1,169 episodes

The day’s top stories from BBC News. Delivered twice a day on weekdays, daily at weekends. Including the latest news from the Middle East, about Israel and Iran.

Global News Podcast BBC Podcasts

    • News
    • 4.2 • 1.2K Ratings

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

The day’s top stories from BBC News. Delivered twice a day on weekdays, daily at weekends. Including the latest news from the Middle East, about Israel and Iran.

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    Prosecutors ask judge to punish Trump for violating trial gag order

    Prosecutors ask judge to punish Trump for violating trial gag order

    The former US president Donald Trump denies falsifying business records to cover up a payment to a porn actress. Also: the Israeli military has rejected accusations that its forces buried the bodies of Palestinians at a medical compound in Gaza, and at what age do we become 'old'?

    • 30 min
    UK - Rwanda bill: Will it deter small boat crossings?

    UK - Rwanda bill: Will it deter small boat crossings?

    Migrants to be sent abroad for asylum processing. Ministers say the legislation will deter small boat crossings.
    Father begins legal action against BP over son's cancer death in Iraq. Voyager-1 sends readable data again from deep space. Elon Musk Sydney church stabbing video row. The US state that wants to fine homeless sleepers. UK woman races topless in the London marathon to show her mastectomy scars. Shakespeare a man of words and numbers.

    • 35 min
    Trump accused of 'pure' election fraud in hush money trial

    Trump accused of 'pure' election fraud in hush money trial

    Defence lawyers tell jurors in New York there was no crime and the former US president Donald Trump is "cloaked in innocence". Also: Ecuadorean police arrest fugitive gang leader, Fabricio Colón Pico, and have you seen the raccoons that are on the run in the Netherlands?

    • 33 min
    Israel's military intelligence chief resigns over 7 October attacks

    Israel's military intelligence chief resigns over 7 October attacks

    The Israel Defense Forces said Major General Aharon Haliva would retire once his successor was selected. Also, the UK parliament prepares to vote on a bill to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda, and thousands of Filipino and US troops begin three weeks of military exercises.

    • 30 min
    Netanyahu vows to reject any US sanctions on Israeli military

    Netanyahu vows to reject any US sanctions on Israeli military

    Reports say the US is planning to cut military aid to the Netzah Yehuda battalion. Speaking on the eve of the Jewish holiday of Passover, the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, warned that attacks will be stepped up against Hamas in Gaza. Also: the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, says the new US package of military aid could help Ukraine turn the tide in the war against Russia, and tens of thousands of people took part in the London Marathon.

    • 31 min
    US House approves crucial $61bn Ukraine aid package

    US House approves crucial $61bn Ukraine aid package

    The vote comes as Ukrainian troops face a weapons shortage, with Russia continuing its attacks. We get reaction and analysis from Washington and Kyiv, where President Zelensky says it will help his troops on the battlefield. The aid is worth billions of dollars, and the Kremlin doesn't like it. Also in this podcast covering the world's top news events: Iran's ayatollahs launch a new crackdown on women; a river disaster in central Africa; why people in the Canary Islands want tourists to stay away; the arts and housing complex in central London which has been covered in cloth; why China's swimmers failed drugs tests -- but were still allowed to enter the Olympics; and the major international organisation supporting women in tech runs out of cash and closes down.

    • 29 min

Customer Reviews

4.2 out of 5
1.2K Ratings

1.2K Ratings

Listener 0017 ,

Generally Unbiased

Excellent unbiased reporting on world affairs. Sometimes skews to the left on Climate and UK Politics stories. Random stories and the Happy Pod and generally irrelevant and have no bearing on world news.

SF classic fan ,

Public broadcaster puts up paywall.

Shameful practice of locking out information to lower income people. Making news and nuanced perspective the purview of the privileged is corrosive and leads to the disintegration of an informed public. That BBC paywalls the information like this is a disgrace to its core mission of public broadcasting.

Nicollfamily ,

A Long Tradition of Careful, Thorough and Balanced Reporting

All news from professional journalistic sources once aspired to the caliber of reporting the BBC World Service routinely delivers still. The value of thorough, neutral fact finding from experienced and talented professional journalists cannot be overstated in the current “news” marketplace. The Global News Podcast is one of my most trusted sources for news and information. I rarely miss an installment. I choose to subscribe specifically because I want the BBC to realize your listeners value what you provide. Don’t tell the higher-ups, but I would pay more.

Do tell them, however, it is critical that you continue. Every western public broadcaster is periodically asked to make cuts. Please don’t cut this podcast when the next request comes. Remind those higher-ups that one of your American competitors has the mast-head slogan: “Democracy Dies in Darkness”. And while you could once be forgiven for thinking that a tad melodramatic and self-important, as I once did, I do so no longer. The January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol in Washington shocked advocates of the rule of law and the democracies it underpins. The malignancy allowed to grow into that attack is a darkness of sorts, certainly, one with its roots in the real “fake news”.

This podcast, your BBC colleagues and the select few around the globe that adhere to the same standards of journalistic excellence, are the best protection democracies have against the spread of anti-democratic extremism around the world. Look no further than the number of democracies electing and re-electing authoritarian leaders. Without the understanding your journalistic rigor brings, ignorance and its progeny extremism, will spread. Remind those higher-ups of this, right after you extend to them my thanks for helping to push back that darkness.

Scott Nicoll
Vancouver, BC Canada

Top Podcasts In News

The Daily
The New York Times
Serial
Serial Productions & The New York Times
Front Burner
CBC
The Current
CBC
The Big Story
Frequency Podcast Network
Pivot
New York Magazine

You Might Also Like

Newshour
BBC World Service
Business Daily
BBC World Service
Learning English News Review
BBC Radio
The Global Story
BBC World Service
Economist Podcasts
The Economist
The Documentary Podcast
BBC World Service

More by BBC

You're Dead to Me
BBC Radio 4
6 Minute English
BBC Radio
In Our Time
BBC Radio 4
Newshour
BBC World Service
The Documentary Podcast
BBC World Service
6 Minute Vocabulary
BBC Radio