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27 November 2014
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Listeners rule on Outlook this week


Category : World Service
Date : 17.05.2004
Printable version


They come from countries as far apart as Cameroon and Japan, Jamiaca and Latvia and they cover topics which range from the mechanical beauty of the guillotine to the selling of young girls.

This week, for the first time in its history, 大象传媒 World Service's daily magazine programme Outlook is entirely devoted to ideas and stories from listeners.

They can be heard on Outlook every day from Monday 17 through to Friday 21 May.

"The idea was for listeners to tell their story, point us towards somebody interesting or look into an issue which concerned them and we would send out local reporters to help the listeners bring their stories to life," says producer Neil McCarthy.

"We were looking for the biggest possible mix of issues and that's what our listeners have given us.

"They are stories that would have been difficult for us to stumble upon ourselves."

One of the first was from Thika in Kenya. Reuben Gitahi described a particularly frightening night train ride out of Nairobi.

Incidents of sexual harassment on the unlit train have led female passengers to call for women-only carriages and some lights. He went along with a microphone to show what he meant.

A listener from a village in Jamaica, who asked to be anonymous, was concerned about the welfare of girls at a strip club near where she lives.

Men were turning up and taking the girls, some of them young teenagers, to work in other go-go bars seemingly without their consent. She asked Outlook to look into it.

West Africans who've got as far as North Africa and Europe wrote about the frustrations of life in Africa and the difficulty of deciding whether to stay or just get out.

We hear from a University of Nigeria student whose lecturers are on strike; a Ghanaian who struck out for Europe, managed to get across the Sahara desert only to get stuck in Tripoli; and Alice, a Ugandan woman who is disillusioned with life in Belgium.

Volunteer Gina Kornblitch takes us round the trauma unit of a parrot sanctuary in northern Holland. There are 3,500 birds here and they speak many different languages.

Thomas Kantha, a South African living in Japan, hunts for abandoned wheelchairs, repairs them and sends them to South Africa where they are badly needed.

We hear from him and spend a day in Durban with one of the happy recipients Michael Basi. Michael lost the use of his legs at age five and knew nothing about wheelchairs till adulthood. Now, with his red, racing chair, he can go to work and play sport.

Another Kenyan listener contacted Outlook with news of the notorious "night-runners" of his village, naked witchdoctors who show up in the early hours, cast spells on households and take the people they have bewitched off to the cemetery.

Together with the Outlook reporter he conducts a night vigil to investigate.

Other stories:

the couple in Quebec who welcome ships into port by playing the relevant national anthem and raising the flag of the country;

the tiny island of Kiribati, which is sending athletes to the Olympics for the first time this year;

the difference portable water has made to a small village in the Cameroon;

the effects of the worst drought ever to hit Kerala in India;

a Chilean musician in Germany plagued by the maddening racket made by crows outside his window when he's trying to compose. He's sure they are telling him to "work", "work", "work";

should working animals in India be entitled to pensions? We speak to Cheetah's handler.

Notes to Editors

Outlook is broadcast from noon to 12.45pm, UK time (11.00-11.45am GMT).



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Category : World Service
Date : 17.05.2004
Printable version

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