100 épisodes
(2 h)
Filtrer
Saison 28
Saison 2007
Saison 2009
Saison 2010
Saison 2011
Saison 2012
Saison 2013
Saison 2014
Saison 2015
Saison 2018
Saison 2019
Saison 2020
Saison 2021
Épisodes
S2013 E1 • Ozwald Boateng - Fashion Designer
HARDtalk speaks to the global fashion icon Ozwald Boateng who was the youngest ever and first black designer and tailor on London's prestigious Savile Row. Why does he say his colour was irrelevant to his success and what has made his African roots important to him today?
Première diffusion : 7 janvier 2013
S2013 E2 • Fatih Birol - Chief Economist, International Energy Agency
Not so long ago it seemed the world's addiction to fossil fuels would soon be ended by dwindling supply. But that was before fracking, tar sands and deep sea exploration transformed calculations about global reserves of oil and gas. HARDtalk speaks to Fatih Birol - one of the world's most influential analysts of the global energy market and its effect on the world economy and environment. Is the resilience of fossil fuel supply a cause for celebration, or despair?
Première diffusion : 9 janvier 2013
S2013 E3 • Lord Heseltine - British deputy prime minster 1995-97
Halfway through its parliamentary term, Britain's Conservative-led coalition government has a growth problem: the economy is flat, possibly heading for a triple-dip recession. But how does a government committed to fiscal austerity juice things up? HARDtalk speaks to Lord Heseltine, a former Conservative deputy prime minister, who was last year commissioned by David Cameron's government to come up with a growth strategy. But on a range of issues from economic management to Europe, are today's Tory leaders ready to heed this voice of experience?
Première diffusion : 10 janvier 2013
S2013 E4 • Rupert Everett - Actor
HARDtalk speaks to an actor whose life is been flavoured with a twist of melodrama. Rupert Everett's career has been marked by vivid highs and extreme lows. The same can be said of a personal life which at times featured copious amounts of sex, drugs and alcohol. He had Hollywood success but it was fleeting because, he says, the movie business remains biased against gay actors. Now he's won a new audience as a writer and he is planning to direct his first film. So has the wildness in Rupert Everett been tamed?
Première diffusion : 14 janvier 2013
S2013 E5 • Joaquin Almunia - EU Competition Commissioner
EU officials in Brussels insist the worst of the Eurozone crisis is over, but is that relief premature? Europe's debt mountain still casts a long shadow. Rising unemployment is fuelling anger on the streets. And Europe's biggest nations are divided on the basic question - where next for the EU? Amid this uncertainty, big practical challenges remain - not least for the EU's Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia. Short term or long term, is there reason to be confident about the European Union?
Première diffusion : 15 janvier 2013
S2013 E6 • Kiran Bedi - Director General, Indian Police Service 2006 - 2007
The brutal gang rape and murder of a young woman in Delhi in December 2012 has prompted India to confront a disturbing truth: the country is failing to protect women from sexual violence. Kiran Bedi has seen the problem close up - she was the most senior female police officer in the Indian Police Service when she retired. Is India ready for the deep-seated changes that would make the country's women less vulnerable?
Première diffusion : 16 janvier 2013
S2013 E7 • Dani Dayan - Chairman of the Israeli Settler Movement
Arguably the most right wing government in Israel's history may soon be replaced by a government even further to the right. Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu is the clear favourite to keep his job after the forthcoming election, but his next governing coalition may depend on hardliners in the Jewish settler movement who want to annex large chunks of the West Bank and end all talk of a two-state peace deal. Dani Dayan is a settler leader who is backing Mr Netanyahu. Is the rise of the far right about to leave Israel dangerously isolated?
Première diffusion : 17 janvier 2013
S2013 E8 • Pascal Lamy - Director General, World Trade Organisation
In the Geneva headquarters of the World Trade Organisation, Stephen Sackur meets the man who for the past eight years has been leading the crusade for global free trade. Pascal Lamy will leave the WTO later this year frustrated, with the so-called Doha round of negotiations designed to spread free trade to the developing world in limbo. The flagging world economy has prompted a rise in protectionism, so has the march toward trade liberalisation ended in failure?
Première diffusion : 21 janvier 2013
S2013 E9 • Doreen Lawrence - Director, The Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust
On the 22nd April 1993, Stephen Lawrence was murdered in south London. Stephen was black and his attackers were white. The killing and subsequent investigation exposed violent racism on Britain's streets and institutional racism within the British police force. Thanks in large part to the tireless campaign of Stephen's mother, Doreen Lawrence, two of her son's killers were brought to justice in 2012. Laws have been passed and institutions reformed to combat racism but, two decades on, how much has really changed?
Première diffusion : 22 janvier 2013
S2013 E10 • Paul Bhatti - Minister in Charge of National Harmony, Pakistan
HARDtalk speaks to a government minister whose very job description seems deeply ironic given his country's current turmoil. Paul Bhatti is Pakistan's minister for national harmony- a job he accepted after his brother was assassinated whilst serving as minorities minister. The Bhatti family is from Pakistan's minority Christian community. What hope is there for national harmony in a country disfigured by extremist violence and endemic corruption?
Première diffusion : 23 janvier 2013
S2013 E11 • Mohamed El-Erian - CEO, PIMCO
Is it time for the doom-mongers to admit they were wrong about the world economy? The Eurozone is intact, the US hasn't plunged off that fiscal cliff and even the most stagnant economy of them all - Japan's - is showing signs of life. Could it be that central bankers and politicians are finally ready to take bold decisions in their quest for growth? HARDtalk speaks to one of the world's most influential investors, Mohamed El-Erian, boss of the massive Pimco fund management business. Caution or confidence, which is winning out?
Première diffusion : 24 janvier 2013
S2013 E12 • Sir Nigel Sheinwald - UK Ambassador to the US, 2007 - 2012
In or out? For the next five years Britain's future in the European Union will be shrouded in uncertainty, thanks to David Cameron's commitment to a referendum. He believes his dramatic gamble will pay off not just at home, but in Europe too - allowing him to recalibrate Britain's relationship with Brussels, will it work? HARDtalk speaks to Sir Nigel Sheinwald who was the UK's top diplomat at the EU, foreign policy adviser to Tony Blair, then Ambassador in Washington. Is the Cameron EU gambit in Britain's national interest?
Première diffusion : 28 janvier 2013
S2013 E13 • Ping Fu - CEO, Geomagic
Ping Fu is fast becoming one of America's most celebrated female entrepreneurs, not just because the tech company she founded is revolutionising the manufacturing process in the digital age, but also because her own life story represents a triumph over long odds. She was just eight years old when her life was turned upside down by Mao's cultural revolution. She endured years of abuse before being thrown out of China. Three decades later she is an adviser to President Obama on innovation. What lessons lie behind this extraordinary journey?
Première diffusion : 29 janvier 2013
S2013 E14 • Mark Lynas - Environmental campaigner and author
Stephen Sackur talks to Mark Lynas, a veteran green activist who once led a campaign to vandalise experimental genetically modified crops. But that was then - now he says that GM technology is entirely safe, and is a necessity if we are to feed the planet. He has made a similar U-turn on nuclear power too. The zeal of the convert can be a factor not just in religion but also in scientific debate. He says that he has junked ideology in favour of hard science. But is it really as simple as that?
Première diffusion : 30 janvier 2013
S2013 E15 • Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri - Chairman, Minaj-ul-Quran International
When radical reformist cleric Tahir-ul-Qadri returned to his native Pakistan from Canada last December, he promised a million-strong march on parliament to force out the government and bring in electoral reform. In the event, the authorities say only tens of thousands of protesters turned out, and just four days into the march he made a deal with the government. Is his a wise voice to be heeded both in Pakistan and further beyond in the Muslim world? Or is he an out of touch, unrealistic opportunist, seeking power and influence, as his critics claim?
Première diffusion : 1 février 2013
S2013 E16 • Lord Ouseley - Chairman, Kick It Out
If football is the beautiful game then it risks being disfigured by an ugly scar, racism. Players, fans and administrators have all pledged their determination to kick racism out of the sport, but there's plenty of evidence to suggest the anti-racist rhetoric isn't working. Lord Ouseley, is a veteran equality campaigner who was appointed to a senior advisory role with the English Football Association. But now he's quitting, has football failed to tackle its race problem?
Première diffusion : 4 février 2013
S2013 E17 • Renzo Piano - Architect
Sarah Montague speaks to the designer of one of London's newest and most controversial buildings - The Shard. Renzo Piano is one of the world's most accomplished and feted architects and one used to dividing opinion. In the 1970s he designed Paris' Pompidou Centre and since then has taken on high profile developments all over the globe. His latest creation is already loved, but it is also loathed. What does The Shard say about us, and why build it so big?
Première diffusion : 5 février 2013
S2013 E18 • Mohammad Jawad - Plastic, Reconstructive and Burns Surgeon
Zeinab Badawi talks to renowned British plastic surgeon Dr Mohammad Jawad, who has helped reconstruct the faces of women disfigured by acid attacks. He has featured in an Oscar-winning documentary about his humanitarian work in his native Pakistan. His high public profile has helped raise awareness about the life-destroying nature of acid attacks in Pakistan and elsewhere in Asia but can it bring about real change and action to help bring down the level of such violence against women?
Première diffusion : 6 février 2014
S2013 E19 • Khaled Meshaal - Leader of the Political Bureau of Hamas
HARDtalk travels to Doha to meet Khaled Meshaal, the leader of the Palestinian Islamist movement, Hamas. His base used to be Damascus but he broke ranks with the Assad regime after the repression of the Syrian uprising. Now he spends much of his time in the diplomatically ambitious Gulf state of Qatar - another sign that the realities of the Middle East are changing. But not, it seems, in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. On that front does Hamas have anything new to offer?
Première diffusion : 7 février 2013
S2013 E20 • Hossein Mousavian Iranian Nuclear Negotiator (2003-2005)
Can there be a negotiated way out of the high-stakes stand-off between Iran and the West over the Islamic republic's nuclear ambitions? A new round of talks is planned for later this month but the basic facts have not changed: Iran's enrichment programme gets ever more sophisticated, international sanctions on Tehran bite deeper and the warnings from the West grow darker. Stephen Sackur's guest on HARDtalk is a former Iranian negotiator on the nuclear issue, Hossein Mousavian. Does diplomacy have a chance?
Première diffusion : 11 février 2013
S2013 E21 • Fernando Carrera - Minister of Foreign Affairs, Guatemala
The government of Guatemala has promised to tackle the high murder rate of a country living under the threat of gangs, organised crime and drug traffickers. Some have expressed fears that it could become a narco-state, with state institutions that are weak or corrupted by criminal activity. When President Otto Perez Molina took office just over a year ago he said the war on drugs has failed and that it is time to consider decriminalising them. HARDtalk speaks to the newly appointed Foreign Minister of Guatemala, Fernando Carrera.
Première diffusion : 12 février 2013
S2013 E22 • Lucinda Creighton - Ireland's Minister of State for European Affairs
HARDtalk travels to Dublin, capital of Ireland, to speak to Europe minister Lucinda Creighton. The country currently holds the presidency of the European Union; a symbolic leadership role in Europe at the very time it is struggling to emerge from the economic straitjacket imposed by the EU/IMF bailout of the Irish economy. Can Dublin convince the world that it has bounced back from the brink of disaster?
Première diffusion : 13 février 2013
S2013 E23 • Enrique Garcia - President, CAF - Development Bank of Latin America
This is Latin America's decade - so says the leader of one of the countries contributing to its impressive economic boom. But as the world slows, can growth be sustained? The region's politicians are divided - talking about free trade deals for years even as some impose ever more restrictions on competition from the world outside. Enrique Garcia has been juggling the demands of protectionists and free marketeers for 20 years. The veteran president of Latin America's Development Bank says times have never been so good. But which side will he come down on to make the good times last?
Première diffusion : 18 février 2013
S2013 E24 • Najeeb Al Nauimi - Human Rights Lawyer
HARDtalk speaks to Najeeb Al Nauimi - one of the Arab world's busiest lawyers. Over the past ten years he has represented Saddam Hussein and a number of Arab nationals who have been detained by the US in Guantanamo Bay. In the mid-nineties he was briefly Justice Minister in the Gulf state of Qatar, where he spent two years attempting to reform the country's legal system. It is under that system that he is fighting his latest case. This time he is not defending a dictator or someone accused of terrorism; but rather a poet who has been imprisoned for life.
Première diffusion : 19 février 2013
S2013 E25 • Timo Soini - Leader, The Finns Party
Europe's prolonged economic crisis has prompted a populist backlash against the powers that be. In Finland, the EU's prosperous northern outpost, the big beneficiary has been Timo Soini, leader of the Eurosceptic, nationalist party long known as the True Finns. He wants to see the Eurozone dismantled, immigration curbed, traditional values restored. Critics have labelled the party xenophobic - is this the angry politics of European disintegration?
Première diffusion : 20 février 2013
S2013 E26 • Mamphela Ramphele - Politician and academic
Stephen Sackur talks to Mamphela Ramphele, anti-apartheid activist, prominent public figure and former partner of the late Steve Biko, one of the heroes of the liberation struggle. She has launched a new political movement with an outspoken attack on the failings of ANC governance. The political supremacy of the African National Congress in post-apartheid South Africa has never been seriously threatened. She says she is on a journey to realise South Africa's dreams, but how far will she get?
Première diffusion : 21 février 2013
S2013 E27 • Jon Huntsman - Republican Presidential Candidate 2011
The state of the US Republican Party has been described as a mess. Badly beaten in the race for the White House, it is seemingly out of touch with mainstream opinion on issues from immigration to gun control and is in danger of being outmanoeuvred by President Obama in the continued stand-off over the federal budget. HARDtalk speaks to the former Republican candidate Jon Huntsman - a moderate frequently at odds with his own party. Is the American right on the wrong road?
Première diffusion : 25 février 2013
S2013 E28 • Gloria Steinem
HARDtalk speaks to one of the most influential women in the history of the modern feminist movement. Gloria Steinem grew up in an America where women were expected to put husband and children first. But that was never her intention. She forged a successful career as a writer. She co-founded Ms. magazine; and she became one of the world's best known campaigners for gender equality. So how much of what she hoped for and fought for has been achieved?
Première diffusion : 26 février 2013
S2013 E29 • Father Bernard Lynch
The Catholic Church has been rocked by not one but two shock and surprise resignations. First, Pope Benedict steps down after announcing he was too old and infirm for the office. Then Britain's most senior Catholic, Cardinal Keith O'Brien, resigned after allegations - which he contests - of inappropriate behaviour towards priests 30 years ago. His departure has once again put the spotlight on the Catholic Church's attitudes towards homosexuality. Zeinab Badawi speaks to Father Bernard Lynch, one of a few openly gay Catholic priests. How will the church recover from these embarrassing blows at a time of historic transition?
Première diffusion : 27 février 2013
S2013 E30 • AB Yehoshua - Author
The conflict between Israelis and Palestinians arouses passions like few others. But on one thing most people can agree: that there's no prospect of the struggle ending anytime soon. So given the failure of the politicians and the diplomats, the militants and the liberals, what should we take from the words of the writer? AB Yehoshua is known as one of Israel's great men of letters. His latest book is seen by some as a powerful allegory of the journey Israeli Jews need now to take. So can he chart a way through the quagmire? And why does he have such a low opinion of Jews outside Israel?
Première diffusion : 1 mars 2013
S2013 E31 • Rached Ghannouchi - President, Ennahda Movement, Tunisia
Stephen Sackur travels to Tunisia, birthplace of the Arab uprising in early 2011, to talk to Rached Ghannouchi. The veteran leader of the ruling Islamist party Ennahda is the most powerful man in this country's post-revolutionary politics. His vision of political Islam has been influential far beyond Tunisia, but at home he's now under enormous pressure. Can freedom, democracy and Islamism really co-exist?
Première diffusion : 4 mars 2013
S2013 E32 • Henry Winkler - Actor
HARDtalk speaks to an actor whose long career will always be defined by one role. Henry Winkler was the Fonz, the cool dude at the centre of the US TV show Happy Days which was a worldwide hit in the 70s and 80s. The show portrayed an innocent, untroubled 1950s America. It was a far cry from Winkler's own childhood which was clouded by undiagnosed dyslexia. How did a troubled kid come to be a symbol of sunny optimism, and what happened to the idealised America of Happy Days?
Première diffusion : 5 mars 2013
S2013 E33 • Julius Makoni - Bishop of Manicaland, Zimbabwe
Zimbabweans are preparing to vote in a key referendum on a draft constitution which will pave the way for elections later this year. After thirty years of rule by eight-nine year old Robert Mugabe, the new constitution is meant to limit the powers of any future president. Civil rights activists say the changes are too limited in scope and that more democratic guarantees are needed. HARDtalk speaks to Zimbabwean Anglican Bishop Julius Makoni. Is the church speaking up loudly enough for the people or are clerics asleep at their pulpits?
Première diffusion : 6 mars 2013
S2013 E34 • Hugo Chavez, President of Venezuela
In an exclusive interview filmed in 2010, Stephen Sackur talks to the former President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez. During the interview the President delivered an uncompromising message, accusing the Obama administration of 'imperialist pretensions'. He rejected accusations that he incarcerated opponents and defended his friendship with the President of Iran.
Première diffusion : 7 mars 2013
S2013 E35 • HARDtalk on the Road: Tunisia
The programme reports from Tunisia, where the Arab revolt against authoritarianism began just over two years ago. Since then, this small North African country has been under intense scrutiny. Could Tunisia set an example for the whole Arab world by embracing freedom and democracy, by developing inclusive politics acceptable to both Islamists and secularists, and by building a stronger, fairer economy? Or will trying to overcome these massive challenges undermine Tunisia's revolution?
Première diffusion : 11 mars 2013
S2013 E36 • Moncef Marzouki - President of Tunisia
Stephen Sackur visits the grand presidential palace in Tunis to speak to the Tunisian president and former human rights campaigner Moncef Marzouki. During his presidency, Tunisia's status as the success story of the Arab uprising has been threatened by growing internal tensions. What has happened to Tunisia's revolution?
Première diffusion : 12 mars 2013
S2013 E37 • Lord Bilimoria - Founder and Chairman of Cobra Beer
Britain and India are united by 200 years of shared history, but their ties are gradually becoming weaker. India is a rising global economic powerhouse, while Britain is a former imperial power in search of a global boost to its ailing economy. Zeinab Badawi speaks to Lord Bilimoria, an Indian-born British entrepreneur, who is founder and chairman of Cobra beer. He is also the founding chairman of the UK-India Business Council and was part of David Cameron's trade delegation to India in February. Is Britain becoming more irrelevant to India today?
Première diffusion : 13 mars 2013
S2013 E38 • Theodor Meron - President of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
Two decades ago the world's killing fields were in the Balkans and Rwanda but right now, they're in Syria. Can we be any more confident today, than we were back then, that the perpetrators of war crimes and crimes against humanity will be brought to justice? HARDtalk speaks to Theodor Meron, currently serving a second term as President of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. When it comes to delivering justice, is the international legal framework now in place fit for purpose?
Première diffusion : 14 mars 2013
S2013 E39 • Kenneth Clarke - Conservative Government Minister, UK
Stephen Sackur asks veteran Conservative cabinet minister Ken Clarke if prime minster David Cameron is in danger of losing grip of his party. No one ever said it would be easy for the British prime minister - his government is an uneasy coalition, and his economic inheritance was disfigured by debt. But right now his biggest problems are coming from within. The Conservative Party is fractious; his authority has been challenged on everything from economic policy, to Europe, to his vision of progressive conservatism.
Première diffusion : 18 mars 2013
S2013 E40 • Victor Ponta - Prime Minister of Romania
At the end of 2013, Romanians will be able to live and work in any EU country they want to. All work restrictions, imposed by some countries when Romania and Bulgaria joined the union six years ago, will be lifted. There were worries then that workers from those two impoverished European states would flock to richer nations, and such concerns have not gone away. Zeinab Badawi speaks to Romania's Prime Minister Victor Ponta. He's on a mission to restore his country's image. Can he succeed?
Première diffusion : 19 mars 2013
S2013 E41 • Kishore Mahbubani - Author and former diplomat.
Are you an optimist or a pessimist when it comes to the future of human civilisation? Your response may be determined by where you live. In the West, beset by economic stagnation, many see reasons to be fearful. In Asia and Africa prosperity and confidence are on the rise. Stephen Sackur speaks to Kishore Mahbubani, former diplomat turned provocative thinker on globalisation. He sees a world increasingly united by economics, ideas and aspirations. But is that more than just wishful thinking?
Première diffusion : 20 mars 2013
S2013 E42 • Gareth Thomas - Former Wales rugby captain
Stephen Sackur speaks to Welsh rugby legend, Gareth Thomas. He confronted one of the last great taboos in professional sport by publically revealing his homosexuality, while still playing at the top level. His honesty won him admiration within and far beyond the world of rugby, but has he changed anything for other gay sportsmen? And what other awkward truths lie behind the public mask donned by sport's elite performers?
Première diffusion : 21 mars 2013
S2013 E43 • Jonathan Miller - Theatre and Opera Director
onathan Miller has had a career of mind-boggling diversity and creativity that defies an easy label. He is best known as a director and producer of opera and theatre, but he is also a writer, performer, sculptor and photographer. He trained in medicine and sometimes seems more fulfilled by science than his life in the arts. Stephen Sackur asks why, after five decades as a dominant figure in British cultural life, he has never seemed entirely at ease with his country or its culture.
Première diffusion : 25 mars 2013
S2013 E44 • Alassane Ouattara - President of Ivory Coast
Ivory Coast was once one of west Africa's economic powerhouses. Today, the world's biggest cocoa producer is trying to recover from the conflict that tore the country apart. Following elections in late 2010 the incumbent president, Laurent Gbagbo, refused to admit defeat to his opponent, Alassane Ouattara. After a period of violence in which thousands of Ivorians were killed, Gbagbo is now awaiting trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague. As president of Ivory Coast, Alassane Ouattara has the task of uniting a divided country. His critics accuse him of presiding over a victor's justice and letting off supporters of his who are suspected of crimes. Are they right?
Première diffusion : 26 mars 2013
S2013 E45 • Major General Robert Mood - Former Head of UN Supervision Mission in Syria
What could and should the outside world be doing as Syria sinks ever deeper into civil war? Has inertia and division within the international community condemned Syria to a slow and agonising collapse? HARDtalk speaks to Norwegian general Robert Mood, who led the ill-fated UN supervision mission in Syria last year. What went wrong then, and do the Syrian people deserve better from the world's major powers now?
Première diffusion : 27 mars 2013
S2013 E46 • Vitali Klitschko - Boxer and Ukrainian Opposition MP
From fist fights in parliament to dodgy elections and the imprisonment of the country's main opposition leader, politics in Ukraine is a brutal business. So it is perhaps fitting that the rising star of the Ukrainian opposition just happens to be the world heavyweight boxing champion Vitali Klitschko. He is tough, wealthy and ambitious but does he have what it takes to win in Ukraine's turbulent political arena?
Première diffusion : 29 mars 2013
S2013 E47 • Professor Daniel Dennett - Philosopher and Cognitive Scientist
Stephen Sackur speaks to Daniel Dennett, a philosopher who applies Darwinian evolutionary theory not just to species, but to ideas and religious beliefs. He believes religion has outlived its usefulness, hampers rational thought and damages our species. Along with Richard Dawkins and the late Christopher Hitchens, Dennett is seen as a founding father of the new atheism. But do humans want to live in a world where atheism rules and religion is dead?
Première diffusion : 2 avril 2013
S2013 E48 • Christopher Pissarides - Council of the National Economy for the Republic of Cyprus
Cyprus has become Europe's zombie economy; the life sucked out of it by a banking collapse and a rescue package which will inflict a generation of economic pain. Christopher Passirides has watched the horror unfold. He is a Nobel prize winning economist who chairs Cyprus's new national council of economic advisers. Do Cypriots have anyone to blame but themselves?
Première diffusion : 3 avril 2013
S2013 E49 • Patrick Chinamasa - Justice Minister of Zimbabwe
For years the UK's relationship with Zimbabwe has been characterised by deep mutual suspicion. But things are beginning to change - the Zimbabwean people have just approved a constitution and the EU has eased its sanctions regime. Stephen Sackur talks to Zimbabwe's justice minister Patrick Chinamasa, a close political ally of Robert Mugabe. His very presence in London is a sign of the new dynamic in Zimbabwe. But are the country's troubles really over?
Première diffusion : 4 avril 2013
S2013 E50 • Mimoza Kusari-Lila - Deputy PM and Minister of Trade & Industry, Kosovo
For more than a decade Kosovo has been struggling to emerge from a political and diplomatic twilight zone. It is a fledgling state lacking universal recognition. At the heart of Kosovo's problem is a still bitter and dysfunctional relationship with Serbia - until their feud ends neither will be welcomed into the European family of nations. Stephen Sackur talks to Kosovo's deputy prime minister Mimoza Kusari-Lila. Are Kosovans ready to reach out to Belgrade?
Première diffusion : 8 avril 2013











































