Latest update: 06/11/2012 

- communism - Estonia - Europe - Far-right - Lithuania - Ukraine


Timothy Snyder, Professor of History, Yale University

Far right movements are on the rise in central and eastern Europe. The nationalist party Svoboda has just enjoyed a breakthrough in the Ukrainian elections. How do these movements exploit old memories of Communist oppression for political gains? And what would it take to write a national history that rises above the narrative of victimhood? Yale University historian Timothy Snyder explains.

Antoine Sfeir, Middle East scholar
16/02/2013 - THE INTERVIEW

Antoine Sfeir, Middle East scholar

Since the beginning of the Syrian crisis, growing tensions between Sunnis and Shiites have been witnessed in the Arab world. Antoine Sfeir explains to Leela Jacinto why he thinks that rivalries within Islam are threatening to hijack the ideas of the Arab Spring.
Dr. Jane Goodall, Primatologist and UN Messenger of Peace
16/02/2013 - THE INTERVIEW

Dr. Jane Goodall, Primatologist and UN Messenger of Peace

World-renowned primatologist and animal rights activist Dr. Jane Goodall tells France 24's Charlotte Sector about her involvement in Disney's "Chimpanzee" production. Through this film, focusing on the life of an orphan chimp, Goodall hopes to draw attention to an endangered species and the loss of its African habitat.
Mira Kamdar, Author, 'Planet India: The Turbulent Rise of the Largest Democracy and the Future of Our World'
14/02/2013 - THE INTERVIEW

Mira Kamdar, Author, 'Planet India: The Turbulent Rise of the Largest Democracy and the Future of Our World'

With a two-day trip to India, French President François Hollande is hoping to boost trade relations between France and the new economic giant. Leela Jacinto speaks to Mira Kamdar, author of "Planet India: The Turbulent Rise of the Largest Democracy and the Future of Our World", about India’s many faces, beyond the stereotypes.
Ali Zeidan, Libyan Prime Minister
13/02/2013 - THE INTERVIEW

Ali Zeidan, Libyan Prime Minister

Following an international conference on security in Libya held in Paris, Taoufik Mjaied meets Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan. The spread of weapons from Muammar Gaddafi’s military stockpiles in the Sahel region has strengthened criminals groups and Islamist rebels. Ali Zeidan describes the work his government has accomplished so far to stop the flow of weapons from Libya and to secure its borders.
William Browder, Co-founder and CEO, Hermitage Capital Management
12/02/2013 - THE INTERVIEW

William Browder, Co-founder and CEO, Hermitage Capital Management

Douglas Herbert speaks to US-born businessman William Browder about his campaign to get a US-style "Magnitsky Act" - blacklisting Russians implicated in severe human rights abuses - passed here in France. The law is named after Browder’s former lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, who was found beaten to death in a Russian jail in 2009.

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I just finished writing a

I just finished writing a long commentary on the interview of Timothy Snyder.I could not send it so after the long required registration my message disappeared.Thanks a lot for bureaucracy!In any case the interviewer should read up on the subjects that he is going to cover. Thus his expressed "shock" at the Latvian SS veterans marching this Spring in Riga is totally unwarranted.First,the Latvian Legion as it is called in Latvia,held mostly 18-20 year olds dragooned against their will to fight on the Eastern front against the Soviet Red Army.They were not involved in the killing of Jews or other civilians. Indeed, the Legion was formed in 1943,several years after the Nazis had exterminated all Jews in Latvia.Just out of curiosity is the interviewer equally shocked that the Red Army veterans remember their own fallen comrades or that they still idolize Stalin?

Timothy Snyder provides a

Timothy Snyder provides a good overview of the "Bloodlands" in Eastern Europe, outlining their actual historical experience of the Nazi and Soviet killings, in contrast to most Western symbolic perceptions of these two totalitarian regimes.I just want to question the interviewers seemingly shocked announcement that Latvian SS veterans were allowed to parade in Riga this year.I think it would help him gain more factual perspective if he spent some time reading up on the history on the Latvian Waffen SS.These mostly young [18-20 year olds] were dragooned into military service against international law by the Nazi occupiers.They were not involved in the killing of Jews or other civilians but were stationed in the Eastern front fighting the Soviet Red Army.Indeed,the Latvian Legion, as it is currently called, was created only in 1943,several years after the Nazis had exterminated Latvia's Jews.

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