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Episode details

World Service,01 Jul 2017,23 mins

Available for over a year

Pascale Harter introduces stories of personal risk, daily challenges and digital discontent from around the world. Secunder Kermani reports from Pakistan on how - and why - a talented journalism student who was accused of blasphemy ended up beaten to death in public on a university campus. Some of the other students and staff accused of taking part in the killing are unrepentant. Polina Ivanova has tales from "Moscow's molars", the Soviet-era apartment blocks which housed so many and saw so much in the city since the 1950s - but which are increasingly marked for demolition as part of a grand 'regeneration' plan. Many residents are suspicious - and have even been moved to protest for the first time in their lives. Shaimaa Khalil takes a deep breath - and a long wait - in order to cross the Gambia river on a notably overloaded ferry route which is the only way for many people to reach the Gambian capital Banjul. and Dave Lee joins the twitching (and often queue-bound) crowds at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles to see what's new in the world of gaming - and finds surprisingly little that's truly original, despite the industry's crushing economic clout. Photo: A student's glasses lie on the ground amid the debris at the scene of a mob killing at the Abdul Wali Khan University in Mardan, Pakistan. (c) BBC

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