Global News Podcast - US strikes Iranian boats in Strait of Hormuz

Episode Date: May 5, 2026

Growing fears for the ceasefire in the Middle East after the US and Iran trade fire as American forces try to open up the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. President Trump said two US-flagged m...erchant vessels were able to transit the waterway. The UAE said Iran also launched cruise missiles and drones towards its oil facilities. Also: Two people are killed and several others injured when a car drives into a central pedestrian zone of the eastern German city of Leipzig; the South Korean owners of tech giant Samsung agree to pay a huge inheritance tax bill of eight billion US dollars - the largest such payment in the country's history; stars turn out in all their glory for this year's Met Gala despite fears of a backlash against the new sponsor Jeff Bezos. And, Wu Yize becomes the second Chinese winner of the World Snooker Championship.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. This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service. Hi, I'm Ankara Dissai, and in the early hours of Tuesday, the 5th of May, these are our main stories. Fears of a resumption of hostilities in the Gulf after the US says it's guided some stranded ships out of the Strait of Hormuz. In retaliation, Iran has fired a barrage of drones and missiles at targets in the region. Also, two people have been killed and 22 injured after a car was driven into a crowd in Germany. And backlash as celebrities take to the red carpet at the Met Gala. Also in this podcast, we analyse how China is fast becoming a juggernaut in the sport of snooker.
Starting point is 00:00:46 My parents are the two champions. My dad has been my side. My mom has also going through a lot over the years. They are the source of my strengths. I love them so much. As a 22-year-old sensation, Wu Yiza has won the World Snooker Championship in a final frame thriller. We begin in the Middle East, where the U.S.-Iran ceasefire is on very shaky ground. The United Arab Emirates says Iran has fired missiles and drones at its territory,
Starting point is 00:01:17 accusing the country of dangerous escalation. The strike on an oil port sparked a fire injuring three people. This is the first time the UAE has been targeted since the ceasefire was agreed four weeks ago. The attacks came in response to President Trump launching his Project Freedom Operation to get stranded commercial vessels out of the Strait of Hormuz. The US said American missile destroyers and merchant ships had sailed through the strait and several Iranian small boats were destroyed. From Washington, here's our North America correspondent, David Willis.
Starting point is 00:01:51 Donald Trump has said the U.S. effort to guide stranded ships out of the Strait of Hormuz is in response to pleas for help from country. all over the world. He's called it an humanitarian gesture and given it the name Project Freedom. But the move is threatening to undo an already fragile ceasefire that's been in place between the United States and Iran for the last month. The head of US Central Command, Admiral Brad Cooper told reporters that Iran had used cruise missiles, drones and boats to try to disrupt the mission, and US forces had already sunk six Iranian ships that were targeting civilian vessels in the region. Retired U.S. General Jack Keen told the BBC
Starting point is 00:02:34 low-key mine clearing operations and other such preparations have been underway in the strait of almost for some time. We've been in communication with ship owners, ship and shores and the merchant ship captains themselves for a number of weeks. We told them what our intent is and we do believe that likely beginning tonight a number of them will begin to conduct that transit. As of now, there are no plans on our part to do any escorting of vessels through that. We're telling them the straits are clear. U.S. Central Command said guided missile destroyers belonging to the American Navy
Starting point is 00:03:14 had passed through the Strait of Hormuz and that American forces were assisting transit for commercial shipping with Navy destroyers and warplanes on hand to shoot down missiles or repel fast boat attacks by Iran. But it's a high-risk strategy, and so far there are few signs that tanker owners seem sufficiently confident or sufficiently insured to take advantage of it. Raman Kapoor is the captain of a crude oil tanker stuck in the Gulf. First and foremost, it's my cruise safety, first and then my ship's safety.
Starting point is 00:03:52 So as a captain, I would not take this risk at the moment. Writing on his truth social platform, Donald Trump said Iran had taken some shots, as he put it, at US allies in the region, among them a South Korean cargo ship, and that no other vessels had been damaged going through the strait. Iran claimed earlier that it had hit a U.S. warship in the region. Perhaps it's time for South Korea to come and join the mission, the President added. David Willis in Washington. Well, in a social media post, the Iranian Foreign Minister, Abasarachi, warned the US not to be dragged back into a quagmire. So why has President Trump decided to potentially jeopardise the ceasefire? We asked our North America editor, Sarah Smith. When Donald Trump launches Project Freedom, I don't think he was trying to deliberately provoke the Iranians or trying to disrupt the ceasefire.
Starting point is 00:04:47 What he wanted to do was tackle his biggest domestic problem, which is the way the blockade of the trade of hormones, is, putting prices up here in America and around the world, and that is, of course, what is making his war in Iran so very unpopular with the American public. So the thing is that it was inevitable. If the US was going to try and get tank of ships moving through this trade, that this was going to risk the exchange of fire, which is, of course, exactly what happened today,
Starting point is 00:05:13 that that threatens the fragile ceasefire. On top of that, we've had Donald Trump saying that the US is ready to launch new attacks on Iran from the American bases in the region, if that's what is required. But as I say, I don't think that that was his purpose. The reason that he has been taking this action has got more to do with lowering prices than it has to do with restarting hostilities.
Starting point is 00:05:34 It's just that if that was his aim, that hasn't been very successful either because as a result of what's happened today, the oil price has gone up and the value of the US stock market has gone down a bit. Our international editor, Jeremy Bowen, says the conflict is again at a very dangerous juncture. It was inevitable that something like,
Starting point is 00:05:52 this was going to happen. And this is the way that wars escalate. These are moments where miscalculations about each other's motives are likely and possible and dangerous and that is the problem that they're facing at the moment. America's strategic binders, they need to get
Starting point is 00:06:08 that straight open. The Iranians want to show that they're going to keep it closed or at least controlled. And the foreign minister today has been saying to MPs that not only a no nuclear talks going on with the Americans, but there will be no going back to the way things were before the war started on the 28th of February,
Starting point is 00:06:25 that no hostile vessels from hostile nations would be allowed through, that there would be new mechanisms to control the strait. Let us not forget the strait was open before America and Israel attacked, and now actually opening it has become a major war aim of the war that didn't seem to have clear strategic reasoning behind it. When it stopped, as for the Gulf states, deeply alarming. sources I've been speaking to absolutely reflect the public statements as well. The UAE particularly said publicly they will not be intimidated.
Starting point is 00:06:59 They put a whole lot of new weapons from the Americans. So look, this is a time for steady and calm leadership in Tehran and in Washington. Are we going to get it? Jeremy Bowen, reporting. Two people were killed and several others were injured on Monday when a car drove into a central pedestrian zone of the eastern German city of Leipzig. Police say the two dead are a 63-year-old woman and a 77-year-old man, both German nationals. It's the latest in a spate of such incidents in recent years in Germany.
Starting point is 00:07:33 Police say the driver, a 33-year-old German man, has now been arrested. The mayor of Leipzig Buchhard Jung said it was devastating. A terrible tragedy has unfolded in Leipzig. We're stunned by what has happened. A man has driven at high speed into the shopping. district. We're mourning two deaths, with three people currently in a critical condition and many others injured. It's impossible to find the right words to describe this horrific rampage. Authorities say they do not yet know a motive, but say the man has previously suffered from mental illness. With more details about what happened, here's Bethany Bell. We've heard from the Prime Minister of Saxony, the state in where Leipzig is, saying that
Starting point is 00:08:18 He's believed to have had psychological issues. He's also a local resident. He, as we know, has been arrested and the police are continuing their investigations. They've said that two people have lost their lives in this and a number of others injured. They said it was still too early to say the numbers have injured. And there is this very big emergency and rescue operation underway in the centre of town, what we understand is that this car drove along a street that leads towards the pedestrian area in the centre of Leipzig, in the very touristy area, an area where there's a university, where there's sites connected with the composer, Johann Sebastian Bach, a very busy area in Leipzig where it's very popular for people to be out in the evening and this is when the incident happened.
Starting point is 00:09:16 have not said yet whether they believe that this was a deliberate attack or whether it was an accident or something else. What we know is that they have said the suspect is no longer a danger, that it is fine for people in Leipzig to go out in the streets again and wander around. But this is something which has caused great grief and shock. Bethany Bell reporting. Now here's a phrase you don't hear very often. Paying taxes is a natural duty of. citizens. That was a quote from the South Korean family behind the mighty Samsung business.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Its late chairman, Lee Kun He, died back in 2020, leaving a fortune worth around $45 billion. The family has just paid a massive inheritance tax bill of $8 billion, US, the largest such payment in South Korea's history, possibly the world. While the country's inheritance tax is among the highest in the world that Samsung pays. is still roughly one and a half times the country's total inheritance tax revenue for 2024. Quite the windfall for the government. So what does all this tell us about the company? My colleague Rebecca Kesby spoke to Jeffrey Kane,
Starting point is 00:10:32 an American journalist and writer of the book, Samsung Rising, inside the secretive company, Conquering Tech. Samsung is not any ordinary business. South Koreans even have a term for their country. They call it the Republic of Samson. And so this is a company that is just massive by any standard. It doesn't just make the smartphones and the chips that we all hear about. They build apartments. They have a hospital. And you can literally, in South Korea, this is no exaggeration. You could if you wanted to live cradle to the grave on Samsung. Just literally get a Samsung apartment, watch your Samsung TV. They do have a Samsung managed graveyard to give another example. So it is massive and so tied to the success or the failure of. of South Korea. It's the company that's the nameplate brand of South Korea. What Samsung does reflects on the country. Were you surprised at how enthusiastic the family was to pay this
Starting point is 00:11:28 inheritance tax? I was absolutely surprised because getting to this point has been a seemingly never-ending succession of scandals and jail sentences. It's just been wild. It is a very high percentage that people pay in South Korea for inheritance tax? I think it's 50%, which is the highest in the world, I think, or among the highest in the world. It's really stunning what Samsung has done. A lot of people did not expect so much money to, you know, come so seemingly easily. But one of the reasons why Samsung and other Korean companies have behaved this way in the past, resisting these payments is exactly that reason. They complain that they just have a sky-high inheritance tax rate, and it's unreasonable by the standards of most developed economies.
Starting point is 00:12:17 It was a reluctant payment. It was something that they were trying to avoid for many decades. They really wanted to lessen the burden of this inheritance tax. But the bottom line is that Samsung has been through so many scandals over its history. Jay Lee himself, the chairman, has been through scandal after scandal, even as he has been rising to the chairmanship. And so the bottom line is that if they fight this, there's going to be trouble for Samsung. There's going to be trouble with the government, with regulators, with the population, with the citizens who are not always so happy about the outsized power of Samsung.
Starting point is 00:12:51 So they just have to bite the bullet and they have to pay it. That's that. But what does that tell us about the powers of nation states to rein in some of these super-rich people that are or corporations that are potentially richer than any given country? It says a lot. And it says that when a nation, when a government puts its mind to it, yes, it can read them in. and it can make them pay their fair share. Jeffrey Kane speaking to Rebecca Kesby. So to come in this podcast, we're on the red carpet.
Starting point is 00:13:22 On the shoulder. One shoulder. We're right over here at the bottom. We're in New York as the stars gathered for the Met Gala. I never thought I'd get here in life. I'm arrived. Here I am. That's how I feel.
Starting point is 00:13:36 I'm like dancing inside. The crew of NASA's Artemis 2. mission have returned home safely after successfully completing their groundbreaking voyage around the moon. Splashdown confirmed. Humans are back in the business of going to the moon. But while the mission is over, the Artemis Space Program is just getting started. 13 minutes, the BBC Space podcast is looking back on their epic journey and discovering what the future holds for the Artemis Space Program. Just imagine what we as humans can do next. 13 minutes presents. Artemis 2 from the BBC World Service. Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
Starting point is 00:14:31 This is the Global News Podcast. European leaders gathered in Armenia have stressed the need for a coordinated approach to security in response to global turmoil and strained relations with Washington. The EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Europe must step up its military capabilities by speeding up production. to step up our military capabilities to be able to defend and protect ourselves. There is a vast amount of money available for the investment. Now we really have to step up and speed up the production process for military capabilities.
Starting point is 00:15:10 The European political community or EPC was set up after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The country's present, Volodymyr Zelensky, told the summit Ukraine was ready to help bolster European defence resources. Also attending the meeting was the first non-European, Mark Carney, the Prime Minister of Canada. Our correspondent, James Waterhouse, is in Yerevan. He spoke to my colleague Alex Ritton about the meeting. It really is. It's just a European bloc trying to take on a growing list of very real challenges. It's not now just about the war in Ukraine. That, of course, is high up on the agenda. We've seen continue to support announced for Ukraine today. But there is also the war on Iran, this US-Israeli-led military operation against Iran
Starting point is 00:15:58 that is causing endless economic shockwaves, not least from the blocking of the key shipping lane, of the Strait of Hormuz. And to add to that, you know, Donald Trump's frustration with Europe's defence spending is not new. What is, I think, is that indifference to European security now developing into withdrawal. Because Donald Trump had a falling out with the German chance of the Friedrich Meerts a few days ago, where the latter suggested the US had no strategy when it came to its war on Iran. Donald Trump has now pulled 5,000 troops out of Central Europe. He's pulling out long-range missile systems designed to curb Russian aggression. And you could certainly tell today in Yerevan that that was fueling a sense of urgency.
Starting point is 00:16:43 Yeah, the British Prime Minister Kyr Stama has admitted there that Europe's alliances are not where we want them to be. to quote directly. It is, and no one said Donald Trump's name, but Emmanuel Macron, the French president, called it the elephant in the room. He called it a continued over-reliance by Europe on America's security umbrella. And what this collection of leaders really want,
Starting point is 00:17:06 what they are striving for is, I'm going to use jargon now, strategic autonomy, where as a collective, they should be able to manufacture their own weapons, generate their own intelligence, and defend themselves against threats like, Russian aggression. But that will take decades.
Starting point is 00:17:23 James, briefly, is Armenia being quite brave hosting this meeting? It's an interesting balancing act for Armenia. This is a country historically that has had political and cultural ties with Russia. It still buys Russian gas at a discounted rate. But recent events and political turnings of the tide mean that Nikol Pashina, the Prime Minister, that he is looking to align the country westwards. He is wanting to join the European Union. There's a separate summit happening tomorrow
Starting point is 00:17:56 between the European Union and Armenia, where they'll look at visa opportunities. And Vladimir Putin has made it clear. He's displeased with this. He said, you can't align with Europe and be part of our economic alliance. And on Russian State TV, there are some commentators
Starting point is 00:18:12 threatening another Ukraine if that was to happen. James Waterhouse reporting. Now, it's not that often that people turn up to parties holding a replica of their own head or dressed as a chandelier. But at the Met Gala, we expect nothing less, as the biggest names in Hollywood line up to face the photographers on the museum's famous steps. The annual fundraiser rakes in tens of millions of dollars for the museum and is seen as the hottest ticket in showbiz,
Starting point is 00:18:46 with Vogue's Anna Wintel running the guest list. It's normally sponsored by major fashion houses, but this year Jeff Bezos is footing the bill and co-chairing, which has led to rumours that some famous faces were refusing to go. One person that did show up is the tennis star Venus Williams, who's also co-chairing alongside Nicole Kidman and Beyonce. I never thought I'd get here in life, so I'm like, I feel like, I'm like dancing. Also there are North American correspondent Ned Tofeeke, who spoke to us from the steps.
Starting point is 00:19:20 Right in front of me at the moment is Madonna, who is wearing a hat of a ship, carrying a horn in her hand with a black gown, and a long grey veil that is being carried by no less than seven girls wearing nightgowns. So music is playing, so Madonna arriving, and one of the more dramatic entrances onto. the Met Gala steps with this kind of performance art because the theme is fashion as art. That was the dress code. And so we've seen everything from, you know, Heidi Klum turning up as quite literally a statue and those kind of sculpted looks, even people wearing mannequins on them, to more understated dresses that either reflect inspiration from paintings and other art or just somebody's
Starting point is 00:20:11 kind of personal feelings. For example, Venus Williams, the tennis star, who's actually a co-chair of this event, I asked her about the Swarovsky necklace she was wearing with her gown, and she said it combined a bit of her kind of tennis victories along with paying homage to her mother and father. So so far, this net gala, this theme, has been very widely interpreted. Yeah, I hope when Madonna turned up, they were playing a bit of vogue for her, because that would have been properly apt as well.
Starting point is 00:20:37 I also love seeing some of the photos on the BBC News homepage, Sabrina Carpenter wearing a dress with lots of film around her body as well. Yes, and I actually asked her, we kind of shouted here from behind the hedges, what the film was. And she simply just shouted back Sabrina. So she's clearly put a lot of thought into her gown. And some of my other favorites were Janelle Monet. She was wearing cables and circuit boards and pieces of computer woven into a gown with some moss on it. So I think clearly trying to make a statement about nature and technology, perhaps.
Starting point is 00:21:14 And then there were two people that came that I honestly didn't know who they were at first. Katie Perry had a space-like silver mask until she removed it. We didn't know it was her. And Bad Bunny came dressed like an older man. So we almost missed that it was Bad Bunny after all. Okay. Just before you go then, there's been some controversy and backlash based on the fact that Jeff Bezos has been a big part in this. Yeah, that's absolutely right.
Starting point is 00:21:36 Jeff Bezos and his wife, Lauren Sanchez, Bezos, are basically bankrolling this whole event, and they've been named honorary co-chairs. And so in the lead-up to this, around New York and the streets and subways, some campaigners were calling for celebrities to actually boycott this. There was a projection that said, if he can buy the Met Gala, he should pay more in taxes. So really, just because of growing inequality and the economy, there are some criticisms usually for the Met Gala, saying it's an elitist event, out of touch with regular New York.
Starting point is 00:22:06 workers, but given that Bezos is one of the wealthiest men in America, it has put an added spotlight on that. And I actually asked Cher what she thought about it, and she simply just kind of gave a look and said, I'm not a fan. So I'll let you guess what she meant by that. There's a Telfig reporting from the Met Gala in New York. Tiny pieces of plastic pollution have been found in some of the most remote places on earth, from the depths of the sea to the ice in Antarctica. And a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change suggests that bits of plastic in the atmosphere are helping to drive up global temperatures. More from our environment correspondent Matt McGrath.
Starting point is 00:22:46 The durability of plastic is one of its great strengths. But this same property means it does not dissolve or degrade quickly. Instead, it breaks down into ever smaller fragments. Floating on the lightest breeze, these minuscule pieces have reached the remotest parts of our world. To date, it's their impact on animal and human health that's been the focus. But this new work suggests the massive flood of fragments swirling around the atmosphere is helping warm the planet. A key discovery is the difference the color of these micro and nanoparticles makes. Professor Drew Shindell from Duke University in the U.S. is one of the report's authors.
Starting point is 00:23:25 There's a few of the very light-colored white particles. They reflect sunlight back out into space, therefore, lead to a cooler planet. but the majority of them are darker. They're either they start dark or they age while they're floating around in the atmosphere and they yellow and turn a little bit darker. So the net effect is warming and that's really, I think, a powerful conclusion. The researchers say the problem is worse where plastic accumulates, such as over the area of the Pacific known as the Great Garbage Patch.
Starting point is 00:23:56 They argue that this previously unknown effect of microplastics should be considered in future climate assessments. Matt McGra reporting. Now to the wonderful story of the 16-year-old kid from China, who left home to travel to the UK and pursue his dream of becoming a snooker world champion. That boy is now a 22-year-old superstar. His name is Wu Yuzha,
Starting point is 00:24:20 and he's become the second Chinese player to win the World Snooker Championship. A year after his compatriot, Zhao Jing Tong. Wu held his nerve to defeat England's Sean Murphy in a final frame nail-biter and pockets a sweet prize pot of more than $600,000, which he says he will spend on buying a house in England for his parents. And speaking through an interpreter after the match,
Starting point is 00:24:43 he thanked them for the sacrifices they've made for him. My parents are the true champions. Since I made the decision to drop out of the school, my dad has been my side. My mom had also going through a lot. lot over the years. They are the source of my strengths. I love them so much. Fantastic. Thank you very much. Our Beijing correspondent, Stephen McDonald, told us how the news is being received in China. For people who, maybe they're not super snooker followers,
Starting point is 00:25:19 they've woken up this morning to the social media sensation following this victory. I mean, some of the comments on social media, this young man has nerves of steel, the era of Chinese snooker has arrived. You know, thank you very much for making me fall in love with snooker and stuff like this. I mean, on China's version of Twitter, which is Weibo, the hashtag
Starting point is 00:25:42 Wu'idza winning the world championship had, well, 18 million hits when I last looked. It's the top trending topic on there. And the Chinese march into the snooker world continues. I mean, for people who aren't to wear, for example, you know,
Starting point is 00:25:58 you've got 129 professional snooka players in the world on the circuit. 32 of them are now Chinese. That's a quarter of all players, the largest number outside of Britain. And so you can see why people in China are getting very excited about snooker and the prospects for snooker in this country in the future. And Stephen, this goes back to a player called Ding Junwei, who made the breakthrough, let's say, 15, 20 years ago as a teenager himself.
Starting point is 00:26:25 And that seemed to be the catalyst, didn't it, for a lot of the training academies and a lot of the next generation to follow in his footsteps because there hadn't been much snooker heritage besides him in the country historically. Yeah, exactly. And he's actually been making comments himself, as you might expect, like proud as punch him. He came second and it was, as you say, the breakthrough moment. But he's on social media saying, look, you know, we can go on from here, cheering on China's snooker players of the future. And, you know, the other thing is that For Wu, you mentioned his story earlier on.
Starting point is 00:27:04 I mean, he comes from a place called Gunsu in the west of the country. It's kind of known as a, well, it's a kind of less developed place, famous for desert and this type of stuff. I mean, he comes from a big city there, but he left school, dropped out with the support of his parents, moved to Sheffield and joined this group of Chinese players who are now based in Sheffield. That's how serious they're getting about Snooker here. And it's really a sort of rags to Richard's tale for him. He started in Britain living in a flat there in the same bed as his dad with no windows. And so for him to come through, become the world champion, wins all this money, says he's going to buy a house for his parents.
Starting point is 00:27:48 You know, it really is fairy tale stuff. Our Beijing correspondent, Stephen MacDonald. And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at GlobalPyield. podcast at BBC.com.com. 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.
Starting point is 00:28:17 This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Alana Bowles, and the producer was Helena Borg. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Ankara. Until next time, goodbye. The crew of NASA's Artemis II mission have returned. turned home safely after successfully completing their groundbreaking voyage around the moon. Splashdown confirmed. Humans are back in the business of going to the moon.
Starting point is 00:28:50 But while the mission is over, the Artemis Space Program is just getting started. 13 Minutes, the BBC Space Podcast is looking back on their epic journey and discovering what the future holds for the Artemis Space Program. Just imagine what we as humans can do next. 13 minutes presents Artemis 2 from the BBC World Service. Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.

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