tv The Husband School Al Jazeera March 4, 2019 12:32pm-1:01pm +03
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too early hoping to heal. you know the violence the broken families the loss of identity the various forms of abuse physical mental emotional homelessness substance abuse drug and alcohol and that can be drug and alcohol around the kids and ultimately the kids being embroiled in that substance abuse themselves. astray is first indigenous psychologist professor pat dudgeon says substance abuse is a symptom of largest social issues i think that indigenous people are still dealing with all the problems that are a consequence from. all of that prying has been left unattended and just manifested through the generations
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and that pain passed on to the children and so for has led to the children that we have today who are at the end of that pain trying that and understand the pain that i must understand where it comes from and i don't understand why they must endure such crying. this fifteen year old who call cameron is one boy who wanted to end his life. she can and i'm angry just. don't feel lucky lauzon. and i say awful. what do you do with that anger. see my friends do bad things and then i just hang up the crandall's. that's where you found the nuns and stuff like that with a little help from nature david cole is trying to show these adolescents how to isolate their problems. it does violence broken family if there's been power. whatever it is every challenge every problem that. is on your mind
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i want you to get iraq i want you. to the war. the bigger the problem the bigger the rock. how do they feel is it hurting. and that's one problem if you refuse to find ways of relief you know you will have to carry this pine tree a whole lot you have to learn you have to be willing to learn how to let go of the sort of pre. going to give out. young people need to be given. that they. are being cultural activities and feel that they part of the community in a cultural community. so. small.
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a meditation and. this is the healing circle. and indigenous version of a counseling session. which is going to go through a very. reading meditation technique. in accordance with aboriginal custom the young boys speak at the healing circle but they're encouraged to. go to the. world like we are. both. cameron says the camp has made him feel stronger. like you and i. respect. the
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challenge lies in keeping these boys on track after they leave the balun you camp it's really hard it's hard for us because. thirty percent of the kids are extreme heart risk area and there were kids to be deeply involved in substance abuse and the ones who are looking at it as an option from the sky. with their lack of resources and lack of appropriate funding and support we we can't do adequate follow up marion scrymgour is an outgoing state minister in the northern territory government she skeptical that money from a controversial stead drug government package is reaching indigenous communities under the northern territory emergency response there was a story billion dollars that's significant tax payers money that's gone into what people think has gone into these communities a lot of their money is spent on bureaucrats consultants
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a lot of people fly in fly out from these communities there is very little money that goes into programs and for working with families working with communities so that they can build it and start dealing with that with the trauma. she says she's leaving politics because she doesn't believe it's hoping aboriginals enough heck can i sit in this job any longer don't know what i'm doing. we've got i ten year old young kids killing themselves it's clear something is wrong. and communities have got to start taking some strong staying. because there's not going to be a generation left if. we're heading east of darwin to the picturesque and largely indigenous land just. some years ago the
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community of state made the highest rates of having time no well at its highest point average for the elderly lady decided to take matters into their own hands. is a ski beach she says it was the hanging suicide of a twenty one year old that sparked a cluster of other suicides in her community he was the first one to commit suicide the first time his community in this community. also committed suicide that was when her family took action seven years ago creating a volunteer service called the mangas suicide prevention group what do you do to prevent suicide in the community. walk me and my sisters we walk the
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streets and listen for the noise where it's coming from. the women run a twenty four hour suicide watch often patrolling the streets with only small torches they mediate in family issues and mental troubled youths will probably up the next day go to their house and sit down have cuppa tea read with their parents they've named seven or letting ingrid but like canceling. local police say the group's work has been invaluable for boys that since they've become operating i think there's been a source saw it in their area and while suicide numbers have dropped there's been a shop rise in attempted suicides looking up the figures from thirty two thousand to two thousand i where there was forty or ten now and just as two year period two and a half he's the one hundred thirteen that's
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a significant increase. is nick still bears the rope marks from his suicide attempt to weeks ago. group intervened just in time to save the twenty three year old. two months. the reason i've been doing this was because my biggest problem is with alcohol and once i start drinking alcohol i start losing control i would think things like my family doesn't love me and i want to go hang myself with them and i don't want to learn to new i want to change my life a better life so that i can spend time with my son go hunting and fishing with him and do good thing in the. back in mowanjum terence told me he wants to cut down the tree where he attempted suicide. or live kind of. you know.
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to me that's a staple of someone going forward. but then remove something of a symbol that. they want to end their life. in its own way the community too is giving itself the space to heal trees were families but people commit suicide it's up and down but we don't actually care as. the time it takes to grow back gives us the time to get over forget about it. while suicide remains a scourge in aboriginal communities across a stray it appears that family and culture is indigenous australia is best hope to saving the young.
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australia of last generations so that was back in twenty twelve which leads us to ask how successful have those schemes been in reducing the suicide rate where we're joined now by psychologist professor pat dudgeon who you recognize from the film a former commissioner of the astray and national mental health commission she teaches at the university of western australia and actually runs a number of suicide prevention projects focusing on aboriginal communities it's great to have you with us here on ri one professor dudgeon you really believe then that that local approach works oh absolutely look every right on the people have been just some pad there's a whole lot of issues facing women not just us and a stride in this old. would remain issues for indigenous people of settler countries such as in new zealand canada and the states where recovery from call on
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is a really important issue and what we do on the names that enable people to become empowered to control their own destinies to control their own resources to decide what the problem is and to be given the right information to decide what the solution is twenty twelve when the film was made the wood epidemic was used to describe that situation in western australia and i'm not suggesting for a moment that this would be fixed overnight but we are now six years down the track the levels are still high there are some reports which talk about one hundred times the national average in western australia. i mean would you have expected or certainly hoped for it to have come down more look i think that sometimes those figures have been a tad sensationalized suicide writes however having said that suicide rights do remind very hard we're still twice the national average suicide is the fifth leading cause of death and some my group's indigenous people are seven times more
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likely to type their laws of the people and northern territory actually is a mage in as. having the greatest state average of suicide when you have having a high suicide right something is going terribly wrong you mentioned some other countries a little bit earlier places like new zealand and canada what is the common factor with these indigenous communities around the world including the aboriginal australia that leads to the high suicide rates ah look there's a commonality of a range of different things but odd side that certainly i think there is an affinity with those other countries because they were indigenous people in those countries the countries were taken and sometimes very almost tong's very brutally so we've had processes of colonize asian you know being removed genocides being removed off country put into reserves missions residential schools
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and then having new laws dictated to enforce legislation so there's a history told the countries that are about people losing they brought losing their countries and losing their human rights which needs to be we need to go into recovery about certainly in astride the there was denial of that that process of history that's now starting to change around certainly are proud then prime minister. kevin rudd's apology to the stolen generations was one of the ways really historical moments where there was an acknowledgement of the harm done and a genuine polity given for that how i think that we as a nation can start healing when ownership and and this is a truce a non est between different groups professor pat dudgeon former commissioner for
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the australian national mental health commission it's been a pleasure talking to you thank you for joining us my pleasure kemal and that is it from us or join us again next week and also be sure to check out the rewind page at al-jazeera dot com for more films from the series i'm come on santa maria from the whole team thanks for joining us so you can see. rewind continues i can bring your people back to life i'm sorry with updates on the best about just serious documentaries the struggle continues book from bob did to now use distance revisiting. anatomy of an american city i have close friends who were lost to the streets i can literally see the future of baltimore to the ass of my students and it does not look rewind on al-jazeera.
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the latest news as it breaks i was after the explosions to the point to say the city is safe and the civilians one of the targets. with detailed coverage despite the high cost the right young men are still volunteering to fight this partly out of a sense of pa feel sick to see from around the world it must see it different now that is a few that speaks four to five many many people here in the past a republican. it does look more and more like bangladesh is becoming a one party state give me one good reason why the opposition should have been voted to do power isn't the problem the human rights watch describes how opposition members have been arrested killed and even disappeared maybe house and goes head to head with a gal who is free but going too far get to we want to do it development we don't want is disputing the economic revolution what i don't recall saying this is the product of development is not the same as democracy head to head on out is zero.
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will come under bigger pollen it is good to have you here with us i am are you watching our desire from coming out. exclusive pictures from the saudi consul general's home in istanbul shed more light on the murder of jamal khashoggi and its aftermath. it to a nato rips through the u.s. state of alabama killing at least twenty two people and causing what one mayor calls catastrophic damage. after. a successful mission to space that brings the u.s. a big step closer to return resuming astronaut launches from home soil. jarius eighty two year old president has formally put forward his name for a fifth term in office abilities but to flicka has been facing growing protests
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against this rule now he's trying to appease algeria and saying he'll call early elections if he wins next month's vote. has details. demonstrators marched late into the night in protest against algeria is long time leading up to the cease beautifully kind of al-jazeera content apparently very francis pictures posted on social media showing hundreds. earlier students told the president it's time to go the protesters wanted the constitutional court to stop but to flick a stand in for a fifth term in next month's election in response to the protests beautifully because campaign manager it signaled the president will not rule for long if he wins a post election where in one year there was some mean one doubt i pledge to organize early elections to be set up by the independent national conference i pledged not to be a candidate in that election. before that announcement police fired water cannon in
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the capitol as crowd swelled protests have been echoed in places like france thousands demonstrated in paris on sunday as well as in other cities we are all mobilizing through for example today being many be going up against their fifth mandates but also against the system they have taken our country away from a president but a freak of his eighty two has used a wheelchair since suffering a stricken twenty thirteen and is rarely seen in public to recently travel to switzerland for medical checks on saturday he sacked his veteran campaign manager possibly a tactic to calm the growing protest movement the day before tens of thousands of people took to the streets in the capital and in towns across algeria the protest represent the biggest challenge to put a fake israel since the twenty four thousand election which was denounced by the opposition but analysts say this is different to the protests during the arab spring i don't think there is the anger and hostility against the president which
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you saw in egypt that he did hope to heal the wounds of the civil war he has he has brought some measure of prosperity but he can't buy off the votes is because the economy is is crumbling. in algeria half the population is under thirty and calls for protests on social media have resonated particularly with young old. daring to struggle to find employment and now that anger is restraining the predator barbara out of iraq. remember because a research fellow at the french school for advanced studies and social sciences she said algerian says the government is out of touch with the demands of the people on the religion science and the idea that they will organize on to the base of the elections fake transitions as those who are transitioned they will control from the top is a way to get in time and to think that. that protestors we
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will be carried and get home get back home on the protester side there's no interest in elections whatsoever curiously people are talking about general strike about cereal there's a million so they're not talking about elections or another candidate america or candidate even if it's not bush who wins the election so there's a sort of disconnection between the regime and the people who are actually currently they want to organize their old political life you know they have been marginalized from the oprah show boys you call life in sixty two is indeed the end in the dim dependency of the country and now they are singing it for now we can do we want to be in control want to get back control back over our political life and that's why they are not targeting only would see a car but asking for the system has the will to to lead and that's why also they
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have been so happy to be able to take the streets. in the unity in philly that are easy and also in self control they have been able to do so without any balance. algis there as obtained exclusive pictures from the home of the saudi consul general in istanbul after the murder of the journalist jamal khashoggi a documentary airing on our sister channel al jazeera arabic is shedding new light on his death and how his body may have been disposed of crucial she was killed inside saudi arabia's consulate last october sit in because he has more from ankara . these pictures show a furnace a tenderer or when that was built by a turkish constructor in the garden of saudi consul general's residence in istanbul just a few hundred meters away from the consulate general building where jamal for shift to was brutally murdered and according to order toppings obtained by the turkish intelligence his body parts were dismembered in the closely general building again
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we heard from we heard from the police department and the persecutors office that. geez why the parts would carry it in baggage luggage was and bags to the residence building close to the consulate and according to the police as i sat into thought for two thousand eight hundred the police strongly suspect that his body parts might have been burnt in the stand there were over the according to technical details of this all when it can fire up to one thousand degrees celsius which means that it leaves no trace of the d.n.a. of a body part or any bones and the turkish police insists that since al topeka who is a forensic experts of the saudi hit team who came to monitor jamal has shipped in istanbul his dissertation thesis was about analysis of d.n.a. from bones that's why they strongly now suspect that. body parts were burnt inside
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that over and it was already reported before and the reason why they came up to this idea is also that just a few days after jamal his ship was murdered and his body parts were brought to this place where the saudi men living inside they ordered. portions of meat than cooked meat and they did barbecue that's why the police now strongly suspects that tomorrow g.'s body parts were burnt. and that's in the u.s. for at least twenty two people have been killed after a tornado hit the states of alabama rescue teams are searching the wreckage of homes and businesses destroyed in the county it's fear the number of said could rise more than ten thousand people are without power. fortune the death toll is going up and we're at twenty two right now. and unfortunately i feel like we told that number may rise yet again but again. that's going to
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depend on our search efforts we've done everything we feel like we can do to save the area is just very very hazardous to put anybody into a just point in time debris everywhere and it is just his and his mention previously this evening just some massive damage to structures and residences in the area i got to norway or my kids a. lot of little children were going to my mother in law as we were just trying to get out of this area right coming up around the corner as it was making a left right up there around thirty eight. zero area right. there is very much that is done. then as well as opposition leader says he'll return home on monday to even you protest against president nicolas maduro won by the house wraps up its or of latin american countries seeking support to topple maduro it was lost in ecuador
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but is now reports that they headed back to venezuela a short time ago he appeared on social media calling for venezuelans to join the protests the government is threatening to arrest him if he does us return. has more from the colombian capital a border town of cook. as far as we can tell one by bill has not yet returned to venezuela he took to social media on sunday evening once again calling for venezuelan citizens to take to the streets to fill the streets of the country saying that he's convening demonstrations for eleven am on monday across the country that's local time now it's unclear where that broadcast was made from but mr white dog did say that he would be attending these demonstrations he was most recently in ecuador wrapping up a tour of several south american countries including brazil meeting with leaders in paris why as well as argentina now on that social media broadcast bill said that the dilemma that venezuela currently faces is between democracy and dictatorship he
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also condemned the violence the government's use of paramilitary forces that were responsible for violence that took place here in the in the city of kuta on the border with venezuela on february twenty third violence that lasted for three days mr garrido also called on the venezuelan military to allow international aid tons of international aid that continues to sit in containers here on the border to be allowed to enter the country lastly he said on monday that the that he said that on monday the next steps would be announced this would happen at some point where these nationwide demonstrations would be taking place and we will be keeping a close eye on these demonstrations on the scheduled protests across the country in venezuela. the u.s. consulate mess to islam which deals to palestinians is to be absorbed by the new u.s. embassy for israel on monday a controversial decision to turn them into a single diplomatic mission as announced in october by the u.s.
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secretary of state i can pay you a consulate has been in place for about one hundred seventy five years and it acts as a de facto us embassy for palestinians so many palestinians consider the move a downgrade and diplomatic relations at least jacob says a partner of the truman national security project and he says there's no going back on the embassy move even if trump leaves office bear in mind that in one thousand nine hundred five the it became law in america to try to move the embassy to jerusalem in every six months since then there's been a waiver to to prevent it from happening and it was passed on a bipartisan basis so i don't think the embassy in any way shape or form will will move back to tell of you the issue of the consulate in jerusalem once this change is made i don't imagine that it would change again but i think very importantly one point that's being missed i don't know that the israelis would object to the americans building a full fledged embassy in ramallah and i don't know why that's not something that's being discussed any.
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