BBC OS Conversations: Migrating from Africa

BBC OS Conversations: Migrating from Africa

Up next

Madagascar: From famine to hope

Lying off the south-eastern coast of Africa, Madagascar has been pushed into crisis by a deadly combination of climate change, poverty and environmental degradation. In 2021, more than 1.6 million people faced acute food insecurity, while nearly half of all children under five we ...  Show more

Billion dollar babies

Eels are a popular food in parts of Asia, but they can’t be commercially bred in captivity. Coupled with trade bans to protect the highly endangered fish, this has led to baby eels becoming one of the most trafficked creatures in the world. BBC Eye and DOCDAYS investigate this gl ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Couples Under Lockdown: Lagos, Nigeria
Where Should We Begin? with Esther Perel

Last summer they left everything they'd built in Seattle for a chance at a very different life. He took a dream turn to expand his company and be closer to home; she gave up her nursing job to manage their girls and explore new horizons abroad. COVID-19 hits as they watch the fat ...  Show more

Out of Africa – and those worried about a return
This Is Why

Hundreds of young men have died trying to use boats to get from Senegal to the Canary Islands.   
 
On this episode of the Sky News Daily, Niall Paterson hears about what's been called the "deadliest and busiest migrant passage in the world".   
 
Niall is joi ...
  Show more

How Europe Paid to Lock Up Migrants… and Threw Away The Key
The Final Service

Mass death and disappearances have become normalized on Europe’s borders. Back in 2015, when more than a million refugees turned up on Europe’s doorstep to request asylum, the European Union cut deals with North African and Middle Eastern nations to hold back the flow of asylum-s ...  Show more

Scenes from Nigeria's Baby Boom
Overheard at National Geographic

With 224 million people, Nigeria is Africa's most populous country. By 2050, it could crack the global top three with some 375 million people. In the second of our two-part series on the global population passing eight billion, National Geographic photographer Yagazie Emezi descr ...  Show more