
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In 2008, the brutal murder of Eudy Simelane shocked South Africa and highlighted the widespread violence faced by South African women and members of the LGTBI community. But has anything changed? We hear from a friend of Eudy and speak to Sibongile Ndashe, a South African lawyer and human rights activist. Plus, we look back at the massive oil fires in Kuwait in 1991, battling racial discrimination in British schools in the 1960s, Cold War intelligence gathering in East Germany and the invention of Chanel No.5, 100 years ago.
Photo: Eudy Simelane’s parents sat at the bridge named in their daughter’s honour. Credit: BBC
4.3
554554 ratings
In 2008, the brutal murder of Eudy Simelane shocked South Africa and highlighted the widespread violence faced by South African women and members of the LGTBI community. But has anything changed? We hear from a friend of Eudy and speak to Sibongile Ndashe, a South African lawyer and human rights activist. Plus, we look back at the massive oil fires in Kuwait in 1991, battling racial discrimination in British schools in the 1960s, Cold War intelligence gathering in East Germany and the invention of Chanel No.5, 100 years ago.
Photo: Eudy Simelane’s parents sat at the bridge named in their daughter’s honour. Credit: BBC
5,459 Listeners
370 Listeners
1,804 Listeners
7,690 Listeners
3,217 Listeners
503 Listeners
1,795 Listeners
1,082 Listeners
957 Listeners
605 Listeners
959 Listeners
1,940 Listeners
1,055 Listeners
1,885 Listeners
845 Listeners
355 Listeners
429 Listeners
748 Listeners
4,780 Listeners
4,195 Listeners
733 Listeners
3,167 Listeners
504 Listeners