April 30, 2007
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The British armed forces are currently engaged all over the world in ‘peacekeeping operations’. How do we avoid these missions turning into long-term entanglements, like the current situation in Iraq? The former Liberal Democrat leader, PADDY ASHDOWN, was a Royal Marine in the 1960s and the UN’s High Representative in Bosnia more recently. In his new book, he discusses the successes and failures of peacekeeping operations. He talks about what lessons have been learned and what lessons keep being forgotten and reveals the strategies that are required to avoid another Iraq-style disaster. Swords and Ploughshares: Bringing Peace to the 21st Century is published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
GENERAL SIR MICHAEL ROSE is one of Britain’s most decorated and experienced soldiers. In his new book, he assesses the strategy which brought George Washington’s rag-bag army of insurgents victory against the might of the British Army in 1775, and draws parallels with the strategy that has been used against the US forces in Iraq today. As a former Director of UK Special Forces and Commander of the UN Protection Force in Bosnia, Rose’s experience of counter-insurgency warfare leads him to argue that when the USA entered Iraq in 2003, it made the same mistakes that the British had made over 200 years before. He explains that the Americans are learning now, as the British did then, that sheer military power is not enough. He also shows how, while the British Army learned from its mistakes to become one of the world’s most effective counter-insurgency forces, the US Army seems to have forgotten the lessons of its founding fathers. Washington’s War: From Independence to Iraq is published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
When Britain and America went into Afghanistan in 2001, they claimed that the liberation of women would be one of their main priorities. Did they deliver? Award-winning Pakistani journalist and documentary filmmaker, SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY, finds out what life is like for the women behind the burqa. She argues that the liberation of Afghan women is mostly theoretical, despite the advances in Kabul where there are female journalists and politicians. Tribal customary codes still rule supreme and the position of women is dire and unchanged. Her documentary for Dispatches, Afghanistan Unveiled, is broadcast on Thursday 17 May at 9.00pm on Channel 4. |
April 26, 2007
On Thursday May 17th 2007 Channel 4 (U.K.) will air Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy’s latest film “Afghanistan Unveiled” at 9 p.m as part of its Dispatches series.
April 26, 2007
In 2005, Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy’s film “Pakistan’s Double Game” featured Ghufran Haider a young Pakistani who saved the life of hundreds of worshippers by throwing his body on a suicide bomber.
Ghufran became a key witness in the mosque bombing case. Earlier this year, based on his testimony two accompalices of the suicide bomber were sentenced to death. Since then Ghufran and his family have been receiving death threats.
Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy speaks to CBC Radio “As it Happens” to discuss Ghufran’s plight.
April 25, 2007
Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy will be appearing on BBC Radio 4 on Monday April 30 with Andrew Marr on Start of the Week to discuss her upcoming film “Afghanistan Unveiled”
You can hear the show online through the website.
April 22, 2007
ABC Australia aired “The New Apartheid” on Foreign Correspondents on April 10, 2007.
April 4, 2007
ABC Australia will air Women of the Holy Kingdom on April 5, 2007 at 9:35 p.m.