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From Our Own Correspondent

Serbia and Djokovic: More Than a Matter of Tennis

From Our Own Correspondent

BBC

News, News Commentary

4.41.3K Ratings

🗓️ 15 January 2022

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When Novak Djokovic landed in Melbourne, few could have imagined that his impending encounters on the tennis court would be upstaged by a legal battle, one which then prompted a row between his country and Australia. After immigration officials held the Serb player in a hotel, Djokovic’s father said his son was being “crucified”. Then Serbia’s Foreign Ministry claimed that the player had been deliberately lured to Australia in order to humiliate him, as part of a “political game.” Guy Delauney explains that the affair has touched a raw nerve in Serbia, with an importance way beyond the tennis court. While the war of words was going on between Serbia and Australia, the government of Cameroon was trying to keep everyone’s attention focused on sport, and not on politics. The country is hosting the Africa-wide football tournament, the Africa Cup of Nations, a chance for the country to shine on the international stage. Like any contest, the Cup provides an opportunity for all countries to unite and rally behind their national team. However, there is a distinct shortage of unity among some people of this West African nation. Cameroon has suffered a long-running separatist insurgency in the English-speaking part of the country, and that was where James Copnall went to watch one of the games. You might think Ukraine was used to conflict; it suffered some of the worst casualties of the Second World War, and previously lost millions to murder and starvation, as Stalin imposed communist rule on a population which often resisted it. Today, around a hundred thousand Russian troops are massed on the Ukrainian border, and when Zeinab Badawi visited the capital Kiev, she found a very different mood to what she experienced on previous trips. What have sectarian murders in Northern Ireland got in common with the dawn of democracy in Czechoslovakia, and the start of negotiations to reduce carbon dioxide emissions? The answer is that all of them were reported on by Mary Hockaday, whose career of more than three decades at the BBC has just come to an end. Her departure has left her reflecting on time, and how the world changes with it. The housing market has been rather perky this past year, so it might be a good time to sell your home, but not if you’re a princess, you don’t actually want to move out, and the property in question is a Seventeenth Century palace. Such though is the fate of one of Rome’s more unusual inhabitants, living in one of the city’s more distinctive buildings. The Villa Aurora will go under the auctioneer’s hammer next week, and is valued at more than four hundred million pounds. David Willey has been a regular visitor

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:05.0

Good morning.

0:06.3

It's often a mess when sport gets mixed with politics,

0:09.8

such as when the Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic

0:12.9

was held in a Melbourne hotel.

0:15.2

This week our correspondent in Belgrade explains

0:18.3

why this quickly became a matter

0:20.4

pitting Serbia against the Australian government.

0:24.2

Another sport, football, has been the focus

0:26.6

in Cameroon this week

0:28.2

as the country played host to the Africa Cup of Nations,

0:31.9

but our correspondent there too

0:33.6

found politics and conflict lurking

0:36.0

just below the surface.

0:38.4

It's fear of conflict that's apparent in Ukraine right now.

0:42.3

We hear how it feels to be in a country

0:44.6

which has around a hundred thousand Russian troops

0:47.4

massing on its border.

0:49.6

News comes fast, history is slow.

0:52.8

The conclusion of a veteran world affairs journalist

0:55.6

as she looks back on her career.

0:58.0

And the princess, the palace, and the pending auction,

...

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