2025-10-22
58 分钟Craft matters in small ways like how a coffee is brewed and in not so small ways like how your money is cared for which is why for 160 years UBS has elevated banking to a craft tailoring unique strategies that combine human expertise with the latest technologies all happening across 24 time zones and 12 key financial hubs with you at the heart of it all UBS banking is our craft You're listening to the Globalist, first broadcast on 22 October 2025 on Monaco Radio.
The Globalist, an association with UBS.
Live from London, this is the Globalist with me, Emma Nelson.
A very warm welcome to today's programme.
Coming up, the Turkish president heads to the Gulf, but how does Rajab type Erdogan strike a balance between making the most of forging business opportunities while helping to keep the peace in Gaza?
Also ahead in the next 60 minutes.
That is the new Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Itakaichi following her appointment yesterday.
Japan has enjoyed a boost in the last 24 hours as markets jumping and renewed confidence.
Is she behind it?
Plus... I decided to go really through the minds of the kids and tell this through the drawings, through the stories of the diaries and through animation that is perfectly outlining the vision of the kids what they went through.
The director of the award-winning documentary Children in the Fire tells the globalist how he helped to tell the experiences of Ukrainian children during the war.
That's the papers from Kenya today and we'll chart the rise of the microdrama in Brazil.
That's all ahead.
I'm the Globalist, live from London.
First, a quick look at what else is happening in today's news.
Donald Trump has said he didn't want to have a wasted meeting after the White House shelved plans for a summit with Vladimir Putin.
The International Court of Justice is set to deliver a landmark opinion, examining Israel's legal obligations towards UN agencies operating in the occupied Palestinian territories.
And Lithuania suspended flights from Vilnius Airport last night for the second time this month, after dozens of smugglers' balloons were spotted in its airspace.
are being used to smuggle cigarettes from Belarus.
Stay tuned to Monaco Radio throughout the day for more on those stories.