'The Food Programme'
(BBC Radio 4, 12.32 to 1pm)
Sheila Dillon investigates the latest research into the origins and development of BSE. She talks to scientists who are trying to pinpoint the causes of BSE and asking why BSE originated in Britain and not America, where there are ten times as many cattle and cattle remains were also recycled into feed.
'Correspondent'
(BBC 2, 6.45 to 7.30pm)
In 1996, Regina Louf told the Belgian authorities she had spent years as the victim of a paedophile network. Her tearful account described child sex orgies involving politicians and other members of the country's elite and for years there was a huge effort to discredit her. In this programme, the policeman at the centre of her investigation breaks his silence to claim the inquiry was blocked because it threatened to reveal too much. Postponed from 28 April.
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