The Documentary: Archive 2014

Informações:

Synopsis

The BBC World Service's wide range of documentaries from 2014.

Episodes

  • Searching for Annie in Liberia

    27/11/2014 Duration: 26min

    Gabriel Gatehouse and his team go in search of Annie and along the way meet the medics and families on the front line of the Ebola crisis.

  • Afghanistan: The Lessons of War

    26/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    Former commander of the British and Coalition forces in Helmand province Major General Andrew Mackay, embarks on a personal journey to find out what has been achieved by the 14-year-campaign in Afghanistan.

  • Sister Aimee

    25/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    The story of Canadian-born Aimee Semple McPherson and how she went from farm girl to invent broadcast evangelism, becoming among the most famous and glamorous women in America in the 1920s and 30s.

  • Human Cubans

    23/11/2014 Duration: 50min

    British journalist Nick Baker and Anglo-Cuban journalist Arnaldo Hernandez Diaz discover a vivid snapshot of Cuba including topics around the internet and online communication, LGBT issues and a surprising medical story.

  • Ebola - The Impact on Africa

    21/11/2014 Duration: 50min

    How Ebola is affecting not just health services in West Africa, but tourism, agriculture and investment across the entire continent. Paul Moss travels to Ghana and Senegal to assess the wider impact of Ebola in Africa.

  • Hunting The Taliban

    20/11/2014 Duration: 26min

    Mobeen Azhar is in Karachi, Pakistan’s biggest city, where police are fighting an increasingly desperate war against the Taliban. Every day an officer is killed in the struggle.

  • O' Say Can you See?

    19/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    The Star-Spangled Banner is embedded in American national identity and yet it only became the official national anthem in 1931. Erica Wagner returns to its origins, the Battle of Baltimore in 1814, to find out how Francis Scott Key came to write these lyrics about the American flag

  • Chasing West Africa's Pirates

    15/11/2014 Duration: 50min

    There are now more pirate attacks in the Gulf of Guinea than off the coast of Somalia - once considered the global 'piracy hotspot'. The BBC’s Mary Harper travels to Lagos, one of the busiest ports in Africa, to explore the highly complex world of piracy.

  • 'Power, Politics and Shakespeare in Uzbekistan'

    13/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    Natalia Antelava charts the downfall of Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of the Uzbek president. She hears an inside account of the family feud from Gulnara’s son, Islam Karimov Jr.

  • The Syria Vote

    12/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    In August 2013 the Assad regime in Syria was accused of deploying chemical weapons against its own civilian population. President Obama – who had described the use of chemical weapons as a “red line” – was planning airstrikes against the Syrian government. In Britain, Prime Minister David Cameron was determined to stand with him - but first he had to win Parliament’s approval.

  • Are Pandemics Inevitable?

    12/11/2014 Duration: 23min

    Can the world come together to beat diseases with pandemic potential? We've spoken to four expert witnesses, including a doctor who helped to eradicate one of the world's oldest diseases and a man who discovered one of the world's newest ones.

  • Still Waiting for Godot in Sarajevo?

    12/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    Allan Little returns to Sarajevo to explore the role of the arts in restoring the city's identity, 20 years after the siege which saw its cultural life flourish against the odds. How are the citizens of Sarajevo fulfilling that basic human need for art in a transformed cultural landscape?

  • The Ghostly Voices of World War One

    09/11/2014 Duration: 50min

    Hidden away in the backrooms at Humbolt University and the Ethnological Museum in Berlin are some of the most remarkable sound recordings ever made. They date back to World War One and capture the voices of some of the ordinary men who fought in ‘the war to end all wars’. What happened to these men and how did they die?

  • Iran's Gay Refugees

    06/11/2014 Duration: 26min

    Ali Hamedani has been to Turkey to meet the Iranian lesbian and gay people who’ve fled home after facing pressure to change their gender.

  • Assassination: When Delhi Burned

    05/11/2014 Duration: 27min

    When the Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated in 1984 by her two Sikh bodyguards, riots erupted across the city to avenge the killing. Bobby Friction went into hiding with his family to escape the mobs. He returns with professor Swaran Singh, 30 years on, to talk to the children caught up in the riots.

  • From Kabul to Kiev: Mustafa Nayyem's Story

    04/11/2014 Duration: 26min

    Mustafa Nayyem is one of Ukraine's leading investigative reporters, who has controversially decided to leave journalism and enter the political arena. Andriy Kravets from the BBC’s Ukrainian Service travelled back to his homeland ahead of the recent parliamentary elections to find out more about Mustafa. How did an immigrant boy from Afghanistan manage to make his mark in Ukrainian society? And has this leading anti-corruption campaigner sold his audience short - or is this an attempt to kick-start much-need changes in Ukrainian political life?

  • Switzerland: Stolen Childhoods

    30/10/2014 Duration: 26min

    Kavita Puri goes to Switzerland to hear the extraordinary stories of survivors who lived as indentured child labourers.

  • Linard's Travels

    29/10/2014 Duration: 27min

    Linard Davies is a baggage attendant at San Francisco airport. He deals with the packages that the airlines won't touch. Clown shoes, 10ft carved wooden doors, fresh moose antlers are just some of the strangest artefacts he has dealt with.

  • Politics at the Polling Station

    28/10/2014 Duration: 28min

    What are changes in voting laws doing to demoracy in the USA? Rajini Vaidyanathan travels to North Carolina to investigate voting rights in the United States.

  • India's Forgotten War

    24/10/2014 Duration: 50min

    In the Indian capital Delhi stands India Gate, the largest memorial to the war for which 1.5 million Indian men were recruited. But Anita Rani discovers that World War One is something of a forgotten memory today, seen as part of its colonial history. She sets out to uncover some of the forgotten stories.

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