4.4 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 5 August 2023
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts |
0:05.6 | Today we hear why thousands of young Pakistani men pay people traffickers to take them to Europe |
0:12.7 | despite the risk of drowning in the Mediterranean. What's Pakistan doing about it? |
0:18.6 | On the other hand, Romania is booming and now some of their migrants are returning home. |
0:24.7 | What's it like to be back? We go rat catching in New Zealand |
0:29.2 | where they're trying to rid the whole country of the predatory rodents who've been killing native |
0:34.5 | flightless birds. And we spare a thought for those struggling with politically correct language |
0:40.3 | in Germany, where they speak not just about doctors or prime ministers, but doctors and prime |
0:47.3 | ministers. First to Cambodia, a country that suffered more tragedy than most. They were bombed by |
0:55.0 | the Americans during the Vietnam War, had a civil war, and then for four terrible years the |
1:00.7 | genocidal Khmer Rouge regime. Another civil war lasted into the 1990s. For the last 38 years, |
1:08.7 | Cambodia has been ruled by one increasingly autocratic man, Prime Minister Hun Sen. |
1:15.4 | Last month he once again won a landslide election victory, but the only credible opposition |
1:21.1 | party had been barred from running. At the age of 71, he's planning to hand over to a new Prime |
1:27.8 | Minister next week, his son, in a dynastic arrangement reminiscent of North Korea. |
1:34.8 | Jonathan Head has just been to Cambodia and reflects on Hun Sen's remarkable longevity in power. |
1:42.5 | Around 44 years ago, a thin young man with oversized spectacles and an ill-fitting glass eye, |
1:48.6 | stepped off an old Dakota aircraft at Pnom Penh's war-battered airport. |
1:52.8 | Returning to a country which had in the words of its recently-deposed revolutionary leaders |
1:58.1 | been reset at year zero, most of Cambodia's population had been uprooted. Pnom Penh was a ghost town. |
2:06.7 | Millions were dead, millions more were refugees. These were the desperately bleak circumstances |
2:13.5 | in which Hun Sen, then just 26 years old, would start his ascent to becoming Asia's most enduring |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.