Kenya and DR Congo
Pascale Harter presents personal stories and insight from from BBC correspondents around the world. Natasha Breed sees humans and lions at odds around Nairobi; Thomas Hubert bids farewell to Kinshasa.
Insight, wit and analysis from BBC correspondents, journalists and writers from around the world, introduced by Pascale Harter. Today, two dispatches from African cities where there's daily competition for survival and resources...
King of the savannah - but not the city
Recently, the killing of several lions near the Nairobi National Park made national news in Kenya - and attracted international outrage too. Pictures of dead lionesses, tongues dangling, made for distressing viewing on the internet. Natasha Breed lives very close to the park - which is itself not so far from Nairobi's city centre - and that's given her a special perspective on the ongoing struggle for food, lodgings and resources in the country. Increasingly, she says, humans and lions are bing driven into direct competition.
Where a bribe means 'beans for the kids'
The city of Kinshasa was once mostly famous for Muhammad Ali's 'Rumble in the Jungle', its bubbling nightlife and its lilting music. In recent years, its reputation has been overshadowed by war and atrocities on the eastern borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo - even though the capital city is more than 1500 kilometres away. BBC correspondent Thomas Hubert recently left Kinshasa, and shared some of his lasting impressions of a tough place to live and work.
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- Fri 13 Jul 201207:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Fri 13 Jul 201210:50GMTBBC World Service Online
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- Fri 13 Jul 201218:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Sat 14 Jul 201200:50GMTBBC World Service Online
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