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The highlights of the season will include "hard-hitting"
news reports and analytical programming to reflect where the economies
of the two emerging countries are headed over the course of the
next 20 years, and their potential impact on the rest of the world,
states an official release.
The season will present an overview and bring an international
perspective on what the world's opinion leaders foresee as the real
picture regarding the state of the economies of the two nations.
Presenter Nisha Pillai, Delhi-based correspondent Sanjeev Srivastava,
Mumbai business correspondent Karishma Vaswani, and South Asia correspondent
Navdip Dhariwal will be conducting interviews and reports from India
for Asia Today, Asia Business Report, World Business Report and
News bulletins. There will also be packages produced by Washington
reporter Jonathan Beale, correspondent Humphrey Hawksley, and Shanghai-based
business reporter Quentin Sommerville among others. There will be
two extended World Business Reports every weekday at 4 pm and 7
pm, which will include live reports from the London, New York and
Singapore studios.
Four special editions of HARDtalk presented by Stephen Sackur
will be recorded in India. The line-up of guests include: Praful
Patel, Civil Aviation Minister; Joakim Arputham of Mumbai Slum Dwellers
Association; Dr Vandana Shiva, Environmental Activist and well-known
industrialist Rahul Bajaj. HARDtalk extra, presented by Noel Thompson,
will also be interviewing Shabana Azmi, actress, Manmohan Shetty
filmmaker and producer and Javed Akhtar, writer and lyricist.
In addition, BBC World's US-based business reporter Tanya Beckett
will front The World Debate from New York to offer the US perspective.
Panellists include: Paul O' Neill, former US Treasury Secretary,
Rob Blackwell, Chief Economist, AFL-CIO, Brian O'Shaughnessy, CEO,
Revere Copper and Robert Peston, BBC Business Editor.
As per the release, BBC World has also commissioned its biggest
ever poll for the launch of the Emerging Giants season. It has asked
10,000 respondents across 10 of the world's largest economies what
they think of the rise of India and China. Throughout the season,
the results of the poll will be discussed on the various programmes.
Viewers are encouraged to tell us what they think about the results
at bbcnews.com/haveyoursay.
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