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Anna Politkovskaya murder trial; Holocaust survivor

Jenni Murray presents the programme that offers a female perspective on the world.

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58 minutes

Last on

Fri 9 Aug 2013 10:00

Chapters

  • Women economists

    Are women still behind men when it comes to top positions as economists?

    Duration: 09:07

  • Auschwitz survivor Kitty Hart-Moxon

    Why she has spent sixty years teaching younger generations about the Nazi regime.

    Duration: 09:06

  • Anna Politkovskaya murder trial

    Why is Anna Politkovskaya's daughter Vera boycotting her mothers murder trial?

    Duration: 09:34

  • Lesbians and cervical cancer

    The campaign to raise awareness of cervical cancer screening for lesbians

    Duration: 06:46

  • The Armitt sisters

    The three Armitt Sisters works on the Lake District revisited

    Duration: 06:59

Women economists

On Thursday, the new Governor of the Bank of England Mark Carney told the Today programme that it is 鈥榮triking鈥 there are no women currently on the Monetary Policy Committee. In fact, since the MPC was formed in 1997, only four women have ever been appointed to hold one of its nine positions. 聽Although it is the treasury, rather than the Bank of England itself, which appoints to the MPC, the governor said that the bank still has a responsibility to 鈥済row top female economists through the ranks鈥. So is it true that women are still behind men when it comes to top positions as economists? Jenni is joined by Kate Barker, the last female economist to be on the MPC (before she left in 2010), and Gillian Tett, economist and Assistant Editor of the Financial Times.

Anna Politkovskaya murder trial

Anna Politkovskaya, Russia's most famous opposition journalist and a scathing critic of Kremlin power, was shot dead in her Moscow apartment block on October 7th 2006. A trial in 2009 left the case unsolved, as four men accused of helping to organise the killing were acquitted. However, Politkovskaya鈥檚 children have always maintained that she was a victim of political assassination, and that the 鈥榟igher up鈥 people who were responsible for ordering her killing have never been brought before a court. Last month, five men 鈥 three of which were previously acquitted 鈥 were put on trial charged with involvement in the murder, but Politkovskaya鈥檚 children have again dismissed the proceedings as 鈥減atently illegitimate鈥. Anna鈥檚 daughter, Vera Politkovskaya, tells Woman鈥檚 Hour why she is boycotting the current trial, and 麻豆社 Moscow correspondent Daniel Sandford gives Jenni an update on the case.

Auschwitz survivor Kitty Hart-Moxon

Kitty Hart-Moxon was 12 years old when the Second World War broke out. Born to a Jewish family, she was soon forced to flee her home country Poland to escape persecution from the Nazis. She eventually ended up as one of the millions of prisoners sent to Auschwitz, where she survived until the Allied forces鈥 liberation in 1945. After the war she and her mother came to live in Birmingham, but it was over ten years before anyone in England asked her to tell her story. She says that, in the years after the war, one colleague once saw her number tattoo on her arm and asked 鈥渋s that your boyfriend鈥檚 telephone number?鈥

Last month Kitty was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Birmingham, in recognition of her tireless work over the last sixty years teaching younger generations about the Nazi regime. She joins Jenni to explain why she is determined to never let the world forget what happened.

Lesbians and cervical cancer

Over the last three years, the Lesbian and Gay Foundation have been campaigning to raise awareness of cervical cancer screening for lesbians. It follows a study carried out by the foundation which found that 17.8% of lesbian women of eligible age had never had a cervical screening test, compared with 7% of women in general. They believe these numbers indicate a misconception within the lesbian community that women who have only female sexual partners are not at risk of developing cervical cancer - which is not true. The foundation argues that more must be done to re-educate both women and health professionals, to ensure that this myth聽is debunked.聽Jenni is joined by Annie Emery from the Lesbian聽and Gay Foundation, and Dr Helen Stokes-Lampard from the Royal College of General Practitioners.聽

The Armitt sisters

The Armitt Sisters 鈥 three of them 鈥 were born in Salford, but it鈥檚 in the Lake District, rather than in their home city, where they鈥檙e best known.聽 Sophia was born in 1847, Annie in 1850 and Mary Louisa 鈥 known as Louie 鈥 in 1851. Unusually for women of the period they were highly educated. Louie received a scholarship to Cambridge. They eventually settled near Ambleside, and between them collected together some of the most important manuscripts, books and maps about the Lakes, including reams of scientific papers written by Beatrix Potter. Their collection was eventually gathered together in a museum bearing their name. Caz Graham went to visit it, and spoke to the library鈥檚 guides Clare Brockbank and Barbara Crossley.

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Jenni Murray
Producer Cecile Wright
Editor Nicola Swords

Broadcast

  • Fri 9 Aug 2013 10:00

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