The Other Guantanamo
Travel writer Polly Evans goes to Guantanamo, Cuba, and talks to locals. How do they feel about it becoming synonymous with the prison camp that has been called "the gulag of our times"?
To many people the name Guantanamo conjures up images of detainees in orange, allegations of torture, controversy and trauma.
But to those who live there, Guantanamo means green hills and tumbling waterfalls, distinctive son and guajira music and mouth-watering Jamaican and French-influenced cuisine.
In this programme, award-winning travel writer Polly Evans goes in search of the other Guantanamo, talking to local people about their area, and how they feel about it becoming synonymous with what Amnesty International called "the gulag of our times".
She delves into the history of the open-ended American lease of this corner of the island - and asks whether the nearly 10,000 Cubans who held construction jobs on the site (and still draw a favourable US pension) have different feelings about it.
Polly examines the personal, political and cultural stories of a controversial place - from a perspective that is seldom considered.
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- Wed 27 Oct 201008:05GMTBBC World Service Online
- Wed 27 Oct 201011:05GMTBBC World Service Online
- Wed 27 Oct 201014:05GMTBBC World Service Online
- Wed 27 Oct 201019:05GMTBBC World Service Online
- Thu 28 Oct 201000:05GMTBBC World Service Online
- Sat 30 Oct 201001:05GMTBBC World Service Online
- Sat 30 Oct 201018:05GMTBBC World Service Online
