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From Our Own Correspondent

Anxiety over Afghanistan

From Our Own Correspondent

BBC

News, News Commentary

4.41.3K Ratings

🗓️ 30 September 2021

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

More than six weeks after the Taliban announced their full takeover of the country, Afghanistan is still up against huge challenges. The economy is contracting fast, there’s a punishing drought, and many people are finding it harder to find food, even if they can afford to buy it. The news on human rights and security has been worrying. Journalists have been arrested and beaten up; women’s and girls’ right to education appears to be eroding; and former critics and enemies of the Taliban have been targeted for threats and violence. Jeremy Bowen first went to Afghanistan more than thirty years ago and reported on many cycles of its wars since then. Back in Kabul again, he reflects on the deeper tides of history.

On La Palma in the Canary Islands, the volcanic eruption that started last week is still threatening homes and lives. It’s produced a spectacular display of dramatic images. After destroying more than 700 properties, the lava has now reached the sea - which means a risk of toxic gases and dangerous projectiles. The Spanish government has declared a disaster zone and promised ten million Euros to help reconstruction and rehousing efforts. What will the eruption mean for La Palma in the long term – and how might its altered landscape change even more? Dan Johnson saw the destructive power of the Cumbre Vieja at first hand.

While it’s now clear that Chancellor Merkel’s CDU party suffered a historic defeat in Sunday’s elections in Germany, the rest of the picture is a little paradoxical. Everything looks a little more complicated than before. The smaller, newer parties have certainly gained momentum – and the old left-right divide doesn’t define voters’ world views as much as it once did. There are still regional loyalties, but also signs that other divides – of age and outlook – are emerging among voters. Are there whole new political tribes being formed? John Kampfner followed the election campaign as the opinion polls swung wildly - and ran into a few surprises along the way.

Lausanne in Switzerland, is an ancient place – first put on the map as a Roman military encampment a in the second century AD – and the Celts had a settlement there well before that. It’s also kept a good deal of its heritage restored and on show, with one of the best-preserved medieval old cities in Europe. Respect for the past isn’t just about architecture – or even tangible relics – though. There is intangible heritage too. Heidi Fuller Love recently spent a night shift with a man whose job might be described as public service broadcasting the really old-fashioned way: the nighwatchman, who cries the hours as well as looking out for danger.

And like many a British late-summer traveller, Paddy O Connell recently got back from a charming but occasionally nerve-wracking break spent motoring through France. He has a lesson to share for anyone venturing onto the roads …

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, far meets water, but this is lava from La Palma's volcano and the result is spectacular.

0:13.5

Following the German election results are rather dense of air, but we have some pointers

0:18.5

to the future.

0:20.4

History echoes down the centuries in Switzerland, with a night watchman still calling the

0:25.1

hours over the medieval roofs of Lausanne.

0:28.8

And if we dare mention going for a drive, one correspondent has advised for anyone planning

0:34.4

to take to the road in France.

0:37.4

First to Afghanistan, out of the headlines now, at more than six weeks after the Taliban

0:42.8

announced its full takeover of the country, the new government appears driven by factional

0:48.0

divisions, and not in much hurry to modify other nation's concerns.

0:53.2

Pressing stuff, journalists arrested and beaten up, women's and girls right to education

0:58.5

faster-roading, critics and enemies targeted, a contracting economy, a punishing drought,

1:05.1

and food becoming scarce, if you can afford it.

1:08.8

Outside the country, there's worry that the international community may lose its appetite

1:13.7

for any kind of involvement, not just in Afghanistan.

1:18.4

Jeremy Byrne looks at the background to this sorry tale.

1:22.4

The first time I set foot in Kabul, the Soviets, as we called them back in 1989, were about

1:27.1

to leave.

1:28.4

I watched the last Soviet aircraft take off.

1:31.7

Heavy artillery rumbled around the mountains that surround Kabul airport.

1:36.0

The Mujahideen, the fighters who defeated the Soviet army with American help, were getting

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