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National Heroes

Andrew Harding wonders whether South Africa can adjust to a less dramatic, more 'normal', post-Mandela era; David Chazan learns why the French admire one bank robber so much.

Pascale Harter introduces dispatches from ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ correspondents around the world. In this edition, Andrew Harding wonders what recent events have revealed about South Africa's readiness for a post-Mandela reality. We've heard a lot about the lasting violence of the apartheid era - but despite alarming statistics and sometimes alarmist reporting, he asks whether the nation might in fact be settling into a less dramatic, less heroic, but more normal way of life. Meanwhile, in France, the public seems ever more disenchanted with politicians - even the ones elected to govern - amid continued economic woes. Which might be why, as David Chazan explains, there's more general affection for a convicted bank-robber-turned-folk-hero thank for some of the most powerful men in the land.

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10 minutes

Last on

Tue 9 Apr 2013 18:50GMT

Broadcast

  • Tue 9 Apr 2013 18:50GMT