:00:08. > :00:18.candidate. They are is more coming up on the plane crash. No, it is
:00:18. > :00:28.
:00:28. > :00:31.time for Reporters. -- the the world News, we send out
:00:31. > :00:36.correspondence to bring you the best stories from across the globe. In
:00:36. > :00:41.this week 's programme: after tens of millions took to the streets
:00:41. > :00:43.across Egypt the man then the removal of the President Mohamed
:00:43. > :00:51.Morsi, the country ended the week with a new interim president
:00:51. > :00:56.installed either military. Egyptians are impatient for better lives. The
:00:56. > :00:59.top priorities are keeping the peace and the economy. The generals and
:00:59. > :01:06.the new president need to come up with results quickly. Political
:01:06. > :01:11.honeymoons here are short. Inside Syria's Sharia law courts. We ask
:01:11. > :01:19.whether this is the future of Justice in rebel held parts of the
:01:19. > :01:22.country. Cosmetic surgery day gangland style. We visit the heart
:01:22. > :01:31.of the medical tourism industry where business is booming but not
:01:31. > :01:36.everyone is happy. Finding a surgeon is not the problem. The problem is
:01:36. > :01:41.that the industry is growing too fast for its own good. From the
:01:41. > :01:45.favelas to the football field: the Brazilian street project that is
:01:45. > :01:50.turning drug dealers into soccer stars. And images from the
:01:50. > :01:58.frontline. Jane O'Brien investigates how photography can influence the
:01:58. > :02:01.public's reaction to war. It has been a dramatic week in Egypt.
:02:01. > :02:08.President Mohamed Morsi of the ruling Muslim Brotherhood was ousted
:02:08. > :02:13.from power at the military. Egypt now has a new interim resident, Adly
:02:13. > :02:21.Mansour. This all came after tens of millions of people took to the
:02:21. > :02:24.streets, demanding the removal of Mohamed Morsi. They put on an
:02:24. > :02:34.irrational as the sun went down over Tahrir Square on the first full day
:02:34. > :02:38.of military control. It was a celebration of a takeover that went
:02:38. > :02:41.so smoothly that some Egyptians believed the generals must have
:02:41. > :02:49.started working on the details not long after the ousted resident took
:02:49. > :02:53.office one year ago. -- President. There was another display in the
:02:53. > :03:03.morning, just in case anyone didn't know who was in charge now. It was
:03:03. > :03:03.
:03:03. > :03:08.timed to coincide with the public revival of an old Alliance. The old
:03:08. > :03:10.-- the new president was sworn in the Constitutional Court. Adly
:03:11. > :03:16.Mansour was picked to be interim president by the generals,
:03:16. > :03:21.presumably because he will be compliant. The court was the biggest
:03:21. > :03:25.enemy optimism brotherhood. Adly Mansour strapped the law that
:03:25. > :03:31.stopped former members of the Hosni Mubarak resumes standing in
:03:31. > :03:36.elections. Seizing power and putting an ally into the presidency might be
:03:36. > :03:42.the easy part for the army. They have an even worse inheritance than
:03:42. > :03:48.the one that made my mid-March the's jobs or lard. Egyptians are
:03:48. > :03:53.impatient for a better life. -- made Mohamed Morsi's job so hard. The
:03:53. > :03:58.generals and the new president need to come up with results quickly.
:03:58. > :04:03.Political honeymoons here are short. Many Egyptians who support democracy
:04:03. > :04:09.will not call what has happened a military coup, even those soldiers
:04:09. > :04:18.to power from an elected president. They include Egypt's most prominent
:04:18. > :04:23.international leader, Mohammed Alba Radley. They have been called by the
:04:23. > :04:30.people to avert a civil war. It is a painful measure. No one wanted it.
:04:30. > :04:37.Mohamed Morsi undermined his own legitimacy by declaring himself as a
:04:38. > :04:42.feel. Then we got into a fist fight, not a deck necrotic process.
:04:42. > :04:50.Democratic. If you want change, you go through democracy, not to the
:04:50. > :04:56.states. But look at what is happening in Somalia. Is that the
:04:56. > :05:01.real whiskey? Of course. 36 members of the Muslim Brotherhood have been
:05:01. > :05:11.given travel bans while detained. A spokesman kept his language
:05:11. > :05:11.
:05:11. > :05:16.conciliatory. We have made mistakes. Our country was broken. You know the
:05:16. > :05:23.story of the economy under the Hosni Mubarak resumes. Everybody knows the
:05:23. > :05:27.story. Do you think that one year is enough to the pier everything?
:05:27. > :05:35.the supporters guarding the area that is still being guarded at the
:05:35. > :05:39.presidential palace, much more public anger and emotions. They are
:05:39. > :05:49.restraining us. There are angry people here. They have a lot of
:05:49. > :05:51.
:05:51. > :05:58.energy. We are against what happened. This is not democracy. Two
:05:58. > :06:02.Egypt s exist no. One is made up of supporters of the former president.
:06:02. > :06:08.The other is centred on Tahrir Square and all the Egyptians who
:06:08. > :06:12.believe that their country and their revolution has another chance.
:06:12. > :06:22.Someone needs to bridge the gap between them or Egypt won't be able
:06:22. > :06:22.
:06:22. > :06:27.to solve its enormous problems. It is a killing that many say has come
:06:27. > :06:30.to symbolise just what's gone wrong with Syria's revolution. A 14
:06:30. > :06:36.-year-old boy was accused of bias are made and then beaten and shot
:06:36. > :06:42.dead in the city of Aleppo. -- accused of blasphemy. His death has
:06:42. > :06:49.led to concern about the growing strength of jihad this and the
:06:49. > :06:56.strict use of Sharia law. This report is from Aleppo. It features
:06:56. > :07:00.rare access to a Sharia law courts. We warn you that it does contain
:07:00. > :07:06.distressing images. This is where 40 White Gold Mohamed Morsi 's life.
:07:06. > :07:12.His brother can hardly be to work at the family coffee stand any longer.
:07:12. > :07:18.Mohammed had been asked for a free cup. Not even of the Prophet himself
:07:18. > :07:22.returns, he said laughing. That remark was a death sentence. At the
:07:22. > :07:27.family's cramped apartment close to the frontline, they tell us more
:07:27. > :07:32.about our killing that symbolises what has gone wrong with Syria's
:07:32. > :07:42.revolution. They described how armed men over here Mohammed. His mother
:07:42. > :07:45.
:07:45. > :07:55.saw everything. There were three of them. They said" whoever insults the
:07:55. > :08:00.
:08:00. > :08:05.profit will be killed" she recalls. She goes on" I'd heard the first
:08:05. > :08:10.shot and run out to be afraid. I fell to the ground. They shot him
:08:10. > :08:20.again and take him. I look at them and asked them why they were killing
:08:20. > :08:23.
:08:23. > :08:28.him. His father says he looks out at the killer. The man has not been
:08:28. > :08:37.caught. Religious authorities say the actions were on Islamic and
:08:37. > :08:41.criminal. We are approaching the point we are Mohamed Morsi murdered.
:08:42. > :08:48.There was quite a crowd when he was shot and killed. Everyone felt too
:08:48. > :08:53.terrified to intervene. He was shot right over here. Lots of it sees say
:08:53. > :08:57.the men who did it showed no fear of being caught. Their actions have
:08:57. > :09:01.been condemned by all of the armed groups in Aleppo. Most of those
:09:01. > :09:07.troops are Islamist and character. They are starting to use their
:09:07. > :09:15.influence to impose Sharia law here. It is the same in the northern town
:09:15. > :09:24.here mac. The law has brought in foreign and domestic supporters of
:09:24. > :09:28.jihad to fight for God, not democracy. These men are running
:09:28. > :09:38.things. This man is an Islamist cleric. He oversees the Sharia
:09:38. > :09:46.court. ABC Arabic film the court over more than one month. Four men
:09:47. > :09:52.have an convicted of highway robbery. They are lectured in the
:09:52. > :10:01.name of the profit. The men have said they are rebel fighters. They
:10:01. > :10:05.are told they are weapons will be confiscated. Sentences will be
:10:05. > :10:15.carried out in public. The instrument of punishment is an
:10:15. > :10:16.
:10:16. > :10:22.electrical cable. It is 50 lashes for the leader of the gang and 44
:10:22. > :10:32.each of his men. God 's law is the best protection for the week, he
:10:32. > :10:36.
:10:37. > :10:40.tells the crowd. Many of the crowd showed that the profit is their
:10:40. > :10:50.leader. Others just count the lashes. This may appal secular
:10:50. > :10:55.activists. The uprising's religious supporters like it. They say there
:10:56. > :11:05.is an epidemic of theft, looting and kidnapping. Increasingly, this may
:11:05. > :11:11.be the future of justice in rebel held parts of Syria. Do you fancy a
:11:11. > :11:16.new nose? Different shaped eyes? Perhaps a new baseline? Changing the
:11:16. > :11:20.way that we look is getting easier these days thanks to cosmetic
:11:20. > :11:25.surgery. It is easier in some countries rather than others. It has
:11:25. > :11:32.led to a rise in what is being called medical to his. Thousands
:11:32. > :11:36.head to South Korea for surgery every year. Not all customers are
:11:37. > :11:42.satisfied. Complaints are on the rise. For her summer holiday this
:11:43. > :11:52.year, this woman chose a new phase. A new nose, differently shaped eyes
:11:53. > :11:55.
:11:55. > :12:00.and double jaw surgery to reshape urchin. Less relaxing. She has come
:12:00. > :12:10.from Mongolia to have treatment here. The number of tourists coming
:12:10. > :12:11.
:12:11. > :12:17.to Korea has doubled in the last five years. They could come for
:12:17. > :12:26.surgery and have a good result. is exactly the same for foreigners
:12:26. > :12:30.as Korean movie stars. Even the government has spotted the link
:12:30. > :12:35.between the two growing industries, cultural and cosmetic. It has opened
:12:35. > :12:39.this gleaming new tourists centre in the heartland of Seoul's cosmetic
:12:39. > :12:45.surgery boom. You can pick concert tickets along with hospital
:12:45. > :12:50.appointments. Come here and you are spoilt for choice. Just in the
:12:50. > :12:58.street that I am standing in, there are four cosmetic surgery clinics
:12:58. > :13:03.all next door to each other. Behind mediators -- behind me is a clinic.
:13:03. > :13:08.That is one and so is the building behind that one. There are more than
:13:08. > :13:13.2000 in this area alone. Finding our surgeon is not the problem. The
:13:13. > :13:20.problem, some say, is that the industry is growing too fast for its
:13:20. > :13:26.own good. This woman had jaw surgery three years ago. It was a confidence
:13:26. > :13:35.boost before starting to date again. When nerve damage letter in constant
:13:35. > :13:40.pain, she found that the legal system was not equipped to protect.
:13:40. > :13:45.Medical PNC are based on a patient's ability to work, not their
:13:45. > :13:49.confidence. This woman was awarded 16,000 US dollars. It is a fraction
:13:49. > :13:56.of the amount you spend on pain relief and medical bills and legal
:13:56. > :14:01.fees. Everything in my life has been put on hold. The pain is so constant
:14:01. > :14:06.can hardly do anything else. I feel as if I was tricked by the plastic
:14:06. > :14:11.surgeon. Such a sense of betrayal. Seoul's pop clinics are highly
:14:11. > :14:20.sought after. As she leaves, the doctor is preparing for his next
:14:20. > :14:23.patient. The fear of -- doctors without specialist training are also
:14:23. > :14:31.allowed to practice. It is an industry keeping pace with the man,
:14:31. > :14:37.even if the laws that the pleasant are not. As Brazil prepares for the
:14:37. > :14:41.World Cup, they all -- the government is trying to repair the
:14:41. > :14:51.rundown slums. There is a long history of foot or players who have
:14:51. > :15:01.learnt their skills in the slums. There are millions who are not so
:15:01. > :15:03.
:15:03. > :15:07.fortunate as the stars who make it. But this is not exactly the Rio you
:15:07. > :15:13.see in tourist brochures. A lot of the city is made up of exactly this
:15:13. > :15:23.kind of slum. We know in Brazil, football means life, here there is a
:15:23. > :15:23.
:15:23. > :15:31.project that is going on that is helping to change lives. It has
:15:32. > :15:41.different aims. 1 is that we train ex- soldiers to become trainers. How
:15:41. > :15:45.to use the sport. They work with the kids out of these slums and they are
:15:45. > :15:52.right kind of role model to show these kids that organised crime and
:15:52. > :15:58.the drug trade is not the right solution. We could you see your life
:15:58. > :16:07.being if you had not been involved? I would still be a drug dealer.
:16:07. > :16:12.living very long? Definitely.Here in this slum, there is no family
:16:12. > :16:19.that did not lose our family member by a bullet. Many of the kids are
:16:19. > :16:25.still traumatised. It makes us more aware of other things and helps a
:16:25. > :16:31.study. The more we play, the more influence we have. The teachers have
:16:31. > :16:37.noticed improvement. The project has changed my life. If it was not
:16:37. > :16:46.this, I would still be a drug dealer. What do you do with the kids
:16:46. > :16:50.it? I educate them. I tell them what is right, what is wrong. In the
:16:50. > :16:57.past, I make a lot of mistakes. I want to make sure they don't make
:16:57. > :17:03.the same mistakes that I did. have any friends who are very good
:17:03. > :17:06.friends -- players at football question mark yes. We will born and
:17:06. > :17:10.raised together in the same neighbourhood. Does he still come
:17:10. > :17:20.back to the area and visit people? Yes he visits often. Do you have
:17:20. > :17:24.friends who are still in the drug business? Yes lots of people. At the
:17:24. > :17:31.end of the day, the decision is up to them. You have to decide if you
:17:31. > :17:38.want to change your life. Can you measure your success? We see the
:17:38. > :17:46.influence on the ex- soldiers on the children to show them that big
:17:46. > :17:49.weapons at not a success in life. There are other successes in life.
:17:49. > :17:55.We play with teams from slums who are occupied by different cartels
:17:56. > :17:59.and gangs. We show them that the other side is not the big enemy.
:17:59. > :18:03.With football, we try to show them that you can play together. You can
:18:04. > :18:11.do things together, you can become someone in this world, when you
:18:11. > :18:16.want. All of us who watch or play football are always talking about
:18:16. > :18:25.how important it is to us. I have never seen it as important as it is
:18:25. > :18:31.here. It is not sad, it is inspiring. Football is great. They
:18:31. > :18:35.are powerful and provocative. Images of war at their most graphic, their
:18:35. > :18:38.most disturbing. They are featured in a landmark exhibition touring the
:18:38. > :18:42.United States. The show examines how photography influences public
:18:42. > :18:52.reaction to conflicts from Vietnam's, to the more recent wars
:18:52. > :18:56.
:18:56. > :19:00.in Afghanistan and Iraq. Most people have no direct experience of war.
:19:00. > :19:09.The 300 images of conflict in this exhibition, their powerful witness
:19:09. > :19:15.to its impact, some are iconic. The US flag being raised on the Japanese
:19:15. > :19:19.islands, others are less obvious. All tell it human story. What we see
:19:20. > :19:29.here is a police chief who, in a split 2nd, executes a prisoner of
:19:30. > :19:30.
:19:30. > :19:36.war. Taken during the Vietnam War, the picture set -- captures the last
:19:36. > :19:39.moment of this man's life. It is disturbing and mesmerising. It up --
:19:39. > :19:45.raises questions whether these pictures desensitise us.
:19:45. > :19:51.exhibition like this, if properly seen, will cruise that bash back --
:19:51. > :19:55.will prove that people can desensitise. That we can learn
:19:55. > :20:02.immense amount of details from a horrifying scene or unexpected
:20:02. > :20:07.moment of grace. Award-winning photographer spent 5 years with
:20:07. > :20:12.troops in Afghanistan. His portion of a US Marine is the exhibition
:20:12. > :20:18.poster. He believes that the pictures create a safe space for
:20:18. > :20:21.viewers to reflect on what war means. Photography allows a distance
:20:21. > :20:27.where we are not so shocked and overwhelmed, where we can reflect on
:20:27. > :20:33.wars of the past will stop current wars, and his oracle wars. This
:20:33. > :20:37.portrait is meant to look at you. For you to meet the human being. No
:20:37. > :20:43.gun, he is not shooting, he is not being shot at. It is a psychological
:20:43. > :20:48.experience. The exhibition depicts more than actual conflict. This
:20:48. > :20:52.photo shows the new role of women what -- workers during World War II.
:20:52. > :20:58.They called the noses of aircraft. The euphoria that its troops
:20:59. > :21:01.returning home. It is another sign of the aftermath of wars. Away from
:21:01. > :21:07.the home front, many photographers risk their lives to tell the
:21:07. > :21:13.stories. It is trying to get a wider audience to a moment that will
:21:13. > :21:18.otherwise remain on scene. I think that most photographers which there
:21:18. > :21:24.were some power that their pictures could have that would imbue the
:21:24. > :21:30.world with an ability to get beyond war. It does not seem like we have
:21:30. > :21:34.done a good job of that based on what keeps happening. Photographs