A Global Public Service – Monday 29 April
From courageous frontline reporting to launching lifeline services, the BBC World Service serves some of the hardest audiences to reach, at a time when they most need trusted impartial news.
Demonstrating the BBC’s courageous reporting, we will premiere BBC News Arabic correspondent Adnan El-Bursh’s Gaza Diaries documentary. A panel of experts will then assess the courage needed to provide news for audiences living through conflict – from Afghanistan to Ukraine, Sudan and beyond. We will also explore the making of Dars, an educational programme launched to teach girls in Afghanistan, denied access to schooling after the Taliban took over in 2021.
Three decades on from the end of apartheid, we will premiere a documentary looking at the last thirty years of democracy in Africa, and that evening will see an exclusive live recording of the World Service English hit podcast World of Secrets: Disciples, which exposed exploitation and abuse by the evangelist T.B. Joshua, as we hear an update from whistleblowers and producers.
Forensic and Investigative Journalism – Tuesday 30 April
Delving into the disrupting force of open source and forensics in journalism over the last decade, multiple presenters will collaborate for the Anatomy of Forensic Journalism show-and-tell session. We will also launch the BBC’s Global China Unit and reveal their first piece of analytical research.
We will also scrutinise the Future of Forensic Journalism and open-source intelligence with industry leaders as the impact of AI and disinformation grows and questions are raised over transparency, trust and access. We premiere the latest BBC Eye investigation from the BBC World Service’s multi-award winning flagship investigative series with further details unveiled closer to the event.
Censorship and Freedom – Wednesday 1 May
Examining the importance of providing independent news through circumvention and battling censorship, to mark the week of World Press Freedom Day, we hear from a special panel of journalists from across the world who have endured heavy censorship, exile, and extreme threats to their personal safety, as a result of the stories they have fought to share. We’ll also take a look behind the ‘information iron curtain’ at the impact of censorship and media control on news reporting in Russia.
For the World Service English, BBC Radio 4 and the BBC News channel, Ros Atkins and Katie Razzall present The Media Show live with a special edition looking at news censorship around the world. After, we’ll hear from the World Service Editors – from Russian, Korean, Persian and Ethiopian services – where multiple pressures including state interference, harassment, sanctions and charges consistently attempt to undermine their work.