
Helen Clark and Salah al-Shaikhly
This week: The prime minister of New Zealand and the Iraqi ambassador to the UK.
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Sir David Frost |
Every week, Sir David Frost, one of the most celebrated broadcasters, offers you a programme which takes its stories and guests from every part of the globe.
Coming up this week on Frost over the World: |
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Helen Clark, New Zealand’s prime minister |
A comment by Helen Clark, New Zealand’s prime minister, about whether it was time for the Union flag to be removed from New Zealand’s flag has ignited a debate about whether her country should become a republic. Although it has been independent from Britain for 60 years it still has the Queen as head of state and many see removing the Union flag as the first step toward establishing a republic.
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Dr. Salah al-Shaikhly, the Iraqi ambassador to the UK |
Salah al-Shaikhly, the Iraqi ambassador to the UK, talks to Sir David Frost about the role of private security firms in Iraq, the presence of British and American forces and the future of his country.
The ambassador suggested that Blackwater, the private American security firm that was involved in a shoot-out last month that left 11 Iraqis dead, had “overstepped their terms of duty” and had used unnecessary force, describing the firm’s recent behaviour as “absolutely unacceptable”.
He also reveals that despite the partial withdrawal of UK forces, Gordon Brown, the British prime minister, had reiterated the UK’s commitment to Iraq in a recent private meeting.
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Mark Penn, Hillary Clinton’s strategist |
The US presidential elections are still more than a year away but the campaigns are already in full-swing and for the first time in more than 50 years no former president or vice-president looks likely to run. This means that there are a lot of new players jostling for influence and in a new feature on Frost Over The World we will be introducing you to some of the new players in American politics.
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John Guernsey became a bishop of the Church of Uganda in the US |
The row over homosexuality continues to threaten to break up the Anglican section of the Christian church. The division erupted following the ordination by the US Episcopal Church of the openly gay Gene Robinson as bishop of New Hampshire.