Two sisters are being given early release from prison on the condition that to the other. The sisters are serving life in prison in Mississippi for armed robbery. Gladys and Jamie Scott have already served 16 years of their sentences.
Mississippi Governor has agreed to suspend their sentences because of Jamie Scott's poor health. In a statement on Thursday Governor Barbour said:
The Mississippi Department of Corrections believes the sisters no longer pose a threat to society. Their incarceration is no longer necessary for public safety or rehabilitation, and Jamie Scott's medical condition creates a substantial cost to the State of Mississippi. . . . Gladys Scott's release is conditioned on her donating one of her kidneys to her sister, a procedure which should be scheduled with urgency.
But his decision has not been welcomed by everyone.
Several of Pakistan's biggest cities have been heavily disrupted by strikes that oppose proposed changes to the country's blasphemy laws. We discussed the laws recently on WHYS because of the case of a Pakistani Christian woman, Asia Bibi, who's been sentenced to death for blasphemy.
The changes, which are not backed by the government, want to get rid of the death sentence and introduce other measures aimed at reducing miscarriages of justice. That this is being opposed is seen as evidence by some that Pakistanis have no appetite for 'modernisation'.
Youssoufou Bamba has said there had been large scale violation of human rights as a result of the ongoing political unrest, stemming from the refusal of Laurent Gbagbo to step down despite his rival, Alassane Ouattara, being internationally accepted as the winner of the presidential election.
Bamba is an appointment by Ouattara, so clearly his words may not come from an entirely neutral perspective. Nevertheless, these are clearly worrying times for Ivorians. The number of deaths attributed to the crisis was already in the hundreds last week.
Should the worst happen, it will likely trigger a stream of people desperate to flee into Ivory Coast's neighbours - Liberia, Guinea, Mali, Burkina Faso and Ghana - and perhaps even further afield.
The Red Cross and Red Crescent have already launched a million-dollar appeal to help neighbouring countries cope with the influx.
If you're in the region, what would your reaction be? Is there any chance of averting genocide in Ivory Coast? How should other West African countries be responding? How can they help? And what should the UN be doing?
Ben Sutherland| 10:01 UK time, Thursday, 30 December 2010
A report by the group suggests deaths in the country from violence have fallen to their lowest level since 2003, when the US-led invasion of the country began.
The report suggests deaths dropped by 15% from 2009, to just under 4,000.
On average, two bombs explode each day in the country, each killing four people. The reports says this is the "impassable minimum", with civilians likely to be killed at similar rates for years to come.
So is this the best Iraqis can hope for? Priyam on our Facebook page thinks not:
The tragedy of the situation is that even if 2 bombs explode everyday, it is taken for granted for places like Iraq and Afghanistan. Would we react the same way had it been some other country?
And is critical of the way the report is itself being reported:
bbcnews is so biased. Iraq body count shows fall in civilian deaths. Why not '10 civilians a day still being killed'? Never reported before
But there's equal criticism from on his blog, who describes criticism as "politically expedient memory loss" and says this number of deaths is nothing compared to those killed when Saddam Hussein was in charge:
That 108,000 over seven years equates to less than HALF the average number of killings committed in any one year by Hussein's regime & the 2010 figures are less than ons sixth of that.
What do you think? Are the figures something to applaud, or to be ashamed of?
Ben Sutherland| 10:14 UK time, Wednesday, 29 December 2010
He's only the Prime Minister in a Presidential system of government. But it's Vladimir Putin that people look to when assessing who's in charge in Russia.
Few global observers look to Dmitry Medvedev when discussing who's in charge in Russia. Indeed, Wikileaks recently revealed that US diplomats consider Putin the "alpha male", while Medvedev is "hesitant".
And in the wake of a second conviction of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the Russian business leader and jailed opponent of Putin, people are asking whether Putin isn't just a little too powerful.
puts it:
Mikhail Khodorkovsky is a man who irritates Putin. He had the nerve to support politicians who opposed the election of then president Putin Naturally, anyone who tells the emperor there are no clothes on his body is subject to either being killed or sent to jail.
And in the Russian daily newspaper , the president of the Institute of Modern Politics, Vladimir Lysenko, said the verdict was a "victory" for Putin.
Dan Damon| 08:38 UK time, Wednesday, 29 December 2010
Hi, this is Dan with Newshour today.
The campaign group Sense About Science says that this year there has been a big rise in dubious theories about how the body works.
Cheryl Cole told the world about her and how it gave her extra energy.
Singer and actress Olivia Newton-John says that she takes digestive enzymes and plant tonics to boost her immune system.
Other unusual ideas about boosting bodily functions have prompted strange diets, from Naomi Campbell's maple syrup, lemon and pepper regime to Girls Aloud's Sarah Harding sprinkling charcoal over her meals.
Sense About Science says there's the body does it naturally, and there are no shortcuts to good food and enough exercise.
Have you tried a 'celebrity diet?' How did you get on?
Hi, this is Ros updating Dan's earlier post. I don;t think many of you saw this story coming. Sir Elton (along with his partner, David Furnish) have a son born to a surrogate mother in California on Christmas Day, and there are three things being talked through online.
1) Should a gay couple be allowed to have a surrogate child?
2) Is Elton too old to become a dad?
3) The merits of the name Zachary Jackson Levon Furnish-John. (As a man wth a woman's name, I'm passing no comment...)
There's also some concern about the level of scrutiny young Zacharia will live with.
Are any or all of these issues worthy of consideration, or should we just raise a glass to Elton and his partner, and let them get on with bringing the boy up.
Firstly, he says that NGOs helping with the aid effort need to consult more and take instruction more. 'I need to have control over what they do in my country,' is the quote.
听...That white, fluffy, magical stuff is up to mischief again.
When heavy snow hit Northern Europe only last week, the world听wondered why听 Moscow and Chicago could manage tough weather and why听London and Paris couldn't.听But even they haven't been spared.
, snow storms are forcing airlines to cancel thousands of flights and causing some places to declare a state of emergency.
Julie in Atlanta posts on our Facebook wall,
'I live in Atlanta where we had our first white Christmas in 128 years. We got a little over an inch of snow. Normally our winters are mild and if get winter weather like that, it does not come all in one month.'
For those who celebrate it around the world, Christmas is usually a time to head home to the family and gather together.
However, for some - namely the homeless - that is just not possible.
The Christmas Eve edition of World Have Your Say will be live from the Centrepoint homeless hostel in central London.
Centrepoint was set up in 1969 by , who wanted to "do something for people who were vulnerable and not yet into drugs or prostitution." It has since helped .
We'll be talking to residents there about what's happened in their lives to result in them being homeless at this time, and how they are hoping to rebuild their lives.
"This is the most significant arms control agreement in nearly two decades and it will make us safer and reduce our nuclear arsenals along with Russia"
They were President Obama's words referring to the New Start treaty was approved by 71 votes to 26 in the US Senate. Russia says it may begin ratifying it on Friday.
Under the deal, Russia and the US will cut deployed nuclear warheads by 30% and establish a new system for monitoring and verification. Here's exactly how it differs from previous treaties.
As significant as this treaty is, many people say it's what it between Russia and the US which is more important. After a period of strained relations is this what will help
Update from Ros: We're inviting people we know that you want to speak to...
2011 is a big year for African politics. Next year nearly twenty nations across the continent will hold national elections, probably the most since the independence era.
So you can understand why many have been watching the events unfolding in Ivory Coast. has said this is the World vs Gbagbo in an African test case.
With numerous International and African bodies going up against a steadfast incumbent the outcome in Ivory Coast will surely send a message to the rest of continents leaders ahead of so many important elections.
Today the UN is of a real risk of civil war in the country, they say Mr Gbabgo is recruiting Liberian mercenaries in preparation of violence. The Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has also accused Mr Gbabgo of blockading the country鈥檚 UN mission warning that 鈥渁ttempting to starve them into submission will not be tolerated.鈥
- We've the UN spokesperson in Ivory Coast to respond to your points.
- We'll have at least one expert on Ivory Coast to answer any questions you have about the country and its politics.
- We're inviting spokespeople for both Laurent Gbagbo and Alassane Ouattara to respond to your points (though neither have confirmed yet...).
Ros Atkins| 13:14 UK time, Tuesday, 21 December 2010
No is his short answer. He's given his first face-to-face interview since being released on bail in the UK. You can hear the whole interview with the 大象传媒's John Humphrys's , and this is the news story off the back of it.
In the interview Mr. Assange outlines why he will not voluntarily go to Sweden to speak with the authorities. We're going to discuss if his reasoning is sound.
It's also relevant to read as detailed in police documents leaked to The Guardian newspaper.
Tell us if you believe Julian Assange should travel to Sweden voluntarily and the reasons behind your answer.
Ian Brimacombe| 12:55 UK time, Tuesday, 21 December 2010
听
Austerity means something real to many people around the world at this time of holidays.
Recession, high debt and cutbacks in government welfare projects have led to fears that the number of people forced to give up their homes and live in temporary accommodation or even on the streets will rise.
Ben Allen| 12:46 UK time, Tuesday, 21 December 2010
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鈥淚t鈥檚 like the Hotel California, you can check out but you can鈥檛 leave.鈥 A reference to the classic Eagles track and also the words that Mark, the editor and boss of WHYS, wrote in my leaving card when I departed the programme in 2006. Unsurprisingly I鈥檓 back. It鈥檚 a special programme to work on and it鈥檚 great to be a full time fixture on the show again.
I鈥檓 something of a rarity at the 大象传媒, I鈥檓 a local. I grew up a couple of miles from Television Centre, the corporation鈥檚 London HQ. When I was a boy I used to play football in the park underneath the building鈥檚 main studios, never in a million years did I think I鈥檇 end up working here.
Like most people on WHYS I鈥檝e worked on other World Service programmes and also at the 大象传媒鈥檚 domestic radio station 5Live. Aside from all the donuts in the office one of the best things about working here is the amount of travel. Meeting listeners in far flung cities is such a pleasure. My most memorable trips are Mexico City during the swine flu outbreak, Denmark to interview the Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, the World Cup 2010 in Soweto and recently Sierra Leone.
A Few things you need to know about me鈥.
---Outside of work I spend as much time as my ankles will stand playing football. I鈥檓 what you might call a good old fashioned centre back 鈥 big and brusing - most of the time I don鈥檛 play football, I just stop other people from playing it.
--I like a tune and spend a lot of time listening to new music and going to gigs. Best gig ever? Possibly Arctic Monkeys at Benicassim in Spain?
--I have a huge sweet tooth, particularly when tired. You鈥檒l know when I鈥檓 flagging because I鈥檒l be chomping my way though a bag of fizzy cola bottles.
---I enjoy photography. I took many of the pictures on our Flickr stream in Mexico, South Africa and Sierra Leone. It鈥檚 amazing what photoshop can do.
Ben James| 09:23 UK time, Tuesday, 21 December 2010
听
听
听
As thousands of people spend another day 听- Frankfurt and London Heathrow - thanks to snow and ice grounding planes, there's a common thread to much of the comment:
We need to be better prepared ...听听The attitude of uncertainty cannot last, and it is a time for the authorities to be ready for the worst that each winter might bring.
This blog post was written by Anna Chapman and posted by me.
Snow is falling, all around. Well, it certainly is all over Europe - and nowhere is it doing so with more impact than the UK.
The busiest airport in Europe, Heathrow near London, is all but closed. Flights from Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Brussels and Paris airports have all suffered mass cancellations.
Indeed, the Daily Telegraph describes Heathrow as a "refugee camp." They spoke to Mr Garrels who :
We had -3C here yesterday and four inches of snow. In Helsinki it was -25C and they have almost a metre of snow on the ground. Yet there were no delays there.
One of the major stories of 2010 has been the real rise in tensions in the Korean peninsula - from the back in March to the North's shelling of the island of Yeonpyeong last month.
Now there is the sound of warfare on that disputed island again - this time the weapons being fired by troops from the South, taking part in live-fire exercises there.
The government in the South has been under huge pressure domestically to respond to the attack from the North last month, and this exercise has been seen in that context - the US envoy to the UN, Susan Rice, saying the drills were "fully consistent with South Korea's legal right to self defence".
But is the South as much to blame for the tensions - and ultimately the threat of war - as the North?
Chloe Tilley| 19:00 UK time, Thursday, 16 December 2010
They've been labelled the WikiLeaks hackers. A group of activists who've attacked the websites of companies they accuse of colluding with governments to censor WikiLeaks. Now members of "Anonymous" are coming onto World Have Your Say to take your questions, after so many of you got in touch asking to speak with them. On Friday's show we'll be live at the house of one member, Hamster.
Last week the group took down various websites including VISA, Mastercard and Paypal after these corporations stopped processing payments to WikiLeaks. for eleven hours on Tuesday night. It's been reported today Anonymous are also using posters and bombarding fax machines to continue their campaign.
This means Ireland is likely to have to change its laws regarding abortion, with the government potentially having to allow access to abortion for women whose lives are at risk - something the women's lawyers had argued was not the case in Ireland in reality.
The ruling opens up a huge debate about where sovereignty lies - and whether it matters.
Ros Atkins| 18:00 UK time, Wednesday, 15 December 2010
This topic was discussed on World Have Your Say on 15 December 2010. Listen to the programme.
The International Criminal Court has accused six high-profile Kenyans of being behind the violence that led to 1,200 deaths. Several questions are arising. We'll be live in Kibera (on the outskirts of Nairobi) to hear reaction from people there. How would you answer the questions below?
Ros Atkins| 14:48 UK time, Wednesday, 15 December 2010
Ghana is producing its first commercial oil. If you live in a country that already has an oil industry, what advice would offer Ghanaians? And if you're in Ghana, how do you think oil will change your country? Maybe, more to the point how would you like it change your country?
Sarah Holmes| 09:32 UK time, Wednesday, 15 December 2010
At least 27 people have died after a boat carrying asylum seekers crashed into rocks off the coast of Australia's Christmas Island.
Local people said they first knew what was happening when they heard the screams of those who had been thrown into the water. One eye witness told Australia's ABC radio what it was like.
People were running round with life jackets, trying to compile as many life jackets as we could. But it was pointless, because the wind would just blow them back in your face. I've only just realised that the boat's broken up and people are in the water. I saw children on that boat. I saw children screaming... Screaming. And I can hear children, screaming.
Nuala McGovern| 12:23 UK time, Tuesday, 14 December 2010
Prominent sports journalist , calling homophobia in football 'the ugly prejudice that casts a shadow over the beautiful game'.
Williams sees football as 'out of step with the real world' when it comes to homosexuality and he thinks it matters because听'the special prominence of football in global culture gives it an unusual degree of influence' silencing players and allowing institutionalised homophobia to continue.
Now there is another football story in the news today. Thousands of you, all over the听globe are听tweeting about听the comments of Fifa president Sepp Blatter.
Blatter has apparently joked that gay fans travelling to the 2022 World Cup in Qatar should "refrain from any sexual activities."
On our you have been paying your respects, sharing your memories, positive and negative. You are also asking about the future now for Afghanistan. Mr Holbrooke was best-known for helping to broker the Dayton Peace agreement in 1995 which ended the Bosnian war. His spanned almost 50 years.
Here's a little of what you have been posting, please continue to post below:
Eric in California posts
Holbrooke: a man that actually brought a bit of peace to the world, there are few that can claim that.
Kamran in Holland emailed
Finally one of the designers of American aggressive foreign policy is gone. Nicknamed "fox of Balkans" he was now busy to disintegrate Afghanistan. It seemed preposterous he was asking the head of a corrupt Afghan government which was created by America to behave properly.
Nuala McGovern| 08:38 UK time, Tuesday, 14 December 2010
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UPDATE: Mr. Berlusconi is staying. He won the 2 votes of confidence, scraping by with a 3 vote majority in the lower house. Some Italians have took to the streets.听 Read more from Gavin Hewitt here.
Italians have dubbed it B-day. Just a few minutes ago, Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi听won the听first confidence vote test in the Senate but must now face a second confidence vote in the lower house, the Chamber of Deputies.
大象传媒's Gavin Hewitt explains:
A no-confidence vote in the Chamber of Deputies, however, will be much closer.The word is that it may come down to one vote. It's that close. If Berlusconi were to lose he would have to resign.
suggest it was carried out by an Iraqi Muslim extremist, Taimour Abdulwahab al-Abdaly, who was based in the British town of Luton.
It is the first time a suicide bomber has struck the country, and the first terror attack there of any kind since the 1970s - although there have been attacks on leading figures since then, such as the 1986 assassination of the prime minister or the 2003 stabbing of foreign minister Anna Lindh.
Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt on Sunday said the attack was "unacceptable" but urged Swedes not to jump to "premature conclusions" that "create tension which paints pictures that are then difficult to change."
"Sweden is an open society... which has stated a wish that people should be able to have different backgrounds, believe in different in gods, and live side by side."
But is that possible?
Reports are now suggesting that one of the motivations for the attack was a Swedish cartoon that depicted Islam's prophet Muhammad as a dog.
And of the Swedish Defence Research Agency has said Sweden has the same problems to contend with around radicalisation as anywhere else:
"The whole idea is that this is a global war for them and that the target exists everywhere, all over the world."
Does what happened in Sweden show that even countries famed for tolerance cannot expect to be safe? Why has Sweden been attacked now? What's your reaction to what has happened?
Three months on from being at the centre of global attention with his threats to burn the Koran on 11 September, Pastor Terry Jones is back in the news.
This time, it's because he's accepted an invitation by the to speak at a rally in Luton next year. (By coincidence, Luton was the home of the suicide bomber who this weekend attacked the Swedish capital Stockholm.)
Pastor Jones' explains why he wants to visit the UK:
During the protest, Dr Terry Jones will speak against the evils and destructiveness of Islam in support of the continued fight against the Islamification of England and Europe.
Mark Sandell| 19:00 UK time, Friday, 10 December 2010
I asked to post here on an issue that not only is alive online but also goes to the heart of what we're trying to do on World Have Your Say.
In the interests of transparency i should say that Bill worked in various roles in 大象传媒 News from 1973 to 2008, including and was once my boss at 5 Live. Here's his piece...
Worried....
This is not a thesis, a forecast or a warning - more of an anxiety.
Sitting at a computer screen in the UK this week, there are threads emerging from the way "social media" is being used that worry me.
The "old" politicians are still trying to get to grips with these new forms of communication, after Barack Obama's embracing of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube in his presidential campaign. He still has 6m followers, though nowadays the tweets have the feel of a White House machine, rather than the genuine Obama fingers.
What I'm worried about is an increasing sense that online campaigns and individuals outside our parliamentary system feel they have now a "democratic" position above and beyond the paper processes that produce elected governments and their trappings.
Since Liu Xiaobo was announced as the winner of the Nobel peace prize in October China has barely been able to contain its . Officials in the country have labelled the award an 鈥渙bscenity鈥 and have openly warned against diplomats going to Oslo.
According to Beijing any countries attending the ceremony are 鈥渃lowns鈥, warning they鈥檒l face 鈥渟erious consequences鈥 if they turn up. These threats haven't gone unnoticed, a third of countries invited are staying away.
Russia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Afghanistan are just a few countries that have declined invitations. Publicly many of them haven鈥檛 given a reason for staying away but clearly they鈥檙e worried about repercussions.
Many in the west have labelled China鈥檚 approach nothing more than . Are they right? Is this the best way to pressure China?听How important is it to stand up to China?听Will the peace prize change anything?
Whether it's high-level in deciding the destination of the world's biggest football event or , it seems more palms are being greased and more backs are being scratched worldwide.
On Wednesday a judge in the US state of Louisiana was impeached for taking bribes; earlier this year Ivory Coast's chamber of commerce said unofficial payments to the police were costing the country $300m.
But how bad is the problem where you are? World Have Your Say is going to be looking at the problem today in two special programmes - on TV at 1530 GMT and the usual radio programme at 1800 GMT.
Xavier Zapata| 09:58 UK time, Wednesday, 8 December 2010
This topic was discussed on World Have Your Say on 08 December 2010. Listen to the programme.
It's groundhog day. Once again the media is drenched in Wikileaks. And beyond Julian Assange's , and the ever flowing torrents of , there's a lot of talk about what this means for the way governments share, and withhold, information. So is the world better off without secrets?
Xavier Zapata| 09:56 UK time, Tuesday, 7 December 2010
听
This topic was discussed on World Have Your Say on 07 December 2010. Listen to the programme.
This man, with his shock of ghostly white hair, has been drifting in and out of the public sphere with an uncanny persistence.
Love him or hate him, the founder of Wikileaks is everywhere - and has been particularly so for the past nine days since the secret US cables started to be released.
His name, and assessments of the effects of his work, are all over blogs and social media.
And opinions are divided. As you'll see further down this blog.
Today, he's making headline news听after being by British Police, after a warrant from Sweden for Mr Assange's arrest was issued in connection with alleged sex crimes. He's听since been remanded in custody after being refused bail, following a court appearance.
Now, we don't want to get into the legal case against Mr Assange. The exact specifics of what he has been accused of are not the point of our discussion today.
But with all eyes听on him, what do you make of one of the world's most talked about men and the job he's doing?
From today, we're going to be making a few changes to what we do on World Have Your Say.
We've just hit 15,000 Likes , which is great, and a big thanks to everyone who's been part of the conversation there.
Every day, a key part of putting the show together now involves going through our Facebook page. Often, we contact people who have made particularly interesting points there and ask them if they want to have their say on the radio programme too.
As you'll know if you're a regular, we also sometimes take the suggestions from people make there and turn them into topics for the programme. And always, our presenter will read out the best of the Facebook comment during the show.
But one thing we've not been great at doing is joining in the Facebook conversation ourselves. Too often, we've put up a debate topic and then just left you guys to it.
Xavier Zapata| 09:50 UK time, Monday, 6 December 2010
This topic was discussed on World Have Your Say on 06 December 2010. Listen to the programme.
Last week if we'd asked "what do you know about Qatar" you'd probably all have said "that's where Al Jazeera is." Now the likely answer is Al Jazeera and the . Both subjects have got people asking a lot of questions, and many are hungry to find out more about one of the world's smallest, richest and hottest countries. So what do you want to know about Qatar?
This topic was discussed on World Have Your Say on 03 December 2010. Listen to the programme.
More than 190 countries are gathered in Cancun, Mexico for the latest round of UN climate talks. But . This journalist is convinced they will .
If so many people across the globe accept that climate change is happening, why aren't we taking more action to tackle it? Is it something in our psychology or culture, a lack of leadership or a problem of economics?
As part of a series of programmes on the 大象传媒 called the Climate Connection, WHYS is asking: What's stopping us?
This topic was discussed on World Cup Have Your Say on 03 December 2010.Listen to the programme.
The morning after the night before - and we know that the World Cup in 12 years from now will be held in stadiums like this:
As well as excitement that the tournament is going to pastures new, there's also plenty being written about the hurdles both winning bidders must now overcome.
It's official. Russia will host the 2018 Fifa World Cup. And Qatar won the bid to host 2022. Thousands of you have been contacting us from all over the world with your reaction to the news and we'll be talking to some of you on the programme to see what you think.
...and now, as we head into the final stages of this titanic battle for the (hosting of) the World Cup, let's join our commentary team of Ben Sutherland in London and Alex Capstick at Fifa HQ in Zurich. Ben, just fill us in on what's been happening so far...
Well Ros, as you say, it's been a much-anticipated clash in Zurich, and it's certainly been eventful so far - even if no-one's yet scored the crucial winner.
When you live in extreme poverty, it probably doesn't immediately matter to you how that poverty is measured.
As part of the 大象传媒's Extreme World series, we're looking at the extremes of rich and poor around the world.
Various league tables are published - take the latest UN听听which combines data on schooling, life expectancy and per capita income to rank countries, 1 to 169.
Ben James| 17:05 UK time, Wednesday, 1 December 2010
Here's a chance to see the World Have Your Say special TV edition as part of the 大象传媒's Extreme World series, if you missed it on 大象传媒 World News earlier.
We asked you whether it's possible to close the gap between rich and poor?
Mark Sandell| 09:01 UK time, Wednesday, 1 December 2010
From Steve Titherington, Executive Ed, 大象传媒 Global News:
****
The funny thing about reporting the world (including Sierra Leone- pictured) is that the more and more you do, the more you realise that what divides us is much less than what unites us.
What we care about - education, our kids growing up safe, having a job, somewhere to call home, living long, and being healthy - are things in which we share many common goals and aspirations.
And yet it is these very things which can bring us the most joy and the most anguish. If these basics in life aren't there and aren't secure, then it is these that can affect any of us.
WHYS is a global conversation hosted by 大象传媒 News. For updates on the stories and issues being covered on our broadcasts, pls visit . This is when we're on air:
1100 & 1700GMT Monday to Friday 大象传媒 World Service radio
1500 & 1930GMT on Fridays 大象传媒 World News television
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