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- Panorama travelled the world to create "The dollar a day dress" - a symbol of how the world trade system harms the poor. The dress was designed and made by top London fashion students for the catwalk at London Fashion Week.
- For seven weeks Hamas rockets roared over the border into Israel while Israeli bombs pounded Gaza. Panorama's Jane Corbin goes deep into the underground tunnels where battles have been fought to investigate the war that has devastated Gaza.
- How safe is our money when the banks are going out of business? The program follows the fall of the Lehman Brothers and Bank of Scotland.
- As controversy over Israel's blockade of Gaza still rages, Jane Corbin asks what really happened on the Mavi Marmara, when Israeli commandos seized the ship and nine people died.
- The series takes a look at division between Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem and problems it has caused for those living there.
- Panorama presents an insight into the world of the so-called Price Taggers, a group of Israeli teenagers who believe every Palestinian attack should be met with an act of revenge.
- Over almost two years one family reveals what it is like living with dementia. 55-year-old Chris Roberts used to be a businessman, but now struggles to perform simple tasks due to Alzheimer's.
- Meet 'Alice'. She is a four-year-old child out on the streets of London begging hours on end, day in, day out. 'Alice' is just one of Britain's Gypsy child beggars, and she can earn hundreds of pounds a day. A special Panorama investigation uncovers the truth about these children. Reporter John Sweeney tracks down the begging gangs to luxury homes in Romania, where he confronts the adults forcing the children to beg.
- 1953– 1h8.7 (28)TV EpisodeOn eve of tenth anniversary of Iraq War, Panorama reveals how key aspects of secret intelligence used by Downing Street and White House to justify invasion were based on fabrication, wishful thinking and lies.
- A controversial American doctor claims he can cure cancer. Celebrities have helped raise hundreds of thousands of pounds to send British patients to his clinic.
- Following Labour leader Harold Wilson and Conservative leader Alec Douglas-Home on the election trail.
- Panorama investigates the migrant trade in Africa, revealing the extraordinary scale of people-smuggling across sub-Saharan Africa - a multi-billion pound industry described by some as a new slave trade.
- Richard Bilton continues to investigate how the wealthy shield their money from tax, focusing on how Britain and its overseas territories are at the heart of the offshore industry.
- John Sweeney investigates the Church of Scientology and allegations made by former members and relatives of current members. However, during the course of his investigation he soon finds that he has become a target of the Church.
- Panorama investigates a secret Vatican document known as the "Crimen Sollicitationis", which established a guideline for handling allegations of child abuse, homosexuality and bestiality within the Catholic Church and was enforced for 20 years by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became the Pope.
- Panorma discovered proof in the largely burnt HQ of Gadhafi's secret services of dirty deals with UK as well as US. After Blair's diplomatic make-up, MI5 entertained remarkably cordial relations with its then chief, Moussa Koussa, who was helped getting hold of Libian regime-enemies under absurdly unreliable promises not to torture them, an activity Moussa actually often took a physical part in. During the NATO no-fly-zone, Cameron's British government helped Moussa flee and take great wealth to Qatar.
- From a thriving city to a war-torn ruin. The people of Mariupol share powerful and shocking stories of bravery, loss and determination as the Ukraine war unfolded.
- When Russian forces invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Panorama asked five Ukrainians to start filming their lives. The result is a powerful documentary marking the first anniversary of the war.
- Panorama examines whether the current generation of antidepressant drugs have lived up to their promises, following patients who have suffered serious side effects.
- Richard Bilton investigates Global Fund, whose inspector general was fired.
- Large numbers of people in the UK fall victim to scams each year, many are run from criminal call centres in India. Rajini Vaidyanathan tracks down the man behind one such centre and some of the victims.
- Victoria Derbyshire investigates what the coronavirus lockdown has meant for those trapped with an abusive partner, and meets some of those who have managed to escape.
- Richard Bilton investigates the growing problem of fly-tipping waste and asks why so few criminals are prosecuted for despoiling the places we love. Richard meets some of the people fighting back against the fly-tippers.
- Exploring how artificial intelligence has transformed our world and continues to do so thus creating a new China/US arms race. Experts also warn of the dangers of not implementing urgent regulation and potentially losing control of AI.
- Water companies are dumping huge quantities of sewage in UK rivers every year. So why do some of the worst offenders have such good environmental ratings? Reporter Joe Crowley investigates.
- Adam Wishart travels to Jerusalem to take a ride on the new train line that some hoped could help heal the rift between Israelis and Palestinians. However, it seems to have only deepened resentments on both sides.
- Reporter John Ware investigates one of Britian's most important spies since WWII - Freddie Scappaticci, code-named "Stakeknife". A British spy who became the IRA's spy-catcher.
- Using leaked documents and evidence from whistle-blowers, Jane Corbin reveals how one of the government's flagship foreign aid projects has been used to fund extremism.
- Daniel Kinahan has been named in court as the head of one of Europe's biggest drug cartels. So how has he been allowed to be involved in setting up the World Heavyweight Championship fight between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua?
- Across Britain bus use has plummeted in recent years. Outside London thousands of routes have been cut and bus pass use is down. The prime minister has pledged billions to revitalise the bus network, but is it enough?
- The full story of Princess Latifa's kidnap while she attempted to escape Dubai in 2018 and the subsequent cover up by her family. Latifa secretly tells of her ordeal in her own words while being held prisoner.
- Each year, a billion pounds is lost in failed investment schemes. Panorama tells the story of one of them as its member challenge the regulators they believe failed them.
- John Sweeney investigates claims that the new 'Horizon' computer system at the Post Office has led to dozens of sub-postmasters being accused of theft and that they have been taken to court despite the evidence against them being weak.
- Catrin Nye investigates the use of digital influencers in the advertising industry and the impact this new form of advertising is having on consumers.
- Panorama investigates the multi-million pound industry that sells pick-up techniques to men by going undercover at a so-called seduction boot-camp.
- John Ware looks into the scandal of Downing Street parties during lockdown becoming the greatest crisis in Boris Johnson's career. What does 'partygate' reveal about the character of Britain's current prime minister.
- Since Nicky Campbell went public about the abuse he experienced at school in the 1970s, he's become the face of a campaign by former pupils. They are determined that one teacher should face justice.
- Amazon has risen to become one of the most powerful companies in the world. The technology it is developing has the power to shape our future but is it a force for good or is there a dark side to its power?
- Panorama goes undercover inside a lab analysing Covid-19 tests, revealing a failing service with staff under pressure, equipment malfunctioning and tests wrongly discarded.
- David Cameron was paid to promote Greensill Capital's financial products around the world. Now that Greensill has collapsed, Panorama investigates how much the former prime minister knew about Greensill and the investments it sold?
- Since case of Baby P, there has been a 40% increase in number of children taken into care by state.
- Journalist Layla Wright investigates events as they unfolded at the 2022 UEFA Champions League final in Paris between Liverpool and Real Madrid to try to understand what went wrong.
- Ultra-processed foods contain chemicals that regulators say are safe, but there is emerging scientific evidence of a link between some of these chemicals and cancer, diabetes and strokes.
- Reporter Lara Lewington speaks to some of the so-called 'godfathers' of AI about their hopes and fears, and she meets researchers developing technology allowing computers to read emotions and minds.
- Lucy Letby has been convicted of murdering and harming babies. So what turned a likeable nurse into a serial killer? Reporter Judith Moritz reveals evidence of a cover-up by hospital bosses.
- Only one in 20 crimes in England and Wales result in someone being charged. Criminals are now getting away with everything from burglary to knife crime. Is the public being let down by the system?
- Reporter Richard Bilton investigates the government insisting that new technology will make existing stretches of smart motorway safe. But what happens when the technology doesn't work?
- Panorama follows the personal stories of some of the people who are being affected by changes to the benefit system. Claimants struggle as their benefits are reduced and they are asked to move to areas with cheaper rents.
- Panorama spent a month in Sierra Leone following British doctors and nurses who are working in clinics tackling the devastating Ebola outbreak.
- Eastern Aleppo has been pounded by the Russian-backed forces of President Bashar al-Assad and for the last month five citizen journalists have been commissioned by the BBC to document life in the besieged city.
- Donald Trump has changed the face of American politics, but what do those who voted for him make of his first tumultuous year in office? Filmed over a year in Michigan, Florida, Texas and Wyoming this edition asks Trump voters.
- A report on what could be Britain's largest ever miscarriage of justice - the scandal surrounding the Post Office's Horizon computer system and evidence of a cover-up at the Post Office.
- Panorama investigates the changes to the lives of Afghan people now Afghanistan is under Taliban rule again.
- An investigation into how Sir Jimmy Savile OBE was able to abuse children unhindered for many years and how many people within the BBC knew anything about it.
- With parliament under fire over complaints of sexual harassment and bullying, reporter Naga Munchetty speaks to staff members and MPs who give their accounts.
- Bad investments have left Thurrock Council effectively bankrupt. Bronagh Munro reveals how a businessman spent council cash on himself and left local people to pay the price.
- Jane Corbin investigates what really happened during the mutiny led by Yevgeny Prigozhin and asks what the long-term consequences might be for Putin's presidency.
- An investigation into the state of British school buildings where headteachers are struggling to keep their students safe and children are learning in gloves due to extreme cold.
- In 2007 Panorama reported on increasing segregation between the White British and Muslim Asian populations in Blackburn, Lancashire. A decade on the situation has worsened despite government policy.
- They're one of the biggest and most powerful technology companies in the world, but can we trust the Chinese telecoms giant Huawei to build the next generation telecoms network in the UK?
- This special edition follows West Midlands Police as they work to bring down the largest human slavery operation that has ever been caught in the UK.
- Dr Faye Kirkland investigates the scientific advice the government followed in the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic and asks if they were taking a gamble with people's lives.
- The speed of Afghanistan's fall to the Taliban has shocked the world, but what sort of country will it become? Panorama asks what is at stake for the Afghans who are now in their first week under Taliban rule.
- Reporter John Sweeney investigates the cult of Nazi re-enactment groups.
- Of Panorama, featuring a fresh-faced Jeremy Paxman, takes a look at UK Government's preparations for public in.
- Vivian White investigates the controversial theory of white flight and visits a town in northern England to discover if the local white and Muslim Asian populations are now living separate lives in separate areas of the same town.
- Panorama reporter Richard Bilton investigates the environmental cost of moving our lives online and into the cloud.
- Panorama investigates claims of bullying and body shaming at two of the UK's top ballet schools, The Royal Ballet School in London and Elmhurst Ballet School in Birmingham.
- Fergus Walsh follows patients with Alzheimer's disease who have been taking two new drugs that have been shown to slow down its progression. Is this a turning point in its treatment?
- Andrew Jennings has been investigating corruption in world football for more than 15 years. With FIFA under investigation by the FBI, he again investigates the role of FIFA President Sepp Blatter.
- Rolls-Royce has grown massively over the past 20 years, but some of that growth has been in some of the world's most corrupt countries. Richard Bilton investigates the shady middle-men who help the company sell its engines overseas.
- Panorama investigates Donald Trump's strange bromance with Vladimir Putin. John Sweeney travels to Russia, the United States and Ukraine to report on what's behind their mutual admiration.
- 100 billion throwaway plastic bottles are sold by Coca-Cola each year. Panorama looks into the company's pledge to reduce plastic waste.
- Women are facing threats and blackmail from a mob of anonymous strangers after their personal details, intimate photos and videos were shared on the social media platform Reddit. The BBC has unmasked the man behind one of the groups.
- With exclusive access to CCTV footage never before seen publicly, this Panorama special examines in detail hours leading up to death of Anni Dewani.
- As the nation prepares for the coronation of King Charles III, Panorama asks if the new king will adapt the monarchy to suit modern times.
- Panorama goes undercover in China and Indonesia to discover how workers involved in the production of the new Apple iPhone 6 are treated.
- Richard Bilton meets former Kremlin insiders who accuse Vladimir Putin of corruption on a breath-taking scale. Putin is reputed to have used his power to build-up a vast secret fortune that makes him one of the world's richest men.
- On 12th June 2016 a lone gunman, Omar Mateen, killed 49 people and wounded 53 others in a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida. Richard Bilton tells the story of the massacre from those who were there.
- Ten years after Madeleine McCann's disappearance, reporter Richard Bilton examines the evidence in the case and tracks down some of the men questioned by British police during their investigations.
- David Dimbleby visits Russia to find out what Russians see in Vladimir Putin and how he has held on to power for so long, hearing from his supporters and those opposed to him.
- Olivia Davies went to school with three boys who later went out to fight in Syria. She investigates why they abandoned the UK and what happened to them when they joined the barbaric ISIS regime.
- As Boris Johnson is forced from office, Laura Kuenssberg looks at the scandals that led to his downfall, and hears from the candidates vying to replace him.
- From spy balloons to secret police stations and dissidents on the run, Panorama investigates China's global surveillance operation.
- Fast fashion giant Boohoo faced serious criticism in 2020 for poor working conditions at its suppliers. A Panorama investigation reveals renewed pressure to slash costs.
- Richard Bilton investigates why oil, coal and gas exploration is booming when almost every country in the world has committed to limit the rise in global warming to 1.5 degrees.
- The Ukrainian government says that thousands of children have been taken unlawfully to Russia. Panorama investigates what happened to more than 40 children taken from a children's home in Kherson.
- 1953–7.0 (5)TV EpisodeA new generation of anti-obesity drugs are being hailed as game changers for the NHS and for millions of patients. Is the NHS ready for a revolution in treating obesity?
- Ros Atkins explores how net migration to the UK has hit record levels, when the government promised in the wake of Brexit that immigration would be lower.
- When a beautiful young bride was murdered on her honeymoon in South Africa - allegedly on the orders of her British husband - it made headlines around the world. Nearly three years on, the truth about Anni Dewani's killing remains a mystery, while in July a British judge ordered Shrien Dewani - still sectioned under the mental health act in the UK - should be extradited to South Africa to stand trial. BBC Panorama has obtained the secret police files which make up the prosecution case against the 33-year-old Bristol businessman, and has commissioned leading forensic experts to review all the evidence. Their findings expose fundamental mistakes both in the police investigation and in the interpretation of forensic evidence. Could Shrien Dewani be - as he has always claimed - an innocent man?
- On the eve of the withdrawal of NATO forces from Afghanistan, Panorama gains unique access to a Taliban stronghold 60 miles from Kabul.
- In this hour long special report Mark Daly investigates serious allegations of doping in athletics. Since the explosion in the use of steroids in the 1970s the issue of sports doping persists and governing bodies have struggled to cope.
- Reporter Rohan Silva asks if Britain is ready for one of the biggest changes ever to happen in the world of work. We are on the brink of a technological revolution with machines and artificial intelligences beginning to take the place of human staff. Panorama visits a number of workplaces where this process has begun. Should we feel threatened by it or will we all benefit from the coming of the new machine age?
- Hackers have stolen the details of millions of customers, how do they get hold of this data? Daniel Foggo speaks to the hackers who claim they can break into any website and discovers how criminals make money from this data.
- Richard Bilton explores the shadowy world of tax havens. A huge leak of documents has revealed details of the super-rich, criminals and world leaders who thought their financial secrets were safe.
- As Britain awaits the final verdict of the Iraq Inquiry Jane Corbin travels to Southern Iraq with the parents of a soldier who was killed by an IED. Corbin also speaks to key figures in London, Sweden and Iraq.
- In May 2016, BBC reporter Rupert Wingfield-Hayes was expelled from North Korea after displeasing the totalitarian authorities. He reports on life in the world's most secretive state and tells the story of his detention and interrogation.
- Britain is in the grip of a hidden epidemic that threatens to overwhelm the NHS as more and more people, even children, are being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Panorama reports from Birmingham where nearly 1 in 10 have the disease.
- Panorama investigates a hidden aspect of child sex abuse, when children abuse other children - often referred to as peer-on-peer abuse. It is happening in classrooms and playgrounds and is on the increase.
- 1953– 55m6.9 (20)TV Episode
- Tom Heap asks if Britain's love of bottled water is the ultimate triumph of marketing over common sense. Environment Minister Phil Woolas has said that the £2 billion a year we spend on bottled water is 'morally unacceptable'.
- Joe Biden has won the battle for the White House. Reporter Hilary Andersson meets the Trump supporters who believe the election was stolen and asks whether they will ever accept their new president.
- We spend more on chocolate each year than investors spend on gold - but as Easter approaches, how much do we really know about.
- Richard Bilton investigates the problems Margaret Thatcher's right-to-buy policy is causing 40 years later, including the return of slum landlords.
- BBC reporter Tom Martienssen was on Everest with a group of British Army Gurkhas when the earthquake hit Nepal. This program tells the story of the extraordinary rescue mission and the of those who lost their lives that day.
- Marianna Spring investigates the scare tactics of anti-vaxxers, revealing the scale of a social media blitz that has targeted vulnerable people and is now reaching young generations yet to be called for their vaccination.
- Panorama unveils new revelations about the corrupt practices deployed by one of Britain's biggest companies.
- 1953– 1h6.8 (6)TV Episode
- Some of those whose lives were devastated by the most widespread miscarriage of justice in British legal history, tell their story.
- An undercover investigation for Panorama reveals that women working on plantations producing tea for PG Tips and Lipton are pressured to have sex with their bosses in return for work.
- Justin Rowlatt reports on plans to reduce traffic through Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, in what has become a battle between those who support the scheme and those who do not.
- Panorama explores the breakneck rise and sensational fall of Sam Bankman-Fried, the maths genius who set out to transform the world of crypto but ended up being its biggest loser.
- Panorama reports on the conflict between Israel and Hamas. Reporter Jane Corbin hears the human stories on both sides and asks what does the escalating crisis mean for the wider region?
- The Care Quality Commission has said that maternity services at a trust in Gloucestershire are inadequate. Panorama has calculated that maternal deaths there are almost double the national average.
- Panorama investigates Royal Mail, hearing from whistleblowers and the service's senior management who believe the postal system must change if Royal Mail is to survive.
- Justin Webb and Marianna Spring travel from the frozen plains of Iowa to the swing state of Georgia to explore Donald Trump's enduring appeal and look ahead to an unprecedented American election year.
- John Sweeney follows in the footsteps of thousands of migrants on their journey from the Greek island of Kos to the Austrian border with Hungary. With winter on the way is the crisis about to claim many more lives?
- BBC Click Online (2000) presenter Spencer Kelly investigates bitcoin, visiting a bitcoin mine in Iceland, bitcoin millionaires in Silicon Valley and people who have been scammed out of their savings.
- Richard Bilton investigates the fatal flaws of the Boeing 737 Max and asks whether the aviation giant should have done more to protect passengers.
- Former Paralympic athlete Richie Powell investigates the sport's classification system, which is accused of being flawed, easily manipulated and lacking credibility.
- A Panorama crew spends 8 days in North Korea, viewing Potemkin Villages and examining indoctrination.
- As the cost of living crisis deepens, Panorama investigates the booming debt management industry and the companies signing up people for Individual Voluntary Arrangements.
- As President Trump reaches the milestone 100th day in office Jeremy Paxman travels around the U.S. seeing the effects of his polices and meets critics and supporters to assess the Trump presidency.
- As Prince Andrew steps back from his public duties, Darragh MacIntyre hears from the victims of his former friend and convicted child sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.
- Did China hide crucial information about Covid-19? BBC China Editor Carrie Gracie investigates how it delayed reporting the initial outbreak, evidence that it could be spread to humans and how doctors who spoke out were silenced.
- As the government faces mounting criticism that well-connected people made millions out of Britain's PPE crisis, Richard Bilton investigates the high-profile connections to one lucrative contract.
- John Ware investigates the scandal surrounding Martin Bashir's now infamous Panorama interview with Princess Diana 25 years ago.
- Following companies on the Brexit frontline as they navigate their way through Britain's new trading relationship with Europe.
- Rory Carson investigates how anti-social behavior blights communities across Britain and discovers how hard it can be to get help.
- The prospect of closure for collieries across Britain is believed to be pushing moderate areas towards more militant approaches.
- British special forces killed hundreds of people on night raids in Afghanistan, but were some of the shootings executions?
- As U.S. conspiracist, Alex Jones, is ordered to pay nearly $1 billion to families of the Sandy Hook school shooting after claiming the attack was a hoax, Marianna Spring investigates 'disaster trolls' in the U.K.
- John Sweeney investigates the November 2006 poisoning of former KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko. He follows the radioactive trail of Polonium 210 from a piano bar in London's Mayfair to the walls of the Kremlin itself.
- As Donald Trump and Jong-Un Kim trade threats Jane Corbin investigates how North Korea has dodged sanctions and thwarted international efforts to stop it becoming a nuclear power.
- Amid strikes, delays and cancellations, Rachel Burden investigates the aviation industry at home and across Europe, hearing from holidaymakers fighting to get compensation.
- Bronagh Munro investigates the big companies that are profiting from rising energy bills and asks whether some are cashing in at our expense.
- How safe are landfill sites in which millions of tonnes of waste are dumped every year? A Staffordshire landfill which residents claim has affected their health is investigated by reporter Amber Haque.
- Why was it so easy for paedophiles like Jimmy Savile to get away with abusing children?
- In this production for Panorama. Alex James confesses to spending a million pounds on champagne and cocaine during the Britpop years with Blur. Now with the drug more popular in the UK than ever before and celebrities in the firing line for promoting it he travels to Colombia at the invitation of its government. He meets the farmers, the sellers and the enforcers and hears the message that every gram is tainted in blood.
- Countries such as Madagascar, Australia, South Korea have all been adversely affected by climate change. Justin Rowlatt looks at the reasons for this.
- The wood-burning Drax power station in Yorkshire provides 12 per cent of the UK's renewable energy. Reporter Joe Crowley investigates where the wood comes from and uncovers an environmental scandal.
- Panorama reveals how the terror network of the so-called Islamic State has been operating in secret in Europe, from highly organised cells to lone attackers within our communities - and the intelligence agencies battle to stop them.
- A 1-hour special edition of Panorama (1953), co-produced with PBS Frontline (1983), examining the lengths that Harvey Weinstein went to to silence and discredit his accusers.
- What are the reasons behind Putin's invasion of Ukraine? Panorama investigates.
- The full story of how America tracked down and killed world's most wanted man - Osama Bin Laden.
- Thousands of vulnerable people are housed and supported by not-for-profit social housing providers, many of them charities. Rory Carson speaks to tenants who feel they've been let down.
- Covid lock-downs have left a legacy of persistent absence amongst some students, and schools are under pressure to get them back through the gates. Branwen Jeffreys investigates.
- Why are there so many incidents of road rage, injury and confrontation between motorists and cyclists? Reporter Richard Bilton hits the road to investigate.
- Facebook may know more about us than any company in history, but what does it do with that data? Darragh MacIntyre sees how powerful algorithms allow us to be directly targeted and asks if Facebook is now too big to be regulated.
- Hilary Andersson tracks down tech insiders who reveal how social-media companies have deliberately developed habit-forming technology to get people hooked.
- Marianna Spring investigates how Elon Musk's ownership is transforming one of the world's most influential social media platforms.
- Reporter Rory Carson meets the caravan park residents who say they have been mis-sold their properties and falsely promised they could stay in them for the rest of their lives.
- Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are two of the most hated and least trusted presidential candidates ever. Jeremy Paxman visits Washington and beyond to ask political experts and voters why America is facing such an unpopular choice.
- Jane Corbin investigates the smugglers who get people into Britain and finds out what the government's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda means for those attempting the potentially deadly journey.
- Panorama investigates allegations of exploitation and abuse at the top of one of the biggest fashion brands in the US.
- Tom Heap sorts rhetoric from reality in politics of power bills.
- Ahead of the state visit to Britain by Chinese Premier Xi Jinping, the BBC's China Editor Carrie Gracie retraces his remarkable career from living in a cave to becoming the most powerful Chinese leader in decades.
- Thousands of people have joined marches against racism after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Clive Myrie asks if this event could change race relations in America for good.
- Fraud now represents around 40 per cent of all reported crime in the UK, but very few cases are solved. Panorama follows Kent Police as their detectives try to catch the fraudsters.
- How will voters feel if Trump runs for president again? Many Republicans back his claim that the 2020 election was stolen, dangerously dividing the country 2 years on. Can US democracy endure the destructive forces now converging upon it?
- It's been 16 years since the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Richard Bilton travels across Portugal and Germany to find out more about the man suspected of abducting and killing her.
- Following the attacks of 7 October, Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas. But can it? With access to some of Hamas's most closely guarded secrets, John Ware investigates its network outside Gaza.
- Adrian Chiles returns to the Black Country to find out why the majority of people there voted in favour of Britain leaving the E.U. and meets the Remain voters who blame Brexiters for pushing the UK into a crisis.
- Across the world far-right extremists have been on the march from Charlottesville to the suburbs of Paris and the streets of Manchester. As Germany goes to the polls are far-right views becoming mainstream?
- Reporter Kate Quilton explores why current food prices are so high as they have risen at the fastest rate in more than 40 years with household budgets being squeezed as the cost-of-living crisis continues.
- Millions in the UK feel that their wages are not keeping up with the cost of living. As public sector workers continue to take strike action, Ros Atkins asks why so many people are feeling so poor.
- With more than 30 branches in the UK, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God claims to transform lives. But Panorama uncovers allegations that members can feel manipulated into handing over money.
- Pope John Paul II ruled the Catholic Church for 27 years and was one of the most influential figures of the 20th Century. Reporter Edward Stourton offers a new perspective on the emotional life of this very public figure.
- Tesla is now worth more than all the other major car makers put together, but how ethical is its supply chain? Darragh MacIntyre meets the African nuns who say Elon Musk's company must do better.
- John Sweeney assesses what WikiLeaks and its exposing of sensitive official material has achieved.
- The ban of the sale of new petrol and diesel cars is set to come in force in less than seven years. Richard Bilton investigates what the electric vehicle revolution feels like and if the UK is ready.
- Stacey Dooley travels to Kurdish-controlled northern Syria to holding camps where she meets western women who left their countries to join the so-called Islamic State.
- What is the truth about Donald Trump's behaviour towards women? Richard Bilton investigates new allegations about Mr Trump and meets the women who say the president is a sex pest.
- Richard Bilton travels to Serbia to investigate where Abramovich's billions came from following the U.K. government sanctioning the billionaire due to his ties to Putin.
- Reporter Hilary Andersson visits the racially divided city of Bakersfield in California to speak to supporters of Donald Trump and to those who fear what a Trump White House would mean for them.
- Panorama presents the BBC's first interview with Edward Snowden, the man responsible for the biggest ever release of top secret intelligence files.
- Wendy Bendel's partner killed himself after a 20 year struggle with gambling addiction, he singled out Fixed Odds Betting Terminals found in most high-street bookmakers as a major problem for him. Wendy asks why they are so addictive.
- The killing of George Floyd last year triggered a national conversation about race and racism in Britain.Naga Munchetty travels across the country to understand what race and racism mean in the UK today.
- With just days to go before kick-off of Euro 2012 championships, Panorama reveals shocking new evidence of racist violence and anti-Semitism at heart of Polish and Ukrainian football.
- Reporter Hilary Andersson meets angry Americans on all sides of the political divide who feel disillusioned and disenfranchised by the electoral process, asking if the new President can unite the country again.
- A look at the antisemitism controversy which has been tearing the Labour Party apart in recent years.
- More and more people are turning to private clinics for an assessment to determine whether they have ADHD. Panorama investigates whether they are being given a reliable diagnosis.
- In a special edition, Panorama travels with British doctors inside Syria to exclusively reveal devastating impact of war on children caught in conflict.
- As Dot Com fever sweeps through Britain, Panorama investigates internet phenomenon.
- Documentary focusing on civil liberties in the UK's "war on terror". The wide gulf between the British PM Tony Blair and his human rights lawyer wife (Cherie) is dramatised in an imaginary conversation within the documentary based on their actual, publicly stated, positions, which also examines several real life cases (also partly reconstructed)
- This edition features an interview with the Egyptian President, Colonel Nasser. It also features filmed reports on the teaching of Latin in British schools and an investigation of high pressure sales tactics employed by some companies.
- Reality TV is social phenomenon of millennium. Programmes like Big Brother and Survivor have taken TV schedules by storm on both sides of Atlantic.
- Tony Benn and Roy Jenkins debate on EEC Common Market in studio.
- A drama documentary analysing the response to a fictional terror attack in London. Includes dramatised scenes (location) with studio panel of security experts discussing outcomes and potential responses from government and emergency services.
- Michael Crick reports on the controversial life and career of politician and novelist Jeffrey Archer, leading up to his perjury trial in 2001.
- Report on how UN's attempt to disarm Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction ended in humiliation.
- Report on growing concern about health implications of mobile phones and examines accusations industry has covered up possible risks.
- A US government whistleblower tells Panorama how scientific reports about global warming have been systematically changed.
- Richard Bilton meets the controversial landlord who is now evicting 90 families so that he can cash-in on his property empire and finds out what life is like for the families facing eviction.
- Bronagh Munro examines the shocking way in which some academy trusts are running schools, speaking to former teachers turned whistle-blowers alleging nepotism, cheating on exams and financial irregularities.
- With world still reeling from Lovebug virus, which infected millions of computers.
- Justin Rowlatt investigates the 3 days of disruption at Gatwick Airport, asking what really happened? Why no-one has been caught? Was there a drone at all? What needs to be done to protect our skies?
- Jane Corbin investigates cases of child sexual abuse that were ignored for years by senior clergy in the Church of England and asks whether the Church has now learned the lessons of the past?
- Across Britain it is getting harder to to get an appointment to see a GP. As demand increases there is a huge shortage of doctors and local practices are struggling to cope.
- Amar, a victim of napalm attacks by Saddam Hussein's forces in 1991, returns to Iraq for the first time in 30 years to try to find his family.
- Lucy Adams explores the £1 billion industry producing one of the UK's biggest food exports and one of the country's favourite fish but is salmon farming really sustainable?
- An undercover report inside a hospital for vulnerable adults showing how staff taunt, abuse and provoke patients with autism and learning difficulties then restrain them.
- The first of a two part report revealing the failings of our social care system as our population ages and more and more of us need help with day to day living.
- Reporter Mayeni Jones investigates an energy deal involving secret payments made by a controversial businessman to the family of a senior politician. Why has one of Britain's biggest companies invested in the project?
- With more and more care homes closing and a shortage of carers, Alison Holt meets some of the vulnerable people threatened with selling their homes to pay for their care.
- With alcohol-related deaths on the rise, Adrian Chiles investigates what we know about the dangers of drinking, and why the alcohol industry isn't telling us more.
- Fiona Phillips investigates some of the lenders who have stepped in following the collapse of Wonga and asks why the cap on payday loans doesn't apply to other types of lending?
- After a bruising round of campaigning and vote-offs, there are just two candidates left in the race to be the next Prime Minister, John Pienaar asks if either can end the Brexit deadlock.
- With a no-deal Brexit looking increasingly likely, Jane Corbin travels around the UK meeting those who welcome it and fear it and examines preparations for it.
- The introduction of lessons in primary schools designed to promote greater tolerance in society, including learning about LGBT relationships, has caused protests by, mainly Muslim, conservative religious groups.
- For the first time, the politicians and negotiators on both sides of the channel tell the story of the key events, the mistakes and the miscalculations that made Theresa May postpone Brexit and forced her from office.
- Hilary Andersson reports from Alabama, one of 12 US states attempting to overturn the constitutional right to abortion. She speaks to campaigners and politicians on both sides of the debate.
- In this special edition we discover what happened after previous Panorama investigations. How did John Sweeney become a worldwide sensation and how did NHS bosses respond to Panorama's undercover filming in two maternity units.
- Britain's betting industry is booming. The amount we lose to the bookies has almost doubled in a decade. Bronagh Munro asks if they are doing enough to protect problem gamblers?
- Has education funding reached crisis point? This film follows pupils and staff at North Denes Primary in Great Yarmouth where the headteacher has had to lose almost a fifth of staff to balance the books.
- Chanell Wallace, whose brother was stabbed to death when she was 11, meets young people growing up in communities where carrying a knife is now normal. She sees how knife crime is ruining lives and the impact of knives on the classroom.
- Jane Corbin investigates the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul and asks if the West has turned a blind eye in pursuit of lucrative trade deals?
- The government has pledged to radically reduce carbon emissions to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. We'll need to make big changes to the way we live but how much difference will these changes really make?
- Following the massive losses made by the man touted as the golden boy of investing, Neil Woodford, Richard Bilton investigates the secretive world of fund managers.
- Andrew Verity reveals how billions of pounds of drug money is laundered in the UK each year. He follows the criminal cash from the streets of London to the gold markets of Dubai.
- David Dimbleby travels around the UK to reveal why this is going to be the most unpredictable general election of his 50 year career. He finds a country divided as never before.
- Justin Rowlatt investigates plans by the aviation industry to reduce carbon emissions and asks whether it is promising more than it can deliver.
- The government closed down investigations into alleged war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan before a single soldier was prosecuted. Has there been a cover-up at the highest levels of the British military?
- Reveals how China runs its re-education camps, where more than a million people have been imprisoned. Uncovering the surveillance and abuse inside hundreds of new detention centres.
- One year on reporter Catrin Nye returns to Flintshire in North Wales to learn if the roll-out of Universal Credit is still causing difficulties for vulnerable claimants there.
- Greg McKenzie investigates accusations of financial irregularities at the Salvation Proclaimers Anointed Church, a charity dedicated to tackling gang violence and crime.
- For more than a century, our high streets have been key to our communities but now they face a multitude of challenges. Business journalist Adam Shaw investigates government plans to spend millions of pounds reviving town centres.
- Leaked documents reveal how an impoverished country was corruptly exploited by its former ruling family. Richard Bilton follows the money trail back to the UK.
- Richard Bilton asks how safe are 'smart' motorways, where the hard shoulder is turned into a live lane. He assesses the advice given to broken down drivers and learns about the roll-out of the technology.
- In 2013, a change in planning laws meant companies could buy up and convert old office blocks into homes without planning permission. This programme meets some of those now housed in such blocks by local councils.
- Barack Obama is causing something of a political sensation in the United States - an African-American with a genuine chance to become the next President. He promises to unite the nation but can he overcome racial divisions to do so?
- Ellie Flynn talks to the family of Callie Lewis, who killed herself while in the care of the NHS, and uncovers the extent of the service's failure to provide adequate mental health care.
- Mark Daly investigates fresh allegations made against Alberto Salazar, the man who coached Mo Farah to Olympic glory.
- The Department for Work and Pensions is meant to help disabled people get back into work. But the DWP has lost more employment tribunals for disability discrimination than any other employer in Britain.