Long-term negative impact of Brexit on India negligible; short-term challenges remain
NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Britain’s politically controversial referendum last week to exit from the European Union, a unique
MUMBAI: BBC World Service has announced a new series ?The Truth About Mental Health? which kicks off from 31 May. The series looks at the radically different attitudes and definitions of mental wellbeing around the world. Presenter Claudia Hammond reports from India, Jordan, Norway, the US, Kenya, Japan and the UK and explores innovative new treatments.
With wide-ranging conditions varying from anxiety and depression, through to post-traumatic stress disorder and psychosis, there are an estimated 450 million people world-wide with mental health problems according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). World-wide, one in four people develop mental or behavioural disorders at some stage in life. The WHO predicts that by 2030 mental health treatments are to become the largest burden on global health resources.
Presented by psychologist Claudia Hammond ?The Truth About Mental Health? looks at the enormous ?treatment gap? that exists for mental disorders around the world. In many lower- and middle-income countries, three quarters of people with mental health problems receive no treatment at all. Even in wealthier, high-income countries only between a third and a half receive professional help.
From Africa, to Asia, to the Middle East and Europe, Hammond investigates the alternative ways that people experiencing a broad range of mental health problems seek help within the ?treatment gap?, and explores potential strategies for bridging this gulf in mental health care. Throughout the series, Hammond hears personal stories showing how individuals can have hope that treatment and recovery is possible from a range of distressing mental health conditions.
Hammond said, "This has been a fascinating series to make, meeting everyone from young men living in self-imposed exile in their bedrooms in Japan to survivors of the terrorist shootings on Ut?ya Island in Norway, and Syrian children who have fled appalling violence.
"Everyone I?ve met has been brave enough to talk about the difficulties which are the most personal of all - those involving the mind. Listening to their stories has something to tell all of us about how the human mind works. These are issues which affect our audiences all around the world and we?re lucky because the BBC World Service is uniquely placed to be able to cover these stories."
MUMBAI: BBC World News? new chief business correspondent Linda Yueh is making her debut on the channel today 13 May with live reports from Hong Kong throughout the day. Her reports will also be available online and on radio.
Following a week in Beijing, she will tell us what other China experts are saying about the challenges the country?s new leadership face and how they have to go about tackling them. She?ll also be exploring how China is making the shift from factories to shops, and what lessons we can learn from Hong Kong, long considered China?s ?laboratory? when it comes to economic policy.
Her guests will include former chief economist of the World Bank Justin Yifu Lin and billionaire businessman Sir David Tang. Yueh said, "I am excited to unlock what lies behind China?s extraordinary development and to show how the world of business is changing, especially with the dynamic rise of Asia."
Based in Singapore, she will report across BBC World News, BBC.com and World Service radio. She will also report for the BBC?s domestic services in the UK. She was most recently the London-based economics editor for Bloomberg Television.
MUMBAI: A group of international broadcasters have said that media freedom faces its greatest challenge since the Cold War, with internet blocking, satellite jamming and the return of shortwave jamming.
The statement issued on behalf of the representatives of Audiovisuel Ext?rieur de la France (AEF), Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) [Australia], The BBC [UK], the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) [US], Deutsche Welle (DW) [Germany], Nippon Hoso Kyokai (NHK) [Japan] and Radio Netherlands Worldwide (RNW), said: "The jamming of satellite broadcasts has become a regular occurrence as regimes seek to block certain services from the being received. This jamming affects areas stretching from Northern Europe to Afghanistan and as far south as Northern Africa. We have also seen internet blocking of services and cyber-attacks on media organisations of all over the world, shortwave jamming and disruption and interference with FM broadcasts. Media Freedom has not faced such a concerted campaign of disruption since the end of the Cold War."
Marking World Press Freedom Day on 3 May, the broadcasters called on all nations to recognise the legitimate role played by international broadcasts in offering free access to global media and coverage of events.
During the Cold War, the jamming of radio broadcasts to east of the Iron Curtain was commonplace. European and US broadcasters worked hard to overcome this in a game of cat and mouse. From the late 1990s, digital satellite broadcasting has flourished, delivering a wide range of programmes in many languages to communities across the globe. Audiences have been able to benefit from international broadcasts that provide a different perspective on news and cultures.
Shortwave jamming of BBC World Service English broadcasts to China for the first time ever this year is an unwelcome return to the oldest method of interrupting programmes. The jamming is so extensive and powerful that is affecting services to neighbouring Asian nations. This is contrary to the international regulations that govern radio broadcasts. The BBC has recently suspended some broadcasts in Sri Lanka following repeated disruption and there has been a long-running campaign of disruption and intimidation against the BBC in Iran.
BBC Global News director Peter Horrocks said, "Despite repeated jamming, recent figures show that our BBC Persian audience has nearly doubled to 11.8 million adults weekly - up from 6.7million in 2012. This huge rise shows that attempts to discredit our journalism and to intimidate our staff are failing, and ordinary Iranians are turning to the BBC for independent news they can trust."
The BBC adds that it has been working with fellow broadcasters and the satellite industry to counter jamming and secure media freedom. This involves seeking long term technical solutions and short term ?fixes? so that services can continue to be received during major political events and times of tension. All of the leading international broadcasters are working with the ITU (International Telecommunication Union) and other UN bodies to recognise the profound affects that jamming is having on audiences and the industry.
MUMBAI: A mix of documentaries and discussion programmes examining the impact Margaret Thatcher in Britain and around the world are to be telecast by BBC World News over the weekend.
The programmes aim to cover the life and work of Britain?s first female Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who breathed her last on 8 April 2013.
Andrew Marr will presents ?Margaret Thatcher: Britain?s Iron Lady? which sees family, friends and former colleagues ? as well as political opponents ? recall Baroness Thatcher?s life, her personality and her years in power. This will air on 13 April at 7.40 am and 8.40 pm; and on 14 April at 2.40 pm.
In ?The Rise and Fall of Margaret Thatcher?, BBC presenter Martha Kearney charts the unlikely rise of the grocer?s daughter who became Britain?s most famous Prime Minister. In this documentary Kearney reflects on Thatcher?s bitter downfall at the hands of her colleagues in government, a betrayal she never recovered from. It will air on 13 April at 6.00 pm and 14 April at 1.00 pm.
BBC World News will also broadcast a special edition of the current affairs programme ?Newsnight?, which will examine the impact of her policies both in the UK and abroad through insights from those who worked with and against her. The programme includes an interview with former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger who discusses her international role.
?Dateline London?, which brings together foreign correspondents based in London to give an outsider?s view of events in the UK, will host a special discussion considering reaction to Baroness Thatcher?s passing. This edition will be presented by Maxine Mawhinney of BBC News, and will feature journalists from Le Monde, Sunday Telegraph and Bloomberg.
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