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Asia-specific.
Coming soon with me, Marika Oi.
You're listening to the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
Hello, I'm Oliver Conway.
We're recording this at 16 hours GMT on Monday, the 17th of November.
The ousted Bangladeshi Prime Minister,
Sheikh Hasina is sentenced to death over the killings during last year's uprising.
The UN humanitarian chief calls for aid workers and investigators to be allowed urgent access to the devastated Sudanese city of El Fasha and a U-turn from President Trump on the Epstein files.
Also in the podcast.
This is a room where my whole family was killed.
Even though it's painful for me to come to this house,
I insist on coming here to remember my siblings, my parents and the life we used to live.
A BBC investigation raises doubts about the trial of Americans accused of killing Iraqi civilians two decades ago.
Accords in Bangladesh have sentenced the former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to death.
She was found guilty of crimes against humanity over the killing of hundreds of people during the uprising against her last year.
She was tried in absentia after fleeing to India and called the verdict biased and politically motivated.
As the judge announced the death penalty,
there were cheers inside the court in the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka.
We have decided to inflict her with only one sentence.