Historic Korean summit and goat island

Published: Sept. 1, 2023, 11:30 p.m.

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Max Pearson presents a collection of this week's Witness History episodes from the BBC World Service. Our guest is Jean H. Lee, an American journalist who has covered both North and South Korea extensively. Jean is also the co-host of the BBC World Service podcast, The Lazarus Heist. She tells us more about the relationship between the two countries.

The programme begins with the historic meeting between North and South Korea's leaders almost 50 years after the Korean War. We hear from Sameh Elbarky who was in Cairo's Rabaa al-Adawiya Square on the day the army killed hundreds of protestors following a military coup.

In the second half of the programme, British black activists recount how they protested against racism within the local bus company in Bristol in 1963. One of the first Chinese students to arrive in the US in the early 1980s following the Cultural Revolution shares her experience. Finally, how the Mexican island of Guadalupe was saved from being destroyed by hungry goats.

Contributors:\\nJean H. Lee - American journalist and the co-host of the BBC's The Lazarus Heist podcast.\\nProfessor Chung-in Moon - South Korean special delegate. \\nSameh Elbarky - survivor of the Rabaa massacre.\\nPaul Stephenson - spokesperson for the Bristol Bus Boycott. \\nRoy Hackett - Bristol Bus Boycott protestor. \\nZha Jianying - Chinese American writer. \\nProfessor Exequiel Ezcurra - conservationist.

(Photo: North and South Korean leaders meet at the summit in 2000. Credit: Reuters)

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