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Witness History

Witness History

BBC World Service

History as told by the people who were there.

4472 - When Cuban spy Ana Montes was caught
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  • 4472 - When Cuban spy Ana Montes was caught

    In 2001, the American Ana Montes, who was working for the United States Defense Intelligence Agency was arrested for espionage.

    Although the FBI knew that there was a spy they didn't know who it was. The Cubans always referred to Ana by a man's name.

    Former FBI agent, Pete Lapp, tells Gill Kearsley the fascinating story of how he and his team tracked down and arrested Ana, who is known as ‘Queen of Cuba’.

    (Photo: Ana Montes in 2001. Credit: FBI )

    Fri, 17 May 2024
  • 4471 - Baghdad heavy metal

    In the late 1990s, a heavy metal band called Acrassicauda formed in Iraq, when the country was under the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein.

    Over the next decade, the pioneering band found themselves on a collision course with the dictatorship militants and the west.

    The band was able to get inspiration from various bootleg tapes of heavy metal's greatest acts.

    Acrassicauda performed under Saddam's regime, but because of censorship restrictions, they had to write a song that praised the dictator.

    Johnny I'Anson speaks to bass player, Firas Al-Lateef.

    (Photo: Acrassicauda perform in Iraq in 2004. Credit: Getty Images)

    Thu, 16 May 2024
  • 4470 - How nuclear testing changed politics in French Polynesia

    It's 20 years since elections in French Polynesia in 2004, where the independence movement stunned the France-aligned government of the day, propelling pro-independence leader Oscar Temaru to the presidency.

    It was a landmark in the country's politics, where protests against French rule had increased due to the practice of using Polynesian islands for nuclear tests.

    Antony Geros, who helped lead the independence movement, recounts that night to Lizzy Kinch.

    This is a Whistledown production for BBC World Service.

    (Photo: Antony Geros. Credit: Getty Images)

    Wed, 15 May 2024
  • 4469 - The creation of the state of Israel

    On 14 May 1948, the state of Israel was proclaimed.

    Tears and applause met the declaration, witnessed by 200 dignitaries, but fighting intensified in the days that followed.

    In 2010, Arieh Handler and Zipporah Porath spoke to Lucy Williamson about that day and its fallout.

    (Photo: Young Jewish people celebrate the new state. Credit: AFP/Getty Images)

    Tue, 14 May 2024
  • 4468 - The ‘Catastrophe’ for Palestinians

    In 1948, tens of thousands of Palestinians left their homes in the Middle East, never to return.

    The period after World War Two in the region was tense, at times violent and politically complex.

    For Israeli Jews it was finally a chance to build their own nation after the genocide of the Holocaust. But for Arab Palestinian Muslims and Christians it was a time of loss.

    Some sold their land, some were evicted - many felt intimidated by the violence and changing demographics.

    Rebecca Kesby speaks to Hasan Hammami who was 15-years-old when his family felt ‘pushed out’ of Palestine.

    The interview was recorded before the Hamas attacks on 7 October 2023 and subsequent Israeli military operation.

    (Photo: Palestinians leaving their homes in 1948. Credit: Getty Images)

    Mon, 13 May 2024
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