Global News Podcast - US and Israel step up attacks on Iran
Episode Date: March 5, 2026Massive explosions are reported in Tehran and in Karaj to its west as the United States and Israel step up their attacks on Iranian cities. We hear what life is like for those living there. Iran conti...nues to retaliate with attacks on Israel and other countries in the region -- although it denies carrying out drone strikes in Azerbaijan. Ukraine's President Zelensky says he is prepared to lend his support to Gulf states facing Iran's missile attacks and we ask what that help might look like. Also: we take you to Nepal's election, the first since Gen-Z protests brought down the last government. Conservatives from the Anglican church deny they are splitting from the communion after choosing a Rwandan bishop to head a new religious council. And new research suggests stopping weight loss jabs can lead to rapid weight regain in one year. The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Celia Hatton and at 16 hours GMT on Thursday, the 5th of March, these are our main
stories. The United States and Israel have stepped up their attacks on Iranian cities.
And Iran has denied carrying out drone strikes on targets in Azerbaijan as the impact of the
conflict continues to spread. Also in this podcast, could Ukraine help Gulf states facing missile and
drone attacks? Thousands move from southern Lebanon to escape strikes there. And we'll take you to
Nepal's election, the first since Gen Z protests brought down the last government.
I'm here to vote, hoping to bring new changes in Nepal. That was what all of us are seeking,
and that was what all the Gen Z revolt was.
about. Day six of the U.S. Israel war with Iran and frustration and fatigues being expressed in many
parts of the Middle East. In the last 12 hours, there have been fresh waves of attacks. The United
States and Israel have intensified their joint bombing campaign on Iran. In the last few hours,
we've seen images of destruction across the Iranian capital, Tehran. Those verified images,
you can see them for yourself on the BBC website, show huge clouds of smoke, rising.
from the center of the city.
One video that's circulating online
shows Tehran's Azadi football stadium
severely damaged with smoke coming out of a sports hall.
Here are some eyewitness reports
that have been voiced by our producers.
Today I went to the Tehran Saar,
and I was there exactly when Azadi was hit.
When the first strike hit Azadi,
nothing much happened.
But when the second one hit,
orange smoke rose up from the ammunition
deport. The situation was really bad.
Last night, there were a lot of strikes. From about 3 to 5 a.m., they were hitting places
constantly. When it gets to around 9, people go up onto their rooftops. They sit there waiting
for the strikes to happen. If the attacks slowed down a bit and all the leaders of the
Republic killed, then people will definitely pour into the streets.
Ellie Deferrin is a spokesperson for the Israeli army.
The goal of the operation is to influence the military.
severe damage on the Iranian terror regime until it removes the existential threat
to strike and remove that threat over time. We continue to deepen the damage to the regime.
It's important for me to say that it's already shaken. It was shaken by the first strike on
Saturday morning when the leadership was thwarted. And every day we continue to destabilize it
more and more to deepen the damage to it until the existential threat is removed.
So what's it like for those living in Iran?
I spoke to see of Ashmeddi Ardalen from the BBC's Persian service.
Life in Tehran may be different to life in other cities around Iran
because Iran is a vast country seven times the size of the UK.
But in Tehran in particular, the population of 10 million,
the mood is very diverse.
We haven't seen instances of panic, shopping or queues at the petrol stations
because the government has assured that they have enough food stuff
to sustain the population for a few months.
But the mood generally depends on what your political affiliations are.
If you're part of that minority of pro-government, pro-regime supporters,
you're probably defiant and a little bit scared that the regime may collapse as a result of this.
If you're firmly in the anti-regime camp, you might even be cheering on the U.S. and Israeli drones
and fighters that are flying at very low altitudes in Iran's virtually defenseless skies.
And also there are a lot of people who have disdain for the regime, but who also don't see any good coming out of this.
But I guess the common sense is one of fear of what is to come, probably, you know, combined with a bit of hope or with a bit of despair.
In past conflicts, we've seen people try to get out of the cities in Iran.
Are we seeing this as well?
Not so much in Tehran because so much of the attacks have been, you know, precision, targeting.
targets on military installations.
So we have even seen instances where people, when they hear drones or fighter jets flying
overhead, they go onto their roofs and they try to film this.
But in other cities where you have military industrial installations there, where you have
naval assets, for example, in the city of Boucher, which is in the southern part of Iran
with the population of 250,000, the city is almost deserted because they've just decimated
the entire industrial hub in that city.
relating to military production, which is one of the objectives of U.S. and Israel.
So depending on where it is and which city we're talking about, which part of the country,
the moods are different and the people's reaction are different,
but obviously the civilians have been impacted by these attacks.
The latest toll we had yesterday was of 1,097 civilian deaths as a result of these attacks in the past five days.
On Wednesday, the funeral ceremonies for the Supreme Leader were postponed.
Any news on a potential successor?
Yes, his son, Moshaba Khomey, is tipped to be the successor.
The votes have already been cast by a body called Assembly of Experts,
which is comprised of 87 clerics who decide who the successor to the Supreme Leader should be,
but they just haven't announced it yet, perhaps waiting for the funeral to take place before the announcement.
is make. But the reason why
Mosh Dhabahominee is tipped to be the
successor is because he has
very good connections with the military
and security establishment.
And if there is any compromise
to be made, or if there's any new
policy or change of directions,
he is the person who the military
will listen to.
Sivash Medi Artilan.
Israel is fighting on two major
fronts in this war, attacking
Iran and also Hezbollah targets
in Lebanon. Israeli force
have crossed the border into Lebanese territory in a number of areas,
according to the UN peacekeeping contingent in the country.
Residents in Beirut's southern suburbs have been attempting to flee en masse,
hampered by huge traffic jams following an evacuation warning by Israel.
Rana Hamud is one of those leaving South Lebanon.
She's fled before when the Israeli invasion happened in 2023.
Along with her family, she's now in Saidun further north.
She spoke to the BBC's James Copnell.
It was a disaster, catastrophic.
We stayed 10 hours on the road.
We slept in the car on the street for one night with my three children and the cat.
It was a nightmare.
My friend called me at midnight.
She said they're throwing rockets to Israel.
I did not believe that.
I was in total denial.
In 2023, I did not leave.
We stayed like 10 days.
and my children are traumatized.
We've been going to therapists.
Yesterday they sent us to evacuate all the South.
This means like 60 villages, cities, people.
Last time in 2023, this did not happen.
We did not evacuate all the South.
And what about with your children?
I'm really sorry to hear about their trauma.
How are they getting on?
Well, they know that's the situation.
This is our reality.
My youngest, he's nine.
When he went back to school, he was a blank paper.
He forgot everything we had to start all over again with the basics, writing and reading.
But this time we brought the books with us.
But now we still did not find a house.
So where are you staying right now?
Our friend inside them, she said we can stay for a couple of days until we find a place.
But this is very difficult because this time.
it's different because people do not want to rent their houses to the southerns to us
because they say all the people from South Lebanon, we are with what is happening.
The war you're supporting Hezbollah, basically.
Exactly, yes. If you're from South Lebanon, you're supporting them.
So, yes, it's very difficult. You need to prove that.
No, I'm against war. I do not want this to happen.
and the prices for a house like a bedroom, a living room and the kitchen, $15,000 and we need to pay one year in advance.
I don't have $15,000.
I do not want to stay out of South Lebanon for one year.
I prefer to leave the country.
We're going to collapse one day because this is too much for us.
We did not ask for this.
We did not want this.
We never want this.
But it's always happening to us.
We're always paying the price.
Rana Hamoud speaking to James Copnell.
As the U.S. and Israel continue their bombing campaigns,
the Iranians are still hitting back,
launching rockets at Israel and also launching aerial attacks
on other countries in the region.
Explosions have been reported in Bahrain
and in the Qatari capital, Doha,
with black smoke rising over the horizon.
In the seas off the coast of Kuwait,
an explosion is reported.
reported to have hit an oil tanker.
And Azerbaijan has said Iranian drones struck an airport in the west of the country.
That's the whine of an approaching drone followed by a blast,
recorded and posted by a Nazari social media user and verified by our in-house experts at the BBC.
Lees Doucette is the BBC's chief international correspondent.
War wants on Leach has a momentum and a mind of its own.
It's being shown to us in Stark Relief every day.
Yesterday, you were doing a story about a naval destroyer of Iran being torpedoed by a submarine in just out of Sri Lankan territorial waters.
And today came the attack, as you mentioned, that drones went into Azerbaijan, which is on the border, the northern border of Iran.
Iran has now denied that it targeted Azerbaijan. But Azerbaijan has reacted with strong criticism.
It has close historical and religious links to Iran.
It's a Shia majority country and one of the big ethnic minorities in Iran are the Azaries.
But in the long disputes between Azerbaijan and Armenia, Iran has sided with Armenia.
And of course, Azerbaijan has longstanding relations with the U.S. and Israel.
But it doesn't have U.S. basis.
So the big question is, if they are targeting it, why?
the whole ambition of Iran seems to be, although it denies this, but to increase the price for those close to those fighting the war.
Lise Doucette.
Well, one country that has plenty of experience countering missile and drone activity is Ukraine.
And on Wednesday, Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelensky, said he was prepared to lend his support to Gulf states.
He's ordered his government to present options for how it could help those facing Iran's missile and drone attacks.
I asked our diplomatic correspondent James Landell and Kiev what this support might look like.
I think it would come primarily in two forms. One would be actual hardware. In other words, the many forms of intercepted drones that the Ukrainians have developed and are developing that they use to counter the threat of the Shahid drones, as they're known, from the Russians.
In other words, these are relatively slow-moving but pretty devastating attack drones.
that have causing so much devastation across the Gulf at the moment.
So there's the hardware, which we've been speaking to defence sources here in Kiev today.
And they say the Ukrainians have a huge capacity to upscale their production of those.
So they'll be able to get quite a lot to the Gulf quite quickly.
The problem is this.
The second thing that Ukraine could give the Gulf is expertise and training.
And that is much harder to provide because the Ukrainians say that at the moment their training program,
at the moment training their own people, both in the military and civilians, to use these intercept
drones. That training program is incredibly full. It is oversubscribed already. And I think Ukraine will
be very reluctant to send its own people to the Gulf, if that in any way put at risk,
Ukraine's own defense. And that point is something that President Zelensky has made very, very clear.
Absolutely. I mean, President Zelensky has his own war to fight. I mean, what's the strategy
here is Zelensky seeing an opportunity to win allies? Yes, absolutely. I think the Ukrainians are
not relishing, but they are certainly taking note of the fact that the tables have turned
that for the last four years, they have been the ones with the Begging Bowl asking allies and
others around the world to supply them with weapons. Now it is the other way about. There are
teams of people from the Gulf here in Kiev right now asking the Ukrainians, what can you give us,
how soon can you give it to us?
And I think that that is certainly something
that not only is that something
that the Ukrainians can use to make money,
they can improve their own defence production
to satisfy the demand in the Gulf,
but also President Zelensky has made it very clear also
that this is something that he could use
for what he called diplomatic investment.
In other words, using it to win more friends and allies
around the world.
Say, look, we can do business together.
You need to be with us,
and so you need to be with us.
and so you need to put more pressure on Russia as a result,
because this threat of Shahid drones is clearly a global threat now.
It is not just one for, you know, Ukraine, it is not just one for the Gulf.
Our diplomatic correspondent James Landale in Kiev,
and for a more in-depth look at the military situation in the Middle East,
with an assessment of the weapons Washington and Tehran are using
and how long their stockpiles can last,
you can watch our defense correspondent on our use.
YouTube channel. Search for BBC News on YouTube and you'll find the Global News podcast in the podcast section.
There's a new story available every weekday.
Still to come in this podcast, what happens to people's bodies when they stop taking weight loss
drugs? It is expected and known that when you stop these treatments, there will be a rebound in the body weight.
We'll hear the results of a new study. This is the Global News podcast.
Turkey has drawn up plans to deal with a potential influx of people fleeing the war in Iran,
but it's said so far there hasn't been much change in movement along the border.
Our correspondent James Waterhouse is close to one of the crossing points.
He's been speaking to people there, some of whom have left Iran and others who are going back.
The hour and a half journey from the city of Varn to the Capuchoi border crossing here
is a weaving one through jagged, mountainous terrain
under a brilliant white snow covering for as far as you can see.
It is bitterly cold,
and the activity here is only increasing.
It is a peephole into a country under sustained aerial assault.
Where the Iranian flag used to be, you can now see a black one.
In an official sense, at the very least, it is a country mourning the death of Ayatollah Ali Hamani.
There are people taking their suitcases, heading into Iran,
and of course there are people looking to escape going in the other direction.
My name is Hemi. I come from Mashat.
And what's the situation like there?
The intern is going out, and the situation is very bad.
We couldn't contact our family in somewhere else.
the world, but also the telephone, we couldn't read somebody.
What do you make of what Israel and the US are doing?
What do you make of those tactics?
You're worried about that?
It's interesting.
Someone's expression here might tell one story while their words tell another.
Not everyone wants to be named.
They certainly don't want to criticize the regime openly.
And they're almost reluctant to give a view on what Israel,
and the U.S. is doing.
This man did, however, tell us what his hometown is going through.
It's been bombed rapidly.
They are targeted by both regimes, Israel and America.
But it's been a really tough situation in Iran for everybody,
every single person is really getting scared
and they want to get out of there.
You can see in my face how tired I am to get just to get in here.
There is a real nervousness, a hesitation here among Iranians,
not just speak ill of the regime, but even to say where they lived.
They are fearful of reprisals, not just for them, for when they return,
but their families as well still in Iran.
You spoke to one gentleman there,
really didn't want to be filmed or recorded.
I asked him what it's like, and he just turned and said,
they can't beat Iran.
And you sense he really meant it,
visibly angry, visibly tied by the events of the past few days.
I kept to see my mom honestly.
And where's your mother?
My mom is in the city called Nishabur.
And how is it Nishabu?
Oh, it was terrible.
Honestly, unbelievable.
How so?
I could see young people dying.
It was terrible.
From airstrikes?
No, from me.
From police inside Iran.
You can see how difficult it is for people to talk open.
even once they've crossed the border,
that those who talk of change do so out of optimism here
rather than pragmatism.
James Waterhouse on the Turkish border with Iran.
To Nepal now, where the votes are being counted in a general election,
it's being seen as a contest between the old guard
and a new generation of politicians,
taking place nearly six months after a wave of youth-led protests
that left scores dead,
and force Nepal's then Prime Minister to quit.
Candidates now include a former rapper and a former prime minister.
These are some voters in the capital, Kathmandu.
I'm here to vote, hoping to bring new changes in Nepal.
That was what all of us are seeking.
And that was what all the Gen Z revolt was about.
I felt somehow I'm able to fulfill duties and responsibility as a person and a citizen
because each of our votes matter.
Our South Asia correspondent Azadamu Shiri is in Kathmandu, and she's been telling me about the candidates.
Right now, I'm outside of a Hindu temple that's been converted into a polling station here near Kathmandu.
And one of the candidates was actually here earlier.
I spoke to him, who is one of the senior leaders of the Nepali Congress.
He is someone who has been part of the long-established political system.
here. Gagantapa has been part of the fragile coalitions that have ruled Nepal for the past
three decades because what's important to understand here when we talk about a new generation
of faces unseating these veteran heavyweights is that since 90s there hasn't been a coalition
government that has completed its full term and it ends up turning into a round of musical chairs
where the same three parties tend to bargain and negotiate about what happens next. After the
protests in September with the rise of other faces like Balin Shah, a former rapper turned
politician who became the mayor of Kathmandu only three years ago. People are hoping that these
new politicians, these younger ones, he's about 35 years old, could dethrone some of these veteran
politicians. That includes the former Prime Minister, K.P. Sharma Oli, who was forced to resign
after the protests back in September. Now, he also is part of one of these veteran parties. And
And when I spoke to him earlier today at another polling station, I asked him whether he thought he still had a chance.
And he said, of course, that he's confident he will win, that he is confident that his party will win as well.
And after the protests, he told me that his party's dedicated and committed to listening to younger generations and understanding their concerns.
So the established parties think that they can continue this long political dynasty that they've had.
And these new faces like Balin Shah are ready to shake things up.
And this result will test whether those Gen Z protesters who are hoping for change
have managed to convince the rest of the country that it's time for an untried generation to lead Nepal.
So, Hazidic, can you paint a picture for us about what these Gen Z protesters
really want. You talked about their calls for change and their concerns. What are the big issues
for them? Number one, and this comes up, no matter how old people here in Nepal are, is corruption.
They feel like after decades of the same parties in charge, corruption hasn't been dealt with.
And the reason that they marched in September was initially triggered by a social media ban,
but it turned into days of anti-corruption marches. The second is unemployment. They really want jobs.
Youth unemployment here stands at about 20% among the highest in South Asia,
and they don't want to have to leave Nepal in search of better opportunities.
So those are the two big issues that they're hoping will change after this election.
As a day, Mishiri.
And for more from Nepal, check out our BBC News website where we're following the results.
One warning, it will take time, perhaps a few days,
for a final vote tally to come in.
As you can imagine, it takes time to collect and count all the votes.
across Nepal's mountainous terrain.
Conservative Anglicans, meeting in Nigeria's capital, Abuja,
have pulled back from electing a rival leader
to the first female Archbishop of Canterbury.
The plan had been seen as a direct challenge
to Sarah Mulali's leadership just weeks ahead of her installation.
Many churches, mainly in Africa and Asia,
oppose liberal shifts in parts of the Anglican Communion.
Our global religion correspondent,
DeSecco reports. Gafcon, a conservative group of Anglicans, said that it was leaving behind old
structures and as a result was leaving behind old titles. Their new leadership council will be headed
by the Archbishop of Rwanda, Laurent Mbanda. A Gafcon spokesperson said the root cause of the
divide with the Church of England was doctrine. But speaking today, he repeated a previous Gafcon
statement that the majority of the Anglican Communion still believes that the Bible requires an
all-male episcopacy. And he said her support for same
blessings was unbiblical. Ask repeatedly if they recognize Sarah Malali. The spokesperson said that she
is the Archbishop of Canterbury, but that Gaffcon recognized Archbishop Mbanda as its leader.
Our global religion correspondent, Lebu Disséco. And last, some news that might surprise you about
weight loss drugs. The latest research into injections such as Mungaro or Uygovi suggests
most people will regain almost two-thirds of the weight they lose
within a year of stopping the drugs.
The study at Cambridge University
included six trials involving more than 3,200 people.
Professor Antonio Vida Pooge has been speaking to the BBC's Nick Robinson.
I think with respect to the current new treatments for obesity,
they are certainly good at helping people to lose weight,
but then it is clear that people cannot stay in these treatments forever.
So these treatments can help you to lose weight,
around 50 to 20% of your body weight in a very short period of time.
But the price that you pay is that it is expected
and knowing that when you stop these treatments,
there will be a rebound in the body weight
simply because the need of restore energy that perceive your body.
But as I understand the research, is this right?
You still keep off about 25% of the weight loss.
So there is some overall gain?
Yes, in principle, this is the you only recover around 60%.
However, what we don't know at this present moment is that if the way that you recover is exclusively you recover fat or you, for example, don't recover enough muscle.
During the period that you are taking your drugs is fundamental to use this time to relearn the way you eat, also to maintain a very active lifestyle so that when you are willing from this type of treatment, you can defend yourself from the natural tendency of your diet.
your body to regain the body weight.
Professor Antonio Vita Poach from Cambridge University.
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 today takes an in-depth look at America's complicated history of intervention.
in the Middle East and what lessons can be learned in Iran.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Hannah Montgomery,
and the producer was Marion Strahan.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Celia Hatton. Until next time, goodbye.
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 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 rewind
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.
