The World Tonight
BBC
In depth reporting, intelligent analysis and major breaking news from a global perspective
Episodes
US presidential campaign draws to a close
11/4/2024
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are holding their final rallies in one of the closest races for the White House in history, before polling stations open across the US tomorrow.
James Coomarasamy reports on immigration issues in the swing state of Wisconsin
University tuition fees in England are to rise
and the new Pharrell Williams "Lego" biopic
Duration:00:37:11
The last weekend before America decides
11/1/2024
As we head into the last weekend before America decides, Donald Trump and Kamala Harris converge on Wisconsin.
Officials in Spain have issued a red alert for the city of Huelva
James Cleverly says he won't be on the frontbench of the new Tory leader
And predicting how nature will have changed 100 years from now
Duration:00:37:55
Dozens missing after devastating Spanish floods
10/31/2024
Flash floods in Spain have killed at least 166 people, with the eastern region of Valencia particularly badly hit. Scientists suggest climate change made the disaster twice as likely as it would have been. We speak to a BBC correspondent on the ground, as well as a local politician and teacher involved in the relief effort.
Also tonight:
The US confirms thousands of North Korean troops have been deployed to Russia’s Kursk region to help in its war against Ukraine.
We speak to the Independent Schools Council, which is bringing a legal challenge against the government’s plan to charge VAT on private school fees.
And a portrait of Alan Turing becomes the first robot-made artwork to go on sale at Sotheby’s.
Duration:00:37:43
Rachel Reeves delivers first Labour budget in 14 years
10/30/2024
The Chancellor announced £70bn worth of public spending and £40bn worth of tax rises. Spending on the NHS is up, but so are employers’ national insurance contributions, which analysts warn will be passed on to workers. We hear from the government and the Conservative opposition and explore what the Budget means for you and how it will define the next five years of Labour government.
Also tonight:
The World Tonight’s James Coomarasamy speaks to voters in Wisconsin, one of the most tightly contested swing states, ahead of the US presidential elections.
Half a century after the Rumble in the Jungle, George Foreman remembers his iconic clash with Muhammad Ali.
Duration:00:37:31
Minimum wage to rise in Reeves’ first budget
10/29/2024
The government has announced on the eve of Labour’s first budget in 14 years that the National Living Wage will be increased. We hear from Shevaun Haviland, the British Chambers of Commerce’s director-general, on what this could mean for employers.
Also in the programme: staffers and subscribers are protesting against The Washington Post’s decision not to endorse a candidate in the presidential election, one week before America votes.
We speak to a former head of the Oregon Hospice Association about why she went from opposing to supporting the right to assisted dying.
And Buena Vista Social Club musician Manuel "Guajiro" Mirabal has died at the age of 91. We speak to producer Nick Gold about Mirabal’s music and the group’s legacy.
Duration:00:38:06
Israel bans UN Palestinian refugee agency
10/28/2024
Israel's parliament has passed two laws banning the UN's Palestinian refugee agency (Unwra) from operating in the country. We speak to an Israeli MP who backed the ban.
Also in the programme:
The Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said the cap on bus fares will rise from £2 to £3 after this week’s Budget. We hear how this has gone down with commuters and talk to Labour's West of England Mayor Dan Norris.
We speak to former Barack Obama campaign manager Jim Messina about controversial comments made at a Donald Trump rally.
And should magicians ever reveal their secrets?
Duration:00:38:05
What can be done to protect children from 'catfishing'?
10/25/2024
One of the world's most prolific online child abusers has been jailed for life, after one of his victims killed herself. We ask whether the government and tech companies could be doing more to tackle so-called "catfishing" online.
Also tonight:
As Kamala Harris and Donald Trump descend on Texas with the US presidential race neck and neck - the World Tonight's James Menendez is live there.
The broadcaster and disability rights activist Sir Tom Shakespeare on why he's urging MPs to back the move to legalise assisted dying.
And as France is gripped by nostalgia at the release of a new biopic about Charles Aznavour - we speak to the singer's son about his remarkable life.
Duration:00:37:45
Chancellor to change debt rule to free up £50bn
10/24/2024
Rachel Reeves has said the Treasury will make a technical change to the way it measures debt to allow the government to borrow more for infrastructure spending under its self-imposed fiscal rules. We hear from the chancellor as well as her critics in the Conservative party, who accuse her of fiddling the figures.
Also tonight:
The World Tonight’s James Menendez reports from San Antonio in Texas ahead of the US presidential election.
GPs tell the BBC they’re seeing record numbers of scabies cases, with people in care homes and university students particularly badly affected.
And a district attorney in the US recommends the resentencing of the Menendez brothers, convicted of murdering their parents in Beverly Hills in 1996.
Duration:00:38:03
US: North Korea sending troops to Russia
10/23/2024
US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin has said Washington has seen evidence 3,000 North Korean troops are training in Russia and may be sent to fight in Ukraine. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko told the BBC the accusations were ‘nonsense’ and said that using North Korean troops would escalate the conflict.
Also tonight:
Turkey says five people have been killed in what officials are calling a terror attack on a state-owned aerospace firm.
Geoff Capes, the three-time Olympian who was twice crowned the world's strongest man, has died at the age of 75.
And The World Tonight’s James Menendez speaks to voters on either side of the Mexican border ahead of the US presidential election.
(Picture: Kim Jong Un inspects the 2nd Corps of North Korean army, October 17, 2024 Credit: KCNA via REUTERS)
Duration:00:37:52
Should Russian deserters be welcomed in UK?
10/22/2024
As France becomes the first EU country to openly welcome Russian military deserters - we speak to one of the initial group to arrive. The former Defence Secretary Grant Shapps tells us Britain should now also take in Russian soldiers who refuse to fight in Ukraine.
Also on the programme:
We hear how today's mass prisoner release went down - and ask whether it'll be the last.
The former boss of one America's biggest clothing chains - Abercrombie and Fitch - has been arrested on sex trafficking charges. We ask: can the company survive?
And the musician Hak Baker on his journey from the Southwark Cathedral choir - via prison - to Glastonbury and the Royal Albert Hall.
Duration:00:37:57
Met police officer cleared of Chris Kaba’s murder
10/21/2024
Metropolitan Police firearms officer Martyn Blake has been found not guilty of the murder of Chris Kaba. Blake shot the 24-year-old dead during a police stop in Streatham, south London in 2022. Kaba’s family said the verdict was "painful proof that our lives are not valued by the system". We’re joined by Chris Kaba’s local MP, Bell Ribeiro-Addy.
Also tonight:
US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken heads to Israel as part of his eleventh visit to the Middle East since the October 7th attacks.
Nine years after one of Brazil's worst environmental disasters, a mass civil claim begins at the High Court in London. We speak to one of the claimants.
And as a New Zealand airport introduces a limit of three minutes per hug, we ask how long a good hug should last.
(Picture: People gather outside the Old Bailey after British police officer Martyn Blake was acquitted of the 2022 murder of Chris Kaba, October 21, 2024. Credit: REUTERS/Jaimi Joy)
Duration:00:45:24
Will Hamas leader's death end Gaza war?
10/18/2024
The killing of the leader of Hamas has led to calls for a ceasefire, as fears of a winter famine grow. We hear from inside Gaza.
Also tonight:
As the Foreign Secretary David Lammy promises "cooperation" with China on a visit to Beijing, the son of Jimmy Lai, the British citizen jailed in Hong Kong for supporting democracy, urges Mr Lammy to make that conditional.
The TV presenter Mariella Frostrup on how she hopes to tackle gender inequity in the workplace as the government's new menopause employment ambassador.
And it's hot stuff: are celebrities' hot sauces driving the booming demand for spicy seasoning?
Duration:00:37:33
Yahya Sinwar, leader of Hamas, killed in Gaza
10/17/2024
The man who led Hamas for seven years and orchestrated the October 7th attacks against Israel has been killed by the IDF. Yahya Sinwar died in a firefight in central Gaza. US President Joe Biden has spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and urged him to seize the opportunity to bring the war in Gaza to an end. Since it began the war has claimed the lives of more than 42,000 people. An air strike on a school in Jabalia on Thursday left a further 22 people dead.
Duration:00:37:13
Inquiry into carers' payment scandal
10/16/2024
The government has announced an independent review of overpayments to carers - after ministers acknowledged some people had been pushed to "breaking point". We speak live to the Liberal Democrat leader - and carer - Sir Ed Davey.
Also tonight:
A bill to legalise assisted dying in England and Wales has been formally introduced in Parliament. We hear the view of the Silent Witness actor - and disability rights campaigner - Liz Carr.
And the composer of the score for a newly restored silent Sherlock Holmes film.
Duration:00:37:45
US warns Israel it may withhold some military assistance
10/15/2024
The United States has told Israel it may withhold some military assistance unless the provision of aid into Gaza is improved within 30 days. The demand was made in a letter sent to Israel's Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on Sunday. We get the reaction of Simcha Rothman - a member of the Religious Zionist party in Israel's ruling coalition - and the former US ambassador to Israel, Thomas Nides.
On the eve of an assisted dying bill being introduced in parliament, we speak to the Archbishop of Canterbury. And as Thomas Tuchel is named as Gareth Southgate's successor, we ask if a German manager can end the decades of hurt for England.
Duration:00:37:45
Rare air strike in northern Lebanon attributed to Israel
10/14/2024
Lebanon is blaming Israel for an air strike in northern Lebanon that left 21 people dead. The strike hit the mostly Christian village of Aitou, far from the hotspots of the current conflict in southern Lebanon, Beirut and the Bekaa Valley.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to ease regulations in some parts of the economy as he welcomed billions of pounds of inward investment.
And 35 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the legacy of East Germany continues to cast its shadow. A former Stasi officer has been convicted of murdering a Polish defector who attempted to cross from East to West Berlin in 1974.
Duration:00:37:25
Catholic Archbishop's warning on assisted dying
10/11/2024
As MPs pepare to debate whether to legalise assisted dying, the most senior Roman Catholic cleric in England and Wales has made a rare political intervention to urge people to oppose the change. Cardinal Vincent Nichols has been speaking to The World Tonight.
Also on the programme:
The Prime Minister has tonight rebuked his Transport Secretary after she called for a boycott of a ferry company that was poised to increase investment in the UK. We have the latest.
As the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded to a group of survivors of the atomic bombings in Japan - we hear what message one hopes it will send.
And 100 years after Sandy Irvine vanished alongside his climbing companion George Mallory as they attempted the conquest of Everest, a solitary boot belonging to him has been found. We hear from one of the mountaineers who found it - and from Irvine's great niece who's been told what's in it.
Duration:00:37:43
Beirut rocked by more Israeli air strikes
10/10/2024
Twenty-two people have been killed and 117 injured in Israeli air strikes on central Beirut, Lebanon's Health Ministry said. BBC reporters heard loud explosions echoing from the site of a strike in Bachoura, a small Shia area in the Lebanese capital.
A trail of destruction has been left in Florida after Hurricane Milton struck. The aftermath includes political barbs between the two US Presidential candidates.
And the Nobel Prize for Literature has been awarded to South Korean writer Han Kang, who explores themes including grief, violence and patriarchy.
Duration:00:37:46
Floridians prepare as Hurricane Milton lashes coast
10/9/2024
US officials are warning Hurricane Milton, which is scheduled to make landfall on Florida's western coast within hours, could be "deadly and catastrophic". Millions of citizens have fled those areas in the storm's path, but others have decided to stay. We spoke to one man preparing to bunker down with his girlfriend and dog.
US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have spoken on the phone. The pair discussed Israel's response to an Iranian missile attack last week and pledged to remain in "close contact" in the coming days. The BBC's International Editor Jeremy Bowen has spoken to former Israeli leader Naftali Bennett, who believes Israel should target Iran's nuclear programme.
And a much maligned south coast town has inspired a piece of classical music. The Bognor Regis Suite was composed by local jeweller and musician Roger Clayden, inspired by his daily routine in the town.
Duration:00:37:33
Israeli PM calls on the Lebanese to reject Hezbollah
10/8/2024
The Israeli prime minister calls on the Lebanese people to reject Hezbollah. Benjamin Netanyahu used his appeal to claim that Israel had killed the man who would have been Hezbollah's next leader. We get reaction from a Lebanese MP allied with Hezbollah's political wing.
We speak to a Florida woman fleeing from Hurricane Milton, a fortnight after Hurricane Helene flooded her home. And has it been a good evening for meteor gazing?
Duration:00:37:55