Ukraine seeks UN and Red Cross prison deaths probe

Ukraine seeks UN and Red Cross prison deaths probe

Released Saturday, 30th July 2022
Good episode? Give it some love!
Ukraine seeks UN and Red Cross prison deaths probe

Ukraine seeks UN and Red Cross prison deaths probe

Ukraine seeks UN and Red Cross prison deaths probe

Ukraine seeks UN and Red Cross prison deaths probe

Saturday, 30th July 2022
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:00

hello this is the global news podcast from

0:02

the bbc world service with

0:04

reports and analysis from across the world the

0:07

latest news 7 days a bbc

0:09

world service podcast advertising

0:12

this is a global news

0:14

podcast from the bbc world

0:16

service keys

0:18

says,

0:25

un and the red cross must

0:27

be allowed to investigate the deaths of more

0:29

than ukrainian prisoners of war

0:31

in a detention center in russian occupied

0:34

ukraine ukraine new us

0:36

envoy for the horn of africa has arrived

0:38

in ethiopia in an effort to advance

0:40

peace efforts between the government and to grind

0:42

rebels flash floods

0:44

in the us state of kentucky have killed

0:47

at least sixteen people and

0:49

the governor says the toll is likely

0:51

toll be much higher

0:55

also podcast

0:56

more and more of instagram scan become video

0:58

overtime if you did what he was shared instagram

1:01

states shifting one word of it is over time

1:03

the why have instagram note

1:05

on a huge turn honest style

1:08

pieces

1:13

ukraine says united nations and

1:15

the red cross must be allowed to investigate

1:18

the deaths of more than sixty ukrainian prisoners

1:20

of war is an explosion of

1:22

fire in a detention center in the russian

1:25

occupied part of the donetsk region

1:27

the russian say cheese destroyed the center

1:29

in a rocket strike that presence

1:32

and and ski says the blame lies

1:34

with the russians

1:35

that will have your would you open your parole

1:37

dot all kinds of not always does

1:39

breeze today about the strike by the occupiers

1:42

on on a nice com in the dentist region

1:44

they should be a clear legal recognition

1:46

of fresher as posturing state terrorism

1:49

i'm especially turning to the united states

1:52

a decision is needed and it is

1:54

needed now russia

1:56

has proven time and again that

1:58

it is the largest source of terrorism in the

2:00

world today

2:02

ukraine's former head of national security

2:04

audits on the daniel york said it was a

2:06

deliberate attack on members of the

2:08

as of italians who were the last

2:10

defenders of the city of marry a poll

2:12

before it fell in may

2:14

this compelled, the prisoners defenders

2:17

of mario kart play bravery

2:19

for defending mario party became the

2:21

symbol of heroism and bravery and

2:24

self-sacrifice in

2:26

ukraine, but also internationally,

2:28

and russia was looking ways

2:31

to destroy this image

2:33

and them break this prisoners

2:36

sir psychologically and demoralize

2:38

ukrainian society and the army

2:40

i say to a correspondent and keys

2:42

pull adams who told us what exactly

2:44

was known about the attack

2:46

the aftermath is absolutely hellish

2:49

this is a large warehouse that was

2:51

being used to house possibly

2:53

as many as two hundred that

2:55

ukrainian prisoners and there

2:58

are holes who the corrugated

3:00

iron roof and what you

3:02

see is a tangle

3:04

of metal bunk beds and

3:07

in and among and on them large

3:10

number of charred bodies i mean

3:12

literally one or two the bodies look like they

3:14

died as they slapped others are just

3:16

line on the ground they are absolutely

3:19

disfigured and charred and

3:21

mangled and outside there are more

3:23

about is not an band that bloodied

3:25

and rather emaciated i had to

3:27

say so that's the seen as

3:30

for what happens well the russians

3:32

say that this is the aftermath

3:34

of a ukrainian missile attack they

3:36

say they have evidence in the form of fragments

3:39

of a western supplied rockets

3:42

are we haven't seen that the ukrainians

3:45

for their part seriously deny

3:47

that they had anything to do with this they say they were

3:49

conducting no military operations in

3:51

the area and that this is a

3:53

war crime carried out deliberately by

3:55

the russians possibly to cover up their

3:58

treatment of the detainees being

4:00

held inside and in fact they've

4:02

released and intercepted phone conversation

4:05

which they say has the voices

4:07

of pro russian rebels discussing

4:09

how this happened and revealing

4:11

that it was kind of engineered

4:14

by the rebels themselves there

4:16

are post

4:17

some of the dead may have been from

4:19

the as off the totti and

4:21

which fought so hard to descend

4:23

marry a poll before it fell

4:25

though outside observers will say what

4:27

possible know

4:28

with ukrainians have the hitting a

4:30

prison holding ukrainian prisoners of war

4:33

it is pretty the inconceivable

4:35

that ukrainians were deliberately kill their

4:37

own prisoners of war particular ones

4:39

prize for that long siege

4:43

at the as of style still works in matter you

4:45

paul it beggars belief frankly that this

4:47

would have been and a thing deliberate on the ukrainian

4:49

side could it have been a mistake where we cannot rule

4:51

that out at this point but as for

4:53

the the kind of the identity of the prisoners

4:56

it is a big reported by the ukrainians that in

4:58

the last few days as

5:00

off battalion prisoners were

5:02

concentrated in the very buildings

5:04

that was struck again we do not have confirmation

5:07

of that habit he does certainly

5:09

seem as though people from

5:11

marry a poll whether they were civilians or fighters

5:14

are all too familiar with a place in

5:17

which even before today some

5:19

pretty grim thing seems had been happening

5:21

the items well the war in ukraine

5:24

has revealed have tens of millions

5:26

of people many of them in africa us

5:28

depend on the vast amounts of grain the country

5:30

produces to keep salvation at

5:32

bay since february ukraine

5:34

has been unable to export twenty

5:37

million tons of grain because

5:39

of the russian blockade of his ports now

5:41

after after struck a week ago bucks

5:43

by the united nations and turkey there

5:45

are hopes that finally some of that

5:47

grain will the be exported soon before

5:50

it spoils crane in officials

5:52

say ten sits loaded with grain are

5:54

ready to leave it's black sea ports as

5:56

soon as the un and turkey concern

5:58

a safe boot out before

6:01

you could this podcast i asked our correspondent

6:03

james waterhouse who that one of the ports

6:05

is there was any sign of this much yet

6:08

i knew you'd ask me that science is still

6:10

a very difficult question to answer

6:13

there , nevertheless preparation

6:16

taking place along the coastline we

6:18

seen the cost of grain being loaded

6:20

on on , one

6:23

large vessel has been moved has cranes

6:26

across the pool not significant because

6:29

this is an industry and mr the country

6:31

which has been frozen in time since

6:34

the twenty fourth since said free and

6:36

then you have president zealand ski that

6:39

in his visits i think his comments

6:41

represents the political

6:43

will behind wanting to for ya this

6:46

major supply route will

6:48

it equates to equates whole convoy

6:50

of ships coming to a out from this

6:52

weekend know i think this

6:54

is more testing of the waters

6:57

and were because there are a number

7:00

even by mr the united nations are a number

7:02

of crucial questions and details

7:04

which me to be ironed out

7:07

the

7:08

can you ensure whole convoy of

7:10

ships to make their way out of this

7:12

port through these

7:14

movies mine infested waters

7:17

to travel along travel land corridor which will take

7:19

to towards to towards

7:21

naval russian a prison

7:23

switches to be suffocated ukraine's

7:26

onto suffocated school presence which has

7:29

and not miss on attacks to every

7:31

on inside ukraine there

7:34

are a whole host of unknown now the forties

7:37

from see a global forties and shares isa

7:40

global risk will be costed and

7:42

he will take time and

7:44

they will confidence we to be built say

7:46

it'll take a few sips to make it through a

7:49

full when me six leave we just don't know

7:51

russian media is expecting free subs to

7:53

make their way through but as a lot

7:55

that you can mitigate for their

7:57

can lot of unnamed it is mitigate leap of faith

7:59

and i gotta say to say

8:02

trust is rock bottom between russia

8:04

and ukraine is an understatement it has never

8:06

really been any trust for the four separate

8:09

and the seventies now

8:11

james was a house in ukraine's

8:13

the new us envoy for the horn of africa

8:15

might hammer has arrived in ethiopia

8:18

in an effort to advance peace efforts between

8:20

the government and to grind rebels and

8:22

a sicilian addis ababa has said the government

8:25

is ready to negotiate without

8:27

preconditions lou ross reports

8:30

there are still hurdles in the way but

8:32

there are also signs that peace talks

8:34

in ethiopia or a possibility

8:36

the leader of the ticker i people's liberation

8:38

from this week said he wanted basic

8:40

services restored first the

8:42

brits young deborah michael once the government to

8:44

switch the electricity and telecommunication

8:47

links back on integrates and

8:49

to allow the banks to work once again

8:51

they're also territorial disputes to results

8:54

but at least the two sides are talking about

8:56

peace rather them war

8:59

we'll ross palestinian health

9:01

officials say a teenager has been

9:03

shot dead during clashes in the

9:05

occupied west bank the palestinian

9:07

teenagers died in an area close to the

9:09

city of ramallah a middle east

9:11

correspondent on bateman reports from

9:13

jerusalem

9:14

sixteen year old amjad abu ali i was

9:16

shot dead during a protest against israeli

9:19

settlement growth in a village near ramallah

9:21

say palestinian officials palestinians

9:23

had tried to confront israeli settlers in

9:25

an open field according to witnesses on

9:28

of the settlers was armed but it's not clear

9:30

whether clear whether bullet came from them or israeli

9:32

troops who are also firing live

9:34

ammunition video also showed palestinians

9:37

throwing stones at a road on hitting

9:39

a car windscreen the land around

9:41

the village has long been the target of secular groups

9:44

and is a frequent flashpoint

9:45

damon in pakistan

9:48

relief operations are continuing a slush

9:50

floods across the country have killed more

9:52

than three hundred people particularly

9:55

hard hit has been the south western province

9:58

of polluter son were well over hundred

10:00

people have died so far my

10:02

colleague james rent state to be

10:04

to saying from bbc the and

10:06

asked him about the flooding there

10:08

unfortunately this has been going in different

10:10

areas of the province and due to the

10:13

remoteness and the last as of the province the

10:15

government is finding it extremely difficult to reach

10:17

those people even though the ice axes

10:19

they have been sharing their videos or messages

10:21

from my in on social media making

10:24

appeals for someone to come and help but

10:26

unfortunately the infrastructure is so weak

10:28

and baluchistan as i mentioned earlier is

10:30

even the largest province it is the poverty

10:33

stricken the forest province in pakistan's

10:35

infrastructure is not their dog facilities

10:37

are nor there but that's why the delay

10:40

is is she was right now for for people

10:42

to be like it and belief i know we've

10:44

seen some talk on social media

10:46

i'm sure you've seen the same conversations

10:49

suggesting that the government has

10:51

neglected it's treatment of people because

10:54

they are in balochistan itself at

10:56

what's your assessment of this in some ways

10:58

either not outright say it's wrong as a passer

11:01

to to that but the fact of the matter of but of japan

11:03

has been neglected by

11:05

a know a historically in bucks county government

11:07

throughout the time the of the remote area australia

11:10

people the often are not part of

11:12

the in a mainstream coverage unfortunately

11:14

and that's why it's what you're seeing on social media is

11:16

coming from that secondly there's also political

11:18

elements there's a massive nationalist movement

11:21

going on with the i saw a sometimes

11:23

because sympathizers or with it a try to

11:25

portray in this way that the deal

11:27

of people to go minute not supporting them because

11:29

the government does not necessarily support the idea

11:32

of up his those represents over there is

11:34

a want them to suffer as an agenda civic tradition

11:36

from them on the other hand is or pakistan's

11:39

national politics going on be or the opposition

11:41

party will almost always take on

11:44

the goldman and blame them for decent right

11:46

now you have former prime minister in non

11:48

on spotty the bucks anthony consult they are

11:50

flooding the internet and social media

11:52

blaming the incumbents are being in a showing

11:54

them that look look they are so inefficient and

11:57

so incompetent in doing their job for

11:59

it's a mix of

11:59

things got the group of the matter is

12:02

you have like in a massive flood which has been going

12:04

on now for almost like a week and hundred

12:06

people have died and still despite

12:08

that bit of the mix sloppiest of recovery

12:11

for eight four four you know providing support

12:13

with the people that process

12:15

the hussein in the united

12:17

arab emirates officials now say least

12:19

seven people are known to have died as a result

12:21

of the heavy rain and flooding this

12:23

that hit parts of the country on wednesday

12:26

the interior ministry said that all seven

12:28

what asian migrants flooding

12:30

has also been causing severe problems

12:33

in the us state of kentucky is

12:35

experiencing what officials have described as the

12:37

most deadly and devastating says

12:39

said hit the area for decades many

12:41

homes have been swept away officials

12:44

say at least sixteen people

12:46

have died gov id the sheer

12:48

has said the number of fatalities is expected

12:51

to rise even so as rescue

12:53

efforts continue

12:54

we've got at least six dead children

12:57

and

12:59

the car

13:00

the even harder for those families and those community

13:03

so keeper

13:04

still lot of people out there still lot of

13:06

people on account of for for going to do our best to

13:08

find him off ray johnson is a local

13:10

reporter has been covering the floods and eastern

13:13

kentucky

13:14

i have seen athlete devastation

13:17

people's houses have been

13:19

swept away cars and creaks

13:21

everyone i've i've talked to

13:24

seems to be in disbelief

13:26

that the water levels were so

13:29

high one woman i talked to

13:31

was rescued from the second floor of

13:33

a building and a boat was high enough

13:35

for her to just step in to from that building

13:37

so the water in some places has

13:39

been

13:40

me too stories high rate johnson

13:42

the use of social media site instagram

13:45

you've probably noticed some recent changes

13:47

the photo sharing platform has been

13:49

filling uses home pages with videos

13:52

from accounts they don't follow it's a few

13:54

days ago the instagram both out of missouri

13:57

does his own video explaining the changes

13:59

i continue to support for or

14:02

heritage you i love photos i know a lot

14:04

of us live photos to that said i

14:06

need to be honest i do believe it

14:08

more and more of instagram is going to become video

14:10

overtime if you go up people sharing instagram

14:13

that shifting warm water videos overtime

14:15

if you look at what people like and consume and view

14:17

on instagram but also shifting more and more

14:19

to video of the time even when we start changing anything

14:21

so we're going to have to lean into that shift

14:24

well that was then but instagram has since

14:26

announces pausing these new features

14:29

so why the u turn santo

14:31

hostile has been taking

14:34

than a billion regular users

14:36

burkett struggling to keep up with

14:38

it main rival pick tuck which

14:41

the downloaded more than three billion

14:43

times in the past few weeks

14:45

instagram has come in for a lot of criticism

14:48

for straying away from what it was originally

14:50

set up to do some users

14:52

have accused of trying to copy tic

14:54

toc where people post of watch videos

14:57

instead of photos over

14:59

two hundred thousand people had signed

15:01

an online petition cool to make instagram

15:04

instagram again including the

15:06

reality tv star kim kardashians

15:09

and when celebrities with millions

15:11

of silhouettes speaker the social

15:14

media joins pinned to suffer and

15:16

other fighters sharing app snap

15:18

chat lost chat billion dollars in says

15:21

after kylie jenner criticized the

15:23

platform instagram parent

15:25

company missile which also own

15:27

facebook said it wanted to take

15:29

the time to get the changes right it's

15:32

understood the test version of the revamped

15:34

app will be phased out within weeks

15:37

how hot

15:41

she'll become we went to the

15:43

farmer on he lets on the land to

15:46

have a look where the material come from which is

15:48

where we find the not your with the three

15:50

d fish paleontologists

15:52

in england's i'll celebrate

15:53

the new discovery of a remarkable

15:56

new to rustic fossil site

16:02

last month the us supreme court struck

16:04

down the landmark

16:05

roe versus wade ruling row

16:07

bring back nationwide abortion rights

16:10

which had stood for nearly fifty

16:12

years the , further

16:14

polarized and already divided nation

16:16

andrew condemnation from around

16:18

the world video has no

16:20

him suing the justice who wrote that

16:22

decision striking back as his

16:25

critics speaking in rome

16:27

at a conference and religious freedom samuel

16:29

alito quipped that one foreign dita

16:31

had lost his job for opposing

16:34

the us supreme court

16:35

i had the honor this term of

16:38

rating i think the only supreme court

16:40

decisions in the history of that

16:43

institution that has been

16:45

lambasted by the whole

16:47

string of for losers

16:57

one of his wife of former

16:59

prime minister boris johnson he

17:02

paid the

17:08

i think for correspondent in washington

17:10

anthony zurcher and i asked him if it's

17:12

rare to hear the supreme court

17:14

justice speak in this way

17:16

you do here supreme court justices especially

17:19

during the summer recess make public

17:21

appearances and and talk about

17:24

the , in general but to be so specific

17:26

about a case like this antelope

17:29

quite honestly be so glib cracking jokes

17:31

about it when this has been a very controversial

17:34

opinion of people feel very strongly about

17:36

that is are unusual for

17:38

justice although not the fairly unusual for

17:40

alito he's been fairly political

17:43

in public comments over the past couple years

17:45

talking about gay marriage talking about

17:47

their criticisms of him by journalists

17:50

and other things out a it does however

17:53

thrust once again alito back into the spotlight

17:56

the most response been to the speech

17:58

well a from this

18:00

is on the left in particular you've heard condemnations

18:03

alexandria coffee or cortez courses

18:05

or left wing democratic

18:07

socialist in congress has

18:09

said that these put size remarks

18:11

i should be alarming to anyone either

18:13

been critics who said this is going to further politicized

18:16

the court and shows the right wing

18:18

conservative politics behind the

18:21

high profile supreme court decisions recently

18:23

particularly the one on abortion

18:25

the supreme court was established by the

18:27

us constitution has been highly respected

18:29

for centuries but now is it fair

18:31

to say it's authority is being questioned

18:33

and away has never been seen before

18:36

off to these controversies and the way that

18:38

to justices were appointed by donald trump

18:40

i'm certainly not in in the modern era has

18:42

there been this kind of a distrust suspicion

18:45

lack of support for the supreme court

18:47

and that bears out in public opinion polls that

18:49

show public faith in the supreme

18:51

court in the impartiality of

18:53

the supreme court has dropped precipitously

18:56

in the past i would say twenty years

18:58

but particularly accelerated because

19:00

of these high profile cases

19:02

that they decided because of the a controversial

19:05

supreme court nomination pipes that have happened

19:07

during donald trump's years so there

19:09

is a lack of faith in the supreme court now

19:11

and i think more and more americans are viewing

19:13

it as just another politicized branch

19:16

of us government and dot above and beyond it

19:18

indonesia in washington the

19:20

chairman of chairman british inquiry into an infected

19:23

blood scandal dating back decades

19:25

has recommended that each victim

19:27

oh bereaved partner should receive a provisional

19:30

compensation payments of more than a hundred

19:32

and twenty thousand dollars it's

19:34

brian lifestyle said there was there compelling to

19:36

make the payments quickly the

19:39

two and a half thousand people

19:41

died after contracting hiv

19:43

or hepatitis c well being treated

19:45

on the national health service in the nineteen

19:47

seventies and eighties he is

19:49

our health respondent dominic he's

19:52

survivors of the contaminated blood scandal

19:54

and the dependence of so far not had

19:56

any compensation for loss of earnings care

19:58

costs or other

19:59

the time losses until now service

20:02

is a significant statement by the judge

20:04

chairing the public inquiry into how

20:06

tens of thousands of nhs patients

20:09

were infected with blood borne diseases such

20:11

as hepatitis and hiv sir

20:13

brian lang staff told the inquiry that

20:15

he concluded survivors and buried partners

20:17

should receive one hundred thousand pounds now

20:20

as an interim payment robin i'm waiting

20:22

for the inquiry to finish his work this

20:24

is only a recommendation it's up to the government

20:26

whether to accept it or not romney

20:29

he's saying in the uk and

20:31

of than sporting than array of cameras

20:33

designed to catch drivers who are using their

20:35

mobile phones or not wearing seatbelts

20:38

is being tested being white sit

20:40

in central england the aim

20:42

is to try to reduce the number of people seriously

20:45

injured or killed on the roads son

20:47

engines ripple

20:49

the van which is being parts alongside busy

20:51

motorways and a rose is equipped

20:54

with several cameras which capture footage

20:56

of passing drivers images

20:58

of process using artificial intelligence

21:00

to identify motorists who are breaking the law

21:03

they would then be sent letters warning them they could

21:05

face a fine and points on their license

21:07

and future

21:08

the head of roads policy the are a scene

21:10

nicholas least said the motoring organization

21:13

had been urging the government to use such technology

21:15

for several years it's something that

21:18

should have been done quite some time at

21:20

i know that there are fewer

21:22

rights traffic police officers that are enforcing

21:25

laws on the road say it is right

21:27

that we look at different types of technology

21:29

that can actually improve road safety and

21:32

this is the writing still national highway

21:34

says the data collected during the three month

21:36

trial will help us understand the scale

21:38

of the problem

21:39

camera installed on the m four in boxer

21:41

last year spotted almost seven thousand

21:43

people failing to wear their seatbelts and

21:46

twenty five thousand drivers using their

21:48

phones at the wheel in the space of just six

21:50

months

21:51

simon jones paleontologists

21:53

are celebrating the discovery of the remarkable

21:56

new to rustic fossil site in england

21:59

it's you did

21:59

recently preserved fish some

22:02

with his scales and eyeballs

22:04

still intact there's

22:06

, wonderful photo one ferocious

22:08

specimen in full three dimensional

22:10

released on the science pages of the

22:12

bbc news website ticket out the

22:15

find was discovered by a local fossil

22:17

hunters sally and level hollingsworth

22:20

ten francs but the couple and sunny

22:22

told him how they chanced upon the size

22:24

of a farm in the cotswolds recent in

22:26

central south west england cheering and

22:28

listening for

22:30

the farm is actually back onto the cotswold way

22:32

which is a very famous will walk in the cotswolds

22:34

never knows the geology of yeah

22:36

it extremely well and

22:38

we rightly friends at the time

22:39

he saw a spoil heat which

22:41

was material that was set up from

22:43

the footings of a bomb that was going in at some

22:46

this material had been moved to the courts would way

22:48

so we went to the farmer and

22:51

had a chat with him and i instantly caped without

22:53

him he's a wonderful man on

22:55

he less on the land to have land look where the material

22:57

come from which is where we signed the not your with the

23:00

three de ces yeah in

23:02

it and then we took that home to paris

23:04

which we have about forty hours with

23:07

revealing the fish that so seems to popeye

23:09

at that know july it has always been

23:11

his video made like shots he said

23:13

yeah it was amazing

23:14

every and the farmers been so freely

23:16

the same off christmas

23:19

modern contact against all so

23:21

you know where you fight or says i've just

23:23

got planning permission joy can see that might

23:25

bite specific set

23:27

of us so we went to the khyber got

23:30

a group of people together and second

23:32

one i don't understand

23:35

is that you soar up there with

23:37

these nodules these sort of lumps

23:39

of wrong i mean office he didn't know that there was

23:41

going to be this person's preserve three

23:43

d c said leaping out

23:45

from one of them and but how

23:47

on earth did you sort of put two and two together

23:50

and come up with forty seven

23:51

the actual school heat from

23:53

the barn that been dug up had them

23:56

evidence of fossils ammonites in them

23:58

so never knowing

23:59

geology and the age of the material

24:02

is why the citizens and sediments investigation

24:05

and level to was a challenge on radio

24:07

bit with the these extraordinary

24:10

the level of detail that has been

24:12

preserved in in some of these fossils

24:15

i know your experience but we use

24:17

taken aback by the quality isn't completely

24:20

blown away by actually because sally

24:22

mentioned that initial spoilt it had tantalizing

24:25

glimpses will bits of fossil fists

24:28

in some of these nodules that we've located

24:30

behind this can shed and

24:32

the quality of the preservation is just

24:34

truly stunning and the fact

24:37

that we sounds the further material

24:39

to the sweetie skill such

24:41

as fish with their eyeballs

24:43

preserved in the stomach contents

24:46

and skin is truly remarkable

24:48

and it's all down to the type of environments

24:51

that was around one hundred and eighty three

24:53

million years ago during the lower

24:55

jurassic period of geological time and

24:58

that these unfortunate creatures when

25:00

they died got buried quickly by mud

25:02

and into deniers the all time

25:04

capsules these these concretions that

25:07

brassy weathering out of the bank when we when

25:09

we had our first look we think we found hundreds

25:11

of nodules and started literally splitting

25:14

them open to reveal their treasures this

25:16

is a working farm this is happening on

25:18

just wonder identity these quite a big site

25:20

is made a meme it is the farmers sort of okay

25:23

about the fact that some he's giving

25:25

up half is for you to be excavated in the swiss

25:28

are , have an amazing actually actually

25:30

exam the other the farmers been

25:33

really really helpful i mean

25:35

not only that he's in ensues yes they can

25:37

and really interested in the i'm

25:39

what we were going to find full of the cows

25:42

in the sailed were very curious about

25:44

what we what specify

25:46

, was spent on how to

25:48

labour was going on a missoula granting

25:50

mix to watch months and be missing presumably

25:54

yes , routed they will it was

25:56

watching us as we were excavated

25:58

fossil hunters never and sally

26:00

hollingsworth air no

26:03

, at the ready is a final goodbye

26:05

the characters such as scots and charlene

26:07

as a last episode of the australian

26:09

television soap neighbors was broadcast

26:12

in the uk on friday evening the

26:14

show has launched the careers not just of

26:16

actors but of world famous singer

26:19

this is connie minnows holly balance

26:21

and natalie imbruglia and number

26:23

of it's former stars contributed to the final

26:26

episode davis litter reports

26:31

after thirty seven years it's almost

26:34

has even been a special screening of the

26:36

final episode for fans on renzi

26:38

streets every

26:39

they got me i visited by the end the

26:42

data in a really nice way but i'd still like

26:44

i was actually kind of the i

26:45

oh man i'm so tired i just did

26:47

a complete the dentist or as i just got

26:49

guy pearce margot robbie kylie minogue

26:52

jason donovan are amongst the many famous

26:54

for the stars to have taken part

26:56

in this farewell to show that

26:58

at it's peak had twenty million

27:01

viewers in the uk ireland et

27:07

al davis al davis

27:07

the opposing on the final edition

27:10

of the australian so

27:15

my for now but they will be a new edition

27:18

of the global news podcast later if

27:20

you want to comment on this podcast to the topics

27:22

covered his send us an email address

27:24

is global podcast at

27:26

bbc dot com

27:28

hey you , also find us on

27:30

twitter at global news pod this

27:33

edition was mixed by hannah montgomery

27:35

the producer was named mcsheffrey the editor

27:37

is karen

Rate

Join Podchaser to...

  • Rate podcasts and episodes
  • Follow podcasts and creators
  • Create podcast and episode lists
  • & much more

Episode Tags

Do you host or manage this podcast?
Claim and edit this page to your liking.
,

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features