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Economist Podcasts

Peace-meal: ceasefire in Afghanistan

Economist Podcasts

The Economist

News & Politics, News

4.35K Ratings

🗓️ 24 February 2020

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For now, a “reduction in violence” is holding, and a long-awaited agreement hangs in the balance. But can the Taliban and the country’s government engineer a lasting peace? Brazil’s surfers dominate the sport, but perhaps not for long. And the mismatch between teens’ job desires and their prospects.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the Intelligence on Economist Radio.

0:07.3

I'm your host, Jason Palmer.

0:09.4

Every weekday, we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

0:17.4

Sports fans are getting ever more on board with surfing.

0:24.7

In Tokyo this summer, it'll be part of the Olympics for the first time.

0:33.0

Brazil's surfers have become some of the best, but perhaps not for long. At the grassroots level, the sport is slowly suffering.

0:38.3

And when you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up, and how different were your options when you actually got into the workforce?

0:42.3

Today's teens are facing an even starker divide between what's desirable and what's available.

0:48.3

First up, though.

0:57.0

In Afghanistan this week, there's a rare feeling of hope,

1:05.0

hope that the relative peace that took hold over the weekend might be lasting.

1:10.0

Talks between America and the Taliban seem to be

1:12.5

heading toward a peace deal. Psychologically, economically, social life, everything is destroyed.

1:19.2

Mahmoud Marhoon, a lecturer at Kabul University, says that even modest success would be significant

1:24.6

for Afghans. Now people are hoping if Taliban peace make 10% of change, that will big change in their life.

1:32.6

Before the signing of the deal, slated for later this week, both sides signed up to a reduction

1:37.6

in hostilities, short of a truce proper.

1:41.1

For America, an eventual deal would bring thousands of troops home and spell an end to the

1:46.1

country's longest war. Yesterday, President Donald Trump sounded a hopeful note.

1:53.7

There's much to work out yet, not least because Afghanistan's government hasn't been part of the

1:58.6

negotiations. And it's not even clear who in Kabul is in charge.

2:03.3

In any case, the first step is a bit of trust-building.

...

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