Afghanistan: Questions, Doubts and Fears
From Our Own Correspondent
BBC
4.4 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 21 August 2021
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
It’s been a week of searing and surreal images from Afghanistan after the Taliban’s lighting takeover of Kabul. The spectacle of an official Taliban news conference, televised live from the capital on Tuesday, was proof of how just how fast events have moved. The Taliban leadership may have promised forgiveness, reconciliation and protection of women’s rights. But the mood is fearful and there are still thousands of Afghans desperate to get out of the country by any means possible. Lyse Doucet has been hearing from many of them.
As the West’s twenty-year mission to Afghanistan comes to an end, there are questions around the world about how the international intervention, and the new political structures set up after 2001, went so desperately wrong, so fast. Paul Adams has also been covering events and searching his own memories of time spent with foreign forces in the country for clues.
The latest earthquake in Haiti has inflicted more losses on a nation that’s endured plenty of them. The shocks and aftershocks last Saturday caused at least 2,200 deaths, injured more than 12,000 people and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. After the far more devastating quake back in 2010, more than 200,000 Haitians ended up living in squalid encampments in the capital, Port au Prince. This time around, the plan is to encourage survivors to stay put and rebuild, rather than run to already overburdened cities. James Clayton has been to some of the worst-affected areas in the southwest of the country.
Imagine that one ordinary day you find out that - although you feel perfectly normal - you’re officially dead. That’s the experience of a surprising number of people across India. Thousands of men and women who are very much alive are being registered as dead, often by their own relatives who are angling to inherit their property. Covid restrictions prevented Chloe Hadjimatheou from going to India to investigate in person - but she’s been on the trail of these extraordinary stories. Finding out how easily this could happen to anyone brought home to her the extraordinary power which bureaucrats can have...
The cultural history of Paris has a vivid streak of lowlife as well as high art. From Edith Piaf, the “little sparrow” belting out songs on street corners, to Gavroche, the plucky but doomed urchin of Les Miserables – there’s often a deep affection for those characters who must live by their wits on the streets. But the city’s wiles and its tricksters have caused many an unsuspecting visitor to come unstuck. Some come away with more vivid memories of time spent in police stations, embassies and travel agents, trying to untangle their misadventures, than of great meals or cultural highlights. Christine Finn’s been keeping an eye out and her wits about her ...
Producer: Polly Hope
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts |
| 0:05.2 | Today the trail of destruction left by Hatties latest earthquake and the family is still |
| 0:10.7 | camping out on top of the ruins. |
| 0:13.6 | The thousands of people in India who've been declared legally dead, though they're very |
| 0:19.0 | much alive and kicking, indeed fighting for their rights. |
| 0:23.2 | And a very different sort of guide to the streets of Paris in the company of scammers, |
| 0:28.5 | indeed thieves and con-artists. |
| 0:31.8 | First to Afghanistan. |
| 0:34.1 | It's been a week of searing and surreal images after the Taliban's lightning takeover of |
| 0:39.0 | Kabul, bearded fighters roaming through the presidential palace, seeming very at ease |
| 0:45.0 | in its formal rooms, even trying out the gym. |
| 0:48.5 | The spectacle of an official Taliban news conference televised live from the Capitol on Tuesday |
| 0:54.7 | was proof of just how fast events have moved. |
| 0:58.3 | With its fighters patrolling the streets, the movement was simply assuming control. |
| 1:04.0 | It promised forgiveness, reconciliation and protection of women's rights. |
| 1:09.5 | But the mood is fearful, and there are still thousands of Afghans desperate to get out |
| 1:14.1 | of the country by any means possible, leads to set. |
| 1:18.9 | How can you measure an immeasurable loss? |
| 1:22.2 | How can anyone make sense of anything when life is turned upside down and inside out, |
| 1:27.2 | when the identity you cherished the dreams which carried you forward are gone? |
| 1:32.7 | What if you had proudly introduced yourself for years as an Afghan human rights activist, |
| 1:38.1 | member of parliament, journalist, government advisor, university student? |
... |
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