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From Our Own Correspondent

The Amazon’s record forest fires

From Our Own Correspondent

BBC

News, News Commentary

4.41.3K Ratings

🗓️ 12 October 2024

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kate Adie introduces stories from Brazil, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Singapore, Oman and Vietnam.

The Amazon rain forest in Brazil has suffered its worst fires in two decades, with most started illegally by humans looking to exploit the land for its resources. The world relies on the Amazon to absorb a lot of its carbon, but these fires mean it is now emitting record amounts itself. Ione Wells has been in Brazil’s west.

The Democratic Republic of Congo is one of the world’s most biodiverse countries, though decades of war and deforestation have led to the degradation of the environment. But a group of scientists is trying to revitalise a forgotten reserve in Haut-Katanga province. Hugh Kinsella Cunningham travelled with them to the Upemba National Park.

Singapore has a zero-tolerance policy on illegal drugs, and is one of only a few countries that continues to execute people convicted of drug trafficking. For those caught using illicit narcotics, the punishments can also be severe. Linda Pressly met recovering addicts undergoing compulsory treatment in a state-run rehab centre.

Oman is growing in popularity as a tourist destination, though the oil-rich sultanate is focusing on its ancient heritage, rather than the hi-tech desert cities of its neighbours. This travel boom is also providing opportunities for women entrepreneurs hoping to break cultural barriers, as Sophia Smith Galer discovered in the Salalah region.

And we travel to Vietnam where William Lee Adams embarked on a personal mission while filming a travel documentary - to lay his elder brother's ashes to rest at his family's temple in Ho Chi Minh City.

Series producer: Serena Tarling Production coordinators: Sophie Hill & Katie Morrison Editor: Richard Fenton-Smith

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts.

0:04.7

Hello.

0:05.7

Today, deep in the Democratic Republic of Congo, we travel to an abandoned national park

0:11.8

that conservationists are trying to revitalise.

0:15.6

Singapore is known for its zero tolerance approach to illicit drugs and we pay a visit

0:21.2

to its Tough Love Rehab Centre. and we meet the women entrepreneurs challenging traditions as they take tourists on a trek into the mountains.

0:31.0

And in Vietnam our correspondent reflects on a catalyst for a journey he had long delayed.

0:43.0

First to Brazil, where the Amazon rainforest has seen its worst fires in two decades,

0:50.0

most of them believed to be man-made.

0:52.0

More than 24,000 square miles have burned this year already,

0:56.4

a quarter the size of the UK. The Amazon is a vital frontier in the fight against climate change, absorbing a significant portion of the world's carbon

1:06.3

emissions.

1:07.7

As a result of the scale of these fires, it's now contributing to global emissions too. And although deforestation has slowed in recent years,

1:17.0

some land is still vulnerable to land grabs and lawlessness is still rife.

1:22.0

Irony Wells has been in Brazil's west.

1:25.0

When you picture the rainforest, you probably imagine thick green canopies,

1:30.0

the bulging buttress roots of school geography lessons and abundant wildlife.

1:35.0

But this area on the border of the Amazonas and Hondonia states in Brazil,

1:40.0

at the very heart of the Amazon rainforest looks nothing like that.

1:43.4

When I flew over it in a rickety plane the size of a canoe,

1:46.8

the impact of the Amazon's worst forest fires in two decades was laid bare.

1:51.2

There are parts where huge expanses of flat scorched land are all the eyes can see.

...

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