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Outside Source

and allegations is the new electronic voting system, known as bvas introduced by the independent national electoral commission — or inec — which was supposed to make the manipulation of results more difficult and the polls more transparent. but reports of the widespread inability of electoral staff to upload results from the polling stations to inec�*s server has helped fuel allegations of a conspiracy allegations of a possible collusion by inec to fix the outcome. bolanle olukanni is a tv host and documentary—maker in nigeria. shejoins me live now from lagos. you've been very vocal on your social media feeds, saying you have concerns about the electoral process — just talk us through some of your concerns. - just talk us through some of your concerns. , , . ~ - just talk us through some of your concerns. , y . ~ , ., - just talk us through some of your concerns. , , . ~ , ., ., concerns. definitely, thank you for havin: concerns. definitely, thank you for having me- — concerns. definitely, thank you for having me- i— concerns. definitely, thank you for having me. ithink— concerns. definitely, thank you for having me. i think a _ concerns. definitely, thank you for having me. i think a lot _ concerns. definitely, thank you for having me. i think a lot of- concerns. definitely, thank you for having me. i think a lot of the - having me. i think a lot of the concerns which you kind of prayer

Results , Allegations , Polls , Electronic-voting-system , Manipulation , Reports , Polling-stations , Staff , Inability , Inec-which , Independent-national-electoral-commission , Bvas

Outside Source

during the junta's crackdown on dissent. that's according to monitoring group the assistance association for political prisoners. 1.5 million people have been displaced. and a further 40,000 homes have been burned down. eight million children are no longer in school and the un says that 15 million people are dangerously short of food. shahida tulaganova is an award—winning documentary maker and war reporter. she directed "exiled", a documentary about the genocide in myanmar. she says there are a number of reasons why myanmar�*s situation doesn't make headlines like the war in ukraine. the problem with myanmar is it is so far away from the rest of the world where decisions are taken place. secondly, mike is in prison, the national symbol, secondly, mike is in prison, the nationalsymbol, emblem secondly, mike is in prison, the national symbol, emblem of resistance. aung san suu kyi. the resistance. aung san suu kyi. the resistance does not have a face.

People , School , Children , Group , Homes , Dissent , Crackdown , Junta , Un , Assistance-association-for-political-prisoners , 40000 , Eight-million

Newscast

and documentary maker, professor green, hello. hello. welcome. thank you. i thought when i was telling chris that you were coming on i'd have to explain who you were... little did you know. tell us how far back you go? about 3am in stoke, which sounds quite ominous. hello! which club was it? so this was the town hall, incredibly bright lives, three o'clock in the morning, friday morning, thursday into friday by—election. full stoke—on—trent central in 2017. you were making a documentary at the time? ijust reminded myself of those. 2017, yeah. i was, yeah, it was working class white men for channel 4 which was a 2—parter which would have come out i think 2018, i think. we got some really good stuff, we did obviously because we got the documentary otherwise if it wasn't any good they would have told us to sod off. and in the old days chris mason was famous for staying up all night on bbc one

Documentary-maker , Professor-green , Lives , Which-club , By-election , Stoke , 3am , Three-o-clock-in-the-morning , Town-hall , 3 , Three , Ijust-don-t

Newscast

russia finds itself now? i came to the conclusion in russia that we have been profoundly naive and complacent about regimes like the russian and the chinese and others. from that moment, it was a kind of wake—up call that the west had got far too comfortable and you know, the end of history and it was all going to be this relentless march towards liberal democracy. when you were out in russia and you are up close and personal with those people, you realise just how deeply wrong and naive that analysis was. and i think we are now seeing some of those chickens coming home to roost. victoria and stephen, thank you very much. thank you. — thank you, thanks a lot. now we're going to talk about the cost of living and various other issues because we are joined because we're joined by rapper, campaigner and documentary maker, professor green, hello. hello. welcome. thank you. i thought when i was telling chris that you were coming on, i'd have to explain who you were...

Kind , Russian , Conclusion , West , Regimes , Others , Wake-up-call , Chinese , Liberal-democracy , The-end-of-history , People , Victoria-atkins

The Media Show

fanning the flames? i'm joined by cameron ford, who's a carpenter and spokesperson for insulate britain. and richard felgate, a documentary maker who was arrested last week while filming at hejust stop oil protest. also here, wolfgang blau, who left his top job at conde nast and co—founded the oxford climate journalism network. danny shaw, who used to be a bbc home affairs correspondent. he's now free to say what he really thinks. and fiona harvey, the guardian's environment correspondent who is at cop27 in egypt and hasjust left a session to get on the phone to talk to us. fiona, what's the mood amongstjournalists? have your stories been cutting through on the front pages this week? well, the mood is pretty grim here, actually. last week, we had the world leaders arrive, there was great fanfare, they had great things to say, it was all hugely interesting. what's happening now is that it's a lot of men in suits gathered in windowless rooms, just pouring over pages of text, deciding what to do about a semicolon here and a phrase there.

Filming , Richard-felgate , Carpenter , Documentary-maker , Hejust-stop-oil-protest , Flames , Spokesperson , Insulate-britain , Got-wolfgang-blau , Cameron-ford , Bbc-news , Danny-shaw

The Media Show

after the firm's new boss, elon musk, let users decide whether he should be allowed to return to the platform. 15 million twitter users voted and nearly 52% backed the former us president's return. mr trump was banned fromtwitter after the january 6th riots. now on bbc news, the media show. hello — how should journalists cover climate protests? the climate conference, cop27, ended this week. but you might have seen more about the activists who threw oil on a gustav klimt painting in vienna or the protesters who brought the m25 to a standstill. in an era of apparently increasing action, what's the media's role? and by giving the latest stunt publicity, is it fanning the flames? i'm joined by cameron ford, who's a carpenter and spokesperson for insulate britain. and richard felgate, a documentary maker

Trump , President , Us , Users , Twitter , Firm , Riots , Return , Elon-musk , Boss , Fromtwitter , 15-million

The Media Show

and richard felgate, a documentary maker who was arrested last week while filming at a just stop oil protest. also here, wolfgang blau, who left his top job at conde nast and co—founded the oxford climate journalism network. danny shaw, who used to be a bbc home affairs correspondent. he's now free to say what he really thinks. and fiona harvey, the guardian's environment correspondent who is at cop27 in egypt and hasjust left a session to get on the phone to talk to us. fiona, what's the mood amongstjournalists? have your stories been cutting through on the front pages this week? well, the mood is pretty grim here, actually. last week, we had the world leaders arrive, there was great fanfare, they had great things to say, it was all hugely interesting. what's happening now is that it's a lot of men in suits gathered in windowless rooms, just pouring over pages of text, deciding what to do about a semicolon here and a phrase there. it'sjust a grind now, these negotiations.

Oil-protest , Filming , Documentary-maker , Richard-felgate , Got-wolfgang-blau , Top-job , Danny-shaw , Environment-correspondent , Correspondent , Hasjust , Fiona-harvey , The-guardian

The Media Show

the tournament starts. majorsponsor, budweiser, had a multi—million—dollar deal with the organiser, fifa, to sell its products at all venues. now on bbc news. the media show hello. how should journalists cover climate protests? the climate conference cop, 27, ended this week, but you might have seen more about the activists who threw oil on a gustav klimt painting in vienna, or the protesters who brought the m25 to a standstill in an era of apparently increasing direct action. what's the media's role? and by giving the latest stunt publicity, is it fanning the flames? i'm joined by cameron ford, who's a carpenter and a spokesperson for insulate britain and rich filegate, a documentary maker

Budweiser , Fifa , Venues , Tournament , Deal , Products , Majorsponsor , Bbc-news , Media-show-hello , Journalists , Protesters , Activists

The Media Show

publicity, is it fanning the flames? i'm joined by cameron ford, who's a carpenter and spokesperson for insulate britain. and richard felgate, a documentary maker who was arrested last week while filming at hejust stop oil protest. also here, wolfgang blau, who left his top job at conde nast and co—founded the oxford climate journalism network. danny shaw, who used to be a bbc home affairs correspondent. he's now free to say what he really thinks. and fiona harvey, the guardian's environment correspondent who is at cop27 in egypt and has just left a session to get on the phone to talk to us. fiona, what's the mood amongstjournalists? have your stories been cutting through on the front pages this week? well, the mood is pretty grim here, actually. last week, we had the world leaders arrive, there was great fanfare, they had great things to say, it was all hugely interesting. what's happening now is that it's a lot of men in suits gathered in windowless rooms, just pouring over pages of text,

Filming , Richard-felgate , Carpenter , Documentary-maker , Flames , Spokesperson , Insulate-britain , Cameron-ford , Danny-shaw , Got-wolfgang-blau-in , Correspondent , Bbc-news

Don Lemon Tonight

overboard. i think they'll look at it again, laura, the system. i think there will be further amendments to the system. you need a system that makes sense to everyone, but does not punish people of color and others who don't have the means. you mentioned a horrible case, should not have happened. he was in, you know, obviously he died in jail, but the bottom line is that i think the system will be reformed to make it more appropriate and to make it make more sense. >> yeah, i mean he died when he was released -- i'll never forget that story, and i'll never forget that young man, a little boy frankly in my mind in who he is, but thank you. the idea of having, again, we talk about it, joey, it's a legal system aspiring to be a justice system. we're not yet there. thank you. nice talking to you, my friend. >> always. thanks, laura. ahead, a documentary maker who testified in front of the january 6th committee tells us what he thinks aft latest hearing. stay with us.

People , We-don-t , Case , The-system , Laura , Everyone , Sense , Means , Color , Others , Amendments , Man