14/08/2010
Kate Adie introduces reports on the murder of aid workers in Afghanistan; the spreading violence in Mexico; religion and nationalism in Bosnia.
We hear from Kate Clark the story of two of the aid workers who were killed recently in Afghanistan - of their bloody-minded courage and dedication to the country; Emma Thomas discovers how the drug-related violence in Mexico has spread far across the country; Alan Little reports on the convergence of religion and nationalism at a pilgrimage site in the hills of Bosnia; and Chris Bockman explains why grown men dress up as pigs and squeal in the French Pyrenees.
The murder of ten members of a Christian charity group last week in north-western Afghanistan has highlighted just how insecure the country is and how the unwritten rules of conflict have been torn up.
The team, which was bringing medical help to remote communities, included Dan Terry and Tom Little, who had worked in Afghanistan for thirty years.
Kate Clark knew them both well.
Since Felipe Calderon became President of Mexico three and a half years ago and vowed to wipe out the drug cartels which controlled the trafficking routes into the United States, twenty-eight thousand people have been killed. Emma Thomas has seen for herself just how far the worsening violence is blighting the lives of Mexicans.
The Swedish government is tightening up its refugee policy, including sending some Iraqis back home. The news of more than two hundred killings in Iraq in the past two weeks, is extremely worrying for those asylum-seekers who fear that they will be forced to return to Iraq, as Tim Mansel reports.
The Bosnian war ended fifteen years ago. But the peace did little to quell nationalist feelings.
For the Bosnian Croats, their Catholic religion has been an important part of their identity.
Allan Little has been to the town of Medjugorje, near the Croatian border, which is now an important pilgrimmage site for catholics in the area and across the world, to investigate the political sensitivities surrounding the town.
In the depths of France, Chris Bockman reports on the peculiar festival of pig squealing.
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Introduction
Duration: 00:27
Taliban targets: Women, children, foreigners
The killing of eight foreign aid workers in Afghanistan is a mark of dark and disturbing times, as fragmentation in the country's social fabric increases, says Kate Clark.
Duration: 05:35
Living in fear of Mexico's drugs wars
Emma Thomas reports on how a once peaceful and safe part of Mexico is now over-run by violent and dangerous drug gangs
Duration: 05:31
Iraqi asylum seekers struggle to stay in Sweden
Sweden once led the way in welcoming Iraqi refugees, but the authorities are now clamping down and Iraqi asylum seekers increasingly face deportation, as Tim Mansel discovers.
Duration: 05:15
Religion and nationalism meet in Bosnia-Hercegovina
Allan Little visits the town of Medjugorje in Bosnia-Hercegovina, an important pilgrimage site for Catholics, to investigate the political sensitivities surrounding the town.
Duration: 05:34
Pig squealing in the French Pyrenees
In the depths of France, Chris Bockman explains why grown men are dressing up as pigs
Duration: 05:22
Broadcast
- Sat 14 Aug 2010 11:30大象传媒 Radio 4