
CIA director denies air strike chat leak was major mistake
President Trump is facing calls to remove his senior security officials over the mistake
President Trump and his intelligence chiefs have tried to play down a mistake in which a journalist was invited onto a messaging group where he saw plans for US airstrikes in Yemen. We discuss the fallout from the group chat with our senior North American reporter Anthony Zurcher. And the BBC's Technology Correspondent Graham Frazer explains how the messaging app Signal is normally used.
Shoppers across Sweden have been boycotting large supermarket chains, amidst a social media campaign against the rising cost of food. We speak to people involved in Sweden's supermarket boycott movement.
It's the seventh night of demonstrations in Turkey - which have grown into the largest the country has seen in more than a decade. More than 1400 people have been arrested, including journalists. We are joined by three Turkish journalists covering the protests in Istanbul.
We speak to the BBC's Cyber Security correspondent Joe Tidy who has been to a remote Zambian mine on the Zambezi river to see a cryptocurrency project in action.
Presenter: Joe Tidy.
(Photo: CIA Director John Ratcliffe testifies before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on worldwide threats, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 25, 2025. Credit: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
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- Tue 25 Mar 202517:06GMTBBC World Service




