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DocArchive: John Simpson Returns to 1989 - Part Two The BBC's World Affairs Editor John Simpson tells the story of 20 years of post-communist life.
Through personal stories, he traces the different roads that East Germany, the Czech Republic and Romania have taken since 1989.
In part two John returns to Prague to speak to those who lived through the Velvet Revolution.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | A Dollar A Day - Part ThreeIn Nepal, severe drought and unreliable monsoon rains have led to acute food shortages. The impact is felt most by people like Charuri who is struggling to feed three children and cannot afford the medical help she needs.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | The Crescent and The Cross: Part TwoOwen Bennett Jones explores five crucial battles in the relationship between Christianity and Islam. This episode looks at the Crusades.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Africa's Forgotten SoldiersSeventy years after the start of the Second World War the overwhelming impression is of a conflict fought on the battlefields of Europe by white troops. Britain’s war effort was bolstered by soldiers from the white Commonwealth – Australia, Canada and New Zealand and later by the United States. The war in the Far East is often overlooked, as is the fighting that took place in Africa. Yet one million African troops participated in the conflict, fighting their way through the jungles of B ... Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment: Better BankingAs governments struggle to curb the so-called “casino-banking” practices which some blame for the global financial meltdown, Michael Robinson now reports on growing concerns over super-fast, computerised share-dealing systems which are earning massive new profits for banks.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: A Dollar a Day - Part 2Thrown off nearby farms at the time of Namibia’s independence, the squatters of Otjivero lived a hand-to-mouth existence. Last year a scheme was established to give every inhabitant a basic cash grant of US$10 a month, to spend as they wanted. School enrolment has shot up, small businesses are springing up, and the nurse at the local clinic says malnutrition rates amongst the children have dropped.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | The Crescent and the Cross - Part OneThe Crescent and the Cross, a four-part series, presented by Owen Bennett-Jones, examines several turning points in the relationship between Christianity and Islam covering Muslim Spain, the Crusades, the Ottoman Empire and the struggle for Africa.
Part One starts by look going back over 1,000 years ago, in what we now call Spain, but was then known as al-Andalus.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Youssou N’Dour at 50To mark the 50th birthday of Youssou N'Dour, Robin Denselow travels to Senegal to profile the best known African musician of recent times.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Guinea on the BrinkMark Doyle reports from Guinea in West Africa on the harrowing events of 28 September when government troops crushed an opposition rally in the centre of the capital, Conakry. This programme contains some graphic description of sexual violence.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: A Dollar a Day - Part 1What keeps a billion people trapped in the most persistent poverty? Mike Wooldridge travels to Nicaragua to meet Justa who hoped for a better life after the Sandinista revolution.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive:The extraordinary but little-known tale of Russia's three all-female regiments that flew more than 30,000 missions on the Eastern Front. At home they were celebrated as 'Stalin's Falcons' but terrified German troops called them the 'Night Witches'.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Public Places, Private Lives - Part TwoPublic Places, Private Lives is a series of portraits of well known places that reveal the lives and stories of those people who come to a famous spot not to gaze as tourists, but for work or for their own private reasons.
The second programme is set in the Taj Mahal, where we hear the experiences of those people for whom one of the most important sites in India is part of their daily landscape.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Dying to Give BirthJill McGivering travels to Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, to meet a doctor who is battling against the odds to prevent women from dying in childbirth. Listeners may find parts of this Assignment programme distressing.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Rebranding Nigeria - Part TwoNigeria is campaigning for a new image and a new reputation in an effort to attract some much needed investment. Reporter Henry Bonsu follows the many steps of this charm offensive.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: MI6 - A Century in the Shadows - Part TreeThe head of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service Sir John Scarlett, talks for the first time about the interrogation of terrorist suspects and MI6’s role in the run-up to the war in Iraq.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Public Places, Private Lives - Part OnePublic Places, Private Lives is a series of portraits of well known places that reveal the lives and stories of those people who come to a famous spot not to gaze as tourists, but for work or for their own private reasons.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Protecting Britain's ChildrenWhen a 17 month-old London child died after horrific abuse by his family, it unleashed a barrage of criticism against British social services. For Assignment Catherine Miller gains rare access to the people whose job it is to protect Britain's vulnerable children.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Rebranding Nigeria - Part OneCan the home of 419 internet scams, corruption and voodoo ever transmit a positive image? Is changing Nigeria's image an impossible mission?Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | MI6 - A Century in the ShadowsIn Programme Two, we find out what were spies really up to behind the Iron Curtain.
MI6 chief John Scarlett describes his clandestine meeting with an agent, and the Russian defector Oleg Gordievsky talks about his reasons for coming over to the other side.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment Armenia: The cleverest nation on the planetEvery two years teams from all over the world compete with one another in the Chess Olympiad. In the last two Olympiads, the winning medal has gone to a small country in the Caucasus. How has this nation done it? Gabriel Gatehouse investigates.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: John Simpson Returns to 1989The BBC's World Affairs Editor John Simpson tells the story of 20 years of post-communist life. Through personal stories, he traces the different roads that East Germany, the Czech Republic and Romania have taken since 1989.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | MI6 - A century in the shadowsAn unprecedented look inside MI6 - Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, which marks its centenary this year.
Programme One - Gadgets & Green Ink explores the early years of MI6, set up by Sir Mansfield Cumming, a formidable figure known as 'C' who signed his name in green ink.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Memento, part twoImagine that conflict and violence force you to flee your country, leaving behind all that you know and love. In the chaos and panic, you have to choose a single object to take with you - something so full of resonance that it will always remind you of the life and people that you left behind. In the second part of Memento, we meet people who have fled to Britain.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Three Strike LifersA life sentence for stealing a pair of socks. In California the tough 'three strikes' law is sending people to prison for life even if their third crime is a non-violent one. Now a group of law students is trying to change things. Rob Walker reports.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Yiddish - a Struggle for Survival - Part OneYiddish was the language of the Jewish Diaspora, the language of a people on the move across Europe. It has suffered a dramatic decline over the last century. What will become of it now?Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | The Crash: Back from the brinkThe third part of the BBC's definitive series on the banking crash tells the extraordinary story of how politicians reacted, and asks what has been learnt from the entire calamity. Could it happen again?Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Memento, part oneImagine that conflict and violence force you to flee your country, leaving behind all that you know and love. In the chaos and panic, you have to choose a single object to take with you - something so full of resonance that it will always remind you of the life and people that you left behind.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - The Mystery of the Arctic SeaIt's straight out of the pages of a thriller novel: a cargo ship, lost without trace; pirates working the seas at the heart of Europe; whispers of arms smuggling and the scent of international conspiracy. The mysterious disappearance of a Russian-operated cargo ship off the coast of Britain in late July sparked furious speculation that's never been resolved. For Assignment, Sarah Rainsford tries to shine a light on what really happened on board the vessel, the Arctic Sea.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Desperate Dreams - Part TwoPresenter Jenny Cuffe sets out to find Fereinatu, a teenage girl who was trafficked for sex. She had returned to her impoverished home in Benin City, but she is missing once more and relatives fear she may have been sucked back into prostitution.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Chasing the Tax CheatsThis week's Assignment looks at the much-vaunted crackdown on tax havens announced by the G20 earlier this year. The drive is aimed at getting tax havens to agree to yield up information on tax cheats. But is the G-20's weapon of choice, shooting blanks? Is its approach cumbersome and ineffective in the fight to get every dollar that's owed to tax authorities? Lesley Curwen investigates.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | The Crash: The Age of RiskThe second of this three-part series that examines the boom before the bust of 2008 looks at how our attitudes to risk and debt changed with disastrous consequences.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Building out of the Recession - part twoCan we build our way out of the recession? The Empire State Building was started just weeks after the Wall Street Crash, giving Americans hope in times of depression. Jonathan Glancey, architecture correspondent for the Guardian newspaper in London, looks at the economic and social policies of the 1930s and the parallels we can find today.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Desperate Dreams - part oneTwo years ago, Jenny Cuffe followed the journeys of migrants trying to leave Africa and find a better life in Europe.
Innocent Akibor left Nigeria to get to Spain. As exploitation greets him at almost every step of his journey, listen to find out if he made his dream come true.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | The Crash: The bank that busted the worldWhat were the key moments that led to financial meltdown, and what happened in the aftermath? The first of a three-part series that looks closely at the turbulent events in the autumn of 2008.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Dog Fighting in ChicagoIf my dog is tough then I'm tough. Killer dogs give teenagers status in Chicago. For Assignment, Nina Robinson, goes right to the heart of the cruel sport of dog fighting that is attracting so many young people in the run down areas of Chicago's south side.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Building Out of the RecessionJust weeks after the Wall Street Crash in 1929, work began on the Empire State Building. The Guardian's architecture correspondent Jonathan Glancey assesses the economics of building out of a recession.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Dreams from my motherPresident Barack Obama has famously written of the influence exerted on him by his father in his memoir Dreams of My Father, but what of his mother, Ann Dunham? Listen to Judith Kampfner as she unveils more about this unconventional and idealistic woman.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Benjamin Jealous - the future of the NAACPenjamin Jealous is the leader of America's oldest and largest black civil rights group. In a USA fronted by Barack Obama, what are the future battlegrounds for African American human rights?Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | World Stories: Mexico's Missing IslandBermeja Island is missing. This strategically important island was clearly visible on maps of the Gulf of Mexico until the middle of the 20th century but it's now gone. BBC Mundo's David Cuen goes in search.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Assignment: Mastering BusinessWhat role did the business schools play in last year's financial crisis? In this week's edition of Assignment, Ed Butler investigates whether, as the chair of Harvard's MBA programme insists, the schools were guilty only of teaching a deficient assessment of risk in the business world, or whether something more fundamental was at fault. Some inside the system tell Assignment that there had been a growing disconnect between the schools and society, with insufficient attention being paid to t ... Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Citizen Journalism - Part Twon the second episode Michael Buerk visits Cairo and experience for himself how bloggers - arguably among the most hounded anywhere in the world - are taking on the Egyptian government.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Why is Africa poor? Part threeEnterprise, money, innovation are all there. Is tapping into a continent's optimism the key to Africa's future? Mark Doyles looks at the solutions to solve Africa's poverty.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | World Stories: Israel's Muslim soldiersRachid Sekkai from the BBC's Arabic Service talks to Muslims currently serving in the Israeli Defence Force and also to former soldiers and hears about the conflicts they face, at home and on duty, and the pride that military service sometimes brings them.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - China Saving's HabitColin Yu is a teacher who lives in Shanghai. He has a job but still struggles to support his parents on his modest income. Colin would like to spend more money and the Chinese government is offering incentives to people like him to go out and buy Chinese goods. They're hoping that by doing so it will help the country to survive the current global economic downturn. Average savings rates in China stand at around 30% and, as Chris Hogg discovers, most of that money is spent on healthcare. ... Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Citizen journalism - democracy or chaos?Michael Buerk analyses the potential – and the dangers – of citizen journalism. In part one, he talks to bloggers and critics from Sri Lanka, Iran, Burma, and Iraq.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Why is Africa poor? Part TwoAccusations of tribalism, corruption and complacency have all been offered as explanations to the question of Africa's poverty. Mark Doyle looks at each of these and asks why the status quo persists.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: World stories: new media in KashmirViolent footage from the Kashmir conflict has been shared almost in real-time by citizen-journalists on video sharing websites. Suvojit Bagchi tells the story of the impact of new media communication in a conflict zone.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Assignment - Mutiny in BangladeshSix months ago there was a short military revolt in Bangladesh that threatened to push the country into nationwide armed conflict. But some things remain mysterious. Why was it so brutal? Who was really behind it? What did they hope to achieve? In this week’s addition of Assignment, Mark Dummett has tracked down key participants and eyewitnesses in search of some answers.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | DocArchive: Gold - part threeNick Rankin explores how we assess the value of gold.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | |