Episode details

World Service,03 Jul 2014,27 mins

Shaking Hands with the Enemy

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Available for over a year

In many parts of the world, charities are trying to deliver much-needed aid to desperate people living in areas controlled by militant groups. What do they do when counter-terrorism laws ban them from contact with those de facto authorities? Risk of prosecution has now created a climate of fear in many aid agencies - and the UN wants counter-terrorism policies redrawn to ensure lives can be saved without charity workers risking jail. Tim Whewell reports from Gaza - and talks to aid workers operating in Syria, Somalia and other places - on the practical and moral dilemmas involved. (Image: The Najar family living in squalor in the Beach Refugee Camp, Gaza. Counter-terrorism regulate cause major legal obstacles for aid agencies working in the territory. BBC Copyright)

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