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Title Dateline: Ukraine's Frontline/The Cambodian Solution?/Wrestling Women
Published Australia : SBS ONE, 2014
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (51 min. 59 sec.) ; 314376929 bytes
Summary UKRAINE'S FRONTLINEViolent clashes now seem to be a daily occurrence on the streets of Ukraine as pro- and anti-Russia supporters fight for precedence. And on Tuesday's Dateline, Nick Lazaredes reports from the heart of the conflict in the Donetsk region near Russia's border. He's on the streets speaking to protesters when events quickly turn violent and witnesses government buildings being overrun as Ukrainian police lose control. And he reports from a Ukrainian military base besieged by pro-Russia supporters as shots ring out from the base. As the international community increases its rhetoric and sanctions, Dateline asks who is really in control? And what's the next step in this escalating crisis?THE CAMBODIAN SOLUTION?There's increasing speculation that Australia is about to announce a deal to send refugees from the offshore detention centres to Cambodia. But what could they face when they arrive in one of Asia's poorest and least transparent nations? On Tuesday's Dateline, David O'Shea speaks to refugees already living there and sees their daily reality of poverty and desperation. With no support from the Cambodian government, they depend on the charity of welfare organisations to survive. And human rights workers are scathing about Cambodia's track record with refugees and thousands of its own displaced people. With no information so far from either government, could this Cambodian Solution lead to more questions than answers?WRESTLING WOMENWe're marking 30 years of Dateline by replaying some memorable reports from the archives, including this popular 2011 story on women's wrestling in Bolivia. The sport has a huge following there, with crowds flocking to see women in traditional dress, known as cholitas, fighting it out in the ring. But it's also come to represent the fight for equal rights by the poor indigenous women of this south American country. They've become stars and celebrate the recognition they've received, but say they're being exploited by promoters, make little money and receive no medical care for their injuries
Event Broadcast 2014-05-06 at 21:30:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Deportation -- Law and legislation.
Indigenous women.
Refugees -- Social conditions.
Women wrestlers.
Wrestling -- Psychological aspects.
Cambodia -- Phnom Penh.
Bolivia.
Ukraine -- Donetsk.
Form Streaming video
Author Rao, Anjali, host
Lazaredes, Nick, reporter
O'Shea, David, reporter
Vitola, Giovana, reporter
Adamson, Margaret, contributor
Coghlan, Denise, contributor
Robertson, Phil, contributor
Virak, Ou, contributor