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Woman's Hour

Childcare, Returning to Syria, Inclusive wigs after chemo

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Personal Journals

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 10 December 2024

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A new analysis on the quality and quantity of childcare provision in England has revealed that the huge expansion of free childcare currently underway is at risk of not delivering for poorer families, according to a new report from the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) and Save the Children. Author of the report Jodie Reed and Phoebe Arslanagic-Little, Head of the New Deal for Parents at Onward, join Nuala McGovern to discuss.

People in Syria are still celebrating in the streets after Bashar al-Assad was toppled from power at the weekend. For many, the regime change is personally life-changing, especially those who fled the country and now feel like it’s safe to return home. One of those is the BBC’s very own Middle East Correspondent Lina Sinjab, who was forced to leave in 2013 after multiple arrests and threats. Now, she’s back in Damascus, working freely as a journalist for the first time in many years. She tells Nuala what that's like.

A new Spanish-language film, Sujo, examines the life of an orphan in Mexico after his father, a cartel gunman, is killed. It’s a fictional look into the real-life implications of cartel violence for people living in certain parts of Mexico, and it shows the key roles that women play in trying to help this young man move through his life. Astrid Rondero and Fernanda Valadez are the co-directors and they join Nuala to discuss it.

After going through chemotherapy for breast cancer, hairdresser Anastasia Cameron was told at a salon in Wales that they didn’t offer Afro wigs. She joins Nuala to discuss her experience and how she’s now helping other women in similar situations with her own wig business.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

In Northern Ireland, from the late 70s to the early 90s, the IRA killed over 40 alleged informers.

0:08.0

But the man who often found, tortured and sometimes killed these people on behalf of the IRA

0:12.0

was himself an informer, a secret British army agent with the codename Stakeknife.

0:18.0

Who gets to play God? And why me? Why my family?

0:21.4

When lies are still being told to this day, who do you believe?

0:25.1

I wouldn't even know where to start.

0:26.7

And I'm with the IRA.

0:28.5

Steakknife.

0:29.7

Listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:33.5

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:38.1

Hello, this is Newell McGovern, and you're listening to The Woman's Hour podcast.

0:43.0

Hello and welcome to the programme.

0:44.9

Well, you'll hear from the BBC correspondent, Lena Sinjab in just a moment.

0:48.7

She has gone home to Damascus and is reporting from Syria freely for the first time in over a decade.

0:55.2

She brings us to the streets.

0:57.1

Also today, a report into childcare that found two-thirds of England's poorest families miss out on childcare.

1:03.6

It also predicts that there will be no childminders by 2030 if the current rate of attrition continues.

1:11.5

We also today want to talk about a heartbreaking and very beautiful film out of Mexico.

1:16.5

The two co-directors will be with us.

1:18.2

They show the fallout for society from drug cartels and the communities that it creates void of adult men.

1:27.4

Also, one of my guests today helped create a solution when she discovered there was a lack

1:32.8

of Afro wigs when she was going through cancer treatment.

...

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