On Assignment
On Assignment | |
---|---|
On Assignment title card | |
Presented by | Rageh Omaar |
Starring | ITV News presenters and correspondents |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
ITN Productions for ITV News & Current Affairs |
Running time | 35 minutes (inc. adverts) |
Release | |
Original network | ITV, STV, UTV |
Picture format | 16:9 |
Original release | 19 March 2014 – present |
Chronology | |
Related shows |
ITV News, The Agenda, Exposure, Tonight |
External links | |
Website |
On Assignment is an ITV current affairs programme, fronted by ITV News International Affairs Editor, Rageh Omaar. The programme first aired on 19 March 2014, following ITV News at Ten.
ITV News produces the monthly programmes, comprising long-form reports, focusing on providing colour, background, insight and perspectives on the issues of the moment. On Assignment focuses on international coverage, but also includes some stories from the UK.
Assignments
Episode 1
- Original Broadcast: 19 March 2014
- Mark Austin – Return to Rwanda
Twenty years on from Rwanda's savage genocide, ITV News at Ten newscaster Mark Austin returns to the country. He revisits some of the worst scenes he witnessed during his career as a foreign correspondent and hears powerful stories of survival. He meets those working hard to ensure peace, faith and hope continue to outweigh the horrors of the past - whilst the fear of it happening again hangs in the air.
- Robert Moore – Pot in America
Three months ago a new law was implemented in the US state of Colorado. Marijuana is now legal, regulated and taxed. Washington Correspondent Robert Moore travels there to explore how impactful the change in the law has been. He meets the Americans who are enjoying big profits from the 'weed' business and talks to others who think the pro-pot trend is reckless and irresponsible.
- Mary Nightingale – Norway's oil fairy-tale
Norway's oil discovery transformed their economy, turning it into one of the richest countries in the world, with an estimated 500 billion pounds saved for future generations. Back in Britain we chose a rather different outcome for our oil wealth. As Scotland ponders an independent future, ITV News at 6:30 newscaster Mary Nightingale finds out how Norway's oil fairy-tale has changed the country and its people.
Episode 2
- Original Broadcast: 30 April 2014
- Rageh Omaar – Slavery Reparations
Recently fourteen Caribbean states came together to launch a united campaign for reparations from Britain, amongst other countries, for the part it played in the slave trade. The group's demands include compensation, an apology and an assurance that it will never happen again. Whilst trillions of pounds in profit from the trade went towards building countries such as Britain, the claim from those willing to sue was that the Caribbean was left poor, illiterate and suffering in extreme poor health. Rageh Omaar journeys to Jamaica to examine what lies behind those claims and he talks to those who are willing to go all the way to the international court in The Hague for justice.
- John Ray – Hart Island
There is an island in New York that many locals don't even know about. For more than a century, inmates from a nearby prison have been burying the homeless, stillborn babies and unclaimed bodies there. As many as a million lost souls are to be found on Hart Island. It has been described as secret, closed and restrictive. Until now, relatives have been confined to paying their respects at a gazebo at the edge of the shoreline. Diplomatic Correspondent John Ray joins one of eight women who has been campaigning for years to lay flowers at the site of her baby's grave and who now has the opportunity to do so, as Hart Island lifts its lid on its hidden past.
- Geraint Vincent – Land and Demolitions
Moran hugs her children close as she gazes at the pile of rubble that used to be their home in the Middle East. Her husband Muhammad has his head bowed in humiliation. The soldiers came with their bulldozer during this morning and it took them one hour to destroy the house. Muhammad says his family have lived on this land in East Jerusalem for generations, and that the house was built by his grandfather. The Israeli authorities say the house did not have planning permission, and was therefore an "illegal structure". It is a familiar story in this part of the region, but there is something unique about Middle East Correspondent Geraint Vincent's report. Moran is an Israeli Jew who converted to Islam to marry her Arab husband. Now that their house has been demolished what does the future hold for the couple and their children? And as US Secretary of State John Kerry's timetable for peace talks comes to an end, how much has Israel's policy of construction and destruction done for what little faith in the process there was?
Episode 3
- Original Broadcast: Wednesday 28 May 2014
John Irvine investigates rape in India, Rohit Kachroo meets one of South Africa's first black female winemakers, and Lucy Watson reports from China.
Episode 4
- Original Broadcast: Wednesday 25 June 2014
Rageh Omaar travels to Nigeria to explore how the country's north-south divide has been exposed by Boko Haram's brutal insurgency.
Episode 5
- Original Broadcast: Wednesday 30 July 2014
Geraint Vincent reports on Bucharest's stray dog crisis and Robert Moore is in North Dakota finding out about unmanned drones.
Episode 6
- Original Broadcast: Wednesday 22 September 2014
Alastair Stewart visits the ghost town of Varosha in Cyprus, and Julie Etchingham meets a young Afghan woman being helped by UK surgeons.
Episode 7
- Original Broadcast: Wednesday 29 September 2014
Mark Austin returns to the Philippines a year after Typhoon Haiyan, and Julie Etchingham is in Berlin 25 years after the fall of the wall.