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Episode details

World Service,01 Apr 2011,10 mins

Uganda and Ireland

From Our Own Correspondent

Available for over a year

John Murphy presents stories from BBC correspondents around the world. Gaddafi's African connections As the fighting sweeps back and forth in Libya, another economic struggle is going on - to find and freeze the worldwide assets of Colonel Gaddafi and his family. Already the UN, the EU, the US and a number of other countries have frozen tens of billions of dollars' worth of Libyan monies and property. But some African countries have not followed their example. Colonel Gaddafi has built close ties with communities across the continent and, as Will Ross has been discovering in Uganda, the Libyan leader has considerable support there. Ireland's financial hole There's been more bad economic news for the Irish this week. After new "stress tests" of four major banks and building societies, the Irish Central Bank confirmed that the country's debt crisis is even worse than first thought. Because the government last year guaranteed all the major bank losses, it's now estimated that every man, woman and child in Ireland owes the equivalent of around twenty four thousand US dollars. Most of the Irish banking sector is now, effectively, state owned. And at the core of this financial nightmare, as Joe Lynam explains, has been an unhealthy public appetite for bricks and mortar.

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