Cracks in the Facade
Stories from Macedonia's 'colourful revolution', the fragile peace of Iraqi Kurdistan, the mining strongholds of Ecuador and a small-town Japanese geisha house
In Skopje, Lucy Ash finds out why the Macedonian capital is now so festooned with graffiti - and finds it is nothing to do with art, but a visual part of a widespread anti-government protest movement.
Richard Lim notices some ominous signs of economic stagnation amid the apparent optimism of Iraqi Kurdistan. Erbil might seem like a haven of peace to Iraqis from outside the region - but can it really draw visitors from further afield?
Contributors to From Our Own Correspondent often end up having a drink with their interviewees - but in the gritty mining town of Portovelo in Ecuador, Joe Gerlach was not expecting to find that even his shot of firewater had a strong metallic after-taste.
And in Japan, Juliet Rix recently sat down for tea and polite conversation with a couple of modern geisha - and ended up learning some very unexpected facts about their much-mythologised world.
(Photo: Anti-government graffiti marks a monumental arch in Skopje, Macedonia. June 2016)
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- Sat 25 Jun 2016 02:06GMT麻豆社 World Service except News Internet
- Sun 26 Jun 2016 08:06GMT麻豆社 World Service except News Internet
- Sun 26 Jun 2016 22:06GMT麻豆社 World Service except News Internet