tv [untitled] January 28, 2025 7:30pm-7:41pm AST
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is also in jeopardy into one of the largest migrant shelter. the initial shock of the news has given way to confusion and uncertainty, especially for central and south american asylum seekers. in the absence of official information, it falls on religious leaders to provide hope comfort and pull it up. the the latest news as it breaks, as it stands, fire holes. the focus now shifts the making sure these a delivery to continue to address the long term needs of jobs, of people with detailed coverage and this type, some mosse of destruction. policy news are still willing to rebuild their houses and collect anything left from their memories from the house of the story for recovery will take to use in order to remove the rustle and re gain a semblance of normality. again, the
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when i was working in oxide, which by the 10s of my create was really a pinnacle management. my mother was very proud and she was like, but you know, what do you think of? you can do both in 10. 20 is. how is it going to help anybody to improve the lives of the people that lived in the village? it's a wonderful time for me because i have seen the other side of what i can imagine in the bar 3. and what is even more exciting is that i'm seeing,
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like i said, it's just something i couldn't even imagine is when i was trying to find somebody. my name is sheila cat, what's your budget? i was born in nigeria. i studied medical by chemistry and then went on to do a ph, d, and plunge by chemistry. i just wanted to do more in community. what so right now i'm looking a lot well with the you and environment and environmental. what with different agencies. so getting communities to understand how they will impacting each other is an important part of the work we're doing in getting people to understand what ecosystems are. and also what they can do to restore that this is a smaller now it's at that the other one is big enough. and then people use it like
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they just fries how much they key live. we particularly decided to work with women because we understand how we mean very quickly see the big picture of the what they position in community. but in the big of frame, how do we get women who are finding of different parts of the late to understand um how pesticides can run off into the lake and affect the livelihoods of women on the other side, with fishing, how do we connect these groups to begin to understand the impact and how do we then connect the factories that uh, polluting the link to understand what a devastating impact is to the community that they are living in. so everybody that's working around that has an impact and has a responsibility the
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issue of the facility is a county that adopted me when i came back to kenya in 20142015. so it's a county that i feel very close down very personally invested in the future if you see me. right. so one of the projects that were involved in working on and going to increasingly patel resources in energy is the highest and project into so
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it's important that communities understand the science that fix them. and so when we looked at the communities like case in which is very much impacted by a pest on the lake, when communities, i'm not empowered to help to understand that system, they can't make decisions. well, i said we're here to come on looking at size. now called welfare and you do perform only to my, to me and as i said to what does he like to do in the a room lock? it will come on on your end. well, it will be the one that i'm a new rule that out loud and as i do well, you can resolve your, you'll be the level know you, you're the one on 1. 1 will come on the the and i was born in a place like this in nigeria and. 2 finds because when i was growing up as a child,
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i was very interested in 6. i would play by the river. so i was curious about the natural world. so i ended up studying science and i became a scientist. then one day i came back to my mother and i said to her, oh look, i'm in a magazine, see me. this is my was talking about the, what's the time doing? i, she said to my daughter, i did good box. how is this work that you are doing here? going to relate to the people back home the way she asked me that question. i didn't have an answer, or what is it that we can do to transform the lives of women? and we're looking at everything, the 16 health agriculture, all the different sectors. what kind of science can we bring to make a difference to the lives of everyone interested in?
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we have to bring anything we have learned from any way i'm planted where we can have be fixed and we people that we love the very simple trajectory. when we went into the community, it took to the women they had formed into a collective which had a name in lieu a, which was a $5.00 to $8.00 policy. that was the name of the group. now this time when we went to the us and the name of the group, they said no, we're now the 21 through to 20. so to the last 10 years of the sustainable development goals, what are the things we found in environmental governance? is that women are not at the decision making table. we might say that women are the ones who are in touch with their environment because of the what they do in a daily basis. but in terms of decision making, they are not there. they initiated the propeller, is the political will at the top. so the best science of the well, most of a lot of it is left on the shelf because it's not the political will. and even in
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something like climate change, as we have seen, lots of political will to be in the news. the spectrum i want to become a transformative scientist says that everything that i apply myself to brings about a transformation, an impact that is visible. and in my lifetime as well, having fun. yeah, actually we actually have it, but there's actually a really good deal should come every time we have the things we need to bring a group of women to have us and make something of it. yeah. so perhaps like a demonstration from yeah, bring them they harvest, we said we talk about what we can do, restoring landscape. and this is how now we can begin to grow one. and now we start talking about the service. yeah. the
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we, i'm the 1st generations that children have west opportunities in the speak about the place that i loved. and that i missed so much that gave me all of my identity in such derogatory terms that they could not understand. the beauty, the power of the opportunities that i got from those 9 years. and that moment i said to myself, in my head, when will be the day that i will have to make so many explanations? because it will be obvious how rich, how beautiful, how glorious and all of us on this planet. not just the fact that
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the we are just one sessions on this funding. just one that we happen to be the most to hold the solutions. 6, the kids. this time to survive without us, we can destroy ourselves and have an interest over many time. it's out the, i mean have you to survey the so that's a little s to a significant have to come, extraordinary, arrogant in thinking that we lacking the system from within or thrice. we are
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nature on the jersey to the returning cause of lanes of their homes. hundreds of thousands of palestinians continue to travel to northern guys after 15 months of these routes for the for you watching l g 0. live from bill. have with news for these by people also ahead. the scores of civilians at dead hundreds injured in thousands, 3. the advance of the m 20.
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