
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Robert Fowler, a senior Canadian diplomat, was held hostage for five months by Al Qaeda in Niger in 2009. He says that since his capture and release, terror attacks and events in the region, such as the brief Islamist takeover of northern Mali, should serve as a wake-up call of a jihadist danger.
He believes militants aim to set up a seven thousand kilometre Islamic caliphate stretching from Mauritania to Somalia. Is he scaremongering, or does he have a point?
(Image: Robert Fowler, Credit: AFP/Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.4
326326 ratings
Robert Fowler, a senior Canadian diplomat, was held hostage for five months by Al Qaeda in Niger in 2009. He says that since his capture and release, terror attacks and events in the region, such as the brief Islamist takeover of northern Mali, should serve as a wake-up call of a jihadist danger.
He believes militants aim to set up a seven thousand kilometre Islamic caliphate stretching from Mauritania to Somalia. Is he scaremongering, or does he have a point?
(Image: Robert Fowler, Credit: AFP/Getty Images)

7,712 Listeners

4,124 Listeners

375 Listeners

518 Listeners

1,063 Listeners

295 Listeners

1,799 Listeners

962 Listeners

730 Listeners

51 Listeners

844 Listeners

66 Listeners

990 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

6 Listeners

13 Listeners

4 Listeners

1 Listeners

37 Listeners

0 Listeners

145 Listeners

381 Listeners

2 Listeners