Kashmir, Bulgaria, China, and London Wine
The aftermath of fighting in Kashmir, a Bulgarian politician looking eastward, and making wine – and friends – in a gritty London neighbourhood.
Kashmir is one of the world’s most intractable problems. Both India and Pakistan think they should have it. As it stands India has two thirds, Pakistan one third. Both sides complain that the artillery duels that happen across the line from time to time are started by the other. After some years of relative quiet there have been some heavy exchanges in recent days, and our correspondent Shaimaa Khalil has seen the aftermath.
Also in the programme, Nick Thorpe meets a politician in Bulgaria who dreams of friendship with Russia, and Sam Piranty finds out that hair extensions in China do not always come from human heads.
We hear from Carlie Ester at a young offenders institute in Barbados. And, a sports injury forces journalist Leo Johnson to meet his neighbours – with surprisingly liquid results – in a gritty neighbourhood in north-west London.
Producer: Mike Wendling
(Photo: Winemaker in north-west London, courtesy Leo Johnson)
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- Sat 18 Oct 2014 11:05GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service Online
- Sun 19 Oct 2014 00:05GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service Online
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