Newshour BBC Podcasts
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- News
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Interviews, news and analysis of the day's global events.
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Pioneering gene therapy restores baby's hearing
A British girl born deaf can now hear unaided after a ground-breaking gene-therapy treatment. Opal Sandy was treated shortly before her first birthday and six months on can hear sounds as soft as a whisper and is starting to talk. Opal is part of a trial recruiting patients in the UK, US and Spain.
Also in the programme: the advocacy group Human Rights Watch has accused Sudan's Rapid Support Force of possible genocide in the city of El Geneina in Darfur; and US president Joe Biden has issued his strongest warning yet to Israel against launching a full-scale military assault on Rafah in southern Gaza.
Picture: Opal Sandy, who has received a ground-breaking so that she can hear unaided, reads with her mother Jo at their home. Credit: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire) -
US suspends arms shipment to Israel
The US has confirmed that it suspended an arms shipment to Israel as its operation in Rafah intensifies.
Also in the programme: our Berlin correspondent investigates Germany's strengthening far-right; and the ancient rock found by a lockdown gardener in Britain.
(Picture: Destroyed houses and mosque between Khan Younis and Rafah. Credit: Shutterstock) -
US bombs on hold to Israel
The US last week paused a bomb shipment for Israel over concerns it was going ahead with a major ground operation in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, a senior US administration official said. Israel has not "fully addressed" US concerns over humanitarian needs of civilians in Rafah, the official said. An Israeli military official appeared to play down the US move. We hear analysis from the US and reaction from Israel.
Also on the programme: How emissions from ships may be contributing to higher ocean temperatures; and the man who shaped the personality cult of North Korea’s ruling family.
(Picture: Aftermath of an Israeli strike on a house in Rafah Credit: REUTERS/Mohamed Salem) -
Israel vows to continue Rafah operation
Israel vows to continue attacks in Rafah as the UN chief warns of worsening humanitarian situation; also in the programme, Stormy Daniels appears at Trump’s hush money trial; Putin begins his fifth term in office; and Sir Owl, the Nepalese man dedicated to conserving owls.
(Photo: Smoke in Rafah following and Israeli attack. Credit: Shutterstock) -
Israel moves in on southern Gaza
Israel’s army says it has seized the Gazan side of the Rafah crossing with Egypt, after continuously bombarding eastern Rafah overnight. Tanks moved in on the vital entry point for aid, a day after Israel ordered civilians to evacuate the area. Meanwhile, truce talks are to resume in Cairo after Israel said terms which Hamas had agreed to were unacceptable.
Also on the programme: A new insight into Alzheimer’s; the marathon champion Eliud Kipchoge slowed by online abuse; and an ode to the Ode to Joy.
(Photo: People flee the eastern parts of Rafah after the Israeli military begins evacuating Palestinian civilians Credit: Reuters/Doaa al Baz) -
Hamas accepts ceasefire proposal
Hamas says it has accepted a proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza from international mediators. Israel says it's studying the terms, which are aimed at achieving an end to the war.
Also in the programme: we'll hear from Argentina's controversial president, Javier Milei; and busting the myth of one of the most famous deaths in rock and roll.
(Picture: Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza celebrate after Hamas accepted a proposed cease-fire. Credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Customer Reviews
It
Gghh
Paywall for a public broadcast. What a shame
been an avid listener of bbc news, once radio, then podcast. now that a public funded service that used to offer a world perspective is now blocking access to people for a paywall is a disgrace and a shame.
Way to spit in the faces of its listeners.
So disappointing.
Improve climate reporting please
Great stuff, but please improve your climate reporting! I’m hearing a lot of ‘Net Zero by 2050’ - this is a misleading goal. The IPCC (UN scientists) say we have to cut GHG emissions in half by 2030 and only after that is reached is Net Zero by 2050 a safe goal. Discussing ‘Net Zero by 2050’ and disregarding 2030 targets is something governments and the fossil fuel industry loves to do, as it delays the issue and ignores the fact this decade is the most critical for climate action and a fast and fair transition away from fossil fuels. Thank you!
- a 16 year old from Canada