Global News Podcast - US announces a ceasefire extension with Iran
Episode Date: April 22, 2026President Trump has announced an extension to the ceasefire with Iran until talks come to a conclusion. In a social media post, he said the US blockade of Iranian ports would continue until Tehran pre...sented what he called a "unified proposal". The truce between the two sides was due to expire on Wednesday. Mr Trump said he'd been asked to hold off on attacking Iran by Pakistan, which has been acting as a mediator. Also: the Lebanese group, Hezbollah, says it has launched drones and fired rockets into northern Israel. The Iranian-backed movement called the attacks a response to ceasefire violations by Israel. OpenAI is facing a criminal investigation in Florida into whether ChatGPT advised a man on the best way to carry out a mass shooting at a university last year. A diplomatic row has broken out after a well-known Russian television host made offensive remarks about the Italian Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni. And pop superstar Madonna is offering a reward for the return of a costume she wore on stage at the Coachella music festival in California, after several outfits went missing.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.ukMandatory Credit: Photo by ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH/EPA/Shutterstock (16839879i)
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Janet Jalil and in the early hours of Wednesday the 22nd of April, these are our main stories.
President Trump extends the U.S.-Iran ceasefire until negotiations are concluded but says the American blockade of Iranian ports will continue.
We get the response from Iran and look at what this means for efforts to end the war.
Open AI is facing a criminal.
investigation in Florida into whether chat GPT helped a gunman killed two people at a university
last year. Also in this podcast? So you carry the gene, but you won't always get a Parkinson's
disease. And if you have a healthy diet, at least from the data that we have here, you will
reduce your risk of getting the Parkinson's disease. A study finds evidence that eating
healthy can help reduce the risk of Parkinson's and gut microbes could be an early warning signal
before symptoms appear. After days of uncertainty about whether a second round of peace talks
between the US and Iran will take place in Pakistan and with just hours to go before their
ceasefire was due to expire, President Trump has announced that he's extending the truth with Iran
until their negotiations have concluded. He said the blockade.
of Iranian ports would also continue until Tehran presented what he called a unified proposal.
This comes after the Vice President, J.D. Vance, delayed his plans to travel to Islamabad this week
to hold negotiations with the Iranians overending the war. Here's our North America editor, Sarah Smith.
Well, it's interesting, isn't it? This very rapid turnaround from President Trump,
which he is framing as something he did at the request of the Pakistan government. Now, I think he's
doing that quite carefully so it doesn't look like a rapid climb down. But remember, just hours before
he announced this open-ended ceasefire, Donald Trump was speaking to CNBC on television, saying that he was
ready to start bombing again, that he expected to have to do that, that his military were raring to go,
and he was repeating his threats to destroy every bridge and every power plant in Iran. And then
hours after that, he has agreed to a ceasefire more extensive than the two-week one that was just about
to run out. Now, throughout this conflict, Donald Trump has used social media and statements on
television and elsewhere to issue very aggressive, bellicose threats against Iran, talking about
the destructive power of the US military and the damage that he could do inside Iran to try and
force them to agree to a deal. But now, for the second time in two weeks, he is backed down from
his threats of escalating the conflict, making it look very much as though he wants to wind this down
and get out of this war rather than to extend it.
And that in itself will send a message to Tehran.
Sarah Smith.
Well, Mr Trump's announcement came after Iran repeatedly said it had no plans to send a delegation to Islamabad.
With the US having attacked Iran while earlier rounds of negotiations were going on last year and earlier this year,
Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Ismail Bagheed said Tehran simply didn't trust Washington.
During the course of the past two days, they have attacked Iranian vessels.
And at the same time, they're continuing with their threats of war crime, threats of genocide, bombing are bridges and power plants.
So this is not the behavior of a country that is really serious about a diplomatic process.
So given this lack of trust, what has a response?
been in Iran to Mr. Trump's latest ceasefire extension.
Kachaya Joneidi is BBC Persian's Washington correspondent.
Immediately after President Trump made this announcement,
government loyalists in Tehran and other cities, including Mashad,
started celebrating on the streets as a victory.
They consider this that the president has backed down
because of Iran's upper hand in the Persian Gulf and the Hormuz Strait.
So for them, this is a clear win.
But of course, the regime itself knows,
It's in a very delicate and difficult position now with the extension of the ceasefire.
But one official reaction that we had after the announcement was a statement published by the Khatam-Olambia Central Command of Iran's armed forces,
which said that Iran's armed forces are 100% ready and they have their fingers under trigger.
And if the U.S. attacks Iran, then they will attack predestined targets that they have already locked on.
One problem the Iranian side has here is lack of trust and lack of confidence.
They've been attacked by the Americans and Israelis twice in the middle of negotiations,
so they are very careful not to be surprised again with another attack when they are not ready.
But at the same time, deep inside themselves, they're happy with this extension of the ceasefire
because it gives them some time to reorganize and try to rebuild those bombarded military facilities
and get ready for the next phase.
At the same time, they will try diplomacy to see if they could achieve what they want.
Most importantly, at this moment, what makes them upset is the continuation of the blockade
of Iran's ports.
And as one advisor to the Iranian parliament speaker, Mohamed Bogar Ghalyibov, mentioned,
is that the continuation of the blockade itself is a violation of the ceasefire.
And Kashir, we've heard a lot about tensions
between pragmatists and hardliners, how real is that, or is it more for show?
Well, there is a good cop and bad cop show, but at the same time there is some tension and fraction,
but let's make it clear, this is not between the hardliners and the moderates.
It's between different hardline groups. So within the hardliners, we have more pragmatic
forces, people like Mohamed Bogh, Maghore, Kalibov, who at one time President Trump considered to be
the de facto ruler of Iran. They're willing to talk. For them, diplomacy is a tool to achieve what they
want. But the hardliners who wanted to fight till the very end, people who were celebrating the end of
this ceasefire tonight before the announcement by the president. And they do not believe in diplomacy.
They wanted to fight till the end. Between these different groups, there is a lot of pressure and a lot
of fraction, and they're putting the pressure on Ghalibov himself. That's why there was
hesitation on the Iranian side. And President Trump understood that, and you could see that in his
statement where he talks about the fragmentation of the Iranian government.
Kachayar, Joan Adi, of BBC Persian. Well, the conflict in Iran has also had devastating
consequences for Lebanon after the Iranian-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah started firing into
Israel in solidarity with Iran. The Israeli military, after weeks of intense bombing, is
still occupying a belt of Lebanese territory on its border.
And now the fragile ceasefire imposed by President Trump on the two sides last week is under threat.
Hezbollah said it fired rockets at Israel in response to what it described as Israeli violations of that truce.
This comes two days before a second round of direct talks between Israel and Lebanon is due to take place in Washington.
Hugo Bishaga reports from Beirut.
This is the first attack by Hezbollah since the ceasefire came into a.
effect last week. The Israeli military said he had responded by striking the launcher from which the
rockets were fired. Israel continues to occupy around 5% of Lebanon's territory, with officials saying
the aim is to create a so-called security buffer zone along the border. Despite the ceasefire,
the Israeli military has been carrying out demolitions in the area, saying it is destroying
Hezbollah infrastructure. He has also accused the group of violating the deal. Thousands of Lebanese were
forced to flee because of the war remain displaced.
Hugo Beshager.
Well, two Israeli soldiers have been removed from combat duty and jailed
over the destruction of a statue of Jesus in South Lebanon
after a picture emerged over the weekend showing one of them using a sledgehammer on the icon.
In the latest deadly violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank,
two Palestinians, one of them a child, have been killed in an attack on a village
involving Jewish settlers and Israeli soldiers, according to Palestinian officials.
The Israeli military says it's looking into the incident.
John Donison sent this report from Jerusalem.
Gunfire in the Palestinian village of Al-Mulgayr in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
The mayor told the BBC around 10 Jewish settlers approached the village along with Israeli soldiers
and started shooting towards.
the local school. There was panic outside the school gates as medics tried to get to the dead and
injured. The Palestinian Red Crescent says a 13-year-old boy and a man in his 30s were shot and died.
The mayor said they were killed by Israeli soldiers. Four other people were injured by gunfire
and taken to hospital. In a statement, the Israeli military said soldiers had been dispatched to the
area after reports of a violent confrontation and of Palestinian youths throwing rocks at an Israeli
car. The military said an army reservist was in the car who got out and started shooting. It said
the incident was under review. It is the latest attack in what the United Nations has called a surge
in settler violence. At the end of last month, the UN said on average there were six attacks
happening every day and that more than 1,500 Palestinians had been displaced.
by the violence.
John Donison.
We've all heard about how AI has helped people write essays,
deal with projects at work and even get therapy.
But now OpenAI's chatbot, chat GPT,
is being investigated in the US over shocking claims
that it advised a man on the best way to carry out a mass shooting.
The Attorney General in Florida has opened a criminal inquiry
after reviewing messages between chat GPT and the man.
who went on to kill two people at Florida State University last year
and wound several others.
James Uthmeyer said his prosecutors had told him
if the messages had come from a person,
they would have been charged with murder.
The chatbot advised the shooter on what type of gun to use,
on which ammo went with which gun,
on whether or not a gun would be useful in short range.
Chat GPT advised the shooter on what time of the gun.
of day would be appropriate for the shooting to interact with more people, and where on campus
would be the place to encounter a higher population.
Open AI has described the killings as a tragedy, but said that chat GPT was not responsible,
as it only gave out information that was readily available online.
So in what could be a potentially groundbreaking case, I asked our North America technology
correspondent Lily Jamali, if a chatbot could be found guilty of murder.
I think we are going to find out as a result of this criminal probe that's been undertaken by
Attorney General Uthmire.
You know, he acknowledged that his probe is straying into uncharted legal waters.
There's just not a lot of precedent for holding an AI chatbot liable for a crime.
And that's why I think there's so much attention on what he is doing.
The Attorney General of Florida saying Chat GPT offered guidance, which you just laid out a moment ago on how this person could have maximal impact. And you also heard him say, you know, a person doing that would be charged with murder. So we're going to find out can a company that makes a technology that's counseling someone be charged with something like that. The stakes are very high here.
And Lily, it really does seem incredible that Chat GPT doesn't have safeguards or didn't have safeguards to prevent something as horrific.
as this happening? Well, they will argue that they have put safeguards in place. So the major AI companies
like OpenAI and Anthropic and Google, they're constantly adjusting their chatbots and how they work
and how they interact with us. And OpenAI notably made something called GPT5 that came out towards
the end of last year. They made it less sycophantic than the previous version. And actually,
it was interesting because a lot of users didn't like that very much.
But I think the thinking was they were being confronted with the reality that people were having
these parisocial relationships that felt very real with these platforms and that they had to do
something.
But the concern is that these changes are happening after you hear about someone being coached
in a mass shooting situation like what happened in Florida or young people being coached to
kill themselves.
That's why a lot of people argue we need regulation, that these companies shouldn't be just
doing this on their own, making these adjustments as they go.
And briefly, even on a lower level, people's mental health is being affected.
It is. And, you know, I was actually just at a news conference yesterday of a mom speaking about
her son who died of suicide, who killed himself. She says he was coached by chat GPT.
There are so many efforts to regulate these chatbots at the state level. California is one of
those places leading the way.
Lily Jamali
Still to come in this podcast.
She may want those items to be in a Madonna museum or at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
For any artists and really for any person to have their belongings come up missing, stolen or otherwise can be very stressful.
Madonna offers a reward for the return of the purple corset and other vintage items she wore at the Coachella Festival last weekend, which have since disappeared.
This is the Global News Podcast.
A new study led by University College London suggests microbes in the gut can reveal whether a person faces an elevated risk of Parkinson's disease before they have any symptoms.
Scientists found that people with Parkinson's have a distinctive makeup of gut microbes, as do healthy individuals who are genetically at risk of the disease.
Paul Henley asked Professor Tony Shapira, who led the research at UCL, why his team focused on the gut.
This GBA gene, which is the commonest cause of Parkinson's disease, we see it in 10 to 12% of people in the UK with Parkinson's,
doesn't always cause a disease, only about one in five people get the disease.
So it must be something else that's going on.
and the microbiome has recently been shown to influence some brain disorders,
including Parkinson's to some degree, but definitive work hadn't been done on it.
So we wondered, is there a particular microbiome signature in the gut that causes the Parkinson's
and people that have the gene?
And just to be clear, at the moment, you're at an early stage of establishing a correlation,
your many steps away from a cure?
Oh, yes.
Yeah.
But I think the finding of this very distinctive microbiome signature,
I think is providing some useful information into the cause,
as well as an early potential diagnostic test.
And ultimately, of course, we'd like to investigate it
for trying to reduce the risk or slowing the progression of Parkinson's disease.
Gut health is talked about more and more.
Are we talking about a link between bad gut health, if you can say that, and the disease,
or just a certain type of gut flora?
We found that those with, as you put it, bad gut health,
are much more likely to have this distinctive Parkinson's signature.
And those with the signature with Parkinson's disease had more severe disease.
So, yes, there's a clear link here between,
the onset and severity of the disease and the quality, if you will, of the microbiome and the diet.
And you can't shake the gene from your system, but you can control how it develops within your gut.
Is that what you're saying?
Exactly right.
Just explain that a bit more.
So you carry the gene, but you won't always get a Parkinson disease.
And if you have a healthy diet, at least from the data that we have here, you will reduce.
reduce your risk of getting the Parkinson's disease.
But that same message may apply to everybody.
And the healthy diet message is just a general one.
I mean, give some basic examples.
It is.
So diversity is the key.
So eating lots of different things.
And particularly things like high fiber from plants and vegetables and fruits,
things like garlic, asparagus, eating yogurt, berries, olive oil,
and oily fish like mackerel and sardine.
those are the real key to a good healthy diet.
And on the other side, keeping away from lots of processed foods, high sugar, excess alcohol.
Is dairy the big key here?
No, I don't think dairy is the big key.
I think the big key is fibre, high fibre diet from diverse sources,
because that's what the bacteria in the gut thrive off.
And to be clear, the advice to eat healthily gets much more urgent
if you're already displaying symptoms of Parkinson's.
Absolutely.
And, you know, from the research, it seems that even those with the disease,
maybe early on in the onset of the disease who switch their diet,
still a really healthy one, might find that disease progresses more slowly.
But we need more research to confirm that.
Professor Tony Shapira on yet another reason to eat healthily.
A diplomatic row has broken out between Italy and Russia,
after a well-known Russian television host made offensive remarks about the Italian Prime Minister, Georgia Maloney.
The Russian ambassador was summoned to Italy's Foreign Ministry in Rome
in the latest sign of tensions between the two countries over the war in Ukraine.
Carla Conti reports.
Vladimir Solov is one of Russia's most recognizable TV personalities.
Famously sharp-tonged and ruthless, Solov frequently launches vulgar and offensive attacks against the West and Europe.
often threatening countries that offer military support to Ukraine with nuclear action.
Mr. Solofyov's latest target was the Italian Prime Minister, Georgia Meloni.
Speaking during an episode of one of his programs, he began insulting Miss Meloni in Italian.
Calling her a disgrace to the human race, a beast, a certified idiot, little woman.
He then proceeded to switch back in a human race.
He then proceeded to switch back into Russian, describing her as a fascist creature who had betrayed her voters,
and he claimed and even betrayed the U.S. President Donald Trump.
The remarks have now triggered a formal diplomatic dispute.
Italy has summoned the Russian ambassador in Rome,
with Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani describing Solov's outburst as extremely serious and offensive.
George Meloni herself later hit back on social media, saying that a, quote, regime propagandist was in no
position to offer her lessons in either freedom or consistency.
Across Italy's political spectrum, both government allies and opposition figures have rallied
behind Ms. Meloni.
This latest outburst is another sign of how far relations between Rome and Moscow have deteriorated.
Miss Meloni has been a staunch supporter of Kiev, and the insults came just days after
she again reaffirmed her support for Ukraine.
Solof also seized on another vulnerability, her worsening relationship with Donald Trump.
Once seen as one of his closest ideological allies in Europe,
Ms. Maloney has recently distanced herself from him,
including by publicly backing Pope Leo
after Mr Trump lashed out at the pontiff.
Carla Conti.
A criminal investigation is underway
after a tiger leapt into the audience at a circus in Russia.
A video has emerged of the animal climbing over a barrier.
Joanna Keane takes up the story.
The terrifying incident at the circus in the southern sea,
city of Rostov-on-Don has been circulating on social media.
Several tigers can be seen sitting on individual platforms on the stage.
They're performing to music when suddenly the circular barrier separating them from the crowd collapses.
People can be heard screaming as one of the tigers calmly climbs over the metal barrier
and into the audience.
Fortunately, it heads for an empty row of seats at the back of the tent.
Some people grab their belongings and leave while others look on as a trainer follows the tiger.
He's reported to have managed to steer it through an exit and into a secure container.
No injuries have been reported, but an investigation into safety violations is underway.
This isn't an isolated incident.
Two years ago, a bear riding a hoverboard at a circus in Russia suddenly attacked its trainer
as children and parents watched the show.
And 11 years ago in South West Germany, a man taking his regular morning walk
was killed by an elephant which had escaped from its enclosure.
Stricter welfare laws mean that wild animals are now banned from
circuses in a growing list of countries including Britain, but others, including Russia, still allow
them to be used for performances on a regular basis.
Joanna Keane, Pope Leo on the fourth and final leg of his tour of Africa, has been addressing
adoring crowds in Equatorial Guinea. He denounced the colonisation of the continent's minerals
and the lust for power in a country whose leader has been in office for 47 years. Our correspondent
and neighbouring Cameroon, Paul NGA, told Anka Desai more about why the Pope had chosen to go there.
Equatorial Guinea is very symbolic and significant because it has a very huge Catholic population.
And so the Pope is there to also reassure the Church, especially because they had been waiting for a paper visit for over 40 years.
And also because the country is currently what some analysts have described as authoritarianism.
and so the Pope was there to address some of the social ills which he felt that, you know, bringing down the country.
He did speak about exclusion and social inequality and the need for the government there to address it.
He also spoke to the local authorities there about, you know, the need to ensure that the country's resources are equitably distributed
and that those are also felt unrelished by the population.
As it stands now, the country is very rich in oil since it was discovered in the mid-1919.
but some observers have said that it has not gone down to the people who do not also benefit from that.
As a matter of fact, the World Bank says that nearly half of the country's population is living in poverty.
So you can imagine why the Pope today put out a very strong message in the presence of the country's President,
Deodoro Biankema Vaso, saying that there is need for justice, for social equality.
You're right. The Pope has been quite spoken throughout the tour.
What do you think that he's achieved during his visit to Africa?
Well, I think that the Pope's visit to Africa sends a message across to governments that despite the fact that he is a religious figure, he has that moral voice to correct the wrongs and the ills of society, and he demonstrated that without blinking.
When he was in Cameroon, he did speak outrightly against corruption, against lack of transparency and the need for the government to look into the challenges or problems facing young people, women, and the civil society.
And he did repeat that today in Equatorial Guinea.
and we also know that he's been involved in some sort of a spat with U.S. President Donald Trump,
just essentially trying to say that they are a moral voice and they have that obligation
to correct what's going wrong in society.
So Pope Leo, I think what he believes is in the course of this trip,
he is going to be ensuring the international community.
Africa, which is a promising terrain for the Catholic Church,
would be seeing some sort of development going forward,
and especially because he has preached peace, reconciliation, dialogue,
and of course, interfaith dialogue, of course.
All NGA.
Madonna is offering a reward for the return of the costume she wore when she joined Sabrina Carpenter on stage at the Coachella Festival in California on Friday.
The vintage purple corset, purple stockings and lavender gloves were also worn for her first appearance at the festival 20 years ago.
In a post on social media, Madonna revealed that other memorabilia also went missing after the show and she's desperate to get her stuff back.
Dr. Matthew Donahue, who's a musician and a professor at the Department of Popular Culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, says Madonna's outfits are as famous as she is.
Her wardrobe is such a big part of her performance space and style.
And for any artists to lose a part of their history, it can be very stressful, very traumatic.
She may want those items to be in a Madonna,
museum perhaps in the future or at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. For any artists, and really for
any person to have their belongings come up missing, stolen, or otherwise, can be very stressful.
And of course, she's well known for her wardrobe in reference to her theatrical performances,
live, and so on. This performance with Sabrina Carpenter, in many ways, it's sort of like a
continuing of her passing the torch. Like, she really passed the torch. She really passed the
also to artists like Britney Spears and then, of course, to Lady Gaga.
You could certainly say Taylor Swift has taken a page out of Madonna's handbook.
And now is Sabrina Carpenter.
Madonna's still working it.
And you have to give her credit.
She's a living legend, the queen of not only pop music, but also of pop culture.
And she has shown longevity in her career.
And she'll be remembered for a very, very, very long time.
Dr. Matthew Donahue.
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.
This edition of the Global News Podcast was mixed by Charlotte Hadroy Tozimska.
It was produced by Ariankochi and Wendy Urquhart.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Jeanette Jalil. Until next time.
Goodbye.
