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- A soldier fighting aliens gets to relive the same day over and over again, the day restarting every time he dies.
- Seth MacFarlane hosts the Academy Awards.
- Former United States Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, discusses his career in Washington D.C. from his days as a congressman in the early 1960s to planning the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
- Twenty years on from the Rwandan genocide, This World reveals evidence that challenges the accepted story of one of the most horrifying events of the late 20th century. The current president of Rwanda, Paul Kagame, has long been portrayed as the man who brought an end to the killing and rescued his country from oblivion. Now there are increasing questions about the role of Kagame's Rwandan Patriotic Front forces in the dark days of 1994 and in the 20 years since. The film investigates evidence of Kagame's role in the shooting down of the presidential plane that sparked the killings in 1994 and questions his claims to have ended the genocide. It also examines claims of war crimes committed by Kagame's forces and their allies in the wars in the Democratic Republic of Congo and allegations of human rights abuses in today's Rwanda. Former close associates from within Kagame's inner circle and government speak out from hiding abroad. They present a very different portrait of a man who is often hailed as presiding over a model African state. Rwanda's economic miracle and apparent ethnic harmony has led to the country being one of the biggest recipients of aid from the UK. Former prime minister Tony Blair is an unpaid adviser to Kagame, but some now question the closeness of Mr Blair and other western leaders to Rwanda's president.
- Generation Greta interweaves the portraits of 9 young women from all around the world, aged 12 to 23, united in spite of cultural differences by one common cause: trying to finally achieve climate and social justice.
- Former Wales and Lions rugby union captain Gareth Thomas, one of the most famous gay international sports stars, takes a hard-hitting, personal look at what he sees as the last bastion of homophobia in sport - professional football.
- The story of the triumphs and controversies of Britain's cycling medal factory. The architects of Britain's rise to cycling dominance at the Olympics and the Tour De France reveal how they did it and answer their critics.
- Max Clifford was a powerful media publicist to the stars. But in 2014 he was jailed for historic sex crimes. Now, the survivors of his abuse tell their stories.
- An important pilgrimage site in antiquity, the island of Philae has fascinated travelers for centuries. On this rock rising from the Nile, nicknamed the "pearl of Egypt", powerful rulers have built monumental sanctuaries from the time of the last pharaohs to the Romans. Subsequently, the temples were looted, vandalized or transformed, before the successive construction of two dams in the 20th century sealed the fate of the island. To save the precious vestiges from the rising waters, an international campaign coordinated by UNESCO was undertaken in the 1970s. The objective: to dismantle the monuments stone by stone to rebuild them on a neighboring island.
- Presidents Donald Trump, Viktor Orbán and Recep Tayyip Erdogan agree: US multi-billionaire George Soros is the number one public enemy because he is allegedly planning a new world order. All media of the extreme right are in the same vein: Allegedly, Soros is in the process of destabilizing the USA, Hungary or the whole world, flooding them with migrants and eliminating Trump. The right-wing populist criticism of Soros' philanthropic and political engagement, especially in Eastern Europe, has clear anti-Semitic features and is characterized by hatred of Jews that should give food for thought. Activists and ordinary US citizens are associated with Soros and covered with smear campaigns. The crudest and most daring conspiracy theories are in circulation. Some people who are brainwashed as a result take action with serious consequences. But these dangerous conspiracy theories stand up to a fact check. This factual current affairs documentary investigates the question and finds answers.
- Engineer Rob Bell visits the scene of some bridge and building collapses in the United States and Europe examining what caused these tragedies and revealing the lessons engineers can learn from them.
- For the first time, the politicians and negotiators on both sides of the channel tell the story of the key events, the mistakes and the miscalculations that made Theresa May postpone Brexit and forced her from office.
- Hilary Andersson reports from Alabama, one of 12 US states attempting to overturn the constitutional right to abortion. She speaks to campaigners and politicians on both sides of the debate.
- When an aristocrat and his entire family disappear, the authorities unearth something horrifying.
- 201937m5.9 (14)TV Episode
- 201932m4.9 (14)TV Episode
- 201934m6.1 (14)TV Episode
- Jane Corbin investigates the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul and asks if the West has turned a blind eye in pursuit of lucrative trade deals?
- The government has pledged to radically reduce carbon emissions to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. We'll need to make big changes to the way we live but how much difference will these changes really make?
- Reveals how China runs its re-education camps, where more than a million people have been imprisoned. Uncovering the surveillance and abuse inside hundreds of new detention centres.
- Leaked documents reveal how an impoverished country was corruptly exploited by its former ruling family. Richard Bilton follows the money trail back to the UK.
- Jane Corbin looks at how Britain is coping with the Covid 19 crisis - and asks if the government has the right strategy to contain the virus.
- Justin Rowlatt reports from the scientific frontline, finding out how science can help us defeat the virus. With access to key drug and vaccine trials, he reveals a race against time to help save lives.
- An investigation into conditions inside migrant camps in Greece during the Covid-19 lockdown, as experts warn of the potential for dangerous outbreaks inside the camps.
- The rage we see in the streets across USA has been building up, and thus worsening over a long time.
- Thousands of people have joined marches against racism after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Clive Myrie asks if this event could change race relations in America for good.
- Richard Bilton investigates the rapid expansion of our Covid-19 testing capacity and asks whether we have got the world-beating service the prime minister promised.
- Dr Faye Kirkland investigates the scientific advice the government followed in the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic and asks if they were taking a gamble with people's lives.
- Did China hide crucial information about Covid-19? BBC China Editor Carrie Gracie investigates how it delayed reporting the initial outbreak, evidence that it could be spread to humans and how doctors who spoke out were silenced.
- Reporter Darragh MacIntyre meets with the families of British people who have been arbitrarily detained in Iran and asks whether the payment of a historic debt could set them free.
- Jane Corbin visits Liverpool to find out how people are coping with tier three coronavirus restrictions to find out whether people have complied with the rules, if the restrictions are starting to work and what the future now holds.
- Justin Rowlatt visits communities around Britain battered by this year's extreme weather - unprecedented rainfall, sunshine and sustained high temperatures - to find out how they have coped.
- The inside story of the development of the Oxford vaccine against Covid-19. Fergus Walsh scrutinises the data that has come out of the trials, and examines the vaccination's efficacy and safety.
- The full story of Princess Latifa's kidnap while she attempted to escape Dubai in 2018 and the subsequent cover up by her family. Latifa secretly tells of her ordeal in her own words while being held prisoner.
- The UK government says its decisions on Covid-19 have been guided by science. Jane Corbin investigates the policies pursued by governments elsewhere, using data to discover whether anyone got it right.
- 202145m8.3 (12)TV EpisodeHatred and the desire for revenge smoldered in the minds of many Germans after WW1. Many Germans believe that the Jews are the cause of many problems.
- 202159m7.6 (12)TV EpisodeAde begins in the Solomon Islands, and then travels down the east coast of Australia - from the Great Barrier Reef to Tasmania. He learns about the 'feminisation' of green turtles, bush-fires and Tasmania's renewable energy revolution.
- 202159m7.6 (10)TV EpisodeAde joins the effort to plant huge new areas of the Ganges delta in Bangladesh with mangroves. In Bhutan, he hears how local people are being affected by climate change but also how the nation is carbon negative.
- 202013mTV Episode
- Exploring how artificial intelligence has transformed our world and continues to do so thus creating a new China/US arms race. Experts also warn of the dangers of not implementing urgent regulation and potentially losing control of AI.
- Indian children cut themselves with razor blades during the ceremony of Matam. Three year old Thai children earn money as boxers. A five year old Australian boy breast-feeds.
- The speed of Afghanistan's fall to the Taliban has shocked the world, but what sort of country will it become? Panorama asks what is at stake for the Afghans who are now in their first week under Taliban rule.
- A phone call reveals information that may point to a motive for arranging Anni's murder. Shrien's defence team begin dismantling the South African police's case against him.
- South African Police are searching for Tongo, the taxi driver, who has now been named as a suspect in Anni's murder. Meanwhile, back in Sweden, Anni's family start to feel that some of Shrien's behaviour is unusual.