Latest Episode
May 12 0400 UTC Brief
In Australia
A schoolboy from St Aloysius College is in critical condition after being struck by a train at North Melbourne Railway Station on Monday afternoon. Police and emergency crews say his backpack became caught between carriages, dragging him along the platform before he was freed. He was taken to the Royal Children’s Hospital with severe trauma to both lower legs, and Craigieburn line services were suspended with delays spilling onto other routes.
In tech and business
Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella testified in Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft, saying Musk never raised concerns with him about Microsoft’s OpenAI investment, even though the two have each other’s numbers. Musk argues Microsoft’s funding helped steer OpenAI away from its nonprofit roots. Nadella’s position was the usual corporate one, just with more expensive lawyers attached. He said Microsoft was a commercial partner, not a hidden controller, which is a distinction the judge may now have to sort out.
In the Middle East
Residents in southern Lebanon say they are refusing to flee again as Israeli strikes intensify. The reporting suggests a population that has already been uprooted once is now weighing danger against the exhaustion of moving again, and some are choosing to stay put despite the risk.
In U.S. politics
President Trump urged South Carolina Republicans to be “bold” and “courageous” ahead of a redistricting vote, part of a broader Republican effort to redraw maps in their favor. He also praised Tennessee Republicans after they approved a new map that could put the state’s lone House Democrat at risk. Separately, Kari Lake has been nominated as the next U.S. ambassador to Jamaica.
In Latin America
Bolivia has issued an arrest warrant for former President Evo Morales after he failed to appear in court. Morales is on trial over allegations that he fathered a child with a 15-year-old girl while in office.
In health and public safety
U.S. officials say the last passengers have been evacuated from the hantavirus-hit MV Hondius, and one American has tested positive. Eighteen Americans are being monitored for symptoms, while the World Health Organization says the public risk remains low.
Health experts say May 19 will be a key date for determining whether the virus spread beyond the ship, based on the incubation period. So far, all confirmed infections are linked to the vessel, though officials are watching passengers who disembarked earlier in Saint Helena. In France, a woman who tested positive is in serious condition after falling ill on a repatriation flight.
In the U.S.
Federal investigators have opened a case in Hawaii after a tourist from Seattle was accused of throwing a rock at Lani, an endangered Hawaiian monk seal near Lahaina on Maui. Video of the incident spread quickly online, which is usually how people discover that wildlife harassment is still, in fact, a crime.
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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
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