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tv   DW News Africa  Deutsche Welle  June 1, 2024 1:30am-2:01am CEST

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it shouldn't be discussed at some points the right solutions will hopefully the what do you think? leave us a comment for live and don't forget to subscribe to our channel the . this is dw news africa coming up on the program as european countries tried to restrict migration from africa. all they also could badly funding human rights abuses. and a new investigation says you funded operations, a moving migrants on mass and dumping them in dangerous border areas in the sahara with all the funds from europe and inviting some africans to take up much needed jobs. we meet some prospects in kenya, i'm the president of the democratic republic of congo. finally, a points and new cabinets. find out what this means. all the country and the
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nigerian act. uh, hoping to prove down to is wrong about what he can achieve. living with albinism, the other one told me. alrighty, boy, it's good to have you with us. the european union is spending hundreds of millions of zeros in africa to cub irregular migration. part of the scheme involves working with the african governments to stop the migrants. be full of a set off, but a new investigation published by the news consortium. lighthouse report says these deals are actually causing home. the report accuses the use of being complicit in human rights abuses on the corvette mass expulsion of migrants, often dumping them in remote and dangerous border areas in the sahara desert.
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forced on to buses and trucks and driven from the north african coast line into the desert. the light ties reports investigation says migrants that being dumped without food and water. and the vehicle is the e you paid for being used to do it. the use response was defensive, our national partners remained silver and states, and they continued to be in control of their national forces. by the way, they also agreed to cope rates on the basis of the respect for international and human rights. this is what we're trying to work for, and this is why we will remain engaged on the ground. in the past year, the you had signed corporation deals with hundreds of millions of yours with neural coaching, nivia, egypt, mauritania, and others, partly aimed at getting them to hold to migration into your rights groups. say that deals go against your episode. and values is this deals is empowering, repressive regimes that are in head, into the, on a stable it's under mine is integration between african because it's keyed into
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a state of keep the north african countries on supplier and african countries as well beyond this, it sadly food and a lot of funds, you know, for the a, it's food and a lot of and to black um, decisions that we have been seeing the question is whether the use deals even was to close off the rooms for african coast on the textbook like alberto horse night hot, se they on stopping departures and other than completely ceiling. the board is of the you preventing altogether, if they go to immigration, often times the director flows elsewhere. the remain 6 main routes of migration into the e u. b, u has be stopped as border called presidents on the land groups causing a dropping arrivals that are over the past 2 years. but the number of people using the series from africa has risen dramatically again, especially on the most dangerous route from west africa across the atlantic to
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spain's canary islands. the u is known to one to assign further deals with all the african states, which include clauses allowing it to send people back cooperation on return, taking back the nation as is one of the most controversial and divisive domestic issues for these governments. so in defense likely they will ask for something back from the which can be politically, can be financial over 380000 people enter the u on smuggler's roots last year. and the percentage of them coming from sub saharan africa is increasing significantly every year. last week now to drive over to an investigative journalist who was part of the team that produced the report for lighthouse reports . welcome to the program and re what stood out for you in the investigation as well. there's 2 things. i think 1st the scaling seminar, do you have the operations and all 3 countries was really jar and you have hundreds
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and hundreds of people plus every week out to desert or during remote areas. and i'm pretty much similarity happens in all countries under similar operations. and then you have calibration even between the countries, for example, dom rock you okay, bye west. it's a har, i'll just buses arriving there and then there are 100 out to the more 10 and that's ortiz. and then secondly, i think is also the involvement of the spanish officers in virginia. there they are pretty much both steps of the operation from supporting the with equipment and bodes helicopters and intelligence. and even the officers being involved in seeing perceptions and the rates to actually have access to the center is entering the centers and taking photos and videos of the people detained. and then eventually receiving midst of the parties. so this is active involvement is not a case where they funding a project and say they don't know what happened on the ground. exactly. yeah, there's presents, there's knowledge and people know about it. they're involved in it. in your report,
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you mentioned systematic racial profiling. can you provide examples or a testimony that highlights the nature of this profiling? of course. so we've actually dozens of people who are black skinned, dark skinned, and morocco in mortgage area who told us that if they didn't speak arabic or the arabic dialect of each country to get thrown into a bus immediately detained and dumped without any due process or any opportunity to just challenge that detention or arrest some said they even had residence departments, so they were legally in these countries and were not given the opportunity to source those permits and show them to the police. but i think the most revealing case and emblematic case of profiling is the case of the american citizen timothy huts who was present in morocco. he stepped out of the of his hair again b to run some errands and think it was stopped, arrested and dumped in
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a remote area in morocco. even though he was american, he was legally in the country. he didn't have his passport on him. so they just chose to dump him because he wasn't speaking of rock and arabic dialect. and i think his case showed that it's, it's not about the legal status of the people in the country, but it is about using racial profiling to arbitrary arrest people. and sometimes if they are flexible and what are the effects of these operations on the, the local people, for example, mauritania, as well. everyone knows about these operations. when you go and beat to people, no matter where on the street, everyone is aware that there's buses going around or asking people if you don't have your papers, us being deported to money or to senegal. i think last year, result, we've also had the highest numbers of retaining the think the country to euro, but also a lot of in the us. and we heard of cases where i'm worried canyon of this war. i
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think this have been and been detained, intercepted by boat, and they are detained as a way to be threatened, scared them from trying again. but there's some release because uh yeah, and they might face legal challenges, but otherwise the march internationally are not subject to just dumps. and what are the governments saying both the european countries implicated in your reports, but also the african governments, their partners? what are they saying response to your findings so to use, uh uh, knowledge uh that last summer and that you will notice that tunisia was indeed dumping people at the borders. they said it was not them funding these operations and they have nothing to do with them. even though they did close a deal, a migration deal of a $100000000.00 with the cheese and government. we actually found the cars gifted by ok in countries to tanisha that were being used in these operations. and we
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managed to verify that we contract on visual evidence. as for brooklyn were retained that we obtained a unit. its yard from takes european from barnum and documents addressed to the commission in which the explicit d, i a say and describe your operations and show a concern about the operation is we also have inside sources and the who told us they are indeed aware of the operations and yeah, as i said, there are more taking out the spanish for present there to help this the officer stationed the country and uh, they directly funded the institution and with that detention center that does is gracious. right. we'll leave it that. andre pope of a, to thank you very much for speaking to us and we reached out to the european commission for homeless as evaluate, hampton. and although the commission is to ask what they have to say about the accusations, but they were not willing to answer questions at this point in time. now they
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use collaborations with african countries, a stem from why the plans to cost the inflow of the regular migration. but at the same time, europe does have a shortage of work. as jim, the for example, needs over 200000 people to fill the gap. over the next 2 years is reaching out to foreign workers, including kenyans. the german chancellor or life show was in kenya last year to discuss the plans with president william router started on the plus, germany would like to offer more organized and legal ways for all those who want to work in germany one. and at the same time, we want to put a whole to a regular migration justice i know been viewing so would create a win win situation for all countries involved with using. and can we see great potential for skilled labor from? can you orderly migrating into all kinds of parts of our economy as expected? the deal will be signed later this year and some kenyans already preparing to take
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up jobs in germany, dw felix, the ring met to hopefully in the canyon town of home of b. realty to he's never would really sent it to, you know, is training to be a bus driver. she's one of a handful of canyons taking, passing up. i look projects hoping to get a job in gemini in about 8 weeks. she expects to be licensed and walk in flints, bug in the north of the country. so much to be seen. sunday has been driving buses for local school for the last 14 years. but he has to do training as he was driving license is not recognizing gemini,
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that's in addition to the user. bureaucratic had those faced, made people coming to europe. he sees he's been dreaming of walking into money for the past 10 years. and he's well aware that there will be other challenges i've heard about this is i'm in german. i think the a lot of blacks in gemini and being the, it won't affect me so much because i have to adapt to that situation. yeah. and i'm ready for that. yeah, my knees, incoming bus drivers have also been picking up some by told skills that each of these motor east then just language part of the things we've talked about and let them know that this deeply. my mother is, seems like our brave i we're supposed to be very careful. so are you how confident not in the german language alone, but also you know, to kind of themselves, while they are even the cultures of the germans, the food stamps that you know,
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the close being late for, we expect a lot of winter, the gemini needs kids to walk hands and it's turning to countries like kenya to help agencies like solution who are writing this project to try and set a stage for a seamless transition into examine society. oh, we do the, the visa appointments at the german embassy and i o. b, we do from the german side, drum and government. it's a site the preparations. so they get a quick visa and the company in german, and the best company is taking care of the recommendation in germany for the 1st year. so they come to germany, they have a house where they can move in, they can be there and they can take your living, at least for a year. and that helps with stacy and sunday is optimistic about what the hands you know, my hope is that i get a good day once again, vitamins, i get a good colleagues that i can work with me. yes. and also to get something to help
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me instead of the people who i didn't need sunday and mealy sense have now signed the contracts and are looking forward to the new opportunity for them and their families. you're watching dw, you use africa still to come or previously rejected from films for being. i'll be no one nigerian act to defies stigma in his quest for stardom audit. and we'd meet the congolese band making jams from junk found in the streets of can shasta and staying in the democratic republic of congo, president felix choose a. katy has finally appointed a new cabinet. so this ends months of uncertainty following his re election in december. the announcement comes less than 2 weeks after the country's military. he said, is it boiled and attempted cool?
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which on demand entered the president's office in the capital kinshasa. the archie is also grappling with several armed conflicts, including in the mineral rich east of the country, where the powerful m $23.00 group remains a threat. these are among the major challenges felix just a katie faces. as you begin is 2nd to in office. i'm joined now by jason stands of the congo research group. he's covered and written extensively on the situation and the democratic republic of congo. jason, it's good to have you on the program. now, can you begin by explaining why it took so long for president? you security to form a government as well to secure he has one large burden to carry it, which is the fact that he is at the head of a very broad, sprawling coalition. and so in order to form a government,
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he has and consults all the members east collision and there's quite a bit of horse trading involved in that. and so it took him several months. the election obviously results were declared in january and now we're at the end of may as a reminder 2019. when he 1st what, what is 1st election? it took even longer. it took 8 months to get a government. so in comparison with the last time, this problem is actually quite fast. and this comes off the back of this attempted to, we saw last week. what should we make of those events? suitable to know it was a bizarre occurrence. it was a clue that did not target the head of state or at least targeted 1st and foremost what it was me close in partners and. and they went to his office to get these office instead of the place where he usually is and where he was that night. and so it was that it was bizarre and many levels. it was fairly,
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it seems to be fairly incompetence. lead carried out. but i think it's a lot of questions we don't know yet, or we have no answers to, yet it seems likely that there was some sort of outside support and perhaps even promises made from within the security services that didn't materialize. and so there's a lot of unanswered questions that hopefully will find the answers to in the coming weeks. all right, and speaking of instability is the east of the country with the myriads of on groups. there's any hope that this government, this new government can make progress in that regard and resolving the issues that as well it's, it's difficult to say, i think the security has an uphill battle in the east. there are 7000000 people displaced. there's a 100 different armed groups. of course, the most important one who's on groups at the moment is the m 23 that has grown
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in territory dramatically over the coming up over the past months since it 1st emerged in 2021. and so there's and many, many challenges. i think the 1st challenge is probably how to confront them. 23. in order to do that. i think he really needs, given the weakness of his own security services. there's really no other way of doing that other than going through the international community and this is external partners. and so i think the position of foreign minister is extremely important in this new government before and minister is somebody who comes from the outside of the d r c, who spent most of her life in the diaspora. and so issue, see how she performs in that role. and i think as a reminder, the key i think really is how to engage with rhonda which is set some $3.00 to $4000.00 special forces to buy the m $23.00 rebellion and the relations with iran. as donors are honest, main backers of the united states, u. k, and france. and while the united states has been quite critical of rwanda that you can for us have not,
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since i think the coming months will be particularly important. how it is katie is able to leverage those extra real relationships in order to get greater purchase. i would say it goes to asians with rhonda and jason, just looking at a at present just like a his 1st time. can we tell what his 2nd term will look like? this is difficult to say. i think, i mean he's promised many things is 1st service flagship. i mean other than the things that outside is most here about which is the conflict of people in the d. r . c, i think he has his flagship program was free primary education in the d r c. and i think he hopes to build on that. he's talked a lot about free uh, health care, especially pre maternal health care and you've already started rolling that out. and so i think that is likely to be one of his flagship programs. he is trying to leverage the enormous um,
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well it could come from natural resources calling was the largest producer of copper in africa, explorers producer of cobalt in the world. and so he's trying to leverage those natural resources in particular, are struggling with a weak copper price at the moment, but still he has a much larger budget than many of his predecessors had. and so i think the question is how he's going to use that a lot of that money at the moment goes to defense and security. and so i think it's, it's a question really, to what extent he can free himself from the norm as burden that conflicts has, of course, on the population, but also in his budget to be able to start doing the things that population expects of him infrastructure jobs health and education i think are probably as large as far as jason's terms of the congo research group. we appreciate your insights. thank you for coming to us. thank you.
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now let's talk about albinism genetic condition that causes a decrease in the melanin pigment. all of the skin leaving pale skin hat and eyes. nigeria has one of the highest numbers with over 2000000 people affected. many of them still suffer discrimination and stigma, but one not only would act to is hoping to change that dw is only set to come out, tells us more. a dime a little apple goosey knows what it means to stand out. albinos are red in norwood spots the gold fish, as people calling here knows how to fight for what he wants to achieve. how to direct off. can you look at me in the face on said, why do you want to be in the industry? do you see anybody with in the all by, in a, in the industry, you know, why do you want to be on laptops? can you see anybody? the robin is empty, so it's not something you could do. what is i was always the my dream, something i've always wanted to do. so though, the little boy, my uniqueness as an all binary is what makes me special. also if there's no one in
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the industry like that, that means that to miss, i think is if i can play right, when i come bring my talents to bed, then it means that kind of wins in many communities, albinos discriminated against both of them. the hopes that by playing leading rules in big movies and series on streaming platforms like netflix, he kind of helped change by step shops. every time i paint a film, that's the way my presence calls the film. so now we begin to understand the necessity for inclusion. you know about, look the front of these guys in a film tell the story. and in particular, when people come up to me and say they want to be active, i by nose continuously. they want to be asked on, i tell them, go for it, make you happen to go and do it. until recently we go as a major area, we're not used to seeing albinos on screen. their problem does that have been pushed? well, i'm look, i'm actually viewed the public to is dusty for me because, i mean, i say why you get tired of seeing the same people. but i always of didn't always knew was the diversity was because then you'll see more. that's what when they just
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need to be accepted. if you're a good actor, you're a good act. so we will not think of you as an albino act. so you're a good actor that i've seen. think a couple of buying those things. i think it's, it's, it's, it's, it's very interesting because that means there's more, there's more openness, members of the, you know, community also happy to see them in the last working fields. i don't want to see more representations in so sides of the boxes are if we're paying himself out there, he puts the message out to people close to me on close just me. the closest to me i'll be using can do, but you are the receipt that we liked is certainly planning on dwindle. but i love, you know, the whole actions, dollar thing also my dream is to play james bond, or at least least the villain. and it is one move, that's my dream it's. it's just a wonder to walk on, sit on, have the whole crowd, everyone from different places you know,
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come out to come and stop my name on the. i think that's a very good feeling. that's a very good feeling. the now story about turning trash into tries you meet the electro rock band came going below kenyata from 10. shasta king going to low produces a unique sound of instruments made from recycle. the materials they find on the streets of kinshasa, for example, a guitar drums such as made of tin and the kind of via phone, from plastic buckles this band with a message was founded about 5 years ago. do we have an ecological message? it's to tell people not to lease a flag, not just throwing out cans or other things that come pollution block out drainage
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system that instead you could make something and recycle the trash to see it. and so the bad as close to the out and about hunting for trash can be turned into musical instruments to create it's very unique sound. and that's what i would needed for today. but be sure to check out the other stories on dw com for flash advocate on social media. and we'll see you next time bye for now with some more from 10 going below on that current tool of your, of the
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it's time for visionaries for sustainability. but also for horsepower the, it's time for the mobo revolution in 30 minutes on the w. dudley. the
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number of infected burns is skyrocketing and mammals are catching the disease to us. we have declared war on the virus and as facts and needing wild birds for the 1st time in europe. tomorrow today. in 90 minutes on d. w. the name is the calls back said thank you so much for joining in. welcome to don't hold bad. a lot of people do that. it's all about saying it aloud. you guys would have been nosy, bay like get everyone talking to me. you're healthy award winning called call.
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don't call back. um sometimes it's hard to find what you're looking for but we've got something for you. 2 2 2 2 the, the. 2 the. 2 the 2 degrees, 3 green old as blue. p s. white white has nothing to red.
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definitely. pull just a yes. yes, that's what you present. purple apples, very special to georgia. choose your favorite color. the . this is the news and these are our top stories. after you, as president joe biden has endorsed and is really proposal for a temporary cease fire with some us biden's that the deal would lead to the release of more hostages, more humanitarian aid. and eventually, the withdrawal of all is really troops from gaza. mazda is released, the statement saying is the proposal positively spar? donald trump says he'll appeal guilty verdicts in his harsh money trial. new york jerry found the former us president falsified business records to cover up payments
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to the adult film star stormy daniels before the 2016.