Wednesday, June 13, 2007

In tonight's programme

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WEDNESDAY 13 JUNE 22:30 BST - BBC TWO
FROM EMILY MAITLIS

Hello,

We mark an important centenary this evening. The hundredth birthday of the caravan park.

You will no doubt be thinking of Margaret Beckett, at this point. So let me bring the email full circle and start with Foreign Affairs in a part of the world that is looking increasingly volatile tonight:

Gaza

When the Palestinian President himself throws up his hands and cries 'This is madness!' you know things aren't going too well in Gaza. Mahmood Abbas really isn't mincing his words. He's said that without a ceasefire the situation will collapse.

Today, gunfire was turned on thousands of unarmed Palestinian civilians demonstrating against violence on both sides - and policemen loyal to Fatah fled across the border to Egypt to escape Hamas militants.

So did the West have a role to play in helping to create this chaos - or is this internal wrangling which the West should stay out of? And what can be done to solve the crisis?

As ever in the Middle East, it doesn't stop there.

Lebanon

A car bomb has exploded in Beirut killing an MP and five others. The legislator - Walid Eido - was well known for his anti Syrian views - and the method of assassination appears to be the same as that used in the past to assassinate Syria's opponents. It's almost exactly a year since the war between Hezbollah and Israel was played out on the streets of Lebanon.

Tonight we ask if the battles between radical groups in the Middle East are gaining momentum.

Countryside

In the latest in his series on how Blair changed Britain, Jeremy Paxman spends a day in rural England talking to people, some of whom feel they are Britain's most ignored minority group.

Caravans

Which brings us back, rather nicely, to aforementioned caravans. And Steve Smith's celebrations thereof. Ever made a hundredth birthday cake on a camp fire?

Do join us at 10.30pm on BBC2.

Emily

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