US seizes second oil tanker off Venezuela's coast

27m

The United States has released dramatic footage of its forces seizing an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela, ten days after taking control of another ship in similar circumstances. Washington says the tankers’ oil is funding narco-terrorism, while Caracas accuses the United States of theft and kidnapping.

Also: with just one Israeli hostage’s remains still held by Hamas in Gaza, Israel’s Hostages Family Forum begins winding down its operations. The Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has ordered a review into the police and intelligence services after the mass shooting at Bondi Beach last week. President Volodymyr Zelensky says he would support direct talks between Ukrainian and Russian teams if it unlocked prisoner swaps or paved the way for negotiations between him and Vladimir Putin. A German engineer becomes the first wheelchair user to travel to space on a Blue Origin rocket. And astronomers marvel at an unusual lemon-shaped exoplanet the size of Jupiter spotted with the James Webb Space Telescope.

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Runtime: 27m

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This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World World Service.

I'm Anna Holligan, and in the early hours of Sunday, the 21st of December, these are our main stories.

For the second time this month, the United States says it seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela.

Commemorations are taking place across Australia, one week on from the terror attack at Bondi Beach.

Also in this podcast, Ukraine's President Zelensky says the US has proposed fresh face-to-face negotiations between officials from his country and Russia.

And an engineer from Germany becomes the first wheelchair user to blast into space. That was so cool.
I took you every stage of going up. It just showed the world that it is possible.

I think you should never give up on your dreams, right?

The US has released dramatic footage of its military forces seizing an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela 10 days after taking control of another ship in similar circumstances.

Washington claims the oil is being used to fund narco-terrorism, but Venezuela has accused the United States of theft and kidnapping.

In recent months, the US has been building up its military presence in the Caribbean Sea, carrying out deadly strikes on alleged Venezuelan drug-smuggling bows.

President Trump hasn't ruled out the possibility of war against Venezuela, something other regional leaders are deeply troubled by.

The Brazilian president Lula de Silva warned that armed conflict would have catastrophic consequences.

More than four decades after the Falklands War, the South American continent is once again astonished by the military presence of a foreign power. The limits of international law are being tested.

An armed intervention in Venezuela would be a humanitarian catastrophe for the hemisphere and a dangerous precedent for the world.

But Argentina's president, an ally of Mr. Trump, told the same meeting that he welcomed the U.S.
pressure to, in his words, free the Venezuelan people.

Our correspondent in Washington, Sean Dilley, told me more about this latest oil tanker seizure.

They had helicopters, they had military personnel, they had the Coast Guard. So in reality, we would have to say apprehended.

But I think it's safe to say that that looked pretty much to us like they seized it.

To what extent does this escalate the situation?

I think it would be hard to say that it escalates it beyond the realm of anything we were already in, because there was another tanker seized 10 days ago called the Skipper.

President Trump, not long before that, had posted to social media in a message in his words to drug dealers and pilots to consider the airspace above Venezuela as closed.

So it's part of escalating tensions and let's not forget that since the summer they've been escalating military resources posted to the area. Initially the US Navy were there.

As time went on those numbers increased and last month the largest warship in the world, the Gerald R. Ford, was placed within striking distance of Caracas.

So that pressure is ratcheting up but this is an expected consequence of the blockade of sanctioned oil that President Trump had announced earlier in the week. And what's the strategy?

What's Washington's strategy here?

On the face of it, the US is concerned about the transportation of drugs coming to America and harming Americans.

And they're also concerned separately, linked, they would argue, about oil that they argue is going to fund illicit terrorist organisations. There is a deeper narrative here, however.

President Trump, when he was first elected, had very openly said he wanted a different president for President Maduro. So there are some very deep, complex reasons behind this.

If they were totally what's being presented on the surface, well, people ask, well, what about the neighbouring countries that are also involved in the transportation of drugs?

And, of course, many of those drugs destined for Europe and many drugs that come in to the United States via Mexico.

So there's the story they tell publicly and no doubt stories that they don't necessarily share quite so openly. And any response from Venezuela?

Repeatedly, President Maduro has accused the United States president and the country more generally of having colonialist ambitions.

With the seizure of of the skipper 10 days ago, they said, well, this goes to show it's not really about drugs and it's not really about President Maduro. This is about wanting Venezuela's oil.

So they have accused the United States of murder and theft on the high seas. And they've likened the U.S.
President and the United States to pirates of the Caribbean.

There was a warning from the Brazilian President that war could cause a humanitarian disaster. Is that looking like something on the horizon?

Well, President Trump is very well known for keeping all options on the table.

There haven't been ground strikes, although President Trump is indicating that he would consider it, that notably hasn't happened yet.

So his strategy appears to be one of escalating the pressure on President Maduro through means other than ground strikes at the moment. Sean Dilley, reporting from Washington.

With just one Israeli hostages remain still held by Hamas in Gaza, Israel's hostages family forums largely winding down its operations.

The campaign group was set up after 251 hostages were taken during the deadly Hamas-led attacks on Israel. 168 returned alive.

With the help of thousands of volunteers, the forum organized near-daily demonstrations. As tensions rose with Israel's government, it went global in its efforts to return captives to their families.

Our Middle East correspondent, Yulan Nell, reports.

Welcoming in the Jewish Sabbath in Tel Aviv's hostages square. The events led by the family of Ran Kavili, the last hostage in Gaza.

The young police officer was killed by Hamas fighters in a kibbutz on the 7th of October two years ago. His father, Itzhek, is determined to bring his body back for burial.

We are still in the 7th of October, but we were strong. We are waiting for him.
And we do whatever we need. And this gives us hope, the support of the people.

From the start, people power has been key to the hostage families. There was chaos after the Hamas attacks, which killed some 1,200 people in Israel, with more than 250 missing.

Distraught families gathered for the first time in Tel Aviv one week on from the assault. Among them was Gil Dikman, whose cousin Kamel Ghat was being held in Gaza.
We were together in this.

It fell on me that this is actually real. That, okay, now we're going to face this unbelievable challenge of understanding where all these people are and getting them back home.

And the second thing was understanding that, okay, we're in this together. I'm not going to stand alone.

Bring them home became the rallying cry of the hostages and missing families forum, backed up by more than 10,000 volunteers and funded by donations.

After the first truce of the Gaza war broke down, with about half of the hostages released, polls suggested Israelis prioritized defeating Hamas over the return of those still held captive.

The forum brought in political strategist Lior Khorev. It appeared that everything was stuck.
And the public opinion was against us.

As a civil society organization, we could not impact whether or not there's going to be a deal.

but we could work hard on Israeli public opinion to ensure that if a deal came into place, it will have a sound civilian majority within the country.

With mass protests and powerful interviews, the hostages' families forum became a force to be reckoned with. It led to growing tensions with the Israeli government.

But polls indicated a shift in public opinion, so that most Israelis supported a ceasefire deal to bring home the hostages.

Visiting foreign officials made sure to go to Hostages Square and the forum's nearby headquarters, recalls Israeli journalist Tal Schneider.

This place became like a foreign ministry for the country, for the families of the 250 people. So they kept going 24-7 for two years.

Someone was thinking from the early start on how to grasp the international media attention. It was very, very important.
And I think they needed to bypass their own government.

Ultimately, it was a foreign leader, the newly elected US president, working with regional mediators who secured the hostages' release, brokering deals between Israel and Hamas.

Early this year, a prominent campaigner, Mikhail Levy, was emotionally reunited with his brother Orr.

But after Israel ended the ceasefire, he continued to demonstrate with the relatives of others held captive. I couldn't just

be happy. I had to fight for them as well because they became my family.
We still have to keep fighting for

Korani because his family deserves closure.

Since the last 20 living hostages came home in October, the bodies of others have slowly returned.

The remaining funds of the hostages' families forum are now supporting the Gavilis, and the group's left its its offices and taken down the stage in Hostages Square.

Painful questions linger over why more lives weren't saved.

The Hostages' Families Forum recently released Hamas videos found in Gaza showing six hostages, including Carmel Ghat, celebrating Hanukkah months before their captors killed them.

The hostage crisis continues to cast a long shadow over Israeli society, even as many take heart from the family's message of endurance and solidarity. Yulan, now reporting.

The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has ordered a review into the police and intelligence services one week after the mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Sydney.

Fifteen people were killed when two gunmen opened fire on crowds gathered to celebrate the Jewish festival of Hanukkah.

Many within the Jewish community have long warned about a rise in anti-Semitic attacks, while other Australians say the attack has shaken their sense of safety.

One week on, people gathered for a beachside vigil next to a makeshift floral memorial honouring those who died.

Our correspondent Phil Mercer in Sydney has more on this day of reflection. It's very difficult to think of the events of last week given that it seems such a long time ago now.
So much has happened.

We've had funerals, we've had the political leaders promising various measures around gun control and hate speech promising to make Australians safer.

But here we are seven days after 15 people were murdered on Australia's most famous stretch of sand. The flags on the Sydney Harbour Bridge, they are at half mast as they are on government buildings.

and other buildings right around the country. After dark, many of these buildings will be bathed in yellow light to honour those who were killed and wounded in the attack.
The Prime Minister, Mr.

Albanese, will attend a special memorial at Bondi Pavilion today and Australia will pause to share its grief after one of its darkest ever weeks.

Today we've also heard Australia's Prime Minister Albanese saying he has ordered a review into the police and intelligence services in the wake of this attack.

Just tell us a little bit more about that.

We've been hearing from government ministers who say that they've had complete faith in both the intelligence services and the police, but this review will make sure that they are properly equipped to cope with what the Prime Minister is describing as a rapidly changing security environment in this country.

Mr. Albanese, the Prime Minister, says that the attack in Australia a week ago was inspired by ISIS.
And this review will be extremely thorough according to the Prime Minister.

It will look about how things might be able to change the processes and the powers to make Australians safer and as you say the review will be pretty prompt and it will be published in April.

So certainly in the last seven days we've seen a lot of grief, we've seen funerals, anger and sadness but also we've seen at great pace the political response to this.

this around gun crime, the response to anti-Semitism and now the response to Australia Australia in terms of reviewing the performance and powers of its intelligence services and the Australian Federal Police.

Phil Mercer reporting from Sydney there.

Now to a flight being celebrated as a breakthrough for inclusion in space tourism. A German engineer has become the first wheelchair user to travel to space.

She launched from Texas on a Blue Origin rocket. Carla Conti has been exploring this story.

Chamber pressure looks good.

Who gets to go to space is changing.

On Saturday, Michaela Benthaus, a 33-year-old aerospace engineer from Germany, made her dreams come true when she left her wheelchair behind to blast off into space on board of a rocket ship.

After damaging her spinal cord in a mountain bike accident in 2018, Michaela thought whatever chance she had to explore space had just vanished.

But since the injury, her passion only grew stronger as she began researching ways to make space exploration accessible to people with disabilities.

Now, she has become the first wheelchair user to travel to space, launching from Texas with Blue Origin, the space tourism company founded by Jeff Bezos.

She was accompanied by a retired SpaceX engineer also born in Germany, Hans Koenigsmann, who helped organize and sponsor her trip.

The flight lasted around 10 minutes, with roughly three minutes of weightlessness. This was the moment Michaela and her five crewmates began to float.

And as they touched back down on Earth, the adrenaline was still running high.

I didn't only laugh like the view and the microgravity phase, but I also laughed all the going up. That was so cool, like to feel every stage of going up.

You just showed the world that it is possible.

What would you say to that? Let's not stop you.

I think you should never give up on your dreams, right? The mission, known as NS-37, is the 16th suborbital space tourism launch carried out by Blue Origin, the cost of which has not been revealed.

This comes at a time of fierce competition for private space companies as they battle for dominance in commercial space flight. Carla Conti reporting.

Still to come in this podcast, the curious lemon-shaped planet that's fascinating scientists.

Imagine if you had like a ball of Play-Doh and you put it next to a really strong vacuum, the vacuum would kind of suck the front and create this shape, and that's exactly what's happening in this system.

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This is the Global News Podcast. As officials in Florida hold another round of U.S.-led talks on Ukraine, President Vlodymir Zelensky has said he would support a U.S.

proposal for rare direct contact between Ukrainian and Russian teams if it led to prisoner swaps or opened the way for talks between him and Vladimir Putin.

Russia's envoy Kirill Dmitriev is in Miami and has been meeting Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff and President Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner. Mr.

Dmitriev told reporters that discussions had so far been constructive. Our correspondent Samira Hussein reports from Kiev.

President Zelensky

Speaking to reporters in Kyiv, Mr. Zelensky acknowledged the new American proposal.

Indeed, the United States of America said that they would have a separate meeting with representatives of Russia, and they proposed such a format, as far as I understand, Ukraine, America, Russia.

Mr. Zelensky added that the U.S.
has said the Europeans could also be present in the talks, a prospect that may not go down well with Russia, as its relations with Kyiv's main allies are strained.

The U.S. Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, has insisted Washington is not trying to force Ukraine to accept a peace deal and has said no agreement will be made unless Kyiv signs up to it.

But with American envoys offering Ukraine security guarantees, it seems likely that Kyiv will be expected to make territorial concessions.

This is likely to spark a fierce backlash from many Ukrainians.

And this latest flurry of diplomatic efforts to end the war comes after seven people died in Ukraine's southern region of Odessa in a Russian ballistic missile strike.

Samira Hussein, since Russian forces invaded and captured large parts of eastern Ukraine, the Kremlin has tightly controlled news about life in the occupied regions.

In recent months, though, videos from pro-Russian bloggers and content creators detailing life under occupation have attracted thousands of online followers.

But many have described those videos as disinformation, as James Beardsworth has been finding out.

Across Russian-occupied Ukraine, hundreds of content creators are making slick, professional-looking videos celebrating life under Russian occupation.

Mariupol is becoming better and better every day.

Its changes are literally shocking,

says 23-year-old content creator Maria Chushkina.

Maria's blog is one of hundreds of channels run by often young, attractive men and women which broadcast pro-Russian content from occupied Ukraine to tens of thousands of followers.

One of those creators is Elizaveta Cheriyakova, a 21-year-old from Mariupol.

Despite her city being almost completely flattened by Russia's invasion over three years ago, Elizaveta now posts pro-Russian content, posing in front of the Russian flag and celebrating the Kremlin's rebuild of her city.

I asked her why she began making her videos. She is voiced by one of my colleagues, as she didn't want her voice to be broadcast.

To be honest, I always want to create a content even before all the famous events. And when everything changed, I saw that my city was often presented on the internet as a ghost town.

And I wanted to show the reality that we are living, not what it's sometimes written in the news.

The bloggers carefully choreograph their videos, often showing newly built apartment blocks, shops, and restaurants built by Russia, but rarely mentioning the death and destruction caused by the war, or who started it in the first place.

Elizaveta told me more about how she believes her city has changed since Russia's arrival.

There is a feeling that the city is coming to life, that life is gradually getting better, that the constant internal tensions that used to be in the background has gone.

Like many other content creators in the region, Elizaveta learned how to to make her eye-catching content at the Donbass Media Center, a series of newly opened schools across occupied Ukraine.

The centers offer free, vocational video-making courses to people under 25. Pavel Khodbovsky is a blogger and teacher at the school.
He told me more about the centers.

The Donbass Media Centre is a school of bloggers. A few hundred people have studied here in Donetsk, in Lugansk, in Mariupol, and one in Melitopol.

It's very very cool because somebody needs to say what is happening in our region in order to tell, let's say, residents of Britain or France, so that when they watch the content, they understand that their government or the Ukrainian government is trying to sell them something that is far from the truth.

Ilya Yablakov is an expert on Russian disinformation at the University of Sheffield in the UK. He has been monitoring these schools.

They've created this network of media centers, propaganda outlets, let's put them that way, that aggregate information but also produce it on an industrial scale if you look at the pictures you see absolutely regular boys and girls these guys are being trained to spread the message about the war in donbass or rather the peace in the donbass i put those claims to a lisa vetta personally i don't promote anyone's interest i just live in my city and show my reality I'm a patriot of my country, but this is not about work or promoting interest.

Videos posted by the Donbass Media Center show show hundreds of teenagers doing presentations about what they call Russia's new regions, with prizes, including trips to Moscow, for the most successful students.

According to Ilya, the content is created with a wide range of audiences in mind, both to show Moscow's occupation as a positive thing to a Russian domestic audience, as well as show an alternative reality of home to the millions of Ukrainians that were forced to flee their homes.

Imagine yourself living as a refugee. You question quite a lot of things.
So, that message is to create the cognitive dissonance. This is how post-truth reality works.

Media Freedom Group, Reporters Without Borders, have described the four Ukrainian regions partly occupied by Russia as information black holes where they say only Kremlin mouthpieces are allowed to work.

James Beardsworth reporting.

Now, let's take you out of this world for a moment because scientists say they are baffled by a bizarre lemon-shaped planet that defies explanation.

The exoplanet, which is outside our solar system, is the size of Jupiter and was discovered with the help of the James Webb Space Telescope.

Maya Belezny from Stanford University was involved in the study and told Rebecca Kesby what makes it so remarkable. The very special thing about it is its shape and its composition.

This is a a very unique system. It's 2,000 light years away from us.
And we have a planet-like object orbiting around the remnant of a dead star.

And this dead star is very interesting because it's the size of a city, only 10 kilometers in radius, but it weighs almost two times the mass of our Sun.

So it has a, yes, and it has a really strong gravitational pull. And it's this pull that is causing this planet to be distorted into this lemon-like shape.

You can imagine if you had like a a ball of Plato and you put it next to a really strong vacuum, the vacuum would kind of suck the front and create this shape, and that's exactly what's happening in this system.

Interesting. Do we know if it's like made up of gases or whether it's actual matter? What kind of planet is it?

Yes, so the surface has gas, and presumably it's getting denser and solidified in the middle as it cools down. It's difficult to say what this really is.

So this is actually a tough question to answer. We're not sure if if this is really a planet or the remnant of a star.

And so, what the focus of this study was was to study sort of what's on the surface because that's really all we can see.

When astronomers measure light coming from stars or planets, that light is really only telling us what's on the surface. So, it's really difficult to tell what's actually on the inside.

But, from what we can see, the outside is just covered in carbon, which is something that has never been seen before. Goodness.

I mean, all this sounds very bizarre, in fact, in terms terms of what we know of other planets and universes.

Could you believe that this is what you were seeing and how does it help us understand space or does it change what we understand about space?

It's really incredible and honestly it raises more questions than answers. Our team has been debating for almost a year now about what this object really is.

You know, it fits the definition of a planet. It's the same size, it's the right mass, it's the right density.

But planets form from all the debris that's around stars, and that debris contains all sorts of atoms, not just carbon. We can't explain with planetary formation models how this can be a planet.

Maya Belezny from Stanford University.

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 an email to globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk.

This edition was mixed by Chris Lovelock and the producers were Arian Korchi and Chantal Hartle. The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Anna Holligan. Until next time, goodbye.

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