean, I don't think we'd be going for
gene therapy to make you a super-age or at least not in the next coming decades. The brain is
phenomenally complex. But as we get more and more little pieces of this picture, we will be able
to, as scientists and clinicians, work towards drugs that can boost brain health.
Neurologist Professor Tara Spears Jones.
The more than 10,000 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
will begin marking up their ballots on Thursday to choose next month's Oscar winners
for Hollywood's biggest night of the year.
For the first time, Norway has secured a nomination for the most prestigious award, Best Picture.
The film, Sentimental Value, is set in Oslo.
It has already won at Cannes, the British Academy Film Awards, the BAFTAs,
and it swept the board at the European Film Awards.
Director of Sentimental Value, Joachim Trier, has collected many of them,
and Tom Brooke caught up with him in Berlin.
Well, I don't know, man.
I'm very happy to people care about films from Norway.
It didn't used to be like that.
Meet Yoakim Trier, the director of sentimental value.
His profile has been boosted by the success of his modestly budgeted Norwegian family drama,
which has picked up an impressive nine Oscar nominations and numerous other accolades.
My father is a very difficult person.
It's the story of a family in Oslo, the relationship between two sisters.
And at its centre it details the estrangement between one of the sisters,
an actor played by Renata Reinsler,
and her film director father, portrayed by Stellan Scarsgaard,
who's trying to reclaim his former glory.
Why didn't you want to do the role?
I can't work with him.
I guess I am interested in behaviour more than I am.
in telling stories.
Yes.
I'm interested in trying to get into the head of people.
Yer Kim Trir told me of the genesis of sentimental value.
What is different with this film, as opposed to with the previous ones,
I think is that I made something which deals with very fundamental issues of communication
and discommunication in family, between siblings, parents and children.
Things that I imagine are more universal, almost than anything I've done,
because it's about two sisters who grown up women,
who's trying to deal with their father,
who has been quite a narcissistic, difficult character,
quite avoidant, and they're trying to reconcile.
So many people see it as an allegory of dealing with men in power
or men that are of that generation that don't know how
to have that more intimate type of communication.
This film was made in a collaboration between Norway, Sweden, Denmark,
Germany, France, and the UK.
And everyone came along to tell a story about a family
grappling with lack of communication.
So that's my experience, and that was a good one, you know.
But what Liu Kimtri is perhaps most excited about
is how his film has traveled to audiences in distant lands
to become Norway's most successful film globally in history.
I come from a country of 5.5 million people,
and it's not to be taken for granted that a film from Norway travels like this.
So we're grateful for the...
It's a very impressive achievement, isn't it?
At the moment, everyone's very...
really struggling in Norway as well because the arts funding hasn't really increased.
We're having that fight too. But anyway,
Sentimental value is the first Norwegian film ever nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award.
But quite apart from the Oscars, Jokim Trier has already given audiences a piece of well-crafted
cinema with a very resonant, tenderly told human story that seems to touch people quite deeply.
Tom Brooke reporting.
And that's all from us.
For now, if you want to get in touch, you can email us at global podcast at BBC.co.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
And don't forget our sister podcast, the global story, which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story, available wherever you get your podcasts.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Russell Newlove and the producer.
were Mazafar Shakir and Daniel Mann.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson.
Until next time, goodbye.
The interview.
The best conversations coming out of the BBC.
One of the greatest tennis players in history,
Martina Navratilova.
People shaping our world from all over the world.
Music icon, Stevie Wonder.
From global leaders.
The Brazilian president, Luisinacio Lula de Silva.
The president of Poland, Carol Novrots.
U.S. President Donald Trump
to cultural icons.
Two-time Oscar winning actor Sir Anthony Hopkins.
The interview from the BBC World Service.
Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
