Latest Episode
June 5 0000 UTC Brief
In South Korea and regional diplomacy
South Korea’s election watchdog says it will investigate an unprecedented shortage of ballot papers that delayed formal confirmation of Seoul’s mayoral result, even after Oh Se-hoon’s comeback win secured him a fifth term. That result also leaves him better placed as a possible presidential contender, which is a useful reminder that elections can end and still not quite be over.
Separately, South Korean Unification Minister Chung Dong-young has proposed reviving four-way talks involving North Korea, the United States and China, while Egypt’s foreign minister said dialogue, not military pressure, is the only viable path on North Korea’s nuclear issue. The diplomatic appetite is there, which is more than can be said for the actual negotiations.
In Britain
A parliamentary spending watchdog says control of the asylum system is “all but lost,” warning that the Home Office cannot show it is properly managing accommodation and does not know the whereabouts of some failed asylum seekers. MPs want a full overhaul, clearer deportation timeframes, and a plan to tackle illegal working, along with the employers who keep hiring it.
In a separate review, a public spending watchdog is also examining property arrangements involving royals, including Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, with questions around Royal Lodge cottages and subletting.
In security and infrastructure
Australia, the UK and the US have announced new steps to protect undersea cables and pipelines from sabotage, including autonomous submarine drones and stronger reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare. The move reflects just how exposed those networks have become, since undersea cables carry more than 95 percent of the world’s intercontinental telecom data and an increasing share of electricity.
In health and public safety
A parliamentary and health service ombudsman report says a five-year-old girl was left bleeding, in severe pain, and traumatized after a physician associate at a GP practice in the East Midlands wrongly prescribed a vaginal pessary. The report says there were multiple failures in her care after she was seen for itching and vaginal discharge, which is as grim as it sounds.
In brief
The family of American college student James Weston Higginbotham is asking for public help after he went missing in Japan, and a Rhode Island judge has temporarily barred a YouTuber from trespassing at the Burrillville home known as “The Conjuring” house.
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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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