Into The DepthsExplicit
by HumAngle
Welcome to Into the Depths, an audio documentary from HumAngle, where we look beyond the obvious, tell you important stories and provide you with answers to questions you didn't know you could ask.
Welcome to Into the Depths, an audio documentary from HumAngle, where we look beyond the obvious, tell you important stories and provide you with answers to questions you didn't know you could ask.
In North West Nigeria, where more than a decade-old crisis has claimed the lives of about 20,000 people and displaced no fewer than 600,000 more from their homes, the provision of humanitarian aid often comes with an irreparable price. Sometimes, death or, if you’re lucky, abduction. In the middle of that dire strait, aid workers have continued to chisel a small window, defying the many odds stacked against them. They continue to provide what little support they can in the wake of a global decline in humanitarian funding. In this episode, HumAngle spoke with aid workers from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) about what it means to work in the region and how they are overcoming the many challenges.
The Universe Called Lagos Traffic. Our latest audio documentary focuses on the inside life of Lagosians and the people often caught in road traffic congestion: the agberos, hawkers and commuters. This episode was reported and scripted by Adejumo Kabir. Edited by ‘Kunle Adebajo and Hauwa Shaffii Nuhu. Mixed and Mastered by Anthony Asemota. Additional assistance by Jurbe Simon and Ibrahim Adeyemi. The executive producer is Ahmad Salkida.
On February 13, 1958, hundreds of women from different communities in Epie, a kingdom in southern Nigeria, trooped out in a protest that had lasted many days. Some of them who were nursing mothers had their babies tied to their backs. Some were pregnant. They demanded free education and spoke against the proposed policy to tax women. But the British colonial authorities responded with force. Security agents opened fire on the protesters. Many of them were arrested. Villages were looted and burnt. People became displaced. Some lost their lives. But stories of this incident have barely been documented. They are passed from generation to generation by word of mouth. The victims of the savagery from the colonial forces have been reluctant to share their experiences. However, 65 years later, HumAngle is able to piece together what happened based on interviews with multiple eyewitnesses, families of victims, and others who have studied the events.