Skip to main content

tv   DW News Africa  Deutsche Welle  June 16, 2024 10:30pm-11:01pm CEST

10:30 pm
all right, we said there was never giving up every weekend on d w the this is dw news africa coming up on the program and organized a systematic and serious attack on human dignity. the warning from the international criminal court about the violence in sudan as a threat to civilians grows in the country. the icy seas chief prosecute it sounds the alarm arrives in atrocities and the wealth forgotten the war. we discussed the concerns also coming up a month after devastating floods in can you find out why thousands of affected people are still struggling to pick up the pieces and the mothers providing hope for pre term babies in uganda through breast milk donations. we hear how this
10:31 pm
collective saving young lives, the hello i'm told me on lot of people welcome to the program. the chief prosecutor, all of the international criminal court, says he's seeing signs of an increase in atrocities in sedans, doubtful region. the area has been a major flash point in the war between the sydney's army and the power military rapids support forces. the eyes, the seas, korean con, said his investigators had been receiving information from da 4 that points to what he called an organized, systematic and serious attack on human dignity. he called on international organizations, national authorities. and anyone with possible evidence to submitted to his office
10:32 pm
to the evidence my office is collected to date seems to show credible, repeated expanding. continuous allegations of attacks against the civilian population. in particular, attacks direct to the gains comes for internally displaced persons. it seems to show the wide spread prevalent use of rate and other forms of sexual violence. 8 seems to disclose consistency of the shedding of civilian areas. the looting of properties and attacks against hospitals all fresh air, the state capital of north dial 4 is of particular concern where the icy seas chief prosecutor is now investigating allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity. the city has become a new front in the fight between the sydney's army and the recess of the weekends.
10:33 pm
the medical charity doctors without borders said alpha she is lost functioning hospital was forced to close to our assessments and open file and medical staff and patients. most of them were able to leave the facility, which the paramilitaries looted. now, according to new figures from the un international organization for migration, the ongoing fighting incident has displaced more than 10000000 people. it's wanting that 70 percent of them are now trying to survive in places that are at risk of time in including many children now living in places like hearing the sounds i'm refugee camp in north dot for tens of thousands of people have also being killed since the start of the war a little over a year ago, the us special envoy to sit on says some estimates of the death it'll r as high as 850000. sariah
10:34 pm
37 year old mazda ended up in this. i'm come with a children after fleeing the violence in and around the city of l. sasha. like how does it has our lives? if the come, how do i sound? we don't have anything. not even food for my children, not that i'm like this. i mean, what am i getting the i single, the full, we were happy. we didn't have to buy food from the market to me and we just went now for clothes. we could, i mean from live stroke the we raised. but a stone all the livestock, when we arrived at the refugees center, they gave us a few things. but now they've run out. we'll have that and we sold the area who was safe. and they even had the strikes and bombing preventables help us achieve pieces as well. and that's our only concern we're doing now by colored higher founding director of confidence. advisory, which has a focus on policy relating to peace and security economy and governance. welcome
10:35 pm
back to the pro program, followed um, looking at sedan, how the army and we are assess able to operate the way they are with no accountability. so frankly speaking, you know, sit down, has not gone at the kind of international attention that i should have done. and so in many ways the, this war is being prosecuted in the shadows of the pl attention. and this is not just because there was ways you in the training calls that they've been, was waging in different parts of the world. full answer that happened prior to you at the time. but so that has been, you know, do you prioritize by many different capitals? and because of this, you have a sort of bad actors in the region that have been able to try and manifest the foreign policy objectives to the war and sit down. and oftentimes, what we see is the supports as to our saffel to the south,
10:36 pm
not only for reasons related to sit down, but often times related to this a how old the red sea. so for example, you have the united arab emirates, which relies on the, the rabbits of both forces as executor in not just to them, but also in the house. and you see russia and sort of pain, both sides primarily given a lot of support to the bottom to group what is now called the africa cool to the rapids support forces. but at the same time, creating those kinds of relationships with this. it needs all the force of impulse that in order to show up their interest on the red sea by negotiating for a naval base. right? because some people might look at this story and say, well, this is a domestic issue. there's something they need to sort out themselves. you're saying that the international community can have a great impact when it comes to resolving the issue and bringing order back and to sit on. yes, i mean much of this stress in terms of what comes next on what the city and what
10:37 pm
the sit in these words. you know, 5 years ago there was a revolution. it's called very much for the is lising sydney's political landscape and the economy. but also demilitarize and so it needs political life and the economy and that remains the case. but this war itself is increasing the taking on proxy characteristics. so for example, this of nissan, of forces is also been supported by the arrangements and for them it's also about trying to get to put cold on the red sea separate to the one they already have to the who's easy in yemen. and because of these proxy kinds of characteristics, this puts them immediately in other sort of collision cost with united by our everetts, who are supporting the support forces and this increasing proxy nature of this war means that actually the resolution for this war is in large part in the hands of the international community, what we're seeing is an abrogation of responsibility across the board of motors for
10:38 pm
those who have c to the interest direct interest incident, but also countries in the west, in europe and in the united states. and chiefly, the united nations, which has done very little to not only engage with the political dynamics of this war, but the humanitarian situation as well. um, and the famine you mentioned, the finding that the numbers are staggering in terms of the people at risk. um, when we hear from the age organizations, a number of people who need food, the number of people who need attention, but also just the people at risk of violence as numbers of staggering. but how can sedan move up in the global agenda if we're seeing these numbers and nothing seems to be happening effectively as well? there are a lot of reasons why i said, i love the top of the devil agenda. one immediate one related to the time and is that assignment has not been declared instead of
10:39 pm
a positive reason. the when says that it has not declared the time it is because it's feel that it has no data to the integrated of face classification system. that the report from the i p c is meant to come out relatively soon, although we're hearing it keeps getting pushed backwards, perhaps into july. possibly because it's relies on data from one of the belligerent sides of sydney's offices, which of course is not going to be willing to give data that leads to a common classification because they want to very much put forward with the notion that they are covered. and that's in charge, and they are responsible and on not to sort of overseeing if i'm going into that. now what this means is that the i p c data and kind of be relied upon if it's relies on one of the belligerent policies for that data. but beyond that, you know, the, the absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence of funding. and i think that's a crucial point here. we can see already many parts of the country,
10:40 pm
particularly the refugee, comes into for the idp, capt. excuse me, and duffle, and other parts of the country this time and conditions are present. the n g o minutes of home to you, the doctors that i bought. it has already assessed it in different parts of the whole, particularly, or in the fashion it citicard's the on the seat that that off. i'm in conditions. i'm the well food program has privately assessed that there is time and time there . if i'm in like conditions in 39 different areas across the country, the data does exist, it is a political decision, not to declare if i'm in a by not exactly if i'm in the right results is both human resources and financial resources cannot be martialed. in order to raise them up in the status of the world priority. speaking of declarations and you and has added both the sudanese and the iris f 2, a blacklist thing they've hum to children during this war. what to you are the implications of such a designation. is this enough? as no,
10:41 pm
is completely meaningless unless there is more and more consented enjoying the action. uh, for example, we have seen upsets of, of different mediation platforms. springing up since the wall stopped. and none of them have any grade level of coherence, and none of them have brought any serious leverage against a belligerence and, and put that on the table. and so what that means is that you have um at least 2 bedrooms, although there are more who now fee know very well that the world has is allowing this $1.00 to continue the world is allowing them to use television as a one for the whole of the world is allowing them to commit crimes against humanity and will credit to the world is allowing them to hon. children and kill children. and some of these emissions are meaningless, but some in conjunction with others can be quite impactful and particularly fearful that by action. but we need to see is several different countries as well as multi natural is like the you and the african union. and the regional, you got to have a strategy tools to data. all of them has. so if i put forth
10:42 pm
a special on boy for to sit on a war, but none of them have one create to the strategy for how they going to engage with the different moving parts of this war. and to have made enough concerted effort to work together so that the relations don't try and play them off against each other, which is a common tactic that they have used for decades. colored. hi, thank you very much for your insights. it's been a month since floods swept through kenya, more than 290 people died and some 200000 were displaced. the devastation hit one community after another. and so did the helplessness and anger as it emerged, the government was aware, the floods were coming and set aside funds for response, but did not act sufficiently still be effective. people are trying to pick up the pieces as dw mario miller reports. the deluge took everything from kevin,
10:43 pm
his home and his business, the local cinema, and it also rep to him of his brother lawrence. are you still struggling to fully comprehend what happened tonight in may? i have a money in this my mouth. i knew where i'm sitting now is whether cinema used to be up. i think my brother died to you or daisy, my bench at what time housing needs to be one of the benches to guide you through. i wonder if he's not on that. i mean, i mean, the norion's was just 19 years old and neither will just came. he was working at the cinema, slips with down the valley without warning and crushed. the dog, i saw my little brother every day. i didn't do much you need done like this. it's so painful. we always sat together chatting, he told me about his dreams and in their dreams zacko. kevin was powerless to prevent his brother's death. the government was and he says it didn't act despite
10:44 pm
the full cost of heavy rain. if i say that kindly, if the government had warned us, we'd have taken care of ourselves. not that my brother would still be alive now, and we will be laughing together. the ground with a venue for us. i think it was like a check and i the deluge also left kevin homeless like 200000 other people across kenya. and the numbers are rising. not just because of the floods. the government has ordered the demolition of building standing too close to rivers to prevent further loss of life. that means evictions, mandy targeting low income areas, read scripts say people are being forced to leave the homes with liquor notice and has nowhere to move to. they say president william util should have active much earlier. contradict them into logical department. if you choose to follow advice. 5, now you say 15 people without following any criteria. without funding to know, you have to govern a country with a sucking a set of standards. and those funds are defined in the law that we ask the canyon
10:45 pm
government for an interview, but got no response presidential to promised anyone whose house was demolished, the equivalent of 7, the $5.00 and compensation. but it's not just people's homes. so, but these children were not sped, this whole that's left of the scheme. first it was the match by the floods. then the excavators. now these 12 year olds have to learn and attend this sunday sitting as we had on the 10 that dentist by feeling so bad because i cannot, of course, it to me course before the sending. yeah. show, see, you're not getting what's that is stating that school founder george magenta says he's not received any help from the authorities and we were asking the officers that, you know, we have 2 of them. that's who would be taken care of by the government. now what do
10:46 pm
you have for them? they had no answer. so visitors and the i is the unfortunate that we have a government that is not getting yet we as the community we have to do what we can do to support them and also to become a what they seem to be in the future soon these people's have to take exams, but for many that form a means, it's how to focus on learning. anything right now? i missed my house, so i was also my whole goal is the water and everything and the hours in the house. i noticed that because of school, she's even so you cross your hopes, those keys can help her achieve her dreams. she wants to become a teacher. i wanted to see who was having disability of the let's turn to uganda where a growing community of mothers is giving hope to other parents unable to provide
10:47 pm
breast milk full. the newborns collective known as atta receives calls for support for babies born prematurely or to sick to feed naturally and a moment we'll hear from the group sound. but 1st, here's a look at how as the donor community is helping to save young lives. caroline and kennedy has a hands full feeding hood twin babies. a boy in a go full in by imagines. he says every inspection, i'm lucky to be alive. so in the we born 7 months, we requested that they needed to feed and be the fact that the wayne remedy does that look as or like, no, you have to have breast milk not formula. yeah. these big, these need to have, they are, they need to gain weight and it's only per smooth cuz that can help. so i did have breast milk. i tried only me sides a good bumps, but it really failed. i'm thinking it's because of sort of this chris,
10:48 pm
i had the time, i was so frustrated. i always up to depressed. caroline was told that she would need to use the native breastmilk to save her babies. but she had real concerns about how safe that would be. 400 buttons that was between the relates to see the best move. we went to get it from someone else. and they co know to point to oklahoma. people have different diseases. right? but, but if my baby is gets what shrinking the breast move comes, we've always, those tend indeed. caroline eventually found the free and save supplies she needed here to a non profit community group launched in the capsule composite a few years ago. it collects smoke from donors, to a screen and showing how to prepare and store it safely, the tech and through the process to come wash your clean up. do these pump, the milk and the story to the freezer. that didn't make one p key. we did not have
10:49 pm
a pumpkin state that most of its 3 lilo amal that is one of those donors. she was inspired to help when hearing about another mother in need a she had that triplets. and now unfortunately, one passed away and she threw that depression, crating and everything she headboard is for producing milk. so when she stopped getting milk, i get these little ones also need to do to a to they reached out to me like we know you doing it milk, but can you please help us and know that babies are doing okay. and she already says me, mothers, the kids and mothers this. so she sends me every day more than 200 mothers have now donate to express mail support type of 450 babies to the opposite community. great. and it now has plans to set up
10:50 pm
a fully fledged breastmilk bank in the future or last week now to tracy, who moves out from the breast make community you welcome to the dublin hughes africa. you are joining us from edinburgh where i believe you just received an award. can you tell us about that? and this isn't moving mountains. what am i? i got the code to to talk about. i turned the work that we do. and i was asked to give a speech as well, but i think it's just to know what they give to organizations that are creating impacts, i think, and doing things that maybe are useful for future, i believe. all right, congratulations. and how did you come up with this idea of the project? right. um, well for one i was a mother once uh, 3 years ago i had, i gave birth to
10:51 pm
a beautiful baby girl. but unfortunately for me, see, she was not well a when she was born and she required best smoke, but i did not have in that time the doctors told me to get and don't know which i did. unfortunately, she passed away about 3 days after she was born and then when she passed away, i had pressed milk. and because now i knew how important this personal quest for another baby, i went into the native. but lo and behold, the systems did not exist in my country at the time, my country, uganda. and so i wanted to start, i tried personal community to solve that problem. and i tried literally stands for it. alyssa, ta ha. that was her name. is her name, and then my name is tracy, who was s h a t t a. and it sounds like the one that is
10:52 pm
at central milk in one of the local languages back home. it, it does sound like baby speak for the white milk. so the web milk in, in the local language is my town. so i to kind of sounds like that as well. and that was really what happened. okay, good to hear that you did find some inspiration even in your difficult time. how was this idea received or how has it been received a sofa? um, i think it has been received well. uh they said unfortunately not many people know about personal donation to either they're in trouble themselves or they just have too much, or they just want to do it or they hear my story and they wants to donate personal . normally what happens is that the doctor doesn't tell you that you require the
10:53 pm
milk. so normally some baby is born to sue into smaller to seek these a babies. even button pretty much you're before the due date, the mother does not have enough milk or even milk i told during that initial period and they're told to get disbursement because sometimes for me that can cause even bigger problems. so, so that's all to get donors. and what we do is fill that gap because the don't as a not always available in your circle. and so we help plug they've got. and then i think it's literally been one of those things where you, you have, you don't really have a choice you've been told to do this. and this is the thing that will, you're told will save your child's life at that time. because you'll know he's not available and there's evidence to suggest that donna know, does make a difference. we did not. we do not have enough personal facts at the moment. so the w h o recommends breast milk from the breast milk bang. oh,
10:54 pm
that is another mother's milk in the absence of and let us know kinds of bridge to there might not smoke. okay, interesting. i think maybe for people who are in that kind of desperate situation, that would be the ones i suppose more open. i guess most people when they hear of this, they are thinking, is it safe? is it good? things like that. so how do you convince people of that as well? it is true, but that is something that is important for them to consider. but we're very careful because we have people actually all willing to take milk from us from just anybody because they know that we've done the background work. we have screens and mothers, we have, you know, had conversations with them on consent. they have st. documents to give away their milk free of charge because it's donation. we also give them this week about the
10:55 pm
smoke free of charge. we test the mothers, the mothers for diseases that can be transferred through by smoke. so the ideal thing would be to then foster eyes, the milk and all of that. but at the moment we are in the process of doing more than that. what has been happening is look, sharing, which is not safe. we're trying to make it safe. uh. okay, uh that's uh interesting and inspiring um story tracy and good to hear this account from you. tracy home was i thank you for speaking to us. you're welcome. i and match it for now, but be sure to check out other stories on dw. com. forward slash africa or on our social media accounts. we'll see you again. next time, bye. for now. the
10:56 pm
10:57 pm
man side hailstones, switzerland isn't being stats. scientists and authorities are designing sophisticated early warning system protective measures and trails for and that agencies or should other countries follow their lead tomorrow. today. ready in 30 minutes on the w. yeah, the drain for impression. go for the teenager bursting with
10:58 pm
telling me no. the 1st doctor with down syndrome to start your own mat in 60 minutes on d, w, the we need the stream is being healthy rate and burned in south africa. people with disabilities more likely to believe that job of the lack lives matter, protest china spotlight on racially motivated police by the same sex marriage has been legalized discrimination. we all because like,
10:59 pm
instead this may be coming 0 sense excels 3 tons. people have a stories off my right, so i see general flu need routine message into here which kind items are feed us complex doors to have 5 each kind mean each tried supplies should is pulled up. so this does turn sense of the sort of additional chip. no, because i trust the number is only 4 to technical turns 3 generations. one, jenny starts july 7th on d, w. the,
11:00 pm
this is the, the news alive from the, the summers on peace and ukraine has closed with 1800 supporting the final declaration. it communicate urges the territorial integrity of ukraine and the return of abducted children of political prisoners for some agent and on the line states chose not to support the state, but also on the program. the carol succeeds on the sidelines of gym and celebrations that the euro 2020 full football tournament is policing humbugs, shoes of mine, they say was threatening offices with the honda and the petrol ball.

7 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on