Ecuadorian drug lord arrested

25m

Ecuador's Los Lobos drug cartel leader, Wilmer "Pipo" Chavarria, has been captured in Spain. He'd been hiding in Europe after faking his own death. The arrest came as Ecuadorians voted not to allow foreign military bases in their country. Also: President Trump calls for the release of the Epstein files; violence erupts in Bangladesh ahead of the deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina's trial verdict; an auction of items from Nazi concentration camps is cancelled; Chile's election results; we visit the Amazon rainforest as COP30 debates soya beans; and Sky Sports ditches its "patronising and sexist" new TikTok.

The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight.
Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment.
Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk

Press play and read along

Runtime: 25m

Transcript

Speaker 1 This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.

Speaker 3 This is the story of the one. As head of maintenance at a concert hall, he knows the show must always go on.

Speaker 3 That's why he works behind the scenes, ensuring every light is working, the HVAC is humming, and his facility shines.

Speaker 3 With Granger's supplies and solutions for every challenge he faces, plus 24-7 customer support, his venue never misses a beat. Call quickgranger.com or just stop by.

Speaker 3 Granger for the ones who get it done.

Speaker 5 This is the story of the one. As a maintenance supervisor at a manufacturing facility, he knows keeping the line up and running is a top priority.
That's why he chooses Granger.

Speaker 5 Because when a drive belt gets damaged, Granger makes it easy to find the exact specs for the replacement product he needs.

Speaker 5 And next day delivery helps ensure he'll have everything in place and running like clockwork. Call 1-800-GRANGER, clickgranger.com clickgranger.com, or just stop by.

Speaker 5 Granger for the ones who get it done.

Speaker 7 This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.

Speaker 7 I'm Charlotte Gallagher, and in the early hours of Monday, the 17th of November, these are our main stories.

Speaker 7 The leader of one of Ecuador's biggest drug trafficking gangs, Wilma Pipo Chavarria, is captured. Donald Trump calls for the Epstein files to be released, reversing his previous position.

Speaker 7 And a German auction of items from a Nazi concentration camp is cancelled.

Speaker 7 Also in this podcast, we visit the Amazon rainforest as COP30 debates soya beans.

Speaker 8 We can see this vast port complex. There are three huge silos where they store the beans.
And then a giant everything is huge here. A giant sort of conveyor belt that goes out on a huge bridge.

Speaker 7 Ecuadorians have voted not to allow foreign military bases back into their country. Sunday's referendum was proposed by the right-wing government as part of efforts to combat rising gang violence.

Speaker 7 The result is a blow for President Daniel Naboa, who'd been pushing for help from the United States.

Speaker 7 But he did claim another win, announcing that the leader of one of Ecuador's biggest drug cartels had been captured.

Speaker 9 We have captured the highest value target on the list of criminals who harm us so much and harm the entire region, which is Pipo, supreme leader of Los Lobos.

Speaker 9 This was thanks to international cooperation with Spain and the United States.

Speaker 7 Wilmer Pipo Chavarria was detained in the Spanish city of Málaga four years after faking his own death during the COVID pandemic.

Speaker 7 He'd been hiding in Europe while continuing to control criminal operations back home.

Speaker 7 Many Los Lobos members are in jail, and the gang is thought to have instigated some of Ecuador's bloodiest prison riots, as well as planning murders to be committed outside the jail walls.

Speaker 7 Our Latin America expert, Luis Vajardo, told me more about the arrest.

Speaker 11 Pipo has been described as the number one target for Ecuadorian security forces. According to government officials, he's suspected of being involved in at least 400 deaths.

Speaker 11 Also, he has been leading this very violent organization, Los Lobos, as you described, originally involved in prison crimes, expanding into becoming a major criminal organization.

Speaker 11 It has actually been designated as a foreign terror organization by the U.S. It is thought to be closely involved in drug trafficking with Mexican cartels like the Jalisco New Generation cartel.

Speaker 11 So, the government of Daniel Navoa, who arrived in office promising a big crackdown on these crime organizations, was certainly claiming a big success with the arrest of Alia's people in Spain.

Speaker 7 I mean I guess the authorities will say you know we've cut the head off the snake but do they just replace this man Los Lobos?

Speaker 7 Do they have people kind of in the running to replace him and then just carry on with everything that they're doing?

Speaker 11 That has certainly been the case in many occasions when these high-profile arrests occur. There does not seem to be a major, major collapse in the profit for these organizations.

Speaker 11 What some people even fear is that this so-called vacuum of power in one of these criminal organizations could actually intensify violence, at least in the short run, as other members of these organizations try to occupy the position earlier held by someone like PIPO.

Speaker 11 So it is very difficult to predict that drug trafficking in Ecuador is going to substantially decrease in the short run.

Speaker 11 And unfortunately, the country still faces a huge amount of drug-related violence, as has been the case in the last few few years.

Speaker 7 Yeah, because you've been telling us before about how you associate drug cartels with Colombia and Mexico, but Ecuador has this huge problem as well.

Speaker 11 That's right. Ecuador for many years had been seen as an oasis of relative peace in South America with all these drug-related incidents happening around in neighboring countries.

Speaker 11 However, Colombian groups associated with Mexican drug cartels have used Ecuador as a platform for exporting cocaine, which a lot of it is not produced in Ecuador.

Speaker 11 It's in fact brought in from Colombia. But Ecuador has become a crucial point in the logistics of exporting cocaine to the United States, to Europe, even to Asia.

Speaker 11 That is also why President Noah has been asking for foreign help.

Speaker 11 He has been trying to establish ties with countries like Israel and like the US because he thinks, and he has said, that Ecuador needs all the help that it gets to face these criminal organizations.

Speaker 7 Luis Vajardo.

Speaker 7 Much like like Ecuador, voters in Chile are concerned about security, crime, and immigration.

Speaker 7 And after a first round of voting in their presidential election, the candidate from the governing leftist coalition, Jeanette Hara, will face the right-winger Jose Antonio Cast in a runoff vote.

Speaker 7 Our reporter in Santiago, Daniel Pardo, told me more about the vote.

Speaker 12 The first round made one thing clear. Chileans want new solutions.
They are tired of the cultural battles and are deeply skeptical of the strategies that they already know.

Speaker 12 And that's interesting to show through the man who's not going to be in the second round, Franco Parisi, who's the big headliner right now because he's a pragmatic economist focused on everyday problems rather than ideological fights.

Speaker 12 And he won't be in the runoff, but is poised to become an influential figure in the coming years, especially if his coalition secures a strong presence in Congress.

Speaker 12 Now, Jose Antonio Cast now heads into the second round as the clear front runner.

Speaker 12 And his challenge is to unite the rest of the right without losing the moderation he projected during the whole campaign. It seems like his main objective is to prevent the left.

Speaker 12 from framing the runoff as a referendum on him and his radical positions.

Speaker 12 Now, on the other side, you have a left-wing coalition that appears to have fallen short of the 30% of the vote, which leaves it in a very weak position for the second round.

Speaker 12 It is a significant setback for the government of Gaviel Boric, which has failed to deliver on the high expectations it set four years ago.

Speaker 7 And what is this election being fought on? What are the issues that are really mattering to voters?

Speaker 12 Well, it seems to me that it's less ideological and more pragmatic. They want solutions.
The first topic that it's been talking about is crime.

Speaker 12 Chile has been one of the least violent countries in Latin America America for years, but the homicide rate doubled in the last decade. So that has generated an atmosphere of fear among Chileans.

Speaker 12 Then you have the economy.

Speaker 12 Most Chileans, they don't want a radical change of the economic system, but they want solutions that are pragmatic, that have to do with pensions, with paying day-to-day life.

Speaker 7 And you said the homicide rate had doubled. What's that down to? Is that organized crime?

Speaker 7 Because I know Mexicans have been protesting against their government saying, look, we need to get a grip on the murder rate in Mexico. Cartels are having too much influence in this country.

Speaker 7 Is that a similar kind of situation that's bubbling away in Chile as well?

Speaker 12 It's interesting to compare it with Mexico, because obviously the homicide rate, for instance, is far less here in Chile. Chile still is one of the least violent countries in Latin America.

Speaker 12 However, it doubled the homicide rate in the past decade. And they've started to see cases that are new for Chileans, you know, cases of murdering in the street, people who are kidnapped, extortion.

Speaker 12 For a country that has been fearful of that idea for many decades, seeing it in the press for the past years is a huge development and it has generated the idea that this campaign is about fear.

Speaker 7 That was Daniel Pardo.

Speaker 7 President Trump has been under constant pressure from Democrats and some Republicans to release all U.S. Justice Department files on the investigation into the dead sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 7 And now, ahead of a vote in the House of Representatives on Tuesday to order their release, he's had a change of heart, and Mr.

Speaker 7 Trump is calling on Republicans to back it, saying there's nothing to hide and it's a Democrat hoax.

Speaker 7 It comes after President Trump appeared to be angered that some Republicans were backing the bill, including his former ally, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green.

Speaker 7 He's even started calling her Marjorie Traitor Greene. For more on their fallout, here's our North America correspondent, Sean Dilley.

Speaker 13 All right, Georgia, we know what we're going to do in 2024. We're going to re-elect our favorite president, the staunchest of allies.

Speaker 1 Marjorie Taylor Greene was a leading light of the MAGA movement.

Speaker 1 And he was her most influential backer. But now that closest of ties lies in tatters on the floor.

Speaker 15 You got a lot of courage, that one.

Speaker 1 Last Wednesday, Marjorie Taylor Greene was one of four House Republicans to back a Democrat petition to attempt to force the release of the U.S. government's Epstein files.

Speaker 1 She believes it's her call for publication that soured the relationship.

Speaker 14 I stand with these women. I stand with rape victims.
I stand with children who are in terrible sex abuse situations.

Speaker 14 And I stand with survivors of trafficking and those that are trapped in sex trafficking.

Speaker 1 Donald Trump has never denied that he and the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were friends, but he says they fell out in the early 2000s, well before the financiers' 2008 convictions.

Speaker 1 Last week, Democrats published three emails mentioning Donald Trump, suggesting he spent hours with one of Epstein's victims, Virginia Dufray.

Speaker 1 The White House were quick to point to previous comments by Ms. Dufray, saying Mr.
Trump had never done anything wrong in her dealings with him.

Speaker 1 Republican members of Congress responded by releasing more than 20,000 pages of documents from the Epstein estate.

Speaker 1 Two days after Greene supported the Democrat move to release the Epstein files, the president described her as wacky and a ranting lunatic. He said she was a disgrace and branded her Traitor Green.

Speaker 14 He called me a traitor and that is that is so extremely wrong and those are the types of words used that can radicalize people against me and put my life in danger.

Speaker 16 Many here have found the fallout genuinely shocking.

Speaker 16 Marjorie Taylor Greene continued to enjoy Donald Trump's support even after she had promoted an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory, something she's since apologised for.

Speaker 16 And she was perhaps his loudest supporter after a congressional committee accused him of inciting violence here at the Capitol on January the 6th, something he's always denied doing.

Speaker 16 But whatever the two may think about each other now, she's not the only Republican to call for the release of those Epstein files.

Speaker 17 Marjorie Taylor Green is not anywhere. I mean, she is a very different thinking than I The president hasn't spelt out why the rift has happened.

Speaker 1 Marjorie Taylor Greene says she still supports the president and his administration, but Donald Trump has made it clear he no longer supports her and he will back any Republican who runs against her in Georgia at next year's midterm elections.

Speaker 7 That was Sean Dilley reporting.

Speaker 7 A planned auction in Germany of artefacts from prisoners of Nazi concentration camps has been cancelled following backlash and political pressure.

Speaker 7 Auctions of Nazi memorabilia have been held before, against the wishes of many, but this one attracted extra criticism because of the personal nature of the items for sale, as Duncan Kennedy reports.

Speaker 18 According to German media reports, more than 600 items from a private collection were due to be put up for sale at the Feltsman auction house in Neuss near Dusseldorf.

Speaker 18 They included a letter from a prisoner at the Auschwitz concentration camp and a medical diagnosis document about forced sterilisation of a prisoner from the Dachau concentration camp.

Speaker 18 But the sale has triggered a number of protests, ranging from the Polish government to Holocaust survivors groups.

Speaker 18 Poland's foreign minister Radislav Sikorsky called the auction offensive, adding that respect for victims requires the dignity of silence, not the din of commerce.

Speaker 18 Christopher Hupner, the executive vice president of the International Auschwitz Committee, a Berlin-based group of survivors, was asked for his reaction when he first heard about the auction.

Speaker 19 I'm in a close contact with survivors, with families of survivors for many years, and I know how vulnerable they are.

Speaker 19 Even if in their older years, they are very close to what has happened to them in their youth and what has changed all their lives.

Speaker 19 So it's a problem which is dealing with human beings, with their relatives, with their fear and their tortures. And this is why why it made me really angry and sad.

Speaker 18 There's been no public response from the auction house. Poland's culture minister said her ministry would investigate the provenance of the artefacts to determine whether any should be returned.

Speaker 7 That was Duncan Kennedy.

Speaker 7 Still to come.

Speaker 20 We are normal people and we don't have to have everything related to us with like laboo boo, matcha, hot girl walk. Makes my blood boil.

Speaker 7 A TikTok channel made for female sports fans is labeled sexist.

Speaker 3 This is the story of the one. As head of maintenance at a concert hall, he knows the show must always go on.

Speaker 3 That's why he works behind the scenes, ensuring every light is working, the HVAC is humming, and his facility shines.

Speaker 3 With Granger's supplies and solutions for every challenge he faces, plus 24-7 customer support, his venue never misses a beat. Call quickgranger.com or just stop by.

Speaker 3 Granger, for the ones who get it done.

Speaker 21 America is changing, and so is the world.

Speaker 22 But what's happening in America isn't just a cause of global upheaval. It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere.

Speaker 21 I'm Asmakhalid in Washington, D.C.

Speaker 22 I'm Tristan Redman in London.

Speaker 2 And this is the global story.

Speaker 21 Every weekday, we'll bring you a story from this intersection, where the world and America meet.

Speaker 22 Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 3 This is the story of the one. As head of maintenance at a concert hall, he knows the show must always go on.

Speaker 3 That's why he works behind the scenes, ensuring every light is working, the HVAC is humming, and his facility shines.

Speaker 3 With Granger's supplies and solutions for every challenge he faces, plus 24-7 customer support, his venue never misses a beat. Call quickgranger.com or just stop by.

Speaker 3 Granger, for the ones who get it done.

Speaker 7 Violence has erupted in Bangladesh in the run-up to the verdict in the case against the former Prime Minister, Sheikh Hasina, who's being tried in absentia because she's fled to India.

Speaker 7 Prosecutors are demanding she be given the death penalty for crimes against humanity in connection with the deaths of hundreds of students during a crackdown on anti-government protests last year.

Speaker 7 A verdict is expected shortly. Our correspondent, Aruna Day Mukherjee, gave me this update from outside court.

Speaker 10 I've been in Dhaka since late last night and what I have seen is a visible presence of security.

Speaker 10 I can see in front of me as I walk just outside the court premises layers of police personnel, including riot control officials who are present here in riot gear. Some of them are armed as well.

Speaker 10 There is an armoured vehicle just a few meters away from me as well. So when you walk or drive in towards the premises, there is a sense, a visible sense of heightened security.

Speaker 10 We've also got reports, which we tried to confirm with the police, who said that they've heard of a crude bomb explosion taking place earlier this morning.

Speaker 10 No one was injured in that, but they're investigating it further. So they're also being very cautious about the information that they're giving out.

Speaker 10 But in the run-up to today, what is also important to highlight...

Speaker 10 highlight is that there have been several detentions of supporters of the Abami League party to which Sheikh Hasina belonged, the deposed Prime Minister.

Speaker 10 They were arrested on suspicion of planning unrest in the run-up to this verdict, which is why things are tense, because they are anticipating some sort of unrest, depending on what the verdict is.

Speaker 7 And given that Sheikh Hasina has already fled to India, what will happen if she's found guilty? Because I imagine she will have no intention of going back to Bangladesh.

Speaker 10 That's right, and that it remains to be seen, really, isn't it?

Speaker 10 Because what it will do is it will give the Bangladeshi Bangladeshi authorities sort of legal ammunition to further try and put more pressure on Indian authorities to

Speaker 10 allow Sheikh Hasina into Bangladesh.

Speaker 10 So that will be an interesting sort of dynamic to watch out for given the kind of close relations that Sheikh Hasina shared with the Indian establishment over several years while she was in power, which is why she has found herself in India since she fled Bangladesh last year.

Speaker 10 What is also important to watch out for is what happens in the political space here in Bangladesh. At the moment, there's a caretaker government, elections are scheduled for February next year.

Speaker 10 What happens to the Bangladeshi political space, given that the Abami League of Sheikh Hasina is not allowed to contest? And we're talking about a politician like Sheikh Hasina,

Speaker 10 who was Prime Minister for 15 years. It's a very, very crucial verdict, which is going to really define what politics will look like in the coming months in Bangladesh.

Speaker 7 And I remember those protests happening and all those students being killed, and how shocking it was to watch, you know, from the other side of the world.

Speaker 7 I imagine that's really traumatized so many people in Bangladesh.

Speaker 10 Which is why it is a sensitive trial, which is why we're seeing this heightened security as well.

Speaker 10 Given just the sheer number of people killed, the UN put the number at 1,400, some of the estimates, which is why this trial is taking place,

Speaker 10 alleging that Sheikh Hasina is guilty of crimes against humanity. So, this is an emotive issue.

Speaker 10 This is something that is likely to sort of have ramifications, which is what we're going going to watch out for.

Speaker 7 Aruna Day Mukherjee. One of the key issues being discussed at this year's COP summit in Brazil is soya beans.

Speaker 7 It's the host country's largest agricultural export, but growing soya damages the Amazon rainforest.

Speaker 7 A ban known as the Soy Moratorium stops the sale of soya beans grown on Amazon land deforested after 2008. But some now want to overturn it.

Speaker 7 Our climate editor, Justin Rowlett, visited the Amazon to see the industry's impact.

Speaker 8 Well I'm in a stand of rainforest just outside the Amazon port city of Santorim and it's dark down here underneath the dense canopy but as I make my way through

Speaker 8 to the edge of this it opens up onto a huge soya field bright yellow in the sun. And until the Soy Moratorium, forest clearance for farms like this was one of the main drivers of deforestation.

Speaker 8 Soya is a key ingredient in animal and fish feeds and global demand is rising.

Speaker 8 To get a sense of the scale of the industry we are heading out onto the Amazon River itself.

Speaker 8 The flatland around here is perfect for soy production and we can see this this vast port complex.

Speaker 8 There are three huge silos where they store the beans, a giant sort of conveyor belt that goes out on a huge bridge to the deeper water where there's a docking complex, and there's a cargo ship in there now.

Speaker 8 We can see it being filled with soya, dust rising up.

Speaker 8 And there was outrage when this port was built a couple of decades ago, which helped create the pressure for the soya moratorium, which was a landmark agreement where farmers, environmental groups, and international food companies, including some of the biggest players, companies like McDonald's, agreed not to buy soya from newly deforested Amazon land.

Speaker 8 But now, members of Brazil's powerful agricultural lobby, backed by some politicians, are pushing to scrap the arrangement, claiming it represents an unfair cartel.

Speaker 8 Vandale Ataides is president of the Soy Farmers Association of Parastate, one of the main soy growing areas.

Speaker 23 Our estate has a lot of room to grow, and the soy moratorium is working against this development. How does this help the environment?

Speaker 23 I can't plant soybeans, but I can use the same land to plant corn, rice, cotton, other crops.

Speaker 8 Environmental campaigners say ending the ban would have catastrophic impacts on the Amazon.

Speaker 8 Bell Lyon is the chief advisor on Latin America at the World Wildlife Fund, one of the original signatories to the soy moratorium.

Speaker 24 If the Amazon soy moratorium comes to an end, it would be a disaster for the Amazon, for its people, and for the world, because it could open up an area of the size of Portugal for deforestation.

Speaker 8 There is still some pristine forest in this region, but even where the trees are still standing, deforestation has an impact. It reduces the amount of moisture in the air.

Speaker 8 We are climbing the 15 stories up a 45 meter tower in a protected rainforest reserve.

Speaker 8 It is bristling with high-tech sensors which have been measuring evaporation, CO2 levels, solar radiation and much more for more than 27 years. The project is run by scientist Bruce Fosberg.

Speaker 15 Because there's less rainfall, the forest that's still around, the living forest, is closing down and not producing rainfall anymore, not producing water vapor.

Speaker 15 We're already starting to see some of the taller trees dying and losing their capacity to maintain themselves.

Speaker 8 Vosberg fears that as the trees begin to die, it could push the rainforest in this region towards a tipping point.

Speaker 7 And that was Justin Rowlett. All eyes are on the skies in Iran as the authorities have sprayed clouds with chemicals to induce rain in an attempt to combat the country's worst drought in years.

Speaker 4 The process is known as cloud seeding and is a technique that's been around for decades, Sasha Slichta reports Cloud seeding involves spraying particles such as silver iodide and other salts into clouds from aircraft to trigger rain.

Speaker 4 The first cloud seeding flight was conducted in the Urmia Lake Basin in the northwest. What was once Iran's biggest lake has now largely dried out, turning into a vast salt bed.

Speaker 4 Further flights are planned in east and west Azerbaijan provinces. Iranian meteorologists are reporting that there now has been rain in the west and northwest.

Speaker 4 Footage shows snow falling on a ski resort north of Tehran for the first time this year. 2025 has seen an 89% drop in rainfall compared with a long-term average.

Speaker 4 Iran is currently going through the driest autumn in half a century. Earlier this month, President Masoud Pazishkian warned that without rain before winter, Tehran could face evacuation.

Speaker 4 Iran is a largely arid country, and heat waves will only exacerbate with climate change.

Speaker 7 Sasha Slichta.

Speaker 7 Finally, just three days after a British sports channel launched a TikTok to build a welcoming community for female sports fans, it scrapped the whole project and removed posts described as patronizing and sexist.

Speaker 7 Sky Sports Halo shared content featuring pink texts, love hearts, and Gen Z references. Nornanji reports.

Speaker 25 It was billed as Sky Sports Little Sister, a TikTok channel specifically targeting female sports fans.

Speaker 25 But its pink branding and choice of content quickly faced a backlash.

Speaker 25 One video showed the Manchester City striker Erling Harland on the pitch with the caption, How the Matcher and Hot Girl Walk Combo Hits in a Pink Font.

Speaker 25 Social media users accused the channel of being sexist and condescending and warned it risked undermining the progress made in recent years to shine a spotlight on women's sport.

Speaker 25 Others questioned how it was approved in the first place. Critics included the TikToker Kimmy, who posts about Formula One.

Speaker 3 At least they listened to us. Why do we need a separate platform?

Speaker 20 We don't need one.

Speaker 24 We would like to just be treated as normal people because guess what?

Speaker 20 We are normal people. We are normal people and we don't have to have have everything related to us with like laboo boo, matcha, hot girl walk.
Makes my blood boil.

Speaker 25 Now, just three days after its launch, Halo has been scrapped. A statement published on the page last night read, We've listened, we didn't get it right.

Speaker 25 Sky Sports said it remained as committed as ever to creating spaces where fans felt included and inspired.

Speaker 7 No, Nanji.

Speaker 7 And that's all from us for now, but there will be a new edition of the Global News podcast later. If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can send us an email.

Speaker 7 The address is globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag globalnewspod. This edition was mixed by Chris Cazaris.
The editor is Karen Martin.

Speaker 7 I'm Charlotte Gallagher. Until next time, goodbye.

Speaker 21 America is changing, and so is the world.

Speaker 22 But what's happening in America isn't just a cause of global upheaval. It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere.

Speaker 21 I'm Asmakhaled in Washington, D.C.

Speaker 22 I'm Tristan Redman in London, and this is the global story.

Speaker 21 Every weekday, we'll bring you a story from this intersection, where the world and America meet.

Speaker 22 Listen on bbc.com or wherever you get your podcasts.