Libyan probe into Lockerbie suspect handover to USpublished at 12:13 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022
It is claimed that Abu Agila Masud was abducted from his home before being transferred to the US.
Read MoreIt is claimed that Abu Agila Masud was abducted from his home before being transferred to the US.
Read MoreSold to a local chief aged 12, Hadizatou Mani spent a decade as a slave before fighting for justice in Niger.
Read MoreThe man accused of making the Lockerbie bomb should face execution in the US, Bill Barr tells the BBC.
Read MoreBBC Scotland's David Cowan recalls the trial 22 years ago of two men accused of the Lockerbie bombing.
Read MoreAbu Agila Masud is the first person charged on US soil in connection with the 1988 airline attack.
Read MoreThe Libyan man is accused of making the bomb which destroyed Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie.
Read MoreRaufeon Stots says Danny Sabatello's trash talking is just a 'defence mechanism' as the bantamweights prepare to settle their rivalry Bellator 289 in Connecticut on Friday.
Read MoreSarah Chan has overcome racism and violence to become the first woman to manage African scouting for a team in the NBA, the world's top professional basketball league.
Read MoreThe rapid expansion of Indian healthcare firms in Africa has not been without problems.
Read MoreThe government is backing solar energy to help solve the continuing problem of power shortages.
Read MoreIn a developing country like Rwanda building a market for electric cars has proved challenging.
Read MoreTwo Nigerian athletes are convicted in the United States for transferring significant sums of money to the West African country as part of a complex fraud scheme.
Read MoreWe hear about a new plan to drive economies and improve lives across Africa – the Open Internet project between the continent and the EU. A report “The Open Internet as Cornerstone of Digitalisation” is funded by the EU and points out in detail what needs to done to secure easy, reliable and cheap online access without which development will simply stall. We speak to two of the report’s authors – one from the EU and the other from Africa.
Monitoring Mangroves in the Pakistan Indus Delta Mangrove forests are hugely impacted by climate change and monitoring them from space with satellites doesn’t deliver enough data to know fully how they are being impacted by rising temperatures and sea levels. Now a pilot project in the Indus River Delta, just south of Karachi in Pakistan, has used drones to image the mangroves allowing the researchers to study one of the world’s largest forests. The project’s director Obaid Rehman is on the show to tell us about their work and also how these mangrove forests can be used for carbon capture. He says their work should lead to more plantations of the forest too.
The talk at Web Summit 2022 Technology gatherings are back in full swing and Web Summit in Portugal is one of the biggest. This year’s conference was at full capacity and tech reporter Jane Wakefield joined the queues to see what was preoccupying the tech industry as 2022 draws to an end – and the big thing appears to be the Metaverse.
The programme is presented by Gareth Mitchell with expert commentary from Ghislaine Boddington.
Studio Manager: Tim Heffer Producer: Ania Lichtarowicz
(Image: Getty Images)
The US president also defends his country's climate leadership at the UN summit COP27.
Read MoreThe FBI says ex-social media star Hushpuppi is one of the world's most high-profile money launderers.
Read MoreA group of African Americans wants to stop the return of some Benin Bronzes to Nigeria.
Read MoreUganda insists on exploiting its fossil-fuel riches, despite Europe's environmental concerns.
Read MoreGlobal sales of contemporary and modern African art have reached record highs.
Read MoreIn 2020 more than 40% of the world’s population was not using the internet, with many more women being unable to get online. Now a new global study into digital access in 90 countries shows that although women were disproportionately impacted by the Covid pandemic, it seems to have got more of them online in South East Asia and Africa. In these two parts of the world, the study shows progress in terms of bridging the gap between men and women and access to tech and the internet. While, historically, 90% of transactions in India were done by cash, the researchers say the pandemic forced more people to turn to digital payments for everyday items including food and other goods. In many parts of South East Asia, including India, many women are doing most of the shopping. The combination paved the way for progress and highlights a unique instance where the pandemic benefited women in these regions. Additionally, now equipped with their own digital wallets, women are afforded more agency over their finances. The progress in gender parity was seen in sub-Saharan Africa (8% improvement from 2019-2021), the Middle East and North Africa (6%), and South Asia (3%). We speak to Tufts University researchers who carried out the work, the dean of Global Business, Bhaskar Chakravorti, and research manager Christina Filipovic.
War Games: Real Conflicts/Virtual Worlds/Extreme Environments Gareth and Ghislaine visit the Imperial War Museum in London to see the UK’s first-ever exhibition to explore video games and what they can tell us about conflict. Developing technology has introduced new ways of telling and experiencing war stories; toy soldiers and board games, cinema screenings of World War One, radio broadcasts from the frontlines of WWII, and TV images of the Cold War have given way to first-person shooter games on iconic consoles like the Atari 2600 and the Super Nintendo to internet driven team battles with the latest graphics and audio immersion. But is gaming tech the right place to explore conflict and how much is this entertainment industry driving tech development elsewhere?
Presented by Gareth Mitchell with expert commentary from Ghislaine Boddington Producer: Ania Lichtarowicz
(Photo: Rural woman talking on a mobile phone and using a laptop, India. Credit: Exotica.im/Universal Images Group/Getty Images)
Fatou Njie has trained, around 80 female students how to install solar panels in her community in Gambia.
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