1. Rwanda can be trusted, Supreme Court toldpublished at 17:23 British Summer Time 9 October 2023

    The country will treat humanely any asylum seekers sent under the legally-stalled deal, the UK says.

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  2. Gabon’s dark football secretpublished at 01:00 British Summer Time 5 October 2023

    Gabon is football crazy and it’s the dream of most young footballers to play internationally. But, in 2022 a long serving coach for youth national teams admitted to charges of raping, grooming, and exploiting young players. He faces up to 30 years in prison.

    BBC Africa Eye’s Khadidiatou Cissé travels to Gabon to investigate one of the biggest sexual abuse scandals in the history of football. She speaks with victims and eyewitnesses who reveal a shocking culture of sexual abuse and despair, with claims that many people knew, and many stayed silent. We follow a coach who, at personal risk, is determined to bring about change. Football’s world governing body, Fifa, is facing accusations of failing to take effective action over the scandal.

    Presenter: Khadidiatou Cissé Producer: Stephanie Stafford and Suzanne Vanhooymissen BBC Eye editors Rebecca Henschke and Tom Watson Sound engineer: Neil Churchill Assignment series editor: Penny Murphy

    (Photo: Child holding football boots)

  3. Unspun World: Can anyone in Russia challenge Putin now?published at 01:00 British Summer Time 30 September 2023

    Now Yevgeny Prigozhin is dead, can anyone in Russia challenge President Putin’s power? BBC Russian news editor Famil Ismailov gives us his vision of the future for Ukraine.

    Machismo in Mexico is alive and kicking, but it looks like the country’s heading for its first female president. South America correspondent Katy Watson analyses what this might mean for women’s rights and society as a whole. Plus, after more than a decade in South Africa, BBC correspondent Andrew Harding reflects on the highs and lows and his hopes for the nation’s future.

    Produced by Pandita Lorenz and Ben Watt

  4. African Footballerspublished at 01:00 British Summer Time 11 April 2022

    Didier Drogba, Nwankwo Kanu and Yaya Touré. The African continent has produced some incredible footballers over the years, with players like Salah, Mané and Mahrez terrorising opposition defenders on a weekly basis. But who is English football's greatest ever African player? Gary Lineker is joined by Micah Richards and Alan Shearer for another episode to rank ten of the best African players to have played in the Premier League.

  5. Senegal unveils Museum of Black Civilisationspublished at 19:16 Greenwich Mean Time 6 December 2018

    China helped build the museum with a donation of about $34m (£27m).

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  6. Part 19: Unfollow the Leaderpublished at 01:00 British Summer Time 22 June 2017

    The overthrow of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in Libya, remembered by the BBC's Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen.

    Jeremy Bowen reflects on the present and the past of the Middle East, after reporting from the region for more than a quarter of a century. He combines first-hand accounts from the front line with an in-depth look into the region's history. He has witnessed endless wars between individuals, religious groups and full-sized states, jostling for military, political and economic power. He has interviewed dictators, fanatics and fundamentalists as well as the ordinary people caught up in their dangerous games. In that time, the past has always been present, providing motivation and political ammunition . Bowen has made headlines himself and he has paid a personal price, coming under fire and losing a colleague in the course of reporting - on the worst day, he says, in his life.

    Producers: Mark Savage and Cara Swift.

  7. Part 18: The Revolving Revolutionpublished at 01:00 British Summer Time 21 June 2017

    The popular revolution in Egypt during the Arab Spring, remembered by the BBC's Middle East Editor Jeremy Bowen. "Not for the first time in history," he says "the passion of the streets was outdone by organization of long established groups - in Egypt, the military, and the Muslim Brotherhood"

    Jeremy Bowen reflects on the present and the past of the Middle East, after reporting from the region for more than a quarter of a century. He combines first-hand accounts from the front line with an in-depth look into the region's history. He has witnessed endless wars between individuals, religious groups and full-sized states, jostling for military, political and economic power. He has interviewed dictators, fanatics and fundamentalists as well as the ordinary people caught up in their dangerous games. In that time, the past has always been present, providing motivation and political ammunition . Bowen has made headlines himself and he has paid a personal price, coming under fire and losing a colleague in the course of reporting - on the worst day, he says, in his life.

    Producers: Mark Savage and Cara Swift.