Global News Podcast - Water shortages could force evacuation of Iranian capital
Episode Date: November 9, 2025Iran says water supplies in Tehran will suffer scheduled cuts, as the country struggles with severe shortages. The announcement came after President Masoud Pezeshkian warned of rationing and suggested... the capital might have to be evacuated if there's no rainfall in the next two weeks. Also: Bolivia and the United States agree to restore diplomatic relations - at ambassador level - after a 17-year break; a storm bearing down on the Philippines has intensified to a super typhoon; and Saudi Arabia's plans to attract 150 million tourists a 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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Hello and welcome.
This is the Michelle Hussein show.
I'm Michelle Hussein.
I speak with people like Elon Musk.
I think I've done enough.
And Shonda rhymes.
That's so cute.
This will be a place where every weekend you can count on one essential conversation
to help make sense of the world.
So please join me.
Listen and subscribe to the Michelle Hussein show
from Bloomberg Weekend, wherever you get your podcast.
You certainly ask interesting questions.
This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson, and in the early hours of Sunday the 9th of November, these are our main stories.
Water supplies in Tehran are being restricted with warnings that the Iranian capital may have to be evacuated.
Bolivia swears in a new president and Bristol.
stores diplomatic relations with the United States for the first time in 17 years.
Saudi Arabia launches a campaign to become more popular than France as a tourist destination.
Also in this podcast.
The label's like, ha, you are the persons that are going to bring the elephants.
And we are, yeah, yeah.
It's really interesting in the way that the community here engaged with the project
because it's about, really, elephants here?
Why elephants could soon return to the rolling hills of Portugal.
It seems an extraordinary suggestion.
All 10 million inhabitants of the Iranian capital Tehran might be forced to leave
unless the city gets some rainfall in the next eight weeks.
Mohamed Ali Mo Allen manages the main dam which supplies the capital.
Unfortunately, we didn't have enough rain.
Rainfall is reduced by 90 to 92 percent compared with last year.
This has caused the amount of water stored in the reservoir
to drop to just 8% of its capacity.
And this was the warning from President Massoud Peschkian
amid the worst drought in decades.
If it doesn't rain, we'll have to start rationing water in Tehran
between late November and early December.
Even if we do ration it, and it still doesn't rain by then,
we'll run out of water,
and we'll have to evacuate Tehran.
Since that warning was broadcast on Friday,
the government has announced
that Tehran will face cuts to water supplies
as reservoirs begin to run dry.
But this is not a new problem for Iran.
Water expert Professor Kava Madani
used to work for Iran's Environment Department,
but left because of political pressure.
He said that even a sudden deluge
would not help the current situation.
There are years of mismanagement's lack of foresight
problems that have appeared. And then on top of that, you have a catalyst being a drought that is now
in its sixth year and then climate change as a major global driver. Even some rain would not
solve this problem fundamentally. And I'm worried that with the first rain, we all forget that this
problem was real. My colleague Owen Bennett Jones asked Omid Kazani, a freelance journalist in
Tehran, how bad are the water shortages? Some officials.
We're saying that actually we're warning the people that every house, every apartment needs to be equipped with water tanks
because there will be a serious rationing in place and also the situation is catastrophic.
So how many hours a day are people having their water supply cut off?
It depends on the districts and neighborhoods.
In some neighborhoods, there are reports that they have water costs three, four hours, especially in summer.
at least three or four hours of water cuts in many districts were reported,
but it's going to be worse than that.
I've just been reading up about this, and it's not just Tehran, is it?
I mean, Isfahan is also very short of water?
Yes, Isfahan in Mn Shiraz, even in northwestern part of the country,
which had relatively better rainfalls, there is serious warnings for watercots and droughts.
You're blaming the drought, but there are other aspects to this, aren't there?
are an awful lot of illegal wells in Iran. People just dig a well in their garden to secure
water for their household, and that causes problems. Yes, this is called mega mismanagement
over decades, and a range of issues that are ranging from lousy agricultural expansion
around the country, especially in mainland. And I think that it goes without saying that
what caused the Urumia Lake, the second largest salt lake in the world,
dried up because of the illegal wells, which in that area was more than 30,000.
And the same story hits other parts of the country.
I mean, what about these reports I'm reading that buildings are beginning to shift
because the ground under them is drying out and that's causing, you know, big problems?
Yeah, Iran is one of the countries that is hit with this phenomenon.
is one of the worst situations that the country is experiencing,
especially in central cities of Isfahan and Shiraz
and southern parts of capital Tehran,
because there were over-consumption and over-extraction of wells in these cities because of the drought.
Yeah, so, I mean, it sounds really, really bad,
and we've got very senior officials saying that it may be necessary to evacuate Tehran.
I mean, it's a massive city.
Are people taking that seriously? Do they think that's going to happen?
I don't think it is possible because even if it is approved but parliament and other legislative bodies,
evacuating a city of 10 million is close impossible.
And there are some reports of moving the capital to other parts of the country, especially South.
I think it is not possible either.
Omed Khazani.
For the first time in almost 20 years, Bolivia has a conservative president ending the political dominance of the Socialist Party.
A few hours ago, Rodrigo Paz, a pro-business politician, was sworn in as president in the capital La Paz, in a ceremony hosted by his deputy.
You are hereby sworn in as the president of constitutional of Bolivia.
You are hereby sworn in as the constitutional president of the plurinational state of Bolivia, the translation goes.
In his inauguration speech, President Paz said Bolivia would now be open to the world after two decades of left-wing governance.
It's already been announced that it's re-establishing diplomatic relations with the United States.
Last month, the new president's Christian Democrat Party won an election dominated by a severe issue.
economic crisis. Louis Fahardo is our South American expert for BBC monitoring. He joined me from
Miami and began telling me more about Bolivia's new leader. His father was President Pas Samora,
who was a left-wing president in Bolivia a few decades ago. Mr. Pas Samora, the father of the current
president of Bolivia, got in trouble with the military government at the time in Bolivia. He had to
escape to exile in Europe. And that's why President Ligopas was actually born in Spain.
However, he has returned to the country and now he's being seen as starting a new moment in
Bolivian politics after nearly 20 years of domination by the left wing. Now he's seen as a
moderate. And his victory comes as something of a surprise. Certainly a big surprise. As I was
mentioning the left wing in Bolivia had been very strong for nearly 20 years, the mass movement
led by the former president, Evo Morales, and also there was a very strong candidate in the right.
They were the two candidates who had been expected to reach the final round.
However, Mr. Pasamora had a very surprising presidential campaign.
He was also helped by his vice presidential candidate, who was a former police officer who became
a social media sensation because of his criticism and his denunciations of corruption in the police,
something that struck on earth with many voters.
He faces some serious issues, doesn't he?
Certainly.
One of the things Mr. Pass said today when taking over the presidency,
he was demanding rhetorically to ask the former government, literally,
he said, what did you do with the economic boom?
Because for many years, Bolivia had been experiencing an energy boom,
a very good situation in terms of exports of energy, of natural gas.
But this situation has markedly deteriorated in the last few years.
And now Bolivia is facing a serious economic crisis.
It has a serious shortage of foreign currency.
It is increasingly dependent on foreign energy imports.
So he's facing a lot of trouble, a lot of economic instability,
and a lot of expectations to see if he can move the economy in a different direction.
Yeah, and he says he wants to build a closer relationship
with the Trump administration?
That is right.
One of the key elements in Bolivian politics in the last 20 years
was very antagonistic relations with the U.S.
The U.S. had not had a formal ambassador in Bolivia
for more than a decade.
And now the new government, the incoming government,
is saying that they want to move away from what they call
ideological extremism.
And they want good relations with everyone,
specifically with the United States.
A high envoy of the U.S. government
announced precisely in the last few hours that a U.S. ambassador was returning to Bolivia.
So certainly one of the things that people are looking at is how the Bolivian government
is going to have a better political relation with the U.S.
And the expectation is that this might help increase confidence in the business environment,
maybe increase investment, and in that way, maybe make the economic problems
that the country is facing a little bit easier to overcome.
Lewis Fajaro.
It's been thousands of years since wild elephants roamed in Portugal.
But soon these giant creatures will return to the rolling hills of rural Alentejo,
the same region where they were last seen in the country.
A new sanctuary is being built to provide lifelong care for elephants
rehabilitated from zoos and circuses across Europe.
Alistair Leithead has been to visit their new home.
The last evidence of elephants in Portugal
is a series of fossilized footprints
discovered on this wild west coast of Alentejo.
The tracks date back more than 30,000 years,
just before the giant, straight-tusked elephants they belonged to
went extinct.
In 200 BC, elephants were shipped from North Africa to Iberia
by Hannibal of Carthage,
who marched them over the Alps to the edge of Rome.
But now they're coming back to inland Alentejo,
a couple of hours drive from here
for a more peaceful existence.
It's a really beautiful site, actually.
It used to be a cattle farm
and a eucalyptus plantation,
and we've spent the last one to two years
basically trying to restore the biodiversity on site
to get ready for elephants.
Kate Moore is giving me a tour
of the new 400 hectare, 1,000-acre reserve.
And we've estimated the carrying capacity
is between 20 and 30 elephants.
And this isn't just for creating a place
for people to come and see elephants.
No, indeed. It's going to be closed visitors,
So we will have the odd open day for local communities,
but no, this is all about the welfare of the elephants.
Kate leads Pangea, a UK charity set up to find those elephants a peaceful place to retire.
Our first elephant is confirmed as an elephant from Belgium who's called Kareba.
She was wild caught in Zimbabwe 40 years ago.
She was shipped off to Germany and has spent the last 40 years in zoos in Belgium, Netherlands, Germany.
Let me just come to the top of a hill.
It's a stunning view.
You can see Spain from here, I think, can't you?
You can.
How did you choose this site?
And was there a lot of competition from other sites in Europe?
We looked across the whole of Europe.
We did a feasibility study looking at all the different landscapes.
And the reason we chose this one is gentle, rolling hills, lots and lots of water, good diverse habitat, and also privacy.
And you think they'll settle in in this environment?
I think they'll love it.
We might be in the middle of Portugal, but the landscape is very reminiscent of Africa.
It's just the flat top of acacia trees have been replaced by cork oak trees.
And it's not difficult to imagine elephants, wallowing in this little waterhole.
The barn where the elephants can shelter is almost finished,
and the giant Jurassic Park-style fences are being installed.
Basically, it's ready to receive the first elephants.
Grassefonseca is on Panjia's board.
As a former Portuguese Minister of Culture, she's passionate about the project.
What do you think people in the area here will think about elephants on the horizon?
They love it.
You know, when the first visit I did here,
and we were passing through a really small cafe,
and the lady was like,
ha, you are the person that are going to bring the elephants.
And we are, yeah, yeah, we are bringing elephants.
Yes, you know, I told all my name is here that the elephants were coming.
They wouldn't believe me, but now they believe me.
You are bringing the elephants.
It's really interesting in the way that the community here engaged with the project
because it's about, really, elephants here?
Soon these sounds of the African savannah will be coming to the Alentejo.
As these amazing and intelligent animals adjust to their new home after a long time away.
Alastair Leithead reporting.
In recent years, Saudi Arabia has gone some way to try to change its image,
whether this be in sport, culture or moving the economy away from being dependent on oil.
The latest venture involves building more accommodation for people on middle income budgets
to try to attract 150 million tourists every year by 2030.
There will be a new visa scheme to encourage visitors from other Arab countries
and cheaper options will be available at 10 new resorts
which are due to open on Shibara Island in the Red Sea.
I heard more from our global affairs.
as reporter, Paul Moss.
Imagine you are looking for a spot for a holiday next year and you decide on Saudi Arabia.
Perhaps you're, you know, attracted by the Bedouin culture or all that opulent Islamic architecture.
And you go to one of the country's Red Sea resorts.
You will end up paying about $2,000 a night just for the hotel.
Now, obviously the Arab world does have some very wealthy people,
but that does kind of limit people with that kind of price.
However, Saudi Arabia says that it wants to get 150 million visitors every year by the end of the decade.
I had to check that number wasn't a misprint.
Bear in mind, France is the world's most popular tourist destination country and they only get 100 million,
so 150 million is pretty ambitious.
And it seems that the Saudi government has now realised that to achieve this,
it's going to have to give some cheaper accommodation options.
And so, yes, that Saudi tourism minister told people at a tourism conference,
conference, they were going to focus on the mid-range market. He said they're opening
10 new resorts in the coming months. They won't forget the mid-range sector. I think it's
worth noticing, though. They do only mention the mid-range sector, not cheap accommodation. So
I don't think we're going to have scruffy backpackers turning up in Saudi Arabia, hoping to
share a dormitory in a youth hostel. Why is Saudi Arabia doing this? Well, tourism's just one part
of the attempt by the Saudi Crown Prince to diversify away from oil and gas. It's a project he calls
Vision 2030. Climate change means that lots of countries are turning two renewables instead of oil and gas
and the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known universally as MBS, realizes that just too many of the
country's eggs are in one fossil fuel basket. So tourism is just part of this change. They're also
talking about developing manufacturing in Saudi Arabia, digital economy, investing in healthcare.
I should say this also involves Saudi Arabia very much trying to change the country's
image. Famously, MBS has said that women can now drive, they can go to the cinema. They've even
had parties in the desert where, guess what, men and women are dancing together. I think it's an
open question, though, whether this rebranding is going to work. For some people, Saudi Arabia,
will remain a country where, as far as they're concerned, women's rights are extremely limited
and, well, let's be honest, dozens of people are beheaded every year after trials which a lot
of people think are not fair. Yeah. So, I mean, that's it. Is this tourism plan going to work?
Well, I think that's a good question. I mean, a mainstay of the visitor economy in Saudi Arabia
is pilgrims performing the haj and clearly they will always want to come. And of course,
it's very possible that if visiting Mecca becomes cheaper, more of them will make the journey.
For secular tourists, though, different story. I mean, one big potential problem is that for many
people going on holiday involves eating out in restaurants and, of course, drinking alcohol.
And that is strictly forbidden in Saudi Arabia outside of the compounds which house foreign
diplomats. There has been a suggestion. A similar allowance will be made for foreign tourists.
They will be able to knock back a pint of beer or a glass of wine. But the government in Riyadh has
denied any such decisions been made. Presumably they're all too aware of the opposition they'll
face from the religious authorities there.
Still to come in this podcast.
These things just don't happen in threes. That's crazy.
When we got down to the green, it was there in the hole.
The golfer who defied staggering odds to hit three holes in one in just a month.
Hello and welcome.
is the Michelle Hussein show. I'm Michelle Hussein. I speak with people like Elon Musk.
I think I've done enough. And Shonda Rhymes.
That's so cute. This will be a place where every weekend you can count on one essential conversation
to help make sense of the world. So please join me. Listen and subscribe to the Michelle
Hussein show from Bloomberg Weekend, wherever you get your podcast. You certainly ask interesting questions.
Another typhoon is heading towards the Philippines.
The storm Fung Wong has intensified to a super typhoon
and is due to make landfall in the coming hours.
Typhoon Fung Wong will bring sustained winds of around 185 kilometres an hour
and torrential rain to several areas.
The authorities have urged residents in coastal and low-lying areas to seek safety.
The latest storm comes just days after another typhoon hit the Philippines,
causing widespread destruction and killing at least 200 people.
Regis Chapman is the World Food Programmes Director in the Philippines.
As we look at Fung Wong, it's hitting different parts of the country.
So while rescue efforts have been paused in parts of the Sias,
Luzon is now beginning to feel the impact of Fung Wong.
WFP has teams on the ground.
We work hand in hand with the government.
And what's really interesting about Fung Wong is we've been able to,
through our engagement with the Department of Social Welfare and development,
we're getting cash out before the storm hits.
And so we're aiming to reach around 150,000 people over the last several days with cash transfers,
and that will equip them to be able to basically heed government warnings and prepare themselves,
whether that's protecting boats and livelihood assets by getting them out of harm's way,
boarding up doors and windows, or stocking up on food supplies and other.
necessities again before the storm hits. There is right now urgent needs for food, water, shelter,
the usual things that you see in this type of an event. Just now we've been supporting the
government to transport what they call family food packs. So around 100,000 family food packs
are being pre-positioned for the super typhoon that's on its way.
Regis Chapman from the World Food Program. It's one of the great mysteries of mountaineering.
Did George Mallory and Andrew Irvin
reached the top of Mount Everest
before they disappeared in 1924?
Although some of their remains have been discovered,
the question of whether they actually got to the summit
has never been answered.
Now, British twins have tried to test
whether it was feasible,
given what they would have been wearing a century ago.
Will Chalk takes up the story.
When it comes to comparing technology,
the advantages of using twins are obvious.
We are genetically identical.
We are identical mirror twins.
We are almost identical in terms of body weight.
That's Ross Turner, who, along with his brother, Hugo, has just climbed mirror peak near Everest in Nepal.
For Ross, it was business as usual in the latest high-tech climbing gear.
Hugo, on the other hand, was in an exact replica of the outfit George Mallory was wearing when he disappeared.
So I was the younger one.
I got the short straw.
and yeah, what an experience. What an experience. And so we had about two years preparation to get all the kit together.
And it's not easy to find A, out what he wore and B, get it made. But we had Crockett and Jones made the world's first pair of replica boots.
We had a tailoring, a sireness to make all the different layers. I think I had seven different layers.
So, how was it? Well, here are some clips from the climb.
It's freezing.
Absolute freezing. We're all freezing. The altitude's increasing, the wind speeds increasing, the temperature's dropping.
It's Baltic. It's cold. Despite the cold, the brothers made it. And by putting tiny thermometers all over both of their bodies, they've been able to show just how much climbing gear has moved on in 100 years.
So every five minutes, we had live data coming from our boots, our thighs, arms, chest, to see.
the difference. So excitingly, the George Mallory kit is probably two or three degrees, on
average, colder than the modern, which is really exciting. As for the mystery of George Mallory,
there's no earth-shattering solution here, but for Ross, it's enough to shed at least some light on it.
We hope over the next couple of weeks to release some of this data to the public so that
people can get a real insight into George Mallory's performance. And answer that epically exciting
question, could he have got to the top of Everest in 1924, which I think we both agree he probably
could have with the performance in his kit? Ross Turner ending that report by Will Chalk.
An English amateur golfer in her mid-70s has made three holes in one in a month. For those
of you not familiar with the term, it's when a player's ball goes into the hole the first time
they hit it. Lynn Parry achieved the feat twice at her home club and the third time at a
near by course. I'm not sure how you go about calculating the odds on this, but someone has said
they're 1.95 trillion to 1. And there's more. She's actually hit five holes in one, but two
came the month before. Some players go a whole lifetime without managing one. Owen Bennett Jones
asked her how she'd done it. It was a beautiful sunny day, the day of our club AGM.
AGM, annual general meeting. Yeah, on the third hole, I hit
Well, I thought, felt nice.
That felt good.
I knew it was going pretty close to the hole,
but because the direction of the sun and the greens have just been sanded, actually,
it was a little bit difficult to be sure.
Anyway, when we got up to the hole, there it was in the hole.
So I was very popular that day at the AGM with the free drinks.
Oh, I see.
What a terrible day for this to happen.
I should explain that when you get a hole in one,
it's a tradition that the person who got the hole in one buys everyone
in the bar a drink. So you might be
hoping that it would be half a dozen people there
or something, but you have the AGM
must have been a load of people.
Well, it was, but to be fair,
our club very thoughtfully
takes out insurance
against these occasions.
So my bar bill was covered by the club
which is, or by the club's insurance.
That's amazing. There's insurance
for a club can get in case someone gets a
hold in one, and the insurance company pays for the drinks.
Apparently so.
And then your second hole and then your third.
By which point your fellow golfers you play with must be thinking you had a magnet in the ball or some cunning plan.
What did they say when you got the third one?
We were actually visiting another local club that day.
Again, it felt really nice when it came off the club.
I knew it was close.
But I thought, no, these things just don't happen in threes.
That's crazy.
When we got down to the green, it was there in the hole.
Are you actually a good golf? I mean, you know, I mean, I say that. You started, I think, in your 50s. It's an extremely difficult game. People play their whole lives and don't get great at it. Yeah, how good a player are you? I mean, was this real luck or are you actually quite good? I wouldn't say I'm quite good. I would say I'm average. But I did have a terrific summer. I just had one of those summers where I couldn't do anything wrong. So a professional player would have a handicap of zero. An absolute rank amateur would have, let's say, 24 or 36.
Where are you on that scale?
Currently, 12.7.
12's pretty good, yeah.
Well, I'll never get any better.
Let's put it like that.
Amateur golfer, Lynn Parry,
and she was speaking to Owen Bennett Jones.
In the book, Alice in Wonderland,
there's a famous scene known as the Mad Hatter's Tea Party.
Now, a document has been discovered
that shed's light on a social gathering
held by the book's author, Lewis Carroll,
which might have even inspired his literary creation.
A dinner invitation sent by Carol to a guest has been found at Lincoln Cathedral in England.
It's addressed to the cathedral's Choirmaster.
Ella Bicknell has this report.
Come, come, my dear.
Don't you care for tea?
Why, yes, I'm very fond of tea.
Whether it's the Disney animation, Tim Burton's dark reimagining, or Lewis Carroll's original tale,
the Madhatter's tea party remains one of literature's most famous gatherings,
set of course in that dreamlike, nonsense,
world of Wonderland. Now a newly uncovered handwritten invitation is bringing Carol's own social
gatherings to life. Written on cream coloured paper in purple ink, the letter dates back to 1875 and was
found carefully folded and laid on red velvet. The cathedral's curator Fern Dawson has called
the discovery a hidden gem. The Mad Hatter's Tea Party really is recreated here. We have reference
to the bat from Twinkle Twinkle Little Bat in Alice in Wonderland. We have the
Professor Price, who is bat.
He was a mathematician at Oxford alongside Lewis Carroll,
nicknamed Bat because his lectures often went over students' heads.
Others invited included Henry Ramsden Bramley,
known for reviving Victorian Christmas carols
and Reverend John Slatter, who often played chess with Carol.
The invitation was accompanied by a seating plan and a menu,
featuring soup, black curry, lamb cutlets, apple souffle, and apricot cream.
Ella Bicknell.
And that's all from us for now, but there'll be a new edition of the Global News podcast later.
If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can send us an email.
The address is global podcast at bbc.co.com.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Daniel Fox, and the producers were down.
annual man and Mickey Bristow.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson. Until next time, goodbye.
