4.4 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 19 October 2023
⏱️ 28 minutes
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0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts |
0:05.4 | Today, a German far-right populist party has received a surge in support in two regional |
0:11.8 | elections, dealing a blow to the country's political status quo. Portugal plans to open |
0:18.6 | a new lithium mine to aid Europe's transition to green energy, but local farmers worried |
0:25.0 | about damage to their environment of fighting back. In Senegal, many children are sent to |
0:31.6 | live in unregulated religious schools, where they can be neglected, abused and forced |
0:37.6 | to beg. Our correspondent hears their stories. And with actors still out on the picket lines |
0:44.3 | in Los Angeles, we hear how AI voice cloning is one of the issues stalling Hollywood production. |
0:52.2 | But first to Pakistan, where the government has issued an order for illegal migrants to leave |
0:58.0 | the country by the beginning of November. This includes around 1.7 million Afghans, according |
1:05.2 | to official figures. Tensions are mounting between Islamabad and Kabul after a spate of attacks |
1:12.6 | in Pakistan, which Pakistan blames on Afghanistan-based operatives. Afghanistan's Taliban government |
1:20.5 | has repeatedly denied providing refuge for militants who target Pakistan. |
1:27.1 | Among the many caught in the middle are the nearly 2,000 Afghans who risk their lives working |
1:32.5 | with or for British armed forces and government organisations during the war in Afghanistan. |
1:39.1 | They've been promised visas by the British government that would allow them to resettle |
1:44.0 | in the UK. But many now fear they'll be forced to return to Afghanistan to an uncertain |
1:50.7 | future. Caroline Davis has been speaking to some of them. |
1:56.0 | The first time we meet, Jamal shows me his pictures, scrolling through his phone, images |
2:00.8 | of him in uniform pointing out his friends and colleagues from when he worked with the |
2:04.9 | British army as a translator during the war in Afghanistan. He's softly spoken, quick |
2:10.5 | to smile. He points, explaining where and who they are. |
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