Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

World Service,27 Oct 2018,23 mins

Now We’re Being Punished

From Our Own Correspondent

Available for over a year

Pascale Harter introduces analysis, reportage and wit from around the world. In this edition: off the Crimean coast, in the Sea of Azov, Ukraine's modest coastguard fleet - which until recently consisted of just one former Turkish fishing boat - faces tense encounters with its Russian counterpart. On board, Jonah Fisher samples Ukrainian maritime cuisine and considers whether eastern Ukraine's trade links with the outside world can survive Russia's stealthy yet relentless pressure. Samira Shackle reports from Erbil on the place that was once thought to be "the next Dubai" in Iraqi Kurdistan, where a displaced Yazidi couple reflect on the greater safety they enjoy now that fighters from so-called Islamic State have been driven out but where living conditions remain bleak, to say the least. In Afghanistan, man-made crisis has been aggravated by persistent drought. Travelling around the country, Auliya Atrafi finds crops failing, animals dying and people in debt. Nomads have been forced to sell their herds. And growing numbers of people are expected to go the cities. So what are the prospects for relief? And from Senegal, Jane Labous tells the story of Ndim and Badera who have been seeking to start a family after twelve years of marriage. So far they have been unsuccessful in a country where childlessness is still stigmatised. So what options remain for them - and who or what might be able to help their yearning for a baby? Picture Credit: Alexander KHUDOTEPLY/AFP/Getty Images

Programme Website
More episodes