Outlook Weekend: Playing For My Life
Jo Fidgen hears from a chess coach in Kampala, where the stakes couldn't be higher, and from a squash court in Pakistan where a girl is prepared to die for her chance to play.
Robert Katende was brought up in a slum in Uganda but his life was transformed when he discovered the game of chess. He has gone on to teach the game to some of Kampala's poorest children including Phiona Mutesi who has represented Uganda at the world chess championships and whose story has been made into a Disney film called "The Queen of Katwe".
Maria Toor Pakay is so passionate about sport that she once disguised herself as a boy to enter a weightlifting competition. She comes from an ultra-conservative region of Pakistan, where many strongly believe that women should not take part in any kind of sport. Despite having received death threats from those who disagreed with her competing, Maria has now become a world class squash player.
Egyptian protester removes net from a basketball ring in a school playground in Cairo.
Credit: Ed Giles, Getty Images.
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- Sun 4 Dec 2016 00:32GMT91热爆 World Service except Americas and the Caribbean & News Internet
- Sun 4 Dec 2016 08:32GMT91热爆 World Service except News Internet & West and Central Africa
- Mon 5 Dec 2016 02:32GMT91热爆 World Service Australasia