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29 October 2014
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Africa Lives On The Ö÷²¥´óÐã
Holby City special, part of Africa Lives on the Ö÷²¥´óÐã

Africa Lives On The Ö÷²¥´óÐã

Ö÷²¥´óÐã ONE



Breakfast

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Natasha Kaplinsky will be presenting Breakfast from Kenya in the week starting 4 July, as world leaders gather for the G8 summit. Africa is top of their agenda.

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Natasha's father was an anti-apartheid campaigner in South Africa who sought political asylum in the UK. The family eventually settled in Kenya, where Natasha spent her early years.

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Natasha returns to South Africa and the old family home in Kenya to try to find out how Africa has changed and meet old friends.

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In addition, Breakfast will bring viewers stories from across the continent, including a video diary filmed by a family in Tanzania.

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The programme will also be focussing on doing business with African countries and examining the emergence of a new class of African entrepreneur.

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The Girl In the Cafe

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The Girl In The Cafe is a tenderly funny and poignant love story from award-winning screenwriter Richard Curtis, in which he combines his unique comedic touch with a powerful humanitarian message.

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Starring Bill Nighy (Love Actually, State Of Play) and Kelly Macdonald (Gosford Park, Trainspotting, State Of Play) it follows the story of a very hard-working, shy civil servant, Lawrence, and his life-changing relationship with a mysterious girl whom he meets in a café opposite Downing Street.

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He takes her on a romantic mini-break - to the G8 Summit.

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Set against the backdrop of a G8 Summit Meeting in Reykjavik, Iceland, where Lawrence is one of the British delegation, their gentle love story develops as world leaders compete for media and political advantage.

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The film follows both the growing love story between two shy outsiders and the progress of the summit, until the two become dramatically, comically and tragically entwined.

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Elephant Diaries

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For a baby elephant, family life is everything and losing your mother is the worst possible start in life.

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Through unprecedented access to Kenya's elephant rehabilitation centres, Jonathan Scott and Michaela Strachan capture on film, for the first time, the dramatic rescue and reintroduction of fragile young elephant orphans.

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The duo present a week of reports from Africa's only elephant orphanage, run by the Dr Sheldrick Wildlife Trust.

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With 28 years of experience in hand-rearing these gentle giants, Daphne Sheldrick's trust has successfully saved 62 infant calves, two from the day of birth.

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Michaela visits the orphanage in Nairobi to follow the newly-rescued calves on their road to recovery. And Jonathan visits centres within Tsavo East National Park to witness the gradual process of re-integration, as they learn to walk in step with their wild cousins.

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Geldof in Africa

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Leaving Live Aid and politics to one side, Bob Geldof makes a personal journey through Africa to understand ordinary Africans and, through their experiences, understand the forces that make the continent tick.

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Travelling through West Africa (Ghana, Benin and Mali), Central Africa (DR Congo and Uganda) and East Africa (Ethiopia, Tanzania and Somalia), Geldof explores the continent that the rest of the world seems to be leaving behind.

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Geldof says of his experiences: "In Europe, we live in effect East to West - across one vast temperate climate zone. Africa, on the other hand - lying North to South - has the lot: desert with its vast seas of sand; tropical with its jungles; equatorial with its rainforest; savannah and coastal with its animals and fish. In fact, practically everything except Arctic.

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"And within this immense continent more peoples, more language, more cultures, more animals than anywhere else on our world. It is quite simply the most extraordinary, beautiful and luminous place on our planet."

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Africa: Journeys of Hope

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George Alagiah presents an Africa Ö÷²¥´óÐã News Special that takes the viewer on two vibrant, interlocking journeys.

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Re-tracing his own journey from boyhood to manhood in Africa, George relates the compelling story of his beloved continent.

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From the first treasured taste of freedom in Ghana to the post-Apartheid land of opportunity - South Africa - and from an emotional reunion with an old classmate to a rare meeting with the one surviving master tracker of the Kruger National Park, George offers viewers an extraordinary glimpse of an extraordinary place.

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On the way, he meets a little girl at a Liberian refugee camp in Ghana who talks about her dream of going back to her "beautiful" homeland; and a white South African who has acted as a catalyst, making the dreams of land ownership come true for black vineyard workers who now run their own wine-making business.

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He talks to an eight-year-old in Ghana who tells him she wants to be a doctor when she grows up, because she loves helping people.

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And he brings together one of South Africa's first ever black Head Boys with the remarkable human rights campaigner Albie Sachs - one of the main architects of the country's newfound freedom.

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Ground Force - A Garden for Africa '05

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The Ground Force team are celebrating the amazing flora of the African continent in their last ever garden transformation.

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In just three days, the team will transform a patch of lawn outside the British Museum into an exotic garden, symbolising a journey through Africa, with the main path being made out of hardwood railway sleepers - reminiscent of a train journey through the continent.

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The planting will take viewers on a voyage reflecting the desert area of North Africa, through to the rich tropical planting and then on to the temperate regions of Southern Africa - where many of our favourite plants originated.

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At the centre of the garden, a dramatic water sculpture created by world-renowned artist Sokari Douglas Camp will add sound and movement.

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The stunning sculpture will be made from galvanised steel, and feature five statuesque eight foot figures of Nigerian women in vibrant colours.

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The garden will also feature a host of interesting and varied plants - representing the continent's different climatic zones - that will be maintained throughout the summer by volunteers from the Ö÷²¥´óÐã Neighbourhood Gardener scheme.

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A spectacular sculpture of a Baobab tree, donated by the Eden Project and Kirstenbosch Botanic Gardens, will also be displayed within the garden.

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And lending a head-turning twist to the garden is a collection of exciting sculptures by an impressive range of African artists who are taking part in the Africa05 exhibition at the British Museum.

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Holby City

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This summer, Holby City will transport viewers to Africa with a story that will change Ric and Diane's lives forever.

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Shot entirely on location in Ghana, Ric returns to his family home, hoping to find a more fulfilling role in his brother's clinic.

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Diane, reeling from setbacks in her new marriage and stunned by the news that her beloved surgical ward at Holby is to close, travels to Ghana to convince Ric that he's needed at home to fight the closure.

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However, once in Africa, she finds herself facing unexpected emotions.

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ONE Life: Alek Wek

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Alek Wek escaped from her home village, Wau in southern Sudan, on foot aged just 12. She and her family left when rebels arrived and war broke out.

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She arrived, via Kharthoum, in the East End of London with her sister and had to wait a long two years before her mother was allowed into the country.

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Talent-spotted by chance at a KISS FM street party, Alek was suddenly a million miles from her roots as she became one of the modelling world's stellar success stories, gracing the world's glossiest magazine covers and fashion capital catwalks.

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Alek has been back to her home country just once, to raise awareness of those who are suffering in the civil war.

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Now, though, the ONE Life team follow her as she takes her mother back home for the first time.

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Retracing the steps of their journey in reverse, they want to seek out a long-lost and much-loved aunt. Time has passed and the unstable situation in Sudan makes it a journey of hope and uncertainty.

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Rolf On African Art

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Over many millennia, African art has evolved into many diverse forms - from painting and sculpture to textiles, beadwork and pottery.

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Rolf Harris goes on a fascinating journey to discover the diversity of African art.

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Rolf continues the long tradition of rock art, using techniques similar to those which the San Bushmen used thousands of years ago; creates his own piece of sculpture with a group of Makonde wood carvers; and, finally, produces a painting that reflects the African people and landscapes that have inspired him.

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Songs Of Praise

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Kwame Kwei-Armah travels to South Africa to reflect on the pivotal role that music plays in people's lives.

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Travelling to Soweto, Kwame visits the Buskaid Soweto String Project founded by British viola player, Rosemary Nalden, after she heard about the difficulties faced by a group of people trying to bring classical music to the township.

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Archbishop Desmond Tutu talks about the importance of music to South Africans, and how they express their spirituality through music.

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Performances come from the Soweto Gospel Choir, the Imilonji Kantu Choral Society - and Ladysmith Black Mambazo perform in Kwa-Zulu Natal.

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Strictly African Dancing

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Six celebrities of African origin are each paired with an African dance troupe for intensive training before performing a traditional African dance.

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They will dance to live music while a panel of African dance experts judge their skills, and viewers at home vote for their favourites.

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As the novice dancers rebuild links with their heritage, viewers learn about the culture in which they are immersed.

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The celebrities learn about the significance of their dances' traditional values, as each tribe teaches them steps that have been passed down from generation to generation.

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Trauma Africa

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Johannesburg, South Africa is a dangerous city – stabbings and shootings are every day occurrences.

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Trauma Africa follows the doctors, nurses and paramedics as they cope with the extreme conditions and endless stream of casualties in South Africa's busiest hospital – government-run Johannesburg General.

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The leading trauma centre in Africa - and one of the leading trauma centres in the world - Johannesburg General has been described as a shining example of the new South Africa.

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Medical practitioners from all over the world come to learn new techniques and to experience the sheer volume and variety of cases that pass through its doors.

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Dr Ricardo Hamilton has come to South Africa from the Caribbean to learn about trauma medicine.

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In just one day, Ricardo battles to save the lives of two young men who've been stabbed, a baby who's been pulled from a swimming pool, and has to counsel the grieving family of a patient who hasn't made it.

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"People think I'm the only connection between living and dying," he tells us after comforting the distraught parents of a young woman who's been seriously injured in a car crash.

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Louis Phampe is a career paramedic who has notched up ten years' experience working the streets of Soweto.

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He is filled with pride for the township where he was born and raised: "I feel that working here will show the youth that tomorrow they can also be where I am."

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Sister Nthabi Khumalo feels that nursing is a calling: the welfare of patients is so important to her that she leaves the hospital to search for the relatives of a patient who has lost his memory.

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"When I go to sleep at night, I feel very happy knowing there are a few souls I helped out," she says.

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The film crew were given unhindered access to show how these dedicated professionals make it through the day in this nail-biting, real-life drama based in Johannesburg's ER.Ìý

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Kwame Kwei-Armah provides the commentary in these three 60-minute documentaries.

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Ö÷²¥´óÐã THREE will also be showing Trauma Uncut Africa.

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Worlds Apart

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Worlds Apart sees an ordinary British family doing something extraordinary.

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For two weeks, the Hedgecock family from Wanstead undertake an arduous journey to the Kunene region of Namibia.

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Here, they meet the Himba tribe who have invited them to become houseguests of an ordinary family there.

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The challenge is physically and emotionally gruelling for the family, who will have to learn how to live and work as part of the tribe - keeping warm, getting enough food and dealing with the sometimes overwhelming experience of living so close to African nature.


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