¶ Intro / Opening
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This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Celia Hatton, and at 15 Hours GMT on Tuesday, the 30th of June, these are our main stories. Thousands of people march in cities across South Africa calling for undocumented migrants to leave the country. Angry in Venezuela, as many accuse the government of abandoning them after last week's twin earthquake. The Chinese tycoon sentenced to thirty years in a US prison. Also in this podcast.
It will effectively try to grab hold of Swift with each of these arms and will use its onboard propulsion system to try to push it up to a higher orbit.
NASA hurries to save a falling space telescope.
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¶ South Africa's Anti-Migrant Protests
It's been a tense day in South Africa. Extra security was deployed across the country as anti immigration protesters filled the streets in a number of cities. Participants are voicing their anger at the presence of undocumented migrants. The demonstrations have been happening on the day of an unofficial deadline set by anti immigration groups calling for migrants without proper papers to leave the country.
Our first report comes from Nomsa Meseko, who was at the gathering of protesters in Durban.
Thousands of police officers have been deployed countrywide, but There has been a concentration of maximum security here in Durban because the police believe that this is a possible hotspot where violence could erupt or that the protest itself Can turn violent. We are now joined by Philem Twinikumeta, who is one of the protest leaders. You have promised that this protest is going to be peaceful.
תודה רבה.
He's basically told us that they believe that they have given strict instructions to the people who will be holding those these protests here that they should not loot any shops, they should not attack anyone and that they can guarantee uh that there will not be any violence. But when it comes to the question that I asked him about the the the carrying of traditional weapons He has dismissed that. He says that as a Zulu man, uh there is no way that a Zulu man can walk around the street without
holding a stick. He also says that that stick does not carrying a stick does not mean that they will be using them um to attack foreigners or anyone or even businesses. saying that it is just a symbol of who they are and that they will continue carrying those things.
Some South Africans blame workers from outside the country for problems such as high unemployment, long waits at hospitals and crime. Many migrants have already left the country or are preparing to leave. Our correspondent Pumza Filani spoke to us from one of the protests in Johannesburg.
So we've just moved to a safe distance so we can speak to just moments ago we saw crowds moving through the city centre. This appe seems to have been a breakaway crowd from the initial group that we'd been following this morning that left. from the centre of town and were meant to deliver a memorandum to police officials. We are seeing reports that they've broken away into various parts.
of the city. But the group that we were with as they were walking down with the police trying to corral them, we saw people throwing stones into residential buildings through people's windows. We've also seen reports that some people were trying to get access into buildings so police stepped in there to stop that from happening. It's a mixed crowd at the moment of people that one are still participating in what was agreed to the march which was they were going to march
hand over a memorandum and disperse. But there seems to also be offshoot of people that are upset, feeling like this may not be enough and wanting really to take things into their own hands. I spoke to a team of police officers
who had been deployed in this area to ask them what the plan is and the and he said to me that it's fluid at this point because this crowd seems to not be going by what was agreed. But what they're planning on doing is following people and Boxing them in as much as possible so they can maintain a heavy presence and make sure that people don't run off into buildings.
Pumza, when you say you saw people throwing rocks, breaking windows in buildings, are these buildings where they think that there were undocumented migrants inside? I mean why did they target these particular buildings?
Exactly. So just for context, the area that we are in is believed to be home to l mostly foreign nationals. So whether they are documented or undocumented is a secondary issue for most people. But it's an area that's known to be a community that's usually home to people from various parts.
of the continent. So those incidents of throwing those rocks, some people were hurling, you need to go home, you need to go home, inferring um which I can infer refers to wanting people that they believe are non South Africans to to to leave the country.
protesters angry about I guess the pressure that they see undocumented migrants or migrants put on the services that are available to others in South Africa, Pumza, also I can imagine they're worried about high unemployment there, crime rates, all sorts of things they cite. What do the actual statistics say about the broader picture?
Well the statistics in this country are rarely broken down by nationality. In fact they probably aren't broken down by nationality. What you will get is there will be if they're looking at murder broadly, you will get the stat on what the murder rate in the country at a given time is.
So a lot of the sentiment is one anecdotal from people who say they live within communities where they see crime happening, but the police um themselves, when they gather the information, don't release it by nationality. simply you need to be following a specific case to get a sense of
what's happening there. So really the sentiment that you see here in Yovel and other parts of the country is from people saying they've seen first hand illegal documentation happening and they've seen businesses running illegally that are not registered and because some of the the people that own them should not be in the country.
Pumza Filani, who was speaking to Lucy Hawking.
¶ Venezuela Quake: Anger and Search
Venezuela's interim president, Delcy Rodriguez, has described last week's powerful twin earthquakes as the most brutal natural catastrophe in her country's history. That was on Sunday, and on Monday she commended the tireless work that's been done by rescue teams, adding that international help has now arrived from thirty countries.
But those comments from Miss Rodriguez have done little to calm growing anger against the government. Venezuelans say the authorities simply aren't doing enough to help. The official number of dead is now at more than 1,700, but many more people are still missing. The BBC's international correspondent Yogata Lamaye reports from La Guaira, a coastal city that's been hardest hit by the quakes.
You can hear lots of sounds around me. There are two or three earth movers that are working simultaneously, one that is trying to dig through the rubble, another one that is trying to lift the concrete. slab. I'm standing very close to the debris of a collapsed building. Rescue efforts here are ongoing with full intensity because just yesterday they were able to pull some people out of this rubble alive. Rescuers have turned towards the road holding their hands up.
Screaming silencio, telling everyone to remain silent because they're waiting, they're trying to listen and see if they can hear any voices of any survivors from the debris.
Amen.
They've motioned to everyone and they've restarted work again.
Merci.
Yeah. Just by the collapsed building on the side of the street I can see there are families who are gathered here waiting for news of their loved ones. And of course, as the days go by, hopes of finding survivors are growing slim.
Bueno, primeramente mi nombre es Miguel Oscar Uñé.
Amen.
Porque mi hijo estaba a los escondes.
I am here because my son is under the rubble. Like my son, there are hundreds of others trapped here. We need more support from authorities because what's being done just isn't enough. It's possible that the earthquake hasn't killed my son, but negligence will of not getting help in time.
We've come to one of the hospitals in La Guayra and what we've been seeing at hospitals here as well as in Caracas are families who are searching for their loved ones who are missing. So they're going to see the list of those admissions. admitted, they're going to the morgue to see the list of those who've died. And we've met a mother here, a young mother, Belisabeth Herrera. She's looking for information about her two daughters, Grey Belis and Grey Belis Phillips, twelve and thirteen years.
Old.
She believes they were at home when the earthquake occurred, but she can't be sure. And what she's told us is there was absolutely no rescue operation at her building.
Porque ellas son las niñas tranquilas. They are all I have. I just want to find them at any cost. There were no machines or rescue sent. It's like you've been left on your own to search for your loved ones.
We drove through streets and streets and streets where we saw destroyed houses and buildings on both sides, and now we've just come to one place where we Stopped. We can just see this giant mass of debris in front of us. Two tall apartment buildings stood here. residents who live here say they were sixteen stories high and they basically just collapsed
into a pile of rubble. People are trying to clear the debris of their homes. They're wearing hard hats. These are not officials, these are not firemen, these are not rescue teams, just local people who are doing it with hammers, tools. in some cases with their bare hands. They estimate that hundreds of people possibly have been killed. And their bodies are still under that debris. There are no official numbers. But we've been speaking to one man here, Juan Avendo.
Who's shown us video of how they managed to find one woman, a thirty six year old woman, Hilary Rodriguez, and they were able to pull her out of the rubble themselves.
Terima kasih.
The first few days there was no help from the government. The desperation was overwhelming because we could hear people screaming and there wasn't enough support, either equipment or rescue. If we've had both, maybe we could have saved more lives.
De verdad no sé de qué pasa.
When we speak to people here, they're telling us they're angry at their government because they feel like they've been left to their own devices to deal with the aftermath of this massive disaster. There are rescue teams arriving from different parts of the world, from lots of South American countries, from Mexico, from the US, from the UK, other European countries and from further afield like India.
But it's just not enough. The next big challenge for this country is going to be how to dispose of all the dead and how to stop the outbreak of disease.
I reporting from the Venezuelan city of La Guy.
¶ Chinese Tycoon Sentenced For Fraud
Let's focus on the US now, where a Chinese tycoon has been sentenced by a New York court to thirty years in prison. Guoung has been found guilty of financial fraud. The businessman earned his money in China before moving to the United States a decade ago, where he lived a lavish lifestyle. He also claimed to have become a democracy activist dedicated to bringing down China's communist government. So what did he do? Here's the newsroom's Mickey Bristol.
He was convicted of racketeering, money laundering and fraud. Essentially what he did is he took money from thousands of investors, often from the Chinese-American community in America. Often he encouraged them to invest because of his supposed democracy activists there, many of those who were opposed to the Chinese government. He took their money, he said he was going to invest it and give them high returns. He didn't. It was used to fund a really lavish lifestyle.
Mae'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio' investors are not going to get their money back.
Hm.
So you've taken us through a lot of the details of his lifestyle. I mean he was a very visible character, a very colourful character, wasn't he?
If this was a film script they'd probably reject it as too outlandish. He started life in Shandong Province, a village in China, eight children. He doesn't seem to have done well at school. In fact one of his teachers said he spent his time fighting, chasing girls and gambling. He left at thirteen, went to prison, but somehow it was the nineteen nineties in China, the early part of the century.
that was a time of rocketing real estate deals and he somehow made contacts in prison, got involved in that, made a ton of money, became incredibly one of China's richest men and then as you indicated in the introduction there, he moved to the United States. He claimed he was fleeing persecution
But in actual fact, uh the Chinese authorities said essentially he was just a fraudulent businessman and they wanted him arrested and sent back home to stand trial. That's when he reinvented himself a little bit as a democracy activist. He yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw.
Mm. And he also presented himself as somebody who had political connections, right? In China. He s he said he knew what he was talking about.
He did and e even people like myself who often follow Chinese politics He he seemed quite plausible, he was handsome, wore good suits, seemed to be well connected, and everyone seemed to take into account what he was saying. He even admitted himself that he'd been associated with the spy service in China, so a really colourful character we who presented a plausible Face until he was um brought down.
Mickey Bristow.
¶ NASA's Robotic Telescope Rescue Mission
Some space news for you now. NASA is preparing to launch a robotic spacecraft to save an aging space telescope from falling back to Earth. The telescope, known as the Swift Observatory, needs to get into a higher orbit where it can continue its search for some of the biggest explosions in the universe.
NASA had planned the launch for Tuesday, but because of weather conditions, it's now been rescheduled for Wednesday. Bradchenko is a NASA astrophysicist with the SWIFT Observatory. He's been speaking to Amul Rajan about the project.
Swift is in a low earth orbit. Uh it's currently at an altitude of about three hundred and sixty kilometers, and because of drag forces with the atmosphere. uh that altitude is decreasing over time. And if we don't do anything, it will actually re-enter the Earth's atmosphere and burn up probably later this year. So NASA looked at this about a year ago and decided that this was a great opportunity to develop really important capability.
for the commercial space sector and enable all the great science that Swift does. So they hired a company from Arizona called Catalyst Space Technologies to build a new satellite to launch it. to try to grab hold of Swift and push it up to a higher orbit where it continu can continue doing its science for another ten years or more.
And this robot has kind of as I'm just reading about it, it has three robotic arms. It's kind of like a giant lobster claw giving a kind of helping hand up in space to Swift.
That's exactly right. So it has three robotic arms, two that come off of two of its sides and one from the top of the spacecraft. At the end of each of these arms are a robotic grip. And so it will effectively try to grab hold of Swift with a incher-like grab in each of these arms. And once it's done that, it will use its onboard propulsion system to try to push it up to a higher.
Okay.
What do you know about whether or not uh w what Swift's fate will be, whether or not this is successful?
So ultimately, even if it is successful, Swift is going to re-enter Earth's atmosphere. The large majority of it will burn up when it does that. The question is just when? Uh you know, it's still an extremely valuable scientific satellite conducting really important investigations for astronomers all around the world. And so we would really love if we could continue using it for an extended period of time.
Bradchenko is a NASA astrophysicist with a Swift observatory. Still to come in this podcast.
I feel very emotional, I feel very crazy because my wife
Will
Let's go, let's go for a while!
Frustration for some and happy tears for others at the Men's World Cup.
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This is the Global News Podcast.
¶ UK Increases Defense Budget Significantly
The British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has announced billions of dollars of extra defense spending over the next few years to upgrade the country's military. That means that by twenty twenty nine, the UK is expected to have an annual defense budget of more than a hundred billion dollars. The Prime Minister said the additional funding would be spent on new technology such as drones and autonomous weapons, and to create what he called a hybrid naval force which would use uncrewed vessels.
We want our people. to be able to live in a world defined by peace, stability and the rule of the world.
of law.
But the paradox of peace is that when the world is arming and aggression is rising, the best way to avoid war is to prepare. The best way to defend is to deter, to have the strength to make your adversaries think again before they act.
President Trump has long called for NATO countries to increase their military budgets, but it's his reluctance to fully back Ukraine after the full scale invasion by Russia. Convince many European nations that they need to be better prepared to defend themselves. Is this why the British government is taking action? Our diplomatic correspondent is Paul.
I think this is a recognition, Celia, that governments all over Europe have been coming to in the wake of Russia's full scale invasion of Ukraine. Other Eastern European governments have been rather quicker and uh have approached this with a great deal of urgency. You look at Poland, you look at the Baltic republics and Germany, which has recently enormously expanded its military spending.
There is a feeling that the UK and its allies need to be ready to confront a possible conflict in Europe within the next five to ten years. And that even without that, without the prospect of an actual sort of land war against Russia, we're already deep into a kind of hybrid conflict. You look at activity out at sea, you look at Russian vessels hovering over vital undersea cables, you look at assorted sabotage operations mounted in in various European countries.
There is a sense that we are in a state of elevated danger and that this comes at a time when, as the Prime Minister is fond of reminding people, the armed forces have been hollowed out for decades. And so there is a a really urgent sense. that the money spent on defence needs to in some way try and keep up with the elevated threat. The problem is that the government is unwilling or unable to raise the amount of money that many experts
And people who were in responsible for drawing up the government's own plans last year have recommended, by the tune of billions and billions of pounds. So we've had a lot of criticism of this. in the weeks coming up to this moment. We've had two Defence Ministers resigning over this issue.
And I don't think any of the criticisms are going to go away. I should point out that we have yet to see the details, the precise details, of a document which is thought to be eighty pages long and will be quite a complicated piece of work.
Paul Adams. And we have more from Paul on our YouTube channel. Search for BBC News on YouTube, and you'll find the Global News Podcast in the podcast section. There's a new story available every week.
¶ Monaco Parcel Bomb Injures Tycoon
Police in southern France are searching for a man who planted a parcel bomb in Monaco, severely injuring a wealthy Ukrainian businessman. He's in hospital along with his wife and son. Prosecutors say the attack is not being linked to terrorism. Hugh Schofield spoke to us from Paris.
police aren't releasing the name of the target but it's common knowledge. It's a man called Vladimir Malayev, who is Ukrainian a multi-millionair, an oligarch we call him, though I'm not quite sure what that means, but certainly a very, very rich Ukrainian who's living in exile on the Côte d'Azur. was that uh last night about nine o'clock a man wearing a sort of floppy hat
'Cause he's seen on C C T V deposits a parcel of some kind in the entrance to this plush apartment building in Monaco. Monaco a this tiny little city state which sort of merges into France. at at a border which isn't really defined. He leaves this parcel. A few minutes later, Yomalayev and his wife and uh thirteen year old son emerge from their apartment on the ground floor.
And then there is an explosion and the three of them are injured. Very seriously, Yomalaev and his wife taken to hospital with life threatening injuries, the the son less so. We learn today that Yomalaev himself is out of danger, but his wife not. They're in Nice to where they were e evacuated. Meanwhile, C C T V footage
shows this man in a hat running from the scene into France, which is just a few yards away, and there the manhunter is underway now. We know that s C C T V footage in Monaco is very, very probably have a l a lot of video to go on to try and in the in the moments leading up to it and after it to s to to find out where he is. Uh but for the moment we have no news about what leads they're following.
Hugh Schofield.
¶ Paraguay's Shock World Cup Victory
And let's end with the latest from the Men's Football World Cup, and a humbling night for two heavyweights of European football. Two time World Cup finalists the Netherlands and four time winners, Germany, are both heading home. The Dutch lost to Morocco on penalties, but the biggest shock so far of this tournament has to be Paraguay beating Germany also on penalties to make it to the last sixteen. Our correspondent John Bennett was watching the action.
What a night we had over at the Foxborough Stadium about 45 minutes away from where I am now on the banks of the Charles River for the third World Cup in a row. Germany going home before the last 16 stage. Brilliant performance by Paraguay who took the lead, Julio and Siso heading in. Then Kai Havertz equalised for Germany. We went to extra time. Germany thought they'd won it. They had a goal controversially ruled out for a foul on the goalkeeper after a VAR check. So it went to penalties.
Twice Paraguay wasted chances to win the shootout, then eventually they did Jose Canale, the hero, he secured an historic victory for the South Americans. Have a listen to the Paraguay fans who I spoke to after the game.
I feel very emotional. I feel very crazy because...
Wheel
So
Let's go, let's go, bro.
It means everything to our country.
Ha ha
Describe what it means to you that it's a bit Germany.
I mean you could just see how they were playing. They weren't Germany wasn't playing their best, and you you get one goal early, then all you gotta do is sit back, maintain, and then it goes to penalties. Anything can happen.
Did you believe, did you always believe in that penalty shootout when they missed it?
I was nervous at the end I believe it's not a good idea.
beginning I thought our goalie had it and I I said this is a great goalie and he he did it. He came through.
He was able to hold it down for us.
What will this mean to the country back home? I know y you fans here are excited, but what about Paraguay?
Paraguay on the world stage, right? Come on. Yeah. Like really amazing.
I mean it means everything. No one saw it coming.
Yeah.
And this really shows anything can happen. Anything can happen to the World Cup. Anything can happen.
Emotional. Emotional. I mean how how how can one not feel emotional after the performance that someone just had there? I think it's incredible. You know, one has to feel you know that anyone can dream of doing this, of a small country of south of seven million people in the heart of South America to do what they did sixteen years from their last World Cup.
Cup appearance after losing 4-1 on the opening day and everyone thought this team was never going to do anything. Now people can dream of like, hey, we can do it, you guys can do as well.
To beat the Giants of Germany. You're in tears. You're in tears. Describe what it was like around you, your family, your friends.
No, I'm I'm here with my dad over here. It's my it's my first World Cup game. You know, I never had the chance to go to one and the fact that I could finally join here it's a dream come true. And hopefully we can go for more. You know, this isn't the end. We won't wanna keep going.
Yeah.
Round of sixteen, quarter final, seven final, who knows? Final champion, why not? Why not us?
You're here with your dad. Is this one of the best days of your life you've had together?
Hundred percent. It's it's it's up there for
Sure.
But the beautiful thing is, it can get even better. That's the great thing about this sport, and the great thing about supporting a country like Paris. Vamos! Let's go!
We should play much. Paraguay really came strong.
We were
very confident of our team. Uh we we knew that Germany was going to be very tough, it was. But Paraguay, you know, did a great match. Ac actually we believe that Paraguay is for for for great things And uh we just waiting for France because it's gonna be ninety-eight revenge and we never forget the golden goal
The game he's referring to there is from the World Cup in nineteen ninety eight. when France beat Paraguay 1-0 thanks to a golden goal from Laurent Blanc. He's got a long memory. He might get revenge because Paraguay will play France or Sweden in the next round. That'll be on the fourth of July in Philadelphia. So what about Germany then? Absolutely distraught after that defeat. Here are a couple of Germany supporters that I spoke to outside the Boston Stadium.
Disappointed. But the tournament was not really good. I think that they were a little bit unlucky with the referee's decision. But after all uh Yeah. We're not we're not a good team anymore. We do not belong to the top of the uh European teams and so it's well deserved.
Well that's a big thing to say, isn't it, that you're not a big team anymore. Would you agree? It's three World Cups now, isn't it, out before the last sixteen.
Yeah, I mean uh players like Muziala and uh Virt they are when they play at top level we could have a good chance but at currently they do not play at the top level so that is why it's deserved.
Yes, it's astonishing to think that Germany haven't been to the last sixteen of a World Cup now since twenty fourteen. The wait goes on, twelve years and counting. The head coach by the way Yulian Nagelsmann has insisted he won't be resigning. He says he will continue if the German Football Federation wants him to continue. But it's all about Paraguay. What a win, what an upset. Their World Cup goes on.
That was John Bennett reporting on Paraguay's shock win over Germany. And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag globalnewspod.
And don't forget our sister podcast, the Global Story, which goes in depth and beyond the headlines on one big story. This edition of the Global News Podcast was mixed by Kai Perry. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Celia Hatton. Until next time, goodbye.
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