I have learnt such a lot about Leprosy this year from Veronica from her visit to Brownies and her talk in Church, i didn't realise i knew so little, it is so heartbreaking, this program was a wonderful portrayal of some of the difficulties Leprosy sufferers face. The Leprosy Mission is one of the Charitys Union Church support.
Unreported World meets remarkable people fighting back against  leprosy in India, where millions affected by the disease are pushed to  the margins of society, ostracised by their friends and families.
Based  on targets set by the World Health Organization, the Indian government  claims it has eliminated leprosy. However Unreported World reveals the  numbers of new cases in some areas could be much higher than previously  estimated.
Reporter Seyi Rhodes and producer Richard Cookson begin  their journey at a leprosy colony on the outskirts of Hyderabad in the  south east of the country. 
They meet local leader Narsappa, who  caught the disease 30 years ago. Like some of the other residents in the  colony he has been cured and is no longer contagious. Despite this they  are all forced to live together because they're not welcome anywhere  else. 
Narsappa tells Rhodes that when he was diagnosed, his  neighbours shunned him and his mother grieved for him as if he was dead.  He was abandoned at the local hospital when he was just ten years old.  Narsappa says he's now driven to stop others going through the same  experience. 
At a funeral that night for another sufferer, the  discrimination many face is brought home. Narsappa's friend has died and  has to be buried in a patch of waste ground next to the public  cemetery. Even after death some believe the disease is still contagious  so those affected are buried in graves away from everyone else. 
In  2005, the Indian government declared that leprosy had been eliminated.  However, the Unreported World team obtains leaked documents which  suggest the official figures don't show the true scale of the disease.  In one Indian state, health workers found the number of people infected  was five times the official estimate. 
Rhodes and Cookson  accompany Narsappa and a group of colony residents to the local health  directorate to demand supplies for their clinic, which has run out of  stock. But, like on previous visits, they leave with only promises. 
The  team moves on to Naini Hospital in Allahabad. It's India's largest  leprosy hospital and is run by UK based charity The Leprosy Mission.  Senior surgeon Dr Premal Das tells Rhodes that his hospital saw 3,000  new leprosy cases last year - more than any previous year - but the  budget has been cut by 20 per cent because it is practically impossible  to raise money for leprosy when the government claims it has been  eliminated. 
The team films one of his patients - 16-year-old  Pooja - as she undergoes surgery to correct deformities in her hand. The  next day the crew follow Pooja home after weeks in hospital, but how  will she be received and will she overcome the stigma so many of her  fellow patients have to endure?
 
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