Justice for the 21, 1974 Birmingham pub bombings - Julie Hambleton
The Interview24 Mai 2019

Justice for the 21, 1974 Birmingham pub bombings - Julie Hambleton

HARDtalk’s Stephen Sackur speaks to Julie Hambleton, founder of Justice for the 21. In November 1974 the IRA bombed two pubs in Birmingham and murdered twenty one people. More than forty four years later the inquest into those deaths was reopened, attended by the families of the victims, including Julie Hambleton, who lost her sister Maxine. During the hearings one witness, a convicted former IRA man, named four alleged perpetrators; but justice in this terrible case has never been done. Is it now too late to get to the truth?

Image: Julie Hambleton (Credit: Anthony Devlin/Getty Images)

Episoder(1826)

Motaz Azaiza: Photographing Gaza

Motaz Azaiza: Photographing Gaza

Stephen Sackur speaks to Palestinian photojournalist Motaz Azaiza. His images of death, destruction and loss in Gaza went viral across the world. He left 108 days after Israel launched its military response to Hamas’s October 7th attack. What impact have his images had, on him, and us?

2 Sep 202422min

Andris Sprūds: Is Latvia on a war footing?

Andris Sprūds: Is Latvia on a war footing?

Stephen Sackur speaks to Latvia’s defence minister Andris Sprūds. He wants to ramp up military support for Ukraine, and he backs Kyiv’s dramatic push into Russian territory. But will divisions inside Nato and the EU leave Ukraine short of the backing it needs?

30 Aug 202422min

Neil Lawrence: Being human in the age of the machine

Neil Lawrence: Being human in the age of the machine

Stephen Sackur speaks to leading artificial intelligence researcher Neil Lawrence. He’s Professor of Machine Learning at the University of Cambridge and has a Senior AI Fellowship at the Alan Turing Institute. His new book – The Atomic Human – explores the transformational potential of artificial intelligence, while reflecting on the qualities of the human mind that cannot be replicated by even the most sophisticated machines.As more and more aspects of our lives are impacted by the rollout of machine learning, as control of big data and the development of algorithms to exploit it becomes a source of immense power in the 21st century, tech futurists are divided on whether we should embrace AI or fear it. In the end what will matter most isn’t the technology but the humans who develop and deploy it. Should we have faith in ourselves to get it right?

28 Aug 202423min

Nicola Procaccini: How has hard-right rule changed Italy?

Nicola Procaccini: How has hard-right rule changed Italy?

Stephen Sackur is in Rome to talk to Nicola Procaccini, an MEP and confidant of Prime Minister Georgia Meloni. When her nationalist Brothers of Italy party took power, it sent shock waves through Europe. A couple of years on, how has hard-right rule changed Italy?

25 Aug 202422min

Olha Stefanishyna: Does Ukraine's Russia offensive make sense?

Olha Stefanishyna: Does Ukraine's Russia offensive make sense?

Stephen Sackur speaks to one of Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Ministers, Olha Stefanishyna. Kyiv’s military offensive inside Russia has shifted the dynamic in what looked like a war of attrition tilting in Moscow’s favour. But does this dramatic gambit make strategic sense, or is it an act of desperation?

21 Aug 202422min

Karuna Nundy: Human rights and justice in India

Karuna Nundy: Human rights and justice in India

Stephen Sackur speaks to the prominent Indian lawyer Karuna Nundy. She has been at the forefront of long battles to better protect women from sexual violence, legalise gay marriage and safeguard freedom of speech. Is she losing this fight for India’s future?This episode contains references to rape and sexual assault.

19 Aug 202422min

Shannon Watts: Will the votes of white women swing the Trump-Harris race?

Shannon Watts: Will the votes of white women swing the Trump-Harris race?

Stephen Sackur speaks to Shannon Watts, an American political activist who built a powerful women-led gun control movement and is now a fund-raiser for Kamala Harris. Why does she believe the votes of white women will swing the presidential race?

16 Aug 202422min

Pavel Latushka: Can change in Belarus only come with change in Moscow?

Pavel Latushka: Can change in Belarus only come with change in Moscow?

Stephen Sackur speaks to Pavel Latushka, a key figure in the opposition movement struggling for regime change in Belarus. The country’s authoritarian ruler Alexander Lukashenko is a staunch ally of Vladimir Putin - does that mean change in Minsk can only come with change in Moscow?

14 Aug 202422min

Populært innen Politikk og nyheter

giver-og-gjengen-vg
aftenpodden
forklart
aftenpodden-usa
popradet
stopp-verden
fotballpodden-2
dine-penger-pengeradet
det-store-bildet
nokon-ma-ga
frokostshowet-pa-p5
bt-dokumentar-2
rss-dannet-uten-piano
aftenbla-bla
e24-podden
rss-ness
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
rss-gukild-johaug
rss-garne-damer