
Natalie Carney
Journalist, Video Producer, Presenter
Radio and Podcasts
MUNICH, GERMANY (03/22) What happens to our plastic waste? Natalie Carney tries to unravel the mysteries of the plastics chain, discovering that plastics are not as recyclable as we all hoped and that their use is still on the rise across Europe.
All episodes can be found at: https://stories.cgtneurope.tv/trashortreasure/index.html

KRAKOW, POLAND (03/22) The United Nations has warned of the heightened risks to women and children of human trafficking and exploitation caused by the rapid mass displacement of people from Ukraine. Natalie Carney looks into what is being done to protect the most vulnerable.
MILAN, ITALY (03/20) Italy is Europe's worst affected country by coronavirus, bringing huge changes to day to day life. All schools and universities have been closed for the next few weeks. And all sporting events in Italy will take place without fans present for at least the next month.
VENICE, ITALY (11/19) Venice, Italy is still reeling from a week of three exceptional tides that flooded the canal city to levels not seen in 50 years. Floodwaters have caused massive damage to business and threaten the city's cultural heritage, leaving many people asking what is being done to save the sinking city.
VIENNA, AUSTRIA (10/19) Elections in Austria have resulted in a clear victory for the conservative People's Party. The country's coalition government collapsed in May after its junior partner, the far-right Freedom party, was engulfed in corruption scandals. But the victorious People's Party, led by Sebastian Kurz, will again have to enter into coalition talks.
BERLIN, GERMANY (09/19) An archive for old home movies from former East Germany is now online. The "Open Memory Box" offers hundreds of hours of personal videos during some the GDR's most difficult and disturbing times. Those behind the project hope it will help transform stereotypes from a history that's sometimes misunderstood.
MOSTAR, BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA (09/19) In Bosnia-Herzegovina, scars of the 1992-95 war can still be seen nearly 25 years later. In Mostar, local residents have become so tired of the damaged buildings that they hold an annual street art festival to breathed new life into the war-scarred southern Bosnian city.
SARAJEVO, BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA (04/19) The Balkans Wars in the 1990s was one of the bloodiest conflicts in European history. War crimes are still being tried in The Hague; the latest saw a 40-year prison sentence for Radovan Karadzic, the former President of the Bosnian-Serb Republic, increased to life.
TUNIS, TUNISIA (05/18) In 2011, Tunisians successfully ousted their longtime president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali becoming the only successful “democracy” to come from the so-called Arab Spring. But seven years on and unemployment in the North African country is still high and freedom of speech is under pressure. Is this the "democracy " Tunisians were looking for?
BONN, GERMANY (10/17) As COP23 gets underway, hundreds took to the streets against the use of coal. Activists from around the world managed to temporarily shut down the Hambach lignite coal mine in the Rhineland coalfields, just 60 kilometers away from where delegates were arriving for the international summit.
PISKY, EAST UKRAINE (02/17) The small town of Pisky in eastern Ukraine was once a getaway for Donetsk's rich. But after being caught in the crossfire between the Ukrainian army and pro Russian separatists, Pisky has become an apocalyptic ghost town. Only a handful of people remain in this formerly wealthy suburb that used to house over 2,000 people.
AVDIIVKA, EAST UKRAINE (02/17) NATO defense ministers met in Brussels this week to discuss the ongoing conflict in eastern Ukraine. Recently the Ukrainian government-controlled town of Avdiivka saw some of the fiercest clashes the East has seen. More homes are being destroyed and lives left in peril as aid groups rush in to help where they can.
SVYATOGORSK, EAST UKRAINE (02/17) Nearly three years of fighting in eastern Ukraine has killed close to 10,000 people and displaced almost another two million people in the country alone. Ukraine has one of the largest internally displaced populations in the world. The recent shelling has pushed many to flee yet again. How are people faring?
SOFIA, BULGARIA (02/16) Bulgaria, the EU's poorest member, is struggling under the pressure of the refugee trail, many of whom are stuck camping out in woeful conditions around the country. Natalie Carney took a trip to the country's capital Sofia to check out the conditions in the camps for the refugees and migrants.
MOSUL, IRAQ (11/16) Iraqi government forces, Shiite militia and Kurdish forces, backed by the United States, are engaged in a major push to drive fighters from the "Islamic State" group out of Mosul. Natalie Carney visited some refugee camps close to Mosul to find out what life was like under "IS," how escapees managed to flee and the desperate humanitarian response.
SIGNAGI, GEORGIA (11/16) An increasing number of Indian farmers have moved to rural Georgia to work the fertile fields, encouraged by the Georgian government with the aim of bolstering agricultural production and helping Georgia become more self-sufficient. But not all Georgians are happy with the arrival of so many foreign farmers.
TBLISSI, GEORGIA (11/16 ) The Yazidi community has been persecuted and terrorized by militant group "Islamic State" in both Iraq and Syria. Some of the families who managed to escape the violence have ended up in Georgia. Although they're safe, they now face other challenges in their new surroundings.
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN (09/15) While more Afgan children are going to school than a decade ago with millions of aid being poured into building new schools and improving the education sector, children are still struggling to make the grade, as Natalie Carney reports from Kabul.
SPIELFELD, AUSTRIA (02/16) Thousands of migrants are traveling through the Balkans from Greece in a bid to reach wealthier countries in Western Europe. The stream of new arrivals has prompted Austria to announce new regulations to restrict who can cross its border. Other nations are also taking such action, sparking fears for migrants who have been left stranded.
BELGRADE, SERBIA (09/15) The staggering figures and the scenes of utter chaos around the continent, mass migration is indeed bringing out the best in many Europeans who are pulling out the stops to welcome refugees and help them. Even tourists on holiday are pitching in.
ISTANBUL, TURKEY (01/14) Many journalists have been kidnapped, killed or disappeared while covering the civil war in Syria. Last week, a Turkish photojournalist regained his freedom, but others still wait anxiously for news of their loved ones.
ISTANBUL, TURKEY (06/14) Turkish authorities recently announced new draft laws introducing harsher penalties for those accused of domestic violence. In a country with such a high rate of abuse towards women, many say it's too little, too late.





































