Global News Podcast - White House talks on Greenland end without progress
Episode Date: January 15, 2026The United States has not changed its ambition of taking over Greenland after hosting high level talks at the White House. Denmark's foreign minister described the discussions as constructive, but war...ned there was still a fundamental disagreement over the Arctic island's future. Also: President Trump says the killing of protesters in Iran has stopped amid threat of US strikes; the Gaza peace plan moves to phase two; a leaked recording of the Taliban in Afghanistan hints at political division; the International Space Station carries out its first medical evacuation; and a renowned Michelin star restaurant gets a one star hygiene rating. 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
Shopping for a car should be exciting, not exhausting, but sometimes it can feel like a maze.
That's where Car Gurus comes in.
They have advanced search tools, unbiased deal ratings and price history, so you know a great deal when you see one.
It's no wonder Car Gurus is the number one rated car shopping app in Canada on the Apple App and Google Play Store.
Buy your next car car gurus today with Car Gurus at CarGurus.com.
Go to Cargooros.ca to make sure your big deal is the best deal.
That's C-A-R-G-U-R-U-S dot CA.
Car gurus.com.
You're not at the office.
You're solving murders in the Scottish Highlands.
You're not in your car.
You're in a candlelit carriage on the way to the ball.
This winter, see it differently when you stream the best of British TV with Bripbox.
Catch a new original series like Riot Women.
New seasons of fan favourites like Shetland.
The body's been found.
and on paralleled collections of Jane Austen,
Agatha Christie and more.
It's time to see it differently with Britbox.
Watch with a free trial now at Britbox.com.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Jeanette Jol, and in the early hours of Thursday,
the 15th of January, these are our main stories.
High-stakes talks on Greenland's future at the White House
failed to dissuade the US president to drop his demand for the Arctic Island.
Donald Trump says he's been told on good authority that the killing of protesters in Iran has stopped.
After days of threats against the regime, is he backing away from military action.
A leaked recording of the Taliban in Afghanistan obtained by the BBC reveals political divisions
between hardliners and pragmatists.
Also in this podcast, the internet.
International Space Station carries out its first medical evacuation.
There's always a lot of thought that goes into the contingency scenarios.
So whilst this hasn't happened before, it's often been trained for and considered.
Four astronauts leave the station a month early after one of them develops a serious health issue.
A high-stakes meeting at the White House over Greenland's future has failed to make a breakthrough.
President Trump has long made it clear that he is intent on taking over.
the huge Arctic island, a self-governing territory that's part of Denmark, possibly by military means.
That alarmed his NATO allies in Europe so much that on Wednesday, the foreign ministers of Denmark and
Greenland went to Washington for a meeting with the US Vice President, J.D. Vance and U.S. Secretary of State
Marco Rubio. Greenland's Foreign Minister, Vivian Motzfeld, said although the talks were cordial,
big differences remained. I think it's very...
It's important to say it again that how important it is from our side to strengthen our cooperation with the United States.
But that doesn't mean that we want to be owned by the United States.
But as allies, how we can strengthen our cooperation, it's our interest.
Speaking to reporters after the meeting, President Trump reiterated why, in his view, the U.S. needed Greenland.
If we don't go in, Russia is going to go in and China is going to go in.
and there's not a thing that Denmark can do about it,
but we can do everything about it.
Well, we're going to see.
I mean, look, we're going to see what happens.
We need it for national security, and that includes for Europe.
Our North America correspondent, David Willis,
told me more about the outcome of the talks.
The foreign ministers of Greenland and Denmark
looking extremely downcast as they face the media at the White House
following that hour-long meeting with the vice-president.
President, J.D. Vance, and the Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
Lars Lach-Rasmussen said there remained what he called a fundamental disagreement with the United States over Greenland.
And he added to President Trump's suggestion that the United States conquer the territory was simply unacceptable.
Greenland, Denmark and the US have now agreed to set up a working group to discuss Greenland's future.
But the two foreign ministers didn't display very much optimism, I think,
that that would lead to the sort of compromise that they would be willing to accept.
And how credible are President Trump's claims that the US has to have Greenland?
He's talked about how control of the territory is critical for his planned missile defense system, Golden Doe.
Yes, that's right.
And before that meeting, Donald Trump doubled down on his,
insistence that the United States needs Greenland for the so-called Golden Dome Project.
That's a $175 billion plan designed to protect the United States against missile attack.
And Mr. Trump made the point that, in his view, NATO becomes more powerful, more formidable and effective with Greenland in the hands of the United States than it would be otherwise.
Denmark's view, unsurprisingly, is that Greenland already hosts a US military base,
which contains the sort of radar systems that warn of any possible imminent attack by Russia,
and that under the current agreement between the Danish and American governments,
the US can deploy more troops in Greenland to expand its security capabilities there,
but it has chosen not to do so since the Cold War.
Denmark also makes the point that seizing a NATO member's territory, as Mr Trump has, of course, threatened to do,
actually makes the United States less secure because it serves to destroy one of the most secure alliances currently in existence,
namely NATO, to counteract any threat from Russia and China.
David Willis, and staying with Donald Trump, will he or won't he?
That's the question that the world has been asking,
over whether Donald Trump will strike targets in Iran
following the brutal crackdown on anti-government protests there.
Some American and British military personnel have been evacuated
from a huge US air base in Qatar
and the UK has closed its embassy in Tehran.
All this in anticipation of Iranian retaliation
that would surely follow any US military action.
Well, then on Wednesday, President Trump announced
that he'd been told that the killings in Iran had stopped
and that there would be no executions of protesters,
including 26-year-old Erfansultani,
who was supposed to have been put to death
less than a week after being arrested,
but seems to have been spared for now.
We've been told that the killing in Iran is stopping,
and it's stopped, it's stopping,
and there's no plan for executions
and execution or executions.
So I've been told that a good authority.
I'm sure if happens, we'll all be very upset,
including you, will be very upset.
But that's just gotten to me from information,
that the killing has stopped.
The Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghi,
appearing on Fox News,
seemed to confirm this, denying that there was any plan to hang demonstrators.
The Iranian government says it's back in control
after more than two weeks of protests, but it seems at a terrible cost.
One human rights group says its figures suggest more than 3,000 people have been killed in the crackdown.
This demonstrator left Iran on Tuesday.
Their words have been voiced by a BBC producer for their safety.
Many children died.
Ten years old, eight years old.
Security forces were on motorbikes.
We threw gasoline on the street.
I saw some people light the gasoline and the men on motorbikes were caught in the fire.
It was the only way to protect ourselves.
I saw 20, 30 people die.
They took them to the side of the street and then continued protesting.
It was like a war, but only one side had guns.
I asked our chief international correspondent, Lee Doucet,
if Mr. Trump, after days of threats against the Iranian regime,
was now backing away from military action.
President Trump has made a clear.
time and again in moments like this that he likes to keep people guessing. Remember last year when he
made the decision to strike Iran's nuclear sites, he had said, well, I need two weeks to think about it.
And then he attacked within a few days, surprising everyone. So saying, oh, it looks like the
executions have stopped. Is he trying to buy time? Is it an element of surprise? Is he getting
new information that is causing him to think twice? He seems to be still making up his
mind about what is happening on the ground in Iran. Remember he said, I like winning. The end game is to
win and to win in Iran. What is this calculation now? There's all these cautionary steps,
giving the impression that he's about to do something. Embassy's telling their nationals to leave
Iran, US and UK military, taking out non-essential personnel from Al-Udeid base and Qatar, the US's
biggest military base. So everyone is thinking, is it going to happen or is it not? And that was
something they did before those US strikes last year on Iran, taking their personnel out of that base?
Yes, all those steps for the last two days, first of all, telling US citizens who are in Iran to leave,
then the US pulling its troops out of the Al-Udaid base, followed by the British.
Last year, when Iran retaliated for the US strike, it was the Al-U-Dade base which came under attack.
Well, given all that, if Mr. Trump were to order strikes, what would they be on and what effect would it
have on an Iranian regime which is determined to do everything it possibly can to cling on to power?
He is said to have been presented with a range of options. We don't know what they are. We can only
speculate. But could it be symbolic, something which doesn't cause a lot of damage but sends a very
strong signal and is a warning salvo? Is it something which goes to the heart of the regime and actually
threatens those who are in power? So in other words, a message to the leadership. Is it even more
blistering. Is it a huge salvo, hitting, for example, the assets, the bases of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps. They are the most formidable of forces in the Islamic Republic. There is a range
of options for the biggest military in the world. President Trump, as the commander-in-chief,
has a very big toolbox with very sharp tools. Military, cyber, sanction, sending starling
terminals. He could do a lot and do a lot of damage, but there are consequences.
with each choice. Regimes are not brought down in that way. We don't really know what President Trump
is going to do tonight or tomorrow. We don't know what his endgame in Iran is. Is he thinking of
democracy? Is he thinking of regime change? Is he thinking of just sending a strong message? Is he going
to help the protesters? Who's he going to back in the opposition? None of us know. And quite frankly,
President Trump may not know. And if he does do something, I think a lot of the protesters would say,
it's too late. Have the protests been completely crushed now, given the high number of deaths?
Well, his last long post on truth social, which in capital letters help is on the way to the protesters,
by then the protesters had left the streets.
By then, the Iranian security force's use of lethal force had sent people away.
It was just simply too dangerous.
Iranian journalist said to me, you'd have to have a death wish to go out into the streets.
There may still be pockets.
The near total internet blackout means that Iran is literally in the dark.
There's lots happening that we just.
don't know. But what we do know from everything we hear is that roar on the streets has largely
subsided for now. And that's what President Trump was saying. And let's see what happens next.
Please do set. Well, the anti-government protests in Iran are raising the international profile of a film
set in Tehran, a powerful critique of the regime. The revenge thriller, it was just an accident
is the work of one of Iran's leading dissident directors, Jaffa Panahi. The film has been picking up
numerous awards at major festivals and could be in contention for an Oscar nomination. Tom Brooke
has been to meet Jaffa Panahi, who's been promoting his film in the US.
Shot in secret in Tehran, the film It Was Just an Accident is widely seen as a condemnation of
authoritarianism. It tells of former political prisoners involved in the abduction of a man
they believe tortured them. It comes some dissident Iranian filmmaker Jaffa Panaghi.
Over the years, his filmmaking has displeased the authorities.
He served time in prison for charges,
which they have termed as propaganda against the Islamic Republic.
He told me it was not an accident,
was in a way honouring political prisoners he spent time within jail.
It is only natural that when I left the prison,
I would be thinking about them and their stories and their experiences,
and the fact that they were still inside prison,
really affected me to the point that I thought
I need to be unloading this burden that I feel on my shoulders
and I need to be putting this burden down
and paying my tribute to them.
This film is the result of my own personal experiences
and the experiences of people that I had heard about in prison.
The profile of it was just an accident
has been on the rise ever since it won the Palm Door.
the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival last year.
It's gone on to pick up numerous awards of events here in the US and elsewhere,
and that hasn't exactly pleased the Iranian authorities.
They've taken punitive measures against a filmmaker.
In December, he was sentenced in the sentier to another prison term.
Over the years, he has always managed to make films,
whether under house arrest using a mobile phone,
or shooting in secret in Tehran as he did for his latest.
picture. It was just an accident has brought him a lot of respect within the international
film community. Eric Cohn is a film producer and programmer who is a big fan of the Panahe
movie. It was just an accident and is one of Jeff Arbanah's greatest films because it's a true
act of courage. He's literally risking jail time to make this movie. But it's also a culmination
of the stories he's been telling for years and years of people living in a persecuted society
figuring out a path to them. The headlines from Iran in recent days have
heightened interest in Panahis film.
While he's been picking up awards and promoting his picture in the US,
he's been mindful of developments in Iran.
What must happen here has to come from within the country
and has to be reached by the people themselves.
It cannot come from the outside by any political power.
But it has to be decided and collectively experienced by the people.
Of course, foreign powers might be able to manipulate it,
might be able to affect it one way or another,
but they cannot do anything that people themselves
will not find important and will not reach.
While it was just an accident
faces strong competition from other non-US films
vying for Oscar's attention,
it is favoured to be nominated for an Academy Award
for Best International Feature Film next week.
If that happens, it will be recognized.
not just of Jeff Hapanah's artistry, but also for his steadfast commitment to never give up,
to make a powerful cinema, whatever the obstacles.
Tom Brook.
Four astronauts are on their way back to Earth after their mission at the International Space Station
was cut short because of an unspecified medical issue.
Their space capsule is expected to splash down off California.
This is the first medical evacuation since Cruise first started going to the station
a quarter of a century ago.
This report is from our science correspondent, Palab Ghosh.
Now coming through the hatch is Roskosmos, Cosmona Oleg Plotnov.
This is his very first visit to the International Space Station.
Last August, a new crew for the International Space Station,
following Placinoff through the hatch, were Japan's Kimi Yu,
and NASA Zina Cardman and Mike Fink for a scheduled six-and-a-half-month mission.
But last week, a spacewalk to prepare the ISS for new
solar panels was cancelled because one of them fell ill.
The crew member has not been named for reasons of medical confidentiality, but NASA said
their condition was stable and that the four strong crew would be brought home as a
precaution. On Monday, NASA's Mike Fink, with the rest of the crew in the background and none
of them looking visibly unwell, handed command of the space station to cosmonaut Sergei Kuzvorksvichov.
So, Sergei, do you accept command of the International Space Station?
I accept command of international space station.
The incident underlines the dangers of space travel,
according to Libby Jackson, head of space at the Science Museum.
There's always a lot of thought that goes into the contingency scenarios.
So whilst this hasn't happened before, it's often been trained for and considered.
It's just really part of going into space that you're a long way from home.
As well as Kuzvorkov, cosmonaut Sergei Mikhail, and NASA's Christiqv.
Williams will remain on board to keep the ISS safe and running.
Palab Ghosh.
Still to come?
Traditional cooking didn't develop with modern food hygiene rules in mind.
It was based on experience and common sense.
The chef of a Michelin-starred restaurant says he's not embarrassed after being given a rather
different award, a very poor hygiene rating of just one star.
You don't need AI agents, which may sound weird coming from Service Now, the leader in AI agents.
The truth is, AI agents need you.
Sure, they'll process, predict, even get work done autonomously.
But they don't dream, read a room, rally a team, and they certainly don't have shower thoughts, pivotal hallway chats, or big ideas.
People do.
And people, when given the best AI platform, they're freed up to do the fulfilling work they want to do.
To see how Service Now puts AI to work for people.
Visit servicenow.com.
If journalism is the first draft of history,
what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed,
hundreds killed.
But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it.
It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories.
I'm Helena Merriman,
and in a new BBC series,
I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story.
What did they miss the first time?
The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Even as humanitarian conditions in Gaza remain atrocious,
with hundreds of thousands of people living in tents,
enduring winter storms and floods,
Donald Trump's envoy has announced the start of the second phase
of the president's plan to end the war in the Palestinian territory.
Phase one saw Hamas and Israel agree a ceasefire in October.
Israel still doesn't allow international journalists to report from Gaza,
so John Donison is following developments from Jerusalem.
So phase one, of course, of Donald Trump's peace plan
saw the release of the remaining Israeli hostages held by Hamas
in exchange for the release of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.
We've now had the announcement of phase two.
Now, what that is meant to see is the establishment of a government of technocrats within Gaza,
figures from civil society, not from Hamas. The names of those individuals have been announced
today. But it also meant to see the disarmament of Hamas and also the full withdrawal of Israeli
troops from Gaza. Now that is problematic. First of all, Hamas so far have said they are not
willing to give up their weapons and Israel has given no indication that it's ready to fully
withdrawal. It wants to remain in place in Gaza. It says to provide security. The second point is,
you know, we've got a ceasefire in place in Gaza for three months, but it is fragile at best.
In the past three months, since that ceasefire was announced in October, more than 430 Palestinians
have been killed. And then you've got the issue of the conditions in Gaza, which continue to be
absolutely bleak. More aid has got in, but it's not enough. And, you know, over the past week,
we've had some truly awful weather here in the Middle East, very, very heavy rain, heavy winds,
and you've got hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza living in tents. We've seen tents being ripped
apart, blown away in the wind, it's cold, it's flooded, it's grim. So progress cannot come
soon enough, but there's a lot of caution that's got to come with this announcement because a lot
of the detail was missing and a lot of what the future of Gaza holds remains very unclear.
John Donison, divisions in the repressive militant group that rules Afghanistan have been laid bare
in a leaked recording obtained by the BBC. In it, the Supreme Leader of the Taliban
warns that the divisions inside the group could bring down his government. A year-long investigative
The investigation by the BBC Afghan Service found that two groups are competing for leadership.
The Taliban denies that there's a power struggle between hardline ideologues and pragmatists
who want to ease the harsh restrictions on women and goals in order to end Afghanistan's international isolation.
Zia Sharia told us more about the Taliban leader's warning.
He's one of the most secretive leaders in the world.
Now, in a leak obtained by the BBC, the Taliban Supreme Leader Hibbatore.
and Allah Khan Zada appears to confirm rumors of divisions at the top of the Taliban leadership.
The recording is part of a speech he gave in January 2025.
They will raise such issues that cause disagreements within the body of the government.
One will criticize another.
So the system becomes weak and divisions increase.
As a result of these divisions, the Emirate will be destroyed.
and will simply come to an end.
The BBC Afghan service carried out more than 100 interviews,
including with current and former Taliban members.
It found two distinct groups at the top of the movement
with competing visions for Afghanistan.
One aligned to Ahunzada and his hardline policies,
including the continued ban on women's education beyond primary school.
The other set to favor more international engagement
than giving women wider access to education.
The BBC has found that in September,
Taliban officials in Kabul reversed a decision by movement's leader
to switch off Afghanistan's internet and phone networks,
a move described by a government insider as close to rebellion.
A senior Taliban spokesman denied there was a split,
but acknowledged that differences in opinion exist,
which he equated to a difference of opinion in a family.
As we record this podcast,
the bodies of Cuban military personnel who were killed,
during the US operation to seize the Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro are due to be flown home.
Relatives, friends and government officials will pay tribute to them at a funeral with full military honours
before they're then transported to revolutionary armed forces headquarters where the public will be able to pay their respects.
Cuba's relations with Venezuela have been strong for decades with Cuba exchanging doctors and security personnel in return for oil.
But President Trump says those days are over.
Our Central America and Cuba correspondent, Will Grant, told me more about how so many Cuban security forces were killed during the US raid in Venezuela.
Well, it does reveal the extent of the relationship in security terms between the Venezuelan government and Cuba.
Of the Cubans who died or who were killed, we know that many of them were tasked with actually protecting Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
So when the US Delta Force troops entered his compound and entered into a firefight with those troops,
that is where a significant number of the 32 will have lost their lives.
Others would have been Cuban soldiers based at some of the military targets that were hit by US forces.
But it was interesting in that it has been years that Cuba has basically denied having military and security and intelligence personnel in Venezuela.
And in the wake of this attack, had to accept that they were there and are now repatriated.
the bodies. And there are claims that the US military used a mystery sonic weapon during the raid. What more
do we know about that? Well, not a huge amount. It is reporting that hasn't been verified or stood up by
the US government at this stage. But there is suggestion that there was some kind of sonic weapon
being used that the US has acquired this technology and was using it in the Venezuelan raid.
I think we still need to be wary of these reports because although there are quotes from
Venezuelan sources. We don't have anything substantial yet at this stage or substantiated by the
US government. So there is a suggestion that the Americans have acquired something akin to the
technology that was believed to created the Havana syndrome, which targeted US diplomats a number of
years ago. And as you say, the fact that there were so many Cuban security personnel guarding
President Maduro shows how close Cuba and Venezuela have been over the years. Where does this
US raid leave those relations and can Cubans survive without Venezuela's help, particularly
as oil? Well, in a very precarious situation, to be honest, I've been talking to Cubans
constantly since I've come to the island. And of course, there is real concern on the streets
about what all this means. The idea of losing their most important energy benefactor, the most
important, in a sense, economic benefactor in Venezuela under Ogil Chavez and latterly under
Nicolas Maduro is a very, very worrying concept. Cuba is in the grip of an acute energy crisis at the moment.
There are rolling blackouts, the length and breadth of the island, the idea that Delci de Rodriguez is leading an interim Venezuelan government, bends to Washington's will and breaks that relationship with Cuba is deeply worrying for people on the island.
Will Grant. People in Uganda are voting today as longtime president, Uri Maseveni, seeks a seventh term after nearly four.
four decades in power. His main challenger is the pop star turned politician Robert Chagulani,
better known as Bobby Wine, who's running for president for the second time. But as Richard Gagoy
reports, the odds are stacked against him. More than 20 million Ugandans are casting ballots
in one of the country's most closely watched elections. The UN Human Rights Office says
the vote is being held in a climate of fear and repression. Hundreds of opposition supporters have been
detained ahead of polling tea. Authorities have imposed a nationwide internet shutdown, citing concerns
over disinformation and election-related violence. President Jory Moseveni has amended the Constitution
multiple times to extend his rule, making an upset unlikely. But the opposition leader Bobby
Wynne wants a call for protests and even seek U.S. intervention if the vote is rigged.
Richard Kugoy. If you're picking a place to go for dinner, a bad food hygiene rating isn't usually
a great sign. But what if it was one of the top restaurants in the country?
Un is here, twice named the best restaurant in the UK, has been given one out of five in its
official hygiene inspection. But the chef says it's not a problem. Will Chalk explains.
If you want to picture this restaurant, it's less place you might pop in for a sandwich,
a more four-hour-long two-micholined, fine dining experience, costing, costing, costing, costing, costing, costing, costing, costing,
costing more than $600 per person.
Honest here is a tiny 20 cover, former Coaching Inn.
It's run by a chef who's ripped up the culinary rulebook, Gareth Ward.
That's how it was billed on British TV show Master Chef, the Professionals, back in 2019.
That ripping up of the rulebook means Gareth Ward is a big fan of specialist cooking techniques.
Inspired by East Asian cuisine, he also serves a lot of the food raw.
His mission to take diners on a journey through a tasting menu of up to 24 courses,
many of which revolve around ingredients aged in the restaurants bespoke Himalayan salt chamber.
When hygiene inspectors visited in November, they said cleanliness needed to be improved
and major changes made to how food safety was managed.
But Gareth Ward has told the BBC he's not embarrassed or upset
and that people who think outside the box often have to deal.
with this kind of stuff.
Restaurant critic Giles Corrin,
who's eaten at Honours here, agrees.
The normal health and safety things, I think,
I think it's fair enough for you should reply.
Don't really apply.
It's much harder to do.
It's not about your fridge
and have you put the roast chicken from last night
next to the raw chicken,
which could lead to, you know, bacteria.
It's a different sort of world.
But is this type of thing inevitable
when traditional cooking techniques
from one place are used in places
where they're not traditional?
Traditional cooking didn't develop with modern food hygiene rules in mind.
It was based on experience and common sense, freshness, acidity, salt.
So the rules are important today, especially in restaurants.
But they don't always, I think, reflect how traditional food has worked safety for generations.
That's Jad Yusuf, a chef who learned to cook in Lebanon,
but has since worked in kitchens in Norway, Hong Kong and the UK.
He told me, even though he sometimes has to adapt techniques, he's happy to do it.
I think it's possible sometimes to adapt traditional methods responsibly
without losing what makes the food special.
And that report was by Will Chalk.
And that's all from us for now, but there will be a new edition of the Global News podcast later.
If you want to comment on this podcast, you can send us an email.
The address is Global Podcast at BBC.com.com.
This edition was mixed by Lee Wilson.
The producer was Arion Kocchi.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Jean-Ut Jalil.
Until next time.
Goodbye.
When you're car shopping on your phone,
you need to see all the information.
With the Car Guru's app, you can.
Powerful search tools let you see deal ratings,
price history and dealer reviews on listings,
all in one place.
And you can turn on real-time price drop alerts,
so you'll never miss a great deal.
It's no wonder Car Gurus is the number one rated car shopping app in Canada on the Apple app and Google Play Store.
Buy your next car gurus today with Car Gurus at Cargooros.ca.
Go to Cargooros.ca.cair-Gurus.cair-Ca.cairus.cairus.cairus.cair-ca.cairus.ca.
