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03:00 - 03:06
BBC News
29/03/2026 03:01 GMT

03:06 - 03:30
From Our Own Correspondent
Cuba's power failures

03:30 - 03:32
BBC News Summary
29/03/2026 03:30 GMT

03:32 - 04:00
Happy News
The Happy Pod: The hug that stopped a bombing

04:00 - 04:06
BBC News
29/03/2026 04:01 GMT

04:06 - 04:30
The Newsroom
29/03/2026 04:06 GMT

04:30 - 04:32
BBC News Summary
29/03/2026 04:30 GMT

04:32 - 05:00
The Documentary
From famine to hope: Women reshape Madagascar

05:00 - 05:06
BBC News
29/03/2026 05:01 GMT
Eels are a popular food in parts of Asia, but they can’t be commercially bred in captivity. Coupled with trade bans to protect the highly endangered fish, this has led to baby eels becoming one of the most trafficked creatures in the world. BBC Eye and DOCDAYS investigate this global trade from the rivers of the UK to Haiti, Poland and Russia.
We’re in the UK where the last remaining eel trader in the country has a licence to export baby eels to stock a conservation project in Russia. But questions have been raised over whether this is really what’s going on. We visit an investigative journalist in Poland who’s been looking into these exports to Russia and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. With access to a member of an organised crime gang from Hong Kong, we hear how smugglers evade the French authorities to export baby eels to Asia. We also visit the Caribbean where a new and booming demand for glass eels is having a big impact on communities and politics in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
A co-production from DOCDAYS Productions and BBC Eye Investigations.
