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The Number One Ladies’ Landmine Agency

The Sahrawi women clearing up unexploded bombs left in the world's longest minefield.

After Donald Trump’s recent call for Spain to build a wall across the Sahara Desert to curb African migration into Europe, we follow a unique group of Sahrawi women working alongside the world’s longest minefield, the 2,700km sand wall or berm built by Morocco across the region.

We join Baba, Minetou, Nora and the team working in temperatures exceeding 42°c (107°f), hundreds of miles from even rudimentary medical care, as they risk their lives in Western Sahara’s so-called “Liberated Territories” east of the Berm, clearing some of the seven million landmines and unexploded bombs left over from the still unresolved conflict between Morocco and the ethnic Sahrawi liberation movement, the Polisario Front.

Despite decades of paralysis in the UN-led decolonisation and referendum process, and some little scepticism in their own society, over sweet Sahrawi tea and camel pizza we learn how these young women have realised universal aspirations to an education, a family and a vocation, and beyond those goals to act as role models in a community exiled and forgotten deep in the Sahara for over 40 years.

Dreaming of a day they might reside freely in an independent homeland, but living in an era defined by calls to “Build That Wall”, Number One Ladies’ Landmine Agency reveals a story of hope and tolerance embodied by a group of young women redefining the stereotype of the veiled, subjugated Arab woman, whose shared mission is to tear down barriers in all their forms.

(Photo: Casualty evacuation practise in case of an accident in the minefield. Credit: Ivan Broadhead/鶹ҳ)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 25 Nov 2018 18:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Wed 21 Nov 2018 11:32GMT
  • Wed 21 Nov 2018 18:32GMT
  • Wed 21 Nov 2018 21:32GMT
  • Wed 21 Nov 2018 23:32GMT
  • Thu 22 Nov 2018 02:32GMT
  • Sun 25 Nov 2018 18:32GMT