The Frontline Club show

The Frontline Club

Summary: The Frontline Club is a media club for a diverse group of people united by their passion for quality journalism. The Frontline Club is dedicated to ensuring that stories that fade from headlines are kept in sharp focus.

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  • Artist: Frontline Club Charitable Trust
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Podcasts:

 Insight with Leah Chishugi: A Long Way From Paradise | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:18:18

Leah Chishugi describes herself as a survivor of the Rwandan genocide and it is what she calls the 'survivor's guilt' that compelled her to return to her native Congo where she set up the charity Everything is a Benefit to help those affected by the region's conflict. She will be joining us at the Frontline Club in conversation with special correspondent and presenter for BBC News, Razia Iqbal, to tell her story and the stories of the women and children in the eastern part of Congo that she now dedicates herself to helping. Chishugi grew up in eastern Congo but moved to Kigali the Rwandan capital at the age of sixteen to work as a model, she married and had a son. But just three years later she found herself caught up in the massacre that claimed over 800,000 lives. She escaped only after being left for dead under a pile of corpses.

 In The Picture: Afghanistan with Adam Ferguson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:12:24

In The Picture: Afghanistan with Adam Ferguson PhotographyDate: November 10, 2010 7:00 PM Photograph by Adam Ferguson. Adam Ferguson, an up and coming star in the world of photojournalism, will be speaking at the Frontline Club about his work in Afghanistan, his successes to date and his plans for the future. His photograph of the aftermath of a suicide bombing in Kabul won him first prize in the Spot News category at the World Press Photo Awards this year. Ferguson's success in 2010 has not stopped there: he received three Pictures of the Year International awards and was selected to participate in the 17th World Press Photo Joop Swart Masterclass. His work has been published internationally by Time Magazine, The New York Times, Vanity Fair, The Financial Times Magazine, UNICEF and Human Rights Watch, among others. His coverage of the Afghan elections and troops in Korengal valley has won him critical acclaim and by joining the VII Mentor Program, Ferguson has had a chance to learn from those at the pinnacle of their careers in photojournalism, before being accepted into the VII Network. The event will be moderated by Simon Robinson, Thomson Reuters' Enterprise Editor for Europe the Middle East and Africa. Before joining Reuters earlier this year, Robinson worked for Time magazine, first as a correspondent reporting from over 50 countries and later as editor of the Atlantic edition of Time magazine and the London based editor for Time.com.

 Insight with Tariq Ali: The Obama Syndrome | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:22:38

Two years since the White House changed hands, how has the American empire altered? Very little, argues Tariq Ali, apart from the mood music. Ali will be at the Frontline Club in conversation with Al Jazeera's senior political analyst, Marwan Bishara, to discuss his new book The Obama Syndrome: Surrender at Home, War Abroad in which he slices through Obama-mania, demystifying the narrative arc of redemption. Contrary to what the world hoped Obama symbolised; redemption of a racist history, the overcoming of adversity, and the hope of a better, fairer future. Ali argues the wind that drove Obama into the White House was really the immaculate symbiosis of big money and big politics. In this dissection of Obama’s overseas escalation and domestic retreat, renowned author, filmmaker and international commentator Tariq Ali asks how the American empire has changed since Obama took control, with military activity in the Middle East more prevalent than during the Bush Era. The hopes aroused during Obama’s election campaign have rapidly receded: Obama’s failures are paving the way for a Republican surge, while his own supporters become increasingly despondent.

 The Alternative Iraq Enquiry: Post Screening Q & A | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:00:24

The Alternative Iraq Enquiry was borne from David Lawley-Wakelin, the freelance documentary filmmaker who was so incensed by the Iraq war that he made the bold statement from the audience of Question Time suggesting whether Tony Blair was a liar prepared to kill in the name of oil. On this premise, Lawley-Wakelin travels to Iraq to ask its citizens and military personnel whether they agreed with him. Questioning the motives of the war and the responsibilities for its atrocities on both sides of the Atlantic, The Alternative Iraq Enquiry reaches the fundamental question: who is responsible for the atrocities of war? Q A with Director David Lawley-Wakelin

 First Wednesday: US midterms - the reckoning and Yemen, what happens next? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:18:51

November's First Wednesday will see an expert panel address the top stories of the week. With the results just in, we will be discussing the US midterms and the repercussions of the results. Following the failed attempt this weekend to plant bombs on cargo planes destined for the US, we will be discussing Yemen, its politics and the response of the US to this latest terrorist threat. Another opportunity to join in a lively public meeting, hosted by Paddy O'Connell of BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House, bringing together experts and commentators and mixing their views with contributions from our audience. With: Felicity Spector, chief writer and American politics expert for Channel 4 News; Dr Thomas D. Grant, chair of Republicans Abroad UK; Bill Barnard, chair of Democrats Abroad UK; Abdallah Homouda, Journalist and Yemen specialist; Ginny Hill, Journalist, Yemen expert and author of Chatham House briefing paper, Yemen: Fear of Failure; James Brandon, head of research at Quilliam, former journalist who lived in Yemen in 2002 and 2004/5 and worked on both Yemen’s English language newspapers; Tom Finn, freelance journalist, currently working as a copy editor for the Yemen Times in Sana'a (via online link up).

 Insight with Gareth Peirce: Dispatches from the Dark Side | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:10:48

Gareth Peirce is an acclaimed human rights lawyer who has appeared for the Birmingham Six, the family of Jean Charles de Menezes and Moazzam Begg, amongst many others. Peirce will be at the Frontline Club in conversation with the Guardian's legal affairs correspondent Afua Hirsch. She will be discussing her work and Dispatches from the Dark Side: On Torture and the Death of Justice, her new comprehensive set of essays which analyses the corruption of legal principles and practices in both the US and the UK. In Dispatches from the Dark Side Peirce demonstrates how the British government has colluded with the US in a range of unlawful activities; rendition, internment without trial, torture. How it has gone to extraordinary lengths to hide its actions, its devices for maintaining secrecy being more deep-rooted than those of any other comparable democracy.  She states that unless the British government can urgently put into reverse its present course, it will have destroyed much of the moral and legal fabric it claims to be protecting. Exploring the fate of men interned without trial, the subjects of house arrest, extraditees and deportees. Peirce argues that their cases demonstrate a deeply entrenched culture of impunity among those pursuing the West’s new suspect community. She recalls Britain’s crackdown on Irish nationalism and asks if in its prosecution of the ‘War on Terror’, has the West repeated the fatal errors of the Irish conflict, with young Muslims taking the place of innocent Irish men and women?

 What now for the international development budget? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:33:33

In the first of a series of events looking at international development and the aid industry we will be examining the UK international development budget and the implications for foreign aid. What is the coalition government's policy towards the development budget and what impact will the proposed changes have on countries around the world? The government has signalled its intention to retarget a large porportion of the budget to achieving stability in Afghanistan, but is there a danger that the line between development aid and military intervention becomes increasingly blurred?  What will be the impact of cut backs in aid to countries such as India, China and Russia? Join us at the Frontline Club with an expert panel to discuss the coalition government's shake up of the international development budget and if they have their priorities in the right places. Chaired by Humphrey Hawksley, leading BBC foreign correspondent, author and commentator on world affairs. With: Michael Anderson, DFID director general for policy and global issues; Dorcas Erskine, ActionAid head of public affairs; Samir Elhawary, ODI Research Fellow, currently researching the evolving role of humanitarian action in conflict-affected emergencies, with a particular focus on the interface between humanitarianism and politics; Paul Ackroyd, International Development Consultant.

 Paul Mason in conversation with Sir David Hare: Has capitalism learned its lesson? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:25:37

Join us for what should prove to be a fascinating discussion between BBC Newsnight's Paul Mason and acclaimed playwright Sir David Hare, whose recent play The Power of Yes wrestled with the causes of the 2008 financial crisis. From his "ringside seat" as economics editor Paul Mason's book Meltdown: The End of the Age of Greed is a blow by blow account that begins with the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the bailout package of October 2008, seeking to explain how we got there. In an updated edition Paul Mason explores the impact of this development on capitalist ideology and politics. We are delighted that Sir David Hare who carried out meticulous research for his play on the financial crisis will be with us to discuss the events of 2008 and seek to make sense of the state of capitalism today.

 WikiLeaks: Julian Assange and Daniel Ellsberg in conversation | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:38:16

Following the leak by whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks of almost 400,000 secret US army field reports from the Iraq war between 2004 and 2009. Julian Assange in conversation with one of the most famous whistle blowers in history, Daniel Ellsberg, who was responsible for the leak of the Pentagon Papers in 1971. Chaired by Elizabeth Palmer, CBS News correspondent.

 In the Picture: Teun Voeten’s Tunnel People | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:15:41

Dutch photographer, Teun Voeten, is an award winning photojournalist and author. He has covered conflicts in the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Sudan, Angola, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Afghanistan, Colombia, Iraq, Lebanon and Gaza. His work has been featured in publications such as Vanity Fair, Newsweek, The New Yorker, and National Geographic, among others. Voeten is also a contributing photographer for organizations such as the International Red Cross, Doctors Without Borders, Human Rights Watch and the United Nations. In the mid-nineties however, he took a break from war reporting. For five months he lived, slept and worked in a tunnel underneath Manhattan's well-heeled Upper West Side. He lived alongside an eclectic mix of outsiders: Vietnam veterans, hippies, crack addicts, Cuban refugees, convicted killers, computer programmers, philosophical recluses and criminal runaways. His book on this community, Tunnel People was originally published in the Netherlands in 1996 and widely acclaimed for its anthropological and journalistic merits. Recently Voeten went back to find his former co-inhabitants of New York’s Tunnels. In this updated version of Tunnel People, Voeten describes what has happened in the thirteen years since they were evicted from the tunnels and offered alternative housing by Amtrak. Hot on the heals of his New York book launch, Voeten will be at the Frontline Club to discuss his career and his experience of living underground in Manhattan. Moderated by Colin Jacobson

 The New Nobility: Russia’s Secret Services Revealed | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:24:05

The KGB, Russia’s notorious intelligence service, was dissolved in 1991 after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The void it left was soon filled by a new security service, the FSB, which has accumulated powerful backers and increasing authority ever since. This agency has become, in the words of former FSB Director Nikolai Patrushev, Russia’s “new nobility.” Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan, co-founders of the secret services watchdog website Agentura.ru, will be speaking at the Frontline Club about their book The New Nobility which investigates Russia's powerful and shadowy security and intelligence services. Soldatov and Borogan worked for Novaya Gazeta from January 2006 to November 2008. Agentura.ru has been reported on and featured in the New York Times, the Moscow Times, the Washington Post, Online Journalism Review, Le Monde, the Christian Science Monitor, CNN, the Federation of American Scientists, and the BBC. This event will be moderated by Susan Richards, a non-executive director and founder of Open Democracy. She is the author of two books on Russia and a specialist on Russian affairs.

 TV journalism in the 21st century: The real golden age? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:27:01

Featuring: -- Peter Horrocks, BBC director of global news -- Ben Cohen, Channel 4 News technology correspondent -- Greg Beitchman, global editor of the Reuters news agency -- Simon Bucks, associate editor at Sky News. Chaired by Matt Wells, head of audio at the Guardian, and presenter of the Media Talk podcast. There is much talk of Old Media platforms of news print and TV being wiped out by digital platforms. But TV is still world's most dominant communication medium and is growing year on year - TV journalism now reaches more millions of people around the world than ever before. The BBC sells its news channels across the world to more clients than ever before; new broadcasters like al Jazeera and France 24 have set up operations across the globe and in multiple languages and the internet offers new ways for video journalism to be produced quickly and cheaply. So with TV entering its own digitally-connected, multi-platform future, this Frontline panel asks: is this the real golden age of TV news?

 In the Picture Exclusive with John G Morris: Never Again? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:39:02

John G. Morris was LIFE's London Picture Editor on D-Day, and famously saved Robert Capa's pictures of the landing on Omaha Beach, prints of which now line the stairs up to Frontline's Forum. He will reflect on his unique career in picture editing and on why Getty Images only recently released the photographs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Long-suppressed LIFE magazine pictures of the aftermath of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki will be the focus of John G. Morris' discussion at the Frontline Club about what, if anything, we have learned from images of war. Alexander Lindsay, a one-time student of Morris, now a successful filmmaker, will moderate the event. Lindsay made the film Afgan during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which is believed to be the only film by a Western crew with the Soviet forces in combat, and covered both Gulf wars from Iraq. He has since spent five years filming the wreck of the Titanic, creating the largest images of the shipwreck ever made.

 First Wednesday: The looming power shift in North Korea and the nuclear threat beyond | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:22:58

Little is known about Kim Jong-il's youngest son Kim Jong Un but his promotion to North Korea's powerful defence commission is being interpreted as a clear sign that he is being groomed to be his father's heir. If Kim Jong-il is paving the way for a handover of power to a third generation of his faimily, what does this mean for the future of the communist dynasty and its economic and foreign polices? With so much of what goes on inside North Korea veiled in secrecy we will be discussing what recent developments mean for North Korea and its relationships with its neighbours and the world beyond. With North Korea's nuclear threat said to have reached an "alarming level" we will turn to the issue of nuclear proliferation and assess the dangers posed not only by North Korea, but also Libya Iran and the South Asia region. An opportunity to ask questions and discuss with experts. With: Aidan Foster-Carter, Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Sociology & Modern Korea at Leeds University; Charles Scanlon, BBC correspondent in Japan and South Korea from 2000 to 2007, currently an editor at BBC World Service news; Tim Tate, investigative journalist and film maker, director of Dirty Little Secrets; Mark Fitzpatrick, director of Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Programme at International Institute for Strategic Studies;

 Ten years since Milosevic: His wars and legacy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:16:17

When the Yugoslavian president Slobodan Milosevic was ousted from power it brought to an end a 13-year rule that had seen the country torn apart by bloody conflict, with thousands of people killed. The man who had been feted by world leaders at the height of his powers as Serbian President in 1995 was forced out of office amid street protests and a general strike after losing the September 2000 election and later faced trial in the Hague for war crimes in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia and Kosovo. Ten years after the October 5th revolution we will be bringing together journalists, fillmmakers and experts who were there to discuss these remarkable events and their impact. What was the legacy of the former President who died in his cell in 2006? Chaired by Bill Neely, International Editor for ITV News. With: Steve Crawshaw, international advocacy director, Amnesty International and co-author of Small Acts of Resistance How courage, tenacity and ingenuity can change the world; Norma Percy, co-executive producer (with Brian Lapping) of the BBC series, The Fall of Milosevic; Allan Little, BBC News special correspondent and programme presenter; Maggie O'Kane, editorial director of GuardianFilms and former foreign correspondent with the newspaper, she has covered most of the world's major conflicts over the last decade.

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