2025-03-27
32 分钟This is the global news podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Valerie Sanderson and in the early hours of Thursday, 27th March, these are our main stories.
Senior officials in the Trump administration have been grilled in Congress over how planned US airstrikes on Yemen were discussed in a group chat
that accidentally included a prominent journalist.
The military leader of Sudan says the army has regained full control of the capital,
Khartoum, after nearly two years of fighting against the rival RSF Group.
Brazil's Supreme Court says there's enough evidence for the former right wing president Jair Bolsonaro to stand trial for allegedly plotting a coup.
Also this podcast, the dog that went missing on Australia's Kangaroo island,
she is definitely alive.
You don't get too many little dachshunds running around with pink collars on over here.
We begin in Washington with the continuing row over what some are calling Signal Gate,
in which sensitive texts discussing planned airstrikes on the Houthis in Yemen were accidentally shared on the Signal messaging app with a journalist.
The Trump administration has dismissed the revelation of the leak as a hoax and insisted the chat didn't include any classified information.
In response, the editor of the Atlantic magazine, Jeffrey Goldberg, who received the texts,
has now published the whole lot, including discussions of specific operational details.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday, for a second day,
the U.S. house Select Committee on Intelligence grilled top security officials about the leak.
The Democratic representative, Jason Crow, demanded accountability.
It is completely outrageous to me,
completely outrageous to me that administration officials come before us today with impunity,