05/07/2012
Kate Adie presents stories by Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ correspondents from less-reported places: Timbuktu, Kiev, Kinshasa, Toulouse and the Atacama Desert.
Pauline Davies in the desert where nothing lives: the Atacama in Chile. But once thousands of miners lived here. Today ghost towns are all that remain.
Andrew Harding on how the fears of those living in the Malian city of Timbuktu came to be realised when Islamist militants came to town and started to destroy their historic monuments.
Could France be about to issue an apology to Algeria for the brutal events which led up to Algerian independence fifty years ago? Philip Sweeney wonders who exactly owes whom the apology?
Of all the postings a correspondent might expect, one in the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo Kinshasa was never going to be dull! Thomas Hubert looks back on his three and a half years there.
And the dangers from Chernobyl have not come to an end yet. Patrick Evans says there's a real fear the summer heat could trigger radioactive wildfires with consequences which could be felt all over Europe.
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Broadcast
- Thu 5 Jul 2012 11:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4