GNP Show 05 (One Hour) Afghan Orphans
Series: World Vision Report - Weekly One Hour
From: World Vision Report
Length: 01:50:25
- Playing
- GNP Show 05 (One Hour) Afghan Orphans
- From
- World Vision Report
On this week’s World Vision Report…
An orphanage in Afghanistan for descendants of Genghis Khan…a different kind of daycare in India…when helping hurts in Mexico…there’re more killers out there than AIDS…a shelter for sex workers in Indonesia…teenage refugees sing peace but get death threats…being hijacked by a desperate woman… and music from Africa. All that and more this week on the World Vision Report.
Bamiyan Orphanage (3:41)
The descendants of Genghis Khan and his warriors, known as Hazaras, make up one-fifth of the population of Afghanistan. The Taliban murdered tens of thousands of Hazaras in the late 1990s, creating a large population of orphans. More than 200 of those orphans are now cared for in an orphanage outside the city of Bamiyan. But it appears to be a victim of discrimination. Government checks are persistently late and teacher pay is so low they have to have second jobs just to make ends meet. Will Everett reports.
Mobile Creches (5:12)
In the U.S., probably no one would think of taking a baby onto a construction site. But in India, some parents have no choice. They live on the construction sites where they work. And that often means their children are left to fend for themselves. Some of the luckier ones have a better option -- a mobile nursery right at the job site. Peter Aronson reports from city of Mumbai.
When Helping Hurts (3:57)
Give a dollar to the little kid washing your windows at a stoplight in Mexico? Sure. People do it all the time. But government officials say that only exploits young children who should be in school. The welfare department in Boca del Rio offers parents $50 a month and job training if they will put their kids in school and not on the street. But the World Vision Report’s Conrad Fox says the program so far has no takers.
Glass Castle Author
Jeannette Walls is a journalist with MSNBC.com who tried to hide her past for years. She didn't want anyone to know she grew up in stark poverty — sleeping in cardboard boxes and cars and eating from garbage cans.
Then she wrote a book about her childhood called "The Glass Castle." It made the New York Times' bestseller list. She tells host Peggy Wehmeyer her readers helped her overcome self-imposed fears of rejection and ridicule because many of them said they, too, grew up poor.
Hotline Surabaya (4:42)
Surabaya is the hotbed of the sex trade in Indonesia. Prostitution is illegal in Indonesia, but the law is rarely enforced in the red light districts and an estimated 230,000 women sell their bodies on the streets every day. Trish Anderton takes listeners to Hotline Surabaya -- a charitable organization that works to get women out of the sex trade and provides care for their children.
Waayah Cusub (5:41)
Some teenage refugees from Somalia’s long civil war have formed a rap group in a suburb of Nairobi, Kenya and their songs are shaking things up. Waayah Cusub’s songs convey a message of peace and reconciliation, but that’s generated death threats for the group. Somali warlords have a vested interest in continuing the fighting and radical Islamists don’t like songs that deal with taboo subjects. Richard Lough reports.
Hijacker (3:15)
One of the worst places in the world to be a woman is the Democratic Republic of Congo. That’s where reporter Michael Kavanagh tells us in a Reporter’s Notebook about meeting a woman under rather strange circumstances. She jumped in his car to save herself from a fire and her fears from a life of rape, ruin, and constant war.
African Music (5:15)
Music and social protest have been linked for years in America. Now, there’s an entire label devoted to African music and social protest. Two U.S. college students launched the label after going to Africa where they fell in love with the music and were touched by the overwhelming need for social justice. Their first CD already has raised $140,000 to feed refugees from the Darfur region of Sudan. Host Peggy Wehmeyer talks with one of the producers.
:30 PROMO FOR THIS SHOW:
Stop at a red light in Mexico and chances are young children will approach your car selling food, trinkets, or offering to wash your windows. The government in one Mexican town says that exploits the children and it wants to put a stop to it.
That story, caring for prostitutes in Indonesia, orphans in Afghanistan, and on-the-job daycare in India -- plus the music of protest.
It’s all coming up this week’s show from the Global News Partnership.
(ADD LOCAL DATE, TIME, AND STATION I.D.)
Also in the World Vision Report - Weekly One Hour series
GNP Show 8 (One Hour) World Vacation
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
Summer tourism with a twist is the theme this week on the World Vision Report. In Nepal, we follow a street vendor who sells an exotic musical instrument to support his wife ...
GNP 007 (Full Hour) Emmanuel Jal and Spleen Sandwiches
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
Violence against women is commonplace in Afghanistan. It takes all forms: domestic abuse, forced marriage, rape, even honor killings. This week, the World Vision Report ...
GNP Show 06 (One Hour) World Hunger
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
(for air the week of June 18, 2011) According the U.N. World Food Program there are now more than a billion people in the world who are in urgent need of food. Another ...
Global News Partnership Show #04 on Coffee to air week of June 4, 2011
(01:50:22)
From: World Vision Report
On this week’s show we look at efforts to contain the Mafia in Sicily. We also explore who makes the big money off of coffee, and how coffee growing produces more than ...
GNP Show 03 One hour: Clinics in Sudan and Seafood Slavery
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
If you get sick in southern Sudan your chances of dying escalate. Health care is a rare thing in that part of the world. This week, the World Vision Report talks with one ...
GNP Show 2 (Full Hour)-8 year old Mechanics to air the week of May 21, 2011
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
Americans are struggling with high unemployment rates, but in Somaliland, it's closer to 90 percent. This week, the World Vision Report takes you to the public market in ...
GNP Show #1--Zebras and Western Union
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
Many families in Africa go without medical care or prescriptions because they don't have the money. Now residents of Senegal can purchase micro-insurance. For $2.50 a month, ...
WVR Show 382 - Mexico special (One hour to air week of May 7, 2011)
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
You can spend an hour in Mexico this week without ever leaving home. It's all on The World Vision Report. From immigration issues to a plate full of tasty insects and taking ...
Show 381--African Stowaways and Reading in Haiti (One Hour to air week of April 30, 2011)
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
When Africans want to escape political persecution, they often come seeking asylum in the U.S. But getting here often involves being smuggled from one country to another. ...
WVR Show 380 World Music
(01:50:25)
From: World Vision Report
Even poor people can be rich in music. It can calm your nerves, please your passions, and spur people to action. This week the World Vision Report focuses on music around ...
Piece Description
On this week’s World Vision Report…
An orphanage in Afghanistan for descendants of Genghis Khan…a different kind of daycare in India…when helping hurts in Mexico…there’re more killers out there than AIDS…a shelter for sex workers in Indonesia…teenage refugees sing peace but get death threats…being hijacked by a desperate woman… and music from Africa. All that and more this week on the World Vision Report.
Bamiyan Orphanage (3:41)
The descendants of Genghis Khan and his warriors, known as Hazaras, make up one-fifth of the population of Afghanistan. The Taliban murdered tens of thousands of Hazaras in the late 1990s, creating a large population of orphans. More than 200 of those orphans are now cared for in an orphanage outside the city of Bamiyan. But it appears to be a victim of discrimination. Government checks are persistently late and teacher pay is so low they have to have second jobs just to make ends meet. Will Everett reports.
Mobile Creches (5:12)
In the U.S., probably no one would think of taking a baby onto a construction site. But in India, some parents have no choice. They live on the construction sites where they work. And that often means their children are left to fend for themselves. Some of the luckier ones have a better option -- a mobile nursery right at the job site. Peter Aronson reports from city of Mumbai.
When Helping Hurts (3:57)
Give a dollar to the little kid washing your windows at a stoplight in Mexico? Sure. People do it all the time. But government officials say that only exploits young children who should be in school. The welfare department in Boca del Rio offers parents $50 a month and job training if they will put their kids in school and not on the street. But the World Vision Report’s Conrad Fox says the program so far has no takers.
Glass Castle Author
Jeannette Walls is a journalist with MSNBC.com who tried to hide her past for years. She didn't want anyone to know she grew up in stark poverty — sleeping in cardboard boxes and cars and eating from garbage cans.
Then she wrote a book about her childhood called "The Glass Castle." It made the New York Times' bestseller list. She tells host Peggy Wehmeyer her readers helped her overcome self-imposed fears of rejection and ridicule because many of them said they, too, grew up poor.
Hotline Surabaya (4:42)
Surabaya is the hotbed of the sex trade in Indonesia. Prostitution is illegal in Indonesia, but the law is rarely enforced in the red light districts and an estimated 230,000 women sell their bodies on the streets every day. Trish Anderton takes listeners to Hotline Surabaya -- a charitable organization that works to get women out of the sex trade and provides care for their children.
Waayah Cusub (5:41)
Some teenage refugees from Somalia’s long civil war have formed a rap group in a suburb of Nairobi, Kenya and their songs are shaking things up. Waayah Cusub’s songs convey a message of peace and reconciliation, but that’s generated death threats for the group. Somali warlords have a vested interest in continuing the fighting and radical Islamists don’t like songs that deal with taboo subjects. Richard Lough reports.
Hijacker (3:15)
One of the worst places in the world to be a woman is the Democratic Republic of Congo. That’s where reporter Michael Kavanagh tells us in a Reporter’s Notebook about meeting a woman under rather strange circumstances. She jumped in his car to save herself from a fire and her fears from a life of rape, ruin, and constant war.
African Music (5:15)
Music and social protest have been linked for years in America. Now, there’s an entire label devoted to African music and social protest. Two U.S. college students launched the label after going to Africa where they fell in love with the music and were touched by the overwhelming need for social justice. Their first CD already has raised $140,000 to feed refugees from the Darfur region of Sudan. Host Peggy Wehmeyer talks with one of the producers.
:30 PROMO FOR THIS SHOW:
Stop at a red light in Mexico and chances are young children will approach your car selling food, trinkets, or offering to wash your windows. The government in one Mexican town says that exploits the children and it wants to put a stop to it.
That story, caring for prostitutes in Indonesia, orphans in Afghanistan, and on-the-job daycare in India -- plus the music of protest.
It’s all coming up this week’s show from the Global News Partnership.
(ADD LOCAL DATE, TIME, AND STATION I.D.)
Timing and Cues
Timing and Cues
0:00-0:59 Billboard
1:00-5:59 News Hole (no sound)
6:00-6:29 Music Bed
Segment A
6:30- Bamiyan Orphanage
10:47-Will Everett Interview
13:02-Mobile Creches
19:00-19:59 Music Bed
Segment B
20:00- When Helping Hurts
24:32- Glass Castle Author
33:24-- Hotline Surabaya
39:00-39:59—Music Bed
Segment C
40:00-- Waayah Cusub
48:16- Hijacker
52:06- African Music
58:59 End




