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Mohammed Hanif



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+Vote!

26/11 family steels itself to cope with life

A year after 26/11, a Bhendi Bazaar resident, 68-year old Mohammed Hanif Peer Mohammed, still remembers his beloved brother-in-law, Mastan Qureshi, 50, who fell a victim to terrorists' bullets at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) that night.

3Vote!

FOOC: BBC Radio 4, 22 Oct 2009

Mohammed Hanif on Abba songs and Taliban attacks in Pakistan; Jonathan Fryer talks to Kurds in Turkey; Chris Simpson on how the health system is failing women in the Central African Republic; Susie Emmett meets the Maasai pastoralists struggling with drought in Kenya; and Andrew Hosken visits the French port where many pass by but few stay: Calais.

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Tale of two Pakistans

Pakistan has been described as 'the most dangerous place in the world' but Mohammed Hanif knows that it is also a place where many go to the theatre and sing along to Abba songs.