

Fifth Floor
BBC World Service
Faranak Amidi takes a fresh look at the stories of the week with journalists from our 40 language sections.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 17, 2017 • 11min
Being Thai
Thailand encompasses a large geographical, ethnic and cultural range, so is there such a thing as 'Thainess'? BBC Thai colleagues Watchiranont Thongtep, Thitipol Panyalompanun, Thanyarat Doksone and Jiraporn Kuhakan consider the question. Image: A crowd celebrating Songkran, or the Thai New Year, in Bangkok
Credit: LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA/Getty Images

Nov 10, 2017 • 11min
Reporting Mosul: A Journalist's Story
Three years ago, a lightning advance by about 800 jihadist fighters in northern Iraq morphed into a global threat. Nafiseh Kohnavard of BBC Persian has followed the fight against so-called Islamic State, and she witnessed the toughest battle for Iraqi forces, to retake Mosul.Image: Nafiseh Kohnavard sitting wearing helmet and flak jacket in Mosul
Credit: BBC

Nov 3, 2017 • 8min
Insulted and spurned: Somali Gabooye
Qalib Barud of BBC Somali recently reported on discrimination in Somali society against a group of clans commonly referred to as the Gabooye.Image: A shoemaker, one of the Gabooye clans, mends a shoe
Credit: BBC

Oct 27, 2017 • 9min
Apples, Dams and the Taliban
It's a short but risky journey from Kabul to the centre of neighbouring Wardak province - much of which is under Taliban control. BBC Afghan's Auliya Atrafi looked beyond conflict on his recent reporting trip - to the university local people built for themselves, and new power from an old hydro station.Image: Landscape in Chak Valley, Wardak Province, Afghanistan
Credit: BBC

Oct 20, 2017 • 6min
India's Deccan Queen
The Deccan Queen train links Pune in the hills with Mumbai down on the coast, and is older than the state of India itself. It's also India's only train to have a dining car. BBC Marathi's Mayuresh Konnur is from Pune and knows it well.Image: Train sign for Deccan Queen
Credit: BBC

Oct 13, 2017 • 11min
Kenya's Election Drama
The Kenyan presidential election took another surprising turn this week. The crisis has seen protests, a shock intervention from the judiciary, and now the surprise withdrawal of the main opposition candidate. Kenyans Esther Kahumbi and Dickens Olewe from BBC Africa share their stand-out moments.Image: Kenya election protests: crowds protesting on streets, watercannons firing jets
Credit: YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images

Oct 6, 2017 • 9min
Cameroon's Ghost town protests
Ghost town is the name Cameroonians have given to a civil disobedience action where daily life is brought to a standstill. It began last year as an expression of dissent in the two English speaking regions of Cameroon, but tensions between them and the Francophone dominated government go back to the 1960s. Last week a number of protestors demanding independence were shot dead by gendarmes. BBC Africa's Randy Jo Sa'ah was in Bamenda following the story.Image: Demonstrators in Bamenda, the main town in northwest Cameroon
Credit: Getty Images/stringer/AFP

Sep 29, 2017 • 9min
Rwandan BBC journeys
Prudent Nsengiyumva and Didier Bikorimana are colleagues at BBC Great Lakes, a journey that began for Prudent entertaining his family with dining table news reports, and for Didier listening to the Great Lakes Lifeline programme which tried to reunite families separated by the 1994 genocide.Image: Rwandan boy listening to transistor radio
Credit: GIANLUIGI GUERCIA/AFP/Getty Images

Sep 22, 2017 • 9min
New Comic Book Heroines
Two new super-heroines have been launched recently in comic book form. Pakistan Girl joins her established superhero colleague Pakistan Man, and in Nigeria a character called Ngozi joins Marvel's family of mutant super-beings. Can they make a difference in their neighbourhoods? David Amanor finds out from Halima Umar Sale of BBC Hausa and BBC Urdu's Henna Saeed.Image: Pakistan Girl cartoon in library
Credit: FAROOQ NAEEMAFP/Getty Images

Sep 15, 2017 • 8min
The Uphill Battle For Hearts And Minds
Winning hearts and minds has always been a high priority for the US-led coalition which invaded Afghanistan nearly sixteen years ago. But the campaign hasn't always gone to plan, as with a recent airdrop of leaflets that caused so much offence that people rioted in the streets. Moheb Mudessir from BBC Afghan explains.Image: Afghan Shepherd Boy
Credit: GETTY IMAGES/HOSHANG HASHIMI