4.4 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 7 December 2024
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Kate Adie presents stories from Sudan, South Korea, Kazakhstan, South Africa and Ireland.
Lyse Doucet recently gained rare access to Sudan, where she met the remarkable Mama Nour. A steely woman, orphaned in childhood, she now provides refuge for other women and children amid Sudan's ongoing civil war, which the UN has called 'the biggest humanitarian crisis in the world'.
South Korea's president sent shockwaves across the world when he declared martial law earlier this week. Jake Kwon describes the moment the president made his announcement, and the swift, decisive response from both politicians and the South Korean people to stop him in his tracks.
China's Xinjiang province is home to a huge tomato industry, which has been linked to forced labour - an allegation China denies. Still, many Uyghurs and ethnic Kazakhs have fled Xinjiang into neighbouring Kazakhstan, where Runako Celina met one woman who revealed the realitles of life in the region.
In South Africa, there’s an on-going stand-off between authorities and illegal workers living down an abandoned gold mine, southwest of Johannesburg. Security forces briefly stopped food and water from being sent down the mine, before a court ruled against them. Nomsa Maseko recalls her first time entering this hidden world.
Ireland’s elections last weekend did not prove to be a political game-changer unlike other polls this year. Michael Martin will return as Taoiseach for the second time, but scratch the surface and there’s an underlying anti-establishment sentiment, says Chris Page.
Series Producer: Serena Tarling Editor: Richard Fenton-Smith Production Coordinators: Sophie Hill & Katie Morrison
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0:00.0 | Hello. Today we're in the South Korean Capital Soul, where memories of the country's past loomed large after the president declared martial law this week. |
0:16.0 | In South Africa, our correspondent descends into the hidden underground world of the country's illegal miners. |
0:23.3 | We're in the bustling city of Almaty in Kazakhstan, where Uyghurs are living in the shadows, |
0:29.7 | having escaped detention in China's Xinjiang province. |
0:34.0 | And in Ireland, the governing coalition was returned to power this week, but the veneer of stability may be more fragile than it looks. |
0:42.3 | But first to Sudan, which the United Nations is described as the biggest humanitarian crisis in the world. |
0:49.1 | The North East African country has been gripped by a brutal civil war between the regular army and the |
0:55.1 | paramilitary rapid support forces. Both sides have been accused of war crimes. Since fighting |
1:01.7 | began in April last year, it's estimated that tens of thousands of people have been killed |
1:07.0 | and more than 11 million displaced. |
1:15.9 | Few journalists have been permitted to travel to Darfur, where much of the fighting has taken place. |
1:17.4 | But our chief international correspondent, Lee Doucette, managed to gain access by travelling |
1:22.3 | with the UN. |
1:23.6 | Her report starts in Port Sudan. |
1:26.9 | Where is my mother? Where is my father? |
1:29.9 | That's what Nur Hussein keeps asking. |
1:32.3 | She's asked it all her life. |
1:34.4 | Even now, 52 years old, with children of her own, she says she keeps asking. |
1:40.5 | The Sudanese orphan is called Mama Nur now. |
1:44.1 | She's a mother, a godsend, to more than 8,000 people so far, |
1:48.6 | who've come through her centre which shelters orphans, |
1:51.6 | as well as single women, pregnant through accident abuse, |
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