Sleepless in Seoul: South Korea’s Exhausted Workforce
From Our Own Correspondent
BBC
4.4 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 4 December 2021
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
This year's surprise international television success is the dystopian South Korean series, Squid Game, which imagines people competing in a series of ever more violent contests, hundreds dying along the way. The show is a shameless satire on the cut-throat competitiveness of ordinary South Korean life; some characters explicitly state they are taking part in the tournament because it is no worse than how they were living anyway. When Chloe Hadjimatheou went to South Korea recently, she could see what the programme’s creators were getting at.
It is not just the death toll in Ethiopia that is so disturbing but also the manner by which many people are dying: civilians have been murdered in ethnically-based violence, while others have starved. Both sides have accused the other of committing atrocities, while denying any carried out by their own people. This war-of-words is being played out on social media with just as much fervour as the physical war on the ground. Our correspondent, Andrew Harding, found himself caught in the middle.
Negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme were never going to be easy, but the two sides cannot even agree how to start. China, Russia, the UK and US are among those with teams in Vienna, hoping to persuade Iran to stop what they believe is an attempt to develop nuclear weapons. That would mean they cease enriching uranium towards the level required to make a warhead or bomb. However, the Iranians don't want to discuss this until sanctions imposed on their country are lifted. James Landale warns this presents a serious challenge to the chances of a deal being reached.
Nobody is sure who first came up with the suggestion that one could “See Naples and die.” Nor is it even clear whether that counts as a recommendation or a warning. But if the quote caught on, that is perhaps because it sums up the dark associations many have with the biggest city in Italy’s deep south: less economically developed than its northern counterparts, and affected by all kinds of travails, from earthquakes to mafia violence. The neighbourhood of Sanita is among the city's most deprived, but locals have used a famous church there as the centre for a whole series of regeneration programmes. Mark Stratton was shown around.
There are still question marks over how Christmas will be celebrated this year – whether new restrictions might need to be imposed, because of the Omicron variant of the Coronavirus, or even a lockdown. In some countries though, it was already clear long ago that the Christmas period would provide little opportunity for celebrating. In Venezuela, three quarters of the population are now living in extreme poverty, living on less than two pounds a day. Yet as Katy Watson explains, Venezuelans do really like Christmas, and are making greats effort to mark the festive season, even with their circumstances so straitened.
Transcript
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| 0:42.9 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts. Good morning. Today we hear about the war in Ethiopia, |
| 0:51.1 | not the fighting on the ground, but the bitter social media war to decide who gets their side of the |
| 0:57.4 | story told. It's with the aim of a virting war that Iran has met with other countries in Vienna this |
| 1:04.4 | week to discuss its alleged nuclear programme, can they pull off a deal? There's a trip into the |
| 1:11.3 | catacombs of a celebrated church in Naples where a saint's blood is supposed to liquefy each year, |
| 1:18.3 | though it's a modern day miracle of social transformation that our correspondent went to see. |
| 1:24.1 | And Christmas preparations in Venezuela, the decorative lights are in place, just not enough |
| 1:30.4 | electricity to keep them lit. But first, would you take a serious risk of being killed, |
| 1:37.3 | just to get your hands on some cash? What if it was a vast amount of money enough to pay off |
| 1:43.4 | a severe debt or to settle a close relative's hospital bill? Some of you will already have |
| 1:49.3 | recognised this as the premise behind the hugely successful television series, Squid Game. |
| 1:56.2 | Made in South Korea, it imagines people competing in a series of ever more violent contests, |
| 2:02.8 | hundreds dying along the way. But the key point here is that all have chosen to compete. |
| 2:09.2 | Many of them feel that ordinary life in South Korea is so tough and full of cutthroat |
| 2:14.2 | competition that taking part in this deadly tournament is no worse. A female contestant has to |
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