For good governance in Africa we should be thinking more actively about alternatives to the agenda that western donors have been pushing since 1989 Events in the Middle East have the present generation fired up in much the way their parents were after the movements in eastern Europe in 1989. Right now, it is hard to have a conversation about anything in the field of politics and development without somebody throwing in “what about Tunisia, Egypt, Libya… Syria?” This is all very exciting – as it was in 1989. But from the point of view of anybody whose main concern is enduring poverty and bad governance in low-income Africa, it is also troubling. I write with some feeling as the director of a research programme – Africa, power and politics – that is trying to get across some fresh and evidence-based ideas on the latter subject. Why troubling? Well, consider a couple of aspects of the 1989 precedent. The euphoria about liberal-democratic convergence (remember Francis Fukuyama ‘s “end of history”?) was seriously dented as the different parts of the former Soviet bloc went their very different ways. The immediate outcome was a useful reminder that historical trajectories and socio-economic preconditions do matter for the way countries develop. Unfortunately, though, that was not the end of the story. Among the more lasting effects of 1989 on the rest of the world was a simple-minded, history-free concept of the politics of progress: liberal-democracy was the thing – for everyone, at all times. Thanks in part to Iraq and Afghanistan, we are, decades later, backing off from this self-confident universalism. Warnings against, for example, staging elections when an inclusive elite bargain has not yet been established are now getting a hearing . In and around the World Bank, there is recognition of the dangers of a one size fits all approach to reforming institutions. We are getting accustomed to the idea that countries need to discover their own routes to progress, and that well-wishing outsiders should start by understanding country systems better (pdf). In the current climate, however, it is hard sustaining the momentum of this new enlightenment. I think we should remain optimistic but also alert to some big dangers. Let me explain further with reference to some findings emerging from research in the programme I lead. Our starting point has been the need to find alternatives to the good governance agenda that western donors have been pushing in Africa – and many Africans have been embracing with enthusiasm – since around 1989. We are searching for a better understanding of the kinds of institutional arrangements that actually work for development in African countries. We are not satisfied that the recent acceleration of economic growth means Africa has turned a corner development-wise. Apart from anything else, the current growth lacks the rural, smallholder bias that helped many Asian countries to overtake their African peers over past decades. On top of that, the governance of development remains abysmally bad almost everywhere. What makes us optimistic in spite of all this is that African governance has gone through different phases since independence; it’s not all failure. And approaches differ between countries. These facts suggest a room for manoeuvre, a space for drawing creatively on Africa’s own institutional resources and social creativity that Afro-pessimists tend not to recognise. At national level, we are working to distinguish between more and less progressive forms of the type of authority known to political scientists as neo-patrimonialism. As in Asia and earlier in Europe, it makes a difference whether the country’s elite succeeds in centralising management of the main economic “rents” and using them in ways that help to grow the national economy. Historically, this has been the crucial difference between those pre-capitalist regimes that usher in capitalism and those that block this transition indefinitely. Such differences, we argue, are far more important – including for the eventual prospects for democracy – than whether or not a country has the formal trappings of a competitive political system. At sub-national levels, the key difference is between arrangements that permit some local problem-solving and those that don’t. We are finding that so-called democratic decentralisation is not usually conducive to local problem-solving, and not just because it is seldom fully implemented. Under prevailing socio-economic conditions (because, yes, levels of development do matter), local political competition intensifies vote-buying, not provision of the basic public goods that poor Africans need. It strongly discourages decent governance where this involves regulation (eg of crop or medicine markets) or enforcing rules (eg on sanitation or the environment). We should be thinking more actively about alternative ways of improving governance based on the “local reforms” and practical hybrid institutions that we are finding here and there in several countries (Ghana, Malawi, Niger), and more comprehensively in at least one (Rwanda). In short, a more sophisticated approach to institution building for development in Africa may be possible. But it will help if we can avoid being diverted all the time into dictatorship v democracy debates. More fundamentally, we must try to avert a new tidal wave of the one size fits all approach inspired by events in the Middle East. • David Booth heads the Africa, power and politics programme at the Overseas Development Institute guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New BBC chairman says number of highly-paid executives at the corporation is to be cut back Lord Patten, the new BBC chairman, has admitted that some of the BBC’s executives are still paid too highly and that not being able to pay top dollar for talent is something the corporation “has to live with” in return for not having to “flog advertising and subscriptions”. Speaking on Radio 4′s Today programme, Patten said that the corporation was working through a series of cuts that would scale back the number of senior executives by about a quarter. “In some circumstances, yes [pay is too high],” he said. He also said that some talent was paid too highly but admitted that it would “probably be inflationary” to look to publish the bands of pay stars fall into, as has been done with executive pay. “You don’t have to pay 50% more on an individual than you do on the [BBC] Proms, to put it bluntly,” he said. He added that in such a hotly-contested, talent-driven market, “talent drain” is “something you live with” that needs to be balances against the fact the licence-fee funded BBC doesn’t have to “flog ads and subscriptions up and down the street”. Lord Patten said that an important part of the BBC’s raison d’etre is to “discover, train and employ [talent] for a few seasons”. And if then they are “snapped up by competitors [the BBC] shouldn’t feel to bad about that”. He refused to categorically rule out certain BBC services being reduced as the BBC deals with a budget cutback of about 16%. “I hope it can make these choices without hitting services,” he said. “I hope we can avoid cutting services but we can’t avoid making tough choices.” He said he wished that the BBC wasn’t taking over the World Service – from 2014 – “with substantial cuts in the system”, but he felt that it was “safer in the hands of the BBC than the Foreign Office, frankly”. He said that it was important that the BBC Trust, which governs the corporation, be “part of the public realm of this country, not the political”. BBC BBC Trust BBC World Service Radio industry Lord Patten Mark Sweney guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New BBC chairman says number of highly-paid executives at the corporation is to be cut back Lord Patten, the new BBC chairman, has admitted that some of the BBC’s executives are still paid too highly and that not being able to pay top dollar for talent is something the corporation “has to live with” in return for not having to “flog advertising and subscriptions”. Speaking on Radio 4′s Today programme, Patten said that the corporation was working through a series of cuts that would scale back the number of senior executives by about a quarter. “In some circumstances, yes [pay is too high],” he said. He also said that some talent was paid too highly but admitted that it would “probably be inflationary” to look to publish the bands of pay stars fall into, as has been done with executive pay. “You don’t have to pay 50% more on an individual than you do on the [BBC] Proms, to put it bluntly,” he said. He added that in such a hotly-contested, talent-driven market, “talent drain” is “something you live with” that needs to be balances against the fact the licence-fee funded BBC doesn’t have to “flog ads and subscriptions up and down the street”. Lord Patten said that an important part of the BBC’s raison d’etre is to “discover, train and employ [talent] for a few seasons”. And if then they are “snapped up by competitors [the BBC] shouldn’t feel to bad about that”. He refused to categorically rule out certain BBC services being reduced as the BBC deals with a budget cutback of about 16%. “I hope it can make these choices without hitting services,” he said. “I hope we can avoid cutting services but we can’t avoid making tough choices.” He said he wished that the BBC wasn’t taking over the World Service – from 2014 – “with substantial cuts in the system”, but he felt that it was “safer in the hands of the BBC than the Foreign Office, frankly”. He said that it was important that the BBC Trust, which governs the corporation, be “part of the public realm of this country, not the political”. BBC BBC Trust BBC World Service Radio industry Lord Patten Mark Sweney guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Man’s body was nailed to wooden cross with crown of thorns and other signs mimicking crucifixion of Jesus Christ The body of a man with his hands and feet nailed to a wooden cross and a crown of thorns on his head has been found in an abandoned South Korean stone quarry. The body had a wound to the side of the torso and nylon strings tied around the neck, arms and stomach, and was clad only in underpants, police said. It was found on Sunday in Mungyong, about 115 miles (190km) south-east of Seoul, said Chung Ji-chun, the provincial chief for violent crime. Two smaller crosses were erected on each side, Chung said. Police found nails, a hammer, an electric drill, pieces of wood and instructions on how to build crosses inside a tent near the scene, Chung said. An SUV belonging to the dead man was found nearby. Police were awaiting a forensics report to determine the cause of death and whether it was a homicide or suicide. Chung identified the man as a 58-year old with the surname Kim. Popular representations of the death of Jesus Christ depict him crucified between the crosses of two thieves, wearing a crown of thorns, a white cloth over his loins, with a wound on his side from a Roman soldier’s spear. South Korea guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pakistan says raid on Bin Laden’s house was ‘unauthorised’ while CIA director defends decision not to inform Islamabad The war of words between Pakistan and the US in the wake of Osama bin Laden’s killing has intensified as senior officials on both sides traded barbs that underlined their mutual mistrust, and the White House reversed its position on key details of the raid. In Islamabad the Pakistani foreign ministry issued a hard-worded statement condemning the raid on Bin Laden’s house as an “unauthorised unilateral action”, and warned that it would not be tolerated in future. In Washington, the CIA chief Leon Panetta said Pakistan was not informed of the assault on Abbottabad, a military garrison town, because US officials feared the al-Qaida leader could have been warned in advance. “It was decided that any effort to work with the Pakistanis could jeopardise the mission. They might alert the targets,” he told Time. Pakistan’s foreign secretary Salman Bashir described the American attitude as “disquieting”, asserting that Pakistan had played a key role in the fight against Islamist militancy. “Most of these things that have happened in terms of global anti-terror, Pakistan has played a pivotal role,” said he said. “So it’s a little disquieting when we have comments like this.” Earlier, President Asif Ali Zardari said American claims were “baseless speculation … that doesn’t reflect fact”. Meanwhile, American accounts of Bin Laden’s death have come under intense scrutiny following White House admissions that early official reports claiming Bin Laden had been armed and cowered behind his wife during the assault were false. Bin Laden’s wife, earlier said to have been killed, in fact survived and is currently in Pakistani custody. Pakistani television station Geo published a copy of her passport, naming her as Yemeni citizen Amal Ahmed Abdel Fatteh. The Obama administration is still mulling how to release gory photos of Bin Laden’s body to counter claims in the region that he had not been killed at all. “There are sensitivities about the appropriateness,” said spokesman Jay Carney. “It is fair to say it is a gruesome photograph.” Panetta told NBC news: “I don’t think there was any question that ultimately a photograph would be presented to the public.” Pakistan’s military, the brunt of much of the speculation, has been largely quiet, although officials from the Inter-Services Intelligence have released some details about the raid based on interviews with Bin Laden relatives left behind by the US Navy Seal team. A senior ISI official said that Bin Laden’s 12-year-old daughter had witnessed her father being killed and confirmed his death. “She said she saw him being shot,” said the official. The official did not know the name of the girl, adding that between 18 and 19 people were present in the compound at the time of the attack. He said the ISI had raided the Abbottabad house as it was under construction in 2003 in search of Abu Faraj al-Libbi, an al-Qaida lieutenant who was eventually captured two years later. But satellite imagery from 2004 shows an empty field on the site of the present house, and later images suggest that construction started a year later, shortly before US officials say in Laden and his family moved in. Pakistan’s role is coming under intense fire in the US Congress. Patrick Meehan, chair of a House Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence, expressed frustration, wondering aloud if the country was driven by “divided loyalty, complicity [or] incompetence”. Democrat Jackie Speier called it “the elephant in the room”. Inside Pakistan, media coverage has focused on whether Pakistan’s government or military had advance knowledge of the raid – a sensitive issue given widespread anti-American sentiment and worries about breaches of sovereignty. The foreign office statement said reports that US helicopters had taken off from Ghazi airbase inside Pakistan were “absolutely false and incorrect”. It continued: “Neither any base or facility inside Pakistan was used by the US Forces.” There have also been questions about how US helicopters managed to enter Pakistani airspace, conduct a violent raid lasting 40 minutes, then return unhindered to Afghanistan. The foreign office said the US choppers “made use of blind spots in the radar coverage due to hilly terrain”, facilitated by “mountainous terrain, efficacious use of latest technology and ‘nap of the earth’ flying techniques”. Osama bin Laden Pakistan United States Obama administration US politics US Congress Global terrorism US military Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New application will synch tracks from computers to iPods, iPhones and Androids and allow users to buy MP3 bundles If you hate using Apple’s iTunes to synchronise songs on your iPod or iPhone, the music streaming service Spotify would like your attention. It is rolling out a new version of its desktop and mobile application for all of its users, including the ad-supported “free” users, which will synchronise tracks from their computer to iPods, iPhones and Android phones. It is also introducing its own music store, which will allow users to buy “bundles” to pay for MP3-encoded songs from the catalogue, in which buying a bigger bundle effectively gives a discount on the songs. Thus a “bundle” of 10 tracks costs £7.99, effectively costing 80p each, while a bundle of 100 costs £50. The company says the synchronisation – which also works over Wi-Fi, something iTunes doesn’t do – has been the top most requested feature from its users for a considerable time. It has taken more than a year of programming to implement it, and led to other projects being put on hold while the engineers figured out the plumbing of the iPod to ensure seamless functioning. While the new version will not completely replace iTunes for people with iPhone or iPod Touches – which will still need them for synchronising apps and doing software updates – and will also not change calendars, photos, videos or other content on lower-end iPods, chief product officer Gustav Soderstrom told the Guardian that Spotify saw it as important to reach more users of its free service. Premium users can already synchronise content from Spotify playlists on iPod Touches, iPhones and Android phones, but free users were limited to the desktop version. “There are studies which say that the iPod is the biggest music device in terms of hours listened,” Soderstrom said. “Perhaps after the car, because people listen to a lot of radio in cars. But the iPod is certainly second, and the desktop comes a long way behind.” Spotify reckons that if it extends its functionality to the iPod, more people will eventually upgrade to its service. The company said at the beginning of March it has a million subscribers and 10m registered users ; no further update was provided this week. There was also no announcement on when Spotify might reach the US: “We’re still working hard on that. We’re getting closer,” said a spokesman. Asked how he thought Apple would react to the news, Soderstrom said he thought it would be happy: “They have encouraged third-party services through the App Store for the iPhone, iPod Touch and more recently the Mac platform. They believe that having a third-party ecosystem really drives hardware sales.” In the past, Apple has blocked companies it thought were trying to unravel the digital protections around music on the iPod. But Soderstrom said Spotify is not doing that: it will not try to remove songs put on the device by iTunes, and will not try to synchronise DRM-protected songs, although he said that only a “small percentage” of people have such music. Apple stopped selling DRM-protected songs through its iTunes Music Store in January 2009, though some songs have not been updated. The Spotify sync puts the music on the device a second time, though Soderstrom said that most Premium users remove the iTunes music and synchronise their playlists from Spotify directly. At present Spotify can only synchronise “static” playlists from iTunes, and not “smart” playlists which are updated in iTunes when new songs are added to the library. Soderstrom said that functionality was being worked on both for synchronisation and for Spotify playlists generally. • Amazon has cut the prices of MP3 downloads in the US, reducing them to 69 cents, compared to the $1.29 that some songs in Apple’s iTunes Store sell at. Amazon has about 10% of the music download market in the US but is now looking to expand. Spotify Internet Digital music and audio iTunes Apple Software iPhone Mobile phones Telecoms iPod Android Google Wi-Fi Media business Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New application will synch tracks from computers to iPods, iPhones and Androids and allow users to buy MP3 bundles If you hate using Apple’s iTunes to synchronise songs on your iPod or iPhone, the music streaming service Spotify would like your attention. It is rolling out a new version of its desktop and mobile application for all of its users, including the ad-supported “free” users, which will synchronise tracks from their computer to iPods, iPhones and Android phones. It is also introducing its own music store, which will allow users to buy “bundles” to pay for MP3-encoded songs from the catalogue, in which buying a bigger bundle effectively gives a discount on the songs. Thus a “bundle” of 10 tracks costs £7.99, effectively costing 80p each, while a bundle of 100 costs £50. The company says the synchronisation – which also works over Wi-Fi, something iTunes doesn’t do – has been the top most requested feature from its users for a considerable time. It has taken more than a year of programming to implement it, and led to other projects being put on hold while the engineers figured out the plumbing of the iPod to ensure seamless functioning. While the new version will not completely replace iTunes for people with iPhone or iPod Touches – which will still need them for synchronising apps and doing software updates – and will also not change calendars, photos, videos or other content on lower-end iPods, chief product officer Gustav Soderstrom told the Guardian that Spotify saw it as important to reach more users of its free service. Premium users can already synchronise content from Spotify playlists on iPod Touches, iPhones and Android phones, but free users were limited to the desktop version. “There are studies which say that the iPod is the biggest music device in terms of hours listened,” Soderstrom said. “Perhaps after the car, because people listen to a lot of radio in cars. But the iPod is certainly second, and the desktop comes a long way behind.” Spotify reckons that if it extends its functionality to the iPod, more people will eventually upgrade to its service. The company said at the beginning of March it has a million subscribers and 10m registered users ; no further update was provided this week. There was also no announcement on when Spotify might reach the US: “We’re still working hard on that. We’re getting closer,” said a spokesman. Asked how he thought Apple would react to the news, Soderstrom said he thought it would be happy: “They have encouraged third-party services through the App Store for the iPhone, iPod Touch and more recently the Mac platform. They believe that having a third-party ecosystem really drives hardware sales.” In the past, Apple has blocked companies it thought were trying to unravel the digital protections around music on the iPod. But Soderstrom said Spotify is not doing that: it will not try to remove songs put on the device by iTunes, and will not try to synchronise DRM-protected songs, although he said that only a “small percentage” of people have such music. Apple stopped selling DRM-protected songs through its iTunes Music Store in January 2009, though some songs have not been updated. The Spotify sync puts the music on the device a second time, though Soderstrom said that most Premium users remove the iTunes music and synchronise their playlists from Spotify directly. At present Spotify can only synchronise “static” playlists from iTunes, and not “smart” playlists which are updated in iTunes when new songs are added to the library. Soderstrom said that functionality was being worked on both for synchronisation and for Spotify playlists generally. • Amazon has cut the prices of MP3 downloads in the US, reducing them to 69 cents, compared to the $1.29 that some songs in Apple’s iTunes Store sell at. Amazon has about 10% of the music download market in the US but is now looking to expand. Spotify Internet Digital music and audio iTunes Apple Software iPhone Mobile phones Telecoms iPod Android Google Wi-Fi Media business Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Report by human rights group cites ex-inmates and defectors’ accounts of torture and executions in series of camps North Korea’s political prison camps have expanded substantially over the last decade and hold 200,000 people, according to Amnesty International. The human rights group says satellite imagery shows that locations identified as prison camps by defectors have grown rapidly in recent years. Former detainees and guards who subsequently escaped from the country described horrific conditions including torture and widespread malnutrition, Amnesty said, with every former inmate saying they had witnessed executions. Thousands of prisoners are thought to be held purely for guilt by association under a system of collective punishment that holds relatives responsible when an individual breaks the law. “Hundreds of thousands of people exist with virtually no rights, treated essentially as slaves, in some of the worst circumstances we’ve documented in the last 50 years,” said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty’s Asia Pacific director. “As North Korea seems to be moving towards a new leader in Kim Jong-un and a period of political instability, the big worry is that the prison camps appear to be growing in size.” Satellite images showed four of the six camps sprawling over large tracts of land in remote rural areas of South Pyongan, South Hamkyung and North Hamkyung provinces. A comparison with images taken 10 years ago showed that they had grown significantly, Amnesty said, with 15 more guardhouses at Yodok alone. It combined the evidence of additional buildings with former detainees’ descriptions of conditions at the camps to arrive at its estimate of political prisoner numbers. The South Korean human rights commission has also estimated a population of 200,000 while South Korean government sources have suggested around 150,000 people are held in the camps. North Korea has a population of around 24 million. According to defectors, the camps consist of two areas. No one is ever released from the total control zones, for those alleged to have committed serious crimes such as those against the regime. Those deemed to have committed less serious offences, such as being critical of government policy or illegally crossing the border, face sentences of between a few months and a decade in revolutionary zones. Amnesty says only three people are known to have escaped total control zones and managed to leave North Korea. Most of its interviewees had been held in the revolutionary zone at a camp in Yodok. A devastating famine in the mid-1990s killed hundreds of thousands in North Korea and the country has suffered food shortages ever since, but conditions appear to have been particularly gruelling in the camps. Former inmate Jeong Kyoungil, who was detained in Yodok from 2000 to 2003, told Amnesty that prisoners received three meals of 200g of corn gruel a day, with food withheld if they failed to finish their work. “Seeing people die happened frequently – every day. Frankly, unlike in a normal society, we would like it rather than feel sad because if you bring a dead body and bury it, you would be given another bowl of food. I used to take charge of burying dead people’s bodies,” he said. Others reported torture, with detainees forced to spend a week or more in a cube-shaped cell too small in which to stand or lie down. North Korea, which does not acknowledge it has political prison camps, has not responded to the report. North Korea Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments including prime ministers questions 8.20am: Humphrys turns to other subjects. Q: Did Labour get it wrong on immigration? Miliband says Labour significantly underestimated the number of EU migrants who would come to Britain. It’s a class issue. The arrival of Polish builders is good of people who need a builder. But not for anyone who works as a builder. Immigration will contribute to the economic and culture life of Britain, he says. But the problem arises when politicians make false promises. David Cameron is promising to control immigration. But he can’t control the numbers coming in from the EU. The government’s proposed cap is a “very dubious thing”. Q: Are too many people coming into the country? Miliband says you cannot make that judgment. It depends what the economic circumstances are at the time. Cameron’s plan for a cap is not realistic. And it would not be good for British people working abroad. Q: Will your nose operation make you sound different? Miliband says he does not know. He hopes not. But he is having the operation for medical reasons. Humphrys concludes the interview by thanking “David Miliband”. Oh no. Another Humphrys gaffe. He’s not having a good slip. Miliband laughs it off, describing it as a “Freudian slip”, although he must find this a bit humiliating. I’ll post a full summary of the interview in a moment. 8.15am: Q: Why did you not change the voting system when you were in office? Miliband says: “We should have done.” He argued for putting a commitment to an AV referendum in the manifesto. But it didn’t happen earlier because Labour had “too big a majority”. Humphrys says this shows that Labour were motivated by party advantage. Miliband says he is giving an honest answer. Q: People understand first past the post, don’t they? Miliband says AV is an “equally simple system”. Q: But Cameron said yesterday that under AV people have their vote counted twice. Miliband says Humphrys got into “a bit of a tangle” over this. Cameron was wrong. Everyone has their vote counted when votes are counted for a second time. Q: Do you support PR? Miliband says he is not in favour of PR. He supports the constituency link. Q: Would a vote for AV be the end of electoral reform? Yes, says Miliband. “That’s the system I want.” Q: If you lose, is it over for a generation? Miliband says he does not want to speculate on the result. But if the yes camp lose, “we won’t be coming back to this quickly.” 8.10am: John Humphrys is interviewing Ed Miliband. They’re starting now. Q: Why can’t you persuade your own party to support AV? Miliband says Labour has been split on electoral reform for 80 years. But he’s in favour because it would change the political culture. It would force parties to reach out to others. Q: You talk about reaching out. But you were not prepared to share a platform with Nick Clegg? Miliband says he did not want the AV campaign to become a referendum on any individual. He did not share a platform with Clegg because that would damage the campaign. People were “shocked” by what Clegg did at the election. He posed as a politician of the centre left, but then went into government and supported policies that he had opposed. Q: But didn’t Vince Cable, with whom you have shared a platform, do this too? Miliband says Clegg was the “poster boy” for the new politics. But he has broken his promises, showing that he exemplifies the worst of old politics. Q: But so did Cable. Miliband says this is the decision he has made. 8.08am: There’s one day to go until the elections and Ed Miliband will be on the Today programme at 8.10am for an interview. He will be mainly talking about the alternative vote. Miliband is in favour of AV, but today there is a ComRes poll in the Independent showing the no camp 32 points ahead . And we’ve got PMQs at 12pm. Otherwise it looks quite quiet. That will probably suit most MPs. They were here until 4am this morning debating the finance bill. As usual, I’ll be covering all the breaking political news, as well as looking at the papers (I didn’t have time yesterday, but I don’t think you missed much because they were dominated by Osama bin Laden stories) and bringing you the best politics from the web. I’ll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm, and an afternoon one at about 4pm. Alternative vote AV referendum Elections 2011 PMQs House of Commons David Cameron Ed Miliband Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fiendishly complex and morally ambiguous, The Shadow Line aims to bring HBO-style drama to the BBC. Amy
Continue reading …