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Choose an audio clipÌýyou would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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0607 |
The Chief Inspector of Prisons says many mentally disturbed people should not be in prison, but housed elsewhere. Our correspondent Lesley Ashmall. |
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0609 |
After 20 years of conflict in Liberia and the displacement of at least a million people from their homes, peace of a kind has descended. Our correspondent Mark Doyle is in Monrovia. |
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0615 |
The Business News ... this morning coming from Greg Wood in Estonia. |
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0632 |
Gordon Corera reports from Iowa on the first test of Democratic voters in the primary season that's given victory to Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts.
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0634 |
Has the Prime Minister won over most of his critics on the tuition fees row? Our Political correspondent Norman Smith. |
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0637 |
How many child death cases will come back to the Court of Appeal after its explanation of why it had quashed the conviction of Angela Canning? Our home affairs correspondent, Danny Shaw. |
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0642 |
Today's World Press Review comes from Steve Rosenberg in Moscow. |
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0645 |
The future of our railway system was discussed in the Commons yesterday. From Westminster, our parliamentary correspondent Susan Hulme. |
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0651 |
Greg Wood in Estonia, speaks with the country's Prime Minister Juhan Parts. |
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0654 |
It's the start of the Chinese New Year this week, and with many people on the move across China there are fears the Sars virus may spread. The epidemiologist Professor Roy Anderson of Imperal College London. |
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0709 |
Anne Owers, Chief Inspector of Prisons on a proposal to build mental institutions as an alternative to jailing hundreds of disturbed offenders. |
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0715 |
Tony Blair has said he believes he will win a crucial vote on plans for student top-up fees. Not withstanding the best efforts of the Conservatives. Their shadow Education Secretary Tim Yeo. |
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0719 |
More than 250 criminal cases are to be reviewed - but what about parents who've been labelled child abusers in the civil courts? We hear from a mother who wants her case re-examined. |
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0722 |
Dr Patricia Lewis, director of the UN institute for Disarmament Research on the discovery ofÌýparts used to build nuclear weapons that were made in Malaysia found aboard a ship bound for Libya. |
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0732 |
More from our reporter Gordon Corera in Des Moines, Iowa on the result of the first votes cast by Democrats choosing their candidate to take on President Bush. |
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0744 |
The Radio 4 swans - where are they now? |
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0751 |
How electoral reform could damage the British National Party. |
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0810 |
The cases of more than 250 parents jailed for killing their children are going to be re-examined, we talk to the chairman of the Criminal Cases Review Commission. |
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0819 |
In Northern Ireland there has been a sinister rise in the targeting of ethnic minorities by loyalist paramilitaries. Our Ireland Correspondent Kevin ConnollyÌýreports. |
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0823 |
Clocking on - an end to the Today Programme's trouble with time. |
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0834 |
The Transport Secretary has said he plans to "review" the way Britain's railways are run - but why not go the whole hog and renationalise them? |
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0841 |
The Business News with Greg Wood, this morning coming live from Estonia. |
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0844 |
Relatives of British and French detainees held at Guantanamo Bay say human rights are being violated. Andrew Hosken reports. |
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0854 |
In Iraq the Shia majority are clamouring for proper elections this summer. But what of the Kurds in the north of the country? Our correspondent Alastair Leithead is in Kirkuk. |
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0857 |
Leading members of Britain's Jewish Community have been lobbying for weeks against the appointment of Zvi Hefetz as the new Israeli ambassador to London. Ned Temko, the editor of the Jewish Chronicle. |
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