Global News Podcast - Xi Jinping leads summit after Trump leaves
Episode Date: October 31, 2025China's President, Xi Jinping, leads the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit in South Korea, which President Trump chose to leave. Chinese media said Mr Xi told a closed-door meeting of regional... leaders that they should deepen economic co-operation in the face of challenges unseen in a century. Also, the United Nations has said that the "horror" continues in El-Fasher, with aid agencies warning that too few civilians are being allowed to leave the Sudanese city, which has fallen to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. A friend of King Charles tells the BBC that the monarch would have been frustrated and angry with his brother, Andrew, who's now been stripped of the title 'prince' following a damaging sex scandal. Another high-profile, broad-daylight robbery in France, just weeks after a raid at the Louvre museum in Paris. And why bats are finding sanctuary in churches.The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson and on Friday the 31st of October, these are our main stories.
Xi Jinping takes centre stage at the APEC conference in South Korea after Donald Trump's departure
from the gathering of leaders of Pacific nations. Tales of horror
from Sudan from those able to flee Elfasha after the takeover by the paramilitary RSF.
No longer a prince, Andrew is banished by his brother, King Charles, in an effort to distance
the British monarchy from scandal.
Also in this podcast, why churches are helping the spirit of Halloween.
Bats have been associated with churches for a very long time, really.
And the timbers in the roof are like branches.
Churches have become very important to bats historically.
Donald Trump may no longer be at the APEC summit in South Korea,
but many other world leaders are still there doing deals.
And taking undisputed centre stage is China's Xi Jinping.
He told an audience that changes unseen in a century were accelerating across the world.
As part of his diplomatic offensive, Mr Xi met a number of other.
leaders on Friday, including the new Japanese Prime Minister Sanei Takaiichi.
He also sat down with the Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who echoed Mr. Shea's
thought that this was a time of profound global change.
Today, we're facing another hinge moment in history.
Our world is undergoing one of the most profound shifts since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
And that old world, the world in which APEC prospered, but also helped to foster.
that old world of steady expansion of rules-based, liberalized trade and investment,
a world on which so much of our nation's prosperity, very much Canada's included, that world is gone.
I asked our correspondent in Seoul, Jake Kwan, what President Xi has been saying.
Mr. Xi has addressed the world leaders today, and the theme was one of collaboration and open economies.
And this has been an opportunity for Chinese leader Xi Jinping to expand China's influence among these world leaders.
leaders who represent some 60% of the world's GDP and 40% of the global population.
We have expected China to approach these countries with the aim of keeping an open market
for Chinese products. And that's exactly what he told them this morning. And Mr. Xi will also
approach the middle powers and developing economies with an offer of investment in infrastructure
so he can align them closer to China. And he can do all of this without his rival,
President Donald Trump, in the room. And I think we also saw some of the language shift. We just
heard Prime Minister Connie there. And the language had shifted after President Donald Trump has
left South Korea. There was no more fawning over this new world that is great that Mr. Trump is
creating. But the leaders are now addressing the elephant in the room, that there is a danger
here as the world is now fractured and free trade has become a thing of the past. And we just heard
the host of this APEC summit, President E. Jiameng, telling his peers that we are in fact in a
crisis, that there is much uncertainty, that trade and investments are slowing down. The time of
theatrics seems to be over, and we're seeing the world leaders really getting down to the business.
Yeah, as we've been saying, she met Mark Carney, the Canadian Prime Minister, also the Japanese
Prime Minister, Sanei Takachi. Do we know what came out of those meetings?
Well, both leaders had issues to iron out with Chinese leaders, so this was a very important
opportunity for both leaders, and we understand they have met briefly. It was a very brief chat
between these leaders.
I think between Japan and China,
I think Canada's situation
has been perhaps more dire
and China is Canada's number two
trading partner after the U.S.,
but their relationship with China
really froze over since 2018
when Canada arrested a Chinese telecom executive
on the U.S.'s behalf,
and then China detained two Canadians
on spy charges in retaliation.
So this awful relationship
has been continuing until today.
And in recent months,
two countries have been also putting up
economic barriers against each other, namely the Chinese tariffs on canola oil, which is Canada's
major agricultural export. So when it comes to Japan, they also have to address the somewhat
cold air in the room when Prime Minister Takayichi entered the office. She never congratulated
her, which he has done for all her predecessors. Now, we won't know why she never sent a
congratulation letter, but it was speculated that it was because she was considered a nationalist
and a hawk when it comes to the relationship with China.
So all these countries now all have something in common
that they're receiving the brunt of America's trade warfare.
And Mr. Trump has further raised tariffs on Canada just last week.
So, you know, these countries have reasons to find relief from this new trade war
by cooperating with each other, seeking to upgrade the trade relations.
as well as ironing out any kind of security problems and cold problems that they had in the recent years.
Jake Kwan at the APEC summit in South Korea.
The horror is continuing in Darfur, says the United Nations,
as aid agencies in Sudan express their fears that not enough people are being allowed to leave the city of Alfasha,
which fell to the paramilitary rapid support forces at the weekend.
The RSF has acknowledged that violence against civilians,
has been committed by some of its fighters, and several of them have been arrested,
including Abu Lulu, who's been accused of summary executions.
Tom Perrello was the last U.S. special envoy to Sudan.
He left the post when President Trump returned to the White House this year and has not been replaced.
Mr. Periello said that the RSF needed investigating.
It's crimes against humanity and an active campaign of ethnically cleansing
and committing genocide in that area.
This is a moment where I think the world, which has been ignoring these horrific atrocities in Sudan, needs to say very clearly that these must end and that they're going to be immediate consequences for those who are part of the RSF leadership or connected to supporting it.
Our Africa correspondent Barbara Plet, Usher, has heard from some of the people who've managed to escape Alfasha by walking to the town of Tawila 80 kilometers away.
A nurse is probing for bullets in the broken flesh.
of this man. His bare torso
showing he was shot several times as
he fled El Fasher. Now getting
treatment at this camp in Tohila.
The men are often a target.
The paramilitaries who've captured the city
suspect they belong to the army.
That's what happened to this patient.
By God, brother, someone
coming from Alfasha says to you,
you're a soldier. You say to him,
I'm not a soldier and they say no, they
threaten you with a weapon to your head.
What does that mean? We don't understand
anything. They beat us badly and the thirst, the thirst. They took our water and one of them says
to the other, I will kill him. And the other replies, let him die of thirst. Yusra Ibrahim Mohammed is in the
same tent at this clinic run by the medical charity, Doctors Without Borders. She describes making the
decision to leave the city after her husband, a soldier, was killed. We left three days ago
moving to avoid the artillery areas, she says.
The people guiding us didn't know what was happening.
If someone resisted the RSF fighters, they were beaten or robbed or even executed.
I saw dead bodies in the streets.
Ahmed Osman Ibrahim got shot three times when the group he was with tried to escape,
but he was one of the lucky ones.
There were seven of us who left together.
Four of them, the RSF killed them in front of us.
bit them and killed them.
On the road from Alfashar, there is danger of being attacked and robbed by militias.
Many people already weak or injured walk most of the way.
At this last checkpoint, finally getting a ride to the camp.
The fall of Alfashar is a major victory for the RSF
and a turning point in Sudan civil war.
But it's the evidence.
of atrocities that has captured world attention.
The paramilitaries posting videos showing mass killings of unarmed people.
In a recent speech, the RSF's commander, Mohamed Hamdan, Degalo,
admitted some violations and promised investigations.
A day later, the group reported to the UN it had arrested some suspects.
El Fasher is only one battlefield in a terrible war that's killed tens of thousands,
displaced millions and driven half the country into crisis.
Those who made it to Tohila have survived against the odds
one of the darkest chapters in this conflict.
But with the RSF determined to consolidate its gains,
no one here feels safe.
Barbara Plet Usher.
The name of King Charles' brother, Andrew, is no longer on the role of the peerage,
the official record of the highest ranking and titled in Britain.
He lost his right to be called Prince on Thursday
after the king took the honour away from him.
him because of allegations that he had sex with Virginia Geoffrey, a teenager who was trafficked by
his friend, the child sex offender Geoffrey Epstein. Andrew Mountbatten, Windsor, as he must now
be known, denies the claims. My colleague Nick Robinson has been speaking to a friend of the
King, the broadcaster Jonathan Dimbleby. He said King Charles has thought hard about his decision
to strip his brother of his titles, but it was well-deserved.
arrogant, boarish, entitled, an embarrassment for a long time to the institution of the monarchy
and to the king. I think that today he will be failing a measure of relief that after going
through due process constitutionally, legally, being in touch with his family, keep in touch
with number 10, that he has made this decision, his own personal decision, a very big decision
as you've identified, and hope that for him and for the monarchy, it will now go away,
although it won't, of course, for Andrew.
I think the culmination of a whole series of things that he had clearly lied.
You know, in New York, when he was with Epstein strolling, he said that he'd gone there to break
with him.
He was lying.
He did not break with him.
He continued the relationship.
And I think that was the culminating factor.
and I think and hope that he will now be given a measure of relief from the focus being on him
who does important public work and insofar as it continues will be on the person who has been effectively banished
to the private estate at Sandringham.
But why some are still arguing, why did it take so long to deal with this?
The monarchy, the institution, has to go through due process.
It has to, if the man was saying and still says, I'm innocent of any offence, and he as the head of state, and she, the queen beforehand as head of state, jumped from the allegation to the conclusion that by inference they supported the view that he was guilty, that would from their perspective, and I think from the perspective of a constitutional lawyer, would be an inappropriate ground for denying him the status that he has.
and as you've identified correctly, of course,
this is a huge step that has been taken.
Spell out why so huge, Jonathan,
because there are some people listening this morning
who think it's an obvious step,
a step only taken in response to opinion polls
and pressure from MPs
who are getting closer and closer to what has happened.
It is a huge step constitutionally.
I understand those sentiments.
There's a natural sentiment to have.
Of course he should get rid of that title.
Of course he should no longer have been Duke.
Of course he should no longer be Prince.
Of course he should be out of the scene.
But our constitution, our way of government, our way of governance,
and he's at the apex of it all does not work like that.
And you can't just impetuously say if you're the king.
And I have no doubt at all that he has been consistently embarrassed
and frustrated by and angry about the way in which his brother has behaved.
at the same time
he is a brother
he has to be mindful of that person
he doesn't act as I say impetuously
he considers
he decides this is what has to be done
it's major in constitutional terms
because you tell me the last time
that his entitlement to be
a prince was removed from him
Jonathan Dimbleby
the Jamaican government
says Hurricane Melissa
Sir killed at least 19 people when it struck this week.
Aid assistance is now starting to arrive as the authorities increase efforts to clear roads
and reach people in isolated and cut-off areas.
Our correspondent Ned Atorfic reports from Santa Cruz in the western part of Jamaica.
Scambling for supplies at the local market in sweltering heat.
Residents in black water are still partially marooned.
Days after Hurricane Melissa tore through, fears are growing about food, water, and gas running out.
In nearby White House, Trevor White says the community feels abandoned and many need medical attention.
A female got hit in her head by a big piece of lumber and he's bleeding and she can't get to the hospital.
And then another person who passed away in White House got her church slashed by up sink.
from a from the roof still lying there are so many things happened happening happened in the storm right now
and there's no there's no help and all those people who passed away they're still there can't get to
the mug or wherever they they meant to bring their bodies and stuff and i don't really see any help
coming in it's like we're on our own that's the biggest problem there's no help officials say the
The Jamaican defense forces have dedicated a helicopter to locate and collect bodies of anyone who has died.
His update.
The information minister, Dana Morris Dixon, confirmed additional fatalities as the search effort continues.
So I know there are so many people in Jamaica all over the world that I know your heart is breaking because you've not heard from your families.
And so please know that the government is doing everything we can to get to them.
And that's why our soldiers, and they were working with regular civilians,
just came out and said, we want to help.
And they're going by foot, trying to clear the roadways.
And so we are going to get to them.
We're going to get to every community.
It may take a little time, but we're going to do it as quickly as we can
and get aid and food to all those who need it.
Further east, the situation isn't.
as dire in Santa Cruz. But residents are starting the long process of cleaning up and rebuilding.
Stores and homes remain without power, and the town is covered in a thick mud left behind from
the receding floodwater. The Jamaican Red Cross drove through here and surrounding areas
to deliver hygiene kits and tarps given the extensive roof damage from the ferocious winds.
Esther Pinnock described the conditions. We were hindered by trees.
the roadways, mangled wires.
And what is critical also is that we're unable to communicate
because there is no internet access, no electricity, no water.
So those are some of the factors at play right now.
For people trying to understand what Jamaica's going through,
give us a sense of the scale of the need.
It's overwhelming.
It's distressing.
It's going to be hard to quantify.
We include the psychosocial aspect of things that we brought persons into,
give them tips to encourage them because we realize that there's a sense of despondency, anxiety
that is prevailing in these communities that have experienced severe loss.
Relief flights and aid have begun to flow into Jamaica's airports.
Across the western part of the country, the help can't come soon enough.
That report from Nedatophic.
Still to come claims that Western society is facing a crisis of masculinity
with men listening to the wrong people.
Their message is one of nationalism and blaming others,
blaming women for your romantic problems,
blaming immigrants for your economic problems.
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Police in France have arrested six people suspected of carrying out another high-profile broad daylight robbery.
This time the target wasn't the Louvre in Paris, but a gold-refining laboratory in Lyon.
The thieves used explosives to break into the building. Alice Adderley reports.
Video said to have been captured by a worker at a neighbouring company and shown on French TV,
show several men armed with military-grade weapons and a ladder
appearing to blow a hole in the perimeter wall
of the gold refinery on Thursday afternoon.
An eyewitness heard a loud boom then called the police
saying a burglary was in progress.
Several staff were slightly injured in the explosion
with three receiving hospital treatment.
This man is a delivery driver
who often collects merchandise from the factory.
He said he'd spoken to some employees.
When the windows were blown in, lots of debris fell on people in the factory.
In the video, after a matter of just a few minutes, the robbers emerge with gold bars,
later estimated to be worth 12 million euros.
They calmly load them into a van.
But a short time later, the suspects and a woman believed to be an accomplice,
were arrested in the nearby town of Veniseu.
According to the French Interior Minister, Laurent Nunes, who posted on X,
They'd been caught red-handed.
He praised the police for their firmness, speed and control.
This is reportedly the second time in recent months this site has been attacked.
The latest heist occurred as French police on Thursday arrested five more people
over this month's brazen louvre museum robbery in Paris
when the French crown jewels were stolen.
Alice Adelaide.
Western society faces a crisis of masculinity that is dangerous not just for young,
young men, but for society as a whole. That is the view of Scott Galloway, better known by his
online moniker, Prof G, a best-selling American author, marketing professor at New York University,
entrepreneur and host of various podcasts, including Pivot. Next week sees the release of his new
book, Notes on Being a Man, which claims to be an operator's manual for being a man today.
My colleague Nick Robinson spoke to Prof G to describe the crisis.
his book seeks to address.
Data reflects that a big segment of our population is really struggling, and no group has fallen
further faster than men in the West, four times more likely to kill themselves, 12 times
more likely to be incarcerated, three times more likely to be addicted or homeless, and in the
UK, we have what's called NEETs, and that's neither employed in education or training, and that
number has doubled in the last 10 years. One out of seven men in the UK now, working age,
are not really doing anything, so it's bad for the economy.
economy. It's bad for households, and quite frankly, it's just really tough on our young men.
And one reason for this is actually the thing which you are so successful at, social media.
You'd not only present very successful podcasts, you're very big on Instagram too, but you said
an extraordinary quote that for a 14-year-old to have an Instagram account, you said it was more
dangerous than a bottle of Jack Daniels and some weed.
Somewhere between 6% and 8% of teenagers are considered clinically addicted to drugs or alcohol.
It's 24% of social media. I think your daughter has a much greater likelihood.
of cutting herself and engaging in self-harm if she experiments with social media than with
alcohol. So I stand by that statement. We age-gate pornography, the military weapons, alcohol,
but yet we've decided not to age-gade social media, which is shown to take a terrible toll on
the mental health of young girls and also self-harm among young men.
Some of the people who are most powerful on social media are hugely successful with young men.
I think of Andrew Tate. I think in this country, Tommy Robinson. What influence do you fear they're having?
They're having a negative influence. And to their credit, they recognize the problem earlier than anybody. The problem is that their answer is to take us back to the 50s where non-whites and women had less equality. And their message is one of nationalism and blaming others, blaming women for your romantic problems, blaming immigrants for your economic problems. I think it's a very negative message that has filled, unfortunately, avoid that we avoided. So unfortunately,
some very negative voices have filled the void. My biggest supporters are quite frankly
mothers who recognize the problem in their household. And I think we're finally moving to a more
productive dialogue around a change in our economic policy, our society, and just making
young men more comfortable coming forward with the issues they're facing.
Your new book Notes on Being a Man is full of the sort of advice that you post online
as well. I'm looking at one of your Instagram posts in which you say that man's most secret
weapon is kindness. Do you think you're getting an audience other than from people who already
agree with you? I think so. I coach some young men and ultimately, Nick, they turn to they would
really like to be in a relationship. They'd really like to have a girlfriend and their studies showing
that there are three primary reasons that women are attracted to men. One, their ability to signal
resources. That's not just having a range rover now, but having a plan being seen as someone who's
going to be able to be a good provider. Someone who is intelligent. The fastest way to communicate
intelligence, is humor. And third, is kindness. Women instinctively know there'll be periods in their
life likely during gestation when they are vulnerable and they want a partner who is at a very
base level, a kind person. Women are attracted to men who demonstrate kindness. What's so crucial
is role models. Now, you're highly successful. You've made a lot of money as an entrepreneur.
Is one of the reasons you write a book, not just because you like selling books and why not?
You actually see this as something of a mission? I relate to these young men. My mom immigrated from Britain.
by a single mother who lived and died of secretary. I didn't have a lot of male mentorship. When
girls lose their father through death, divorce, or abandonment, they have pretty much the same
outcomes. College attendance rates of self-harm. When a boy loses a male role model, at that moment,
he becomes more likely to be incarcerated than graduate from college. So we absolutely need to
have men involved in a young boy's life. If we want to raise better men, we have to be better men.
And finally, how serious is it if we don't take seriously?
the warnings that are contained in the data you started this conversation with?
The one thing the most violent and unstable societies have in common
is a disproportionate number of young men
who have a lack of economic or romantic opportunities.
The most dangerous person in the world is a young, broke, lonely man
and in the West we're producing millions of them.
Nick Robinson speaking to Scott Galloway.
Today is October the 31st, Halloween.
So if I mention bats and churches,
you might think I'm talking about Dracula.
or some other horror story.
But I'm not.
I'm referring to a new study
that's revealed about half of all churches in England
are home to bats.
Dr Leah Gilmore is research manager
at the Bat Conservation Trust,
the organisation which carried out the research.
So bats tend to roost naturally
in tree holes, crevices and sometimes caves
where they're available.
So these churches provide,
especially older churches,
provide architectural features
that are similar to those roosting features.
in the wider landscape.
So bats have been associated with churches for a very long time, really.
And the timbers in the roof are like branches.
And all bats are reliant on sort of woodland and those kind of features,
at least in part for some of their life cycles.
So churches have become very important to bats historically.
We really wanted to look at how bats were using churches and the factors affecting them,
but also the relationship of the church representatives with their bats
and the people and the community using churches.
And so what we actually found was that even though bats can cause some problems from their droppings,
mostly the attitudes to bats were overwhelmingly positive.
And in those areas where there were a little bit more of a problem,
sometimes really simple solutions could be put in place to allow bats to live in harmony
with the people that use the church.
So a really, really good story coming out of this.
this research paper in terms of the relationship between nature and people.
Dr Leah Gilmour.
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.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
use the hashtag global news pod.
This edition was mixed by Darcy Obrey
and the producers were Carla Conti and Mickey Bristow.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alex Ritson.
Until next time, goodbye.
