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tv   Doc Film - Milk  Deutsche Welle  December 10, 2017 4:15pm-5:00pm CET

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sions of an old warehouse directly in the harbor area. karl lagerfeld is believed to have been born in one nine hundred thirty three and it is early twenty's he went to paris where he worked for various fashion labels. became one of the world's most successful designers and joined show not only in one nine hundred eighty three cents the traditional fashion now also seen a return to its glory days. collection has been key in the development produced annually since two thousand and two each year it's unveiled in a different city. in two thousand and eleven it was mumbai. in two thousand and thirteen chanel went to dallas. and in twenty fifteen it was the turn of roll. the focus is always on craftsmanship every individual piece is produced by small paris studios who do the work by hand. businesses as it is that these studios had a tough time because work done by hand is not prized anymore at the hands it's only
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thanks to lagerfeld and chanel but they still exist if you bought them all and now gives them a lot of freedom that's an a gift and that's really special because it doesn't need to go to that. music line . that's the kind of luxury and craftsmanship chanel stands for. state. a lot of detail and craftsmanship is put down to karl lagerfeld now believed to be eighty four years old he apparently still designs the entire collection himself that's unusual in the fashion industry. he's been a great example to us all in being on the stoppable and he's so young in his attitude to life i think that's one thing we can really ole kind of learn from him and take full was he's just he's just never. never says no and he goes you know
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he's already talking about the year after next. show in hamburg skilled philharmonie concha called. amber karl lagerfeld has come full circle but the fashion king did not stay long he left without a word rushing off to focus on his next collection. this number six marked one hundred years since finland gained its independence from eighteen zero nine until then it had been in a tone of this grand duchy in the russian empire and before that it spent centuries under swedish rule and so the centenary was cause for widespread sense celebration but also for some introspection on the finnish national identity shaped by its vast natural landscapes of course but also its sauna culture and the melancholy of finnish tango for instance and all of these things find a unique expression in the clarity of finnish design.
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minimal and functional the finnish way of life finds expression in the architecture of the capitol hill sinking. and in the local design scene objects should be practical and timeless have clean lines and be made from robust materials. cost us is a designer and has a shop in helsinki design district here design newcomers and the classics are both represented combining the old with the new is what this designer does too in addition to her own collection she makes customized pelts for design label r.t.s. . the design in finland. it's very democratic so it's you can say about almost every household.
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classic design piece so you actually grow up with. those classics are something that i'm sure that you're there throughout your whole life. many of these design classics have been produced without variation for decades designed for everyday gives they combine with one another. this is especially true of ceramics manufacturer robbia and glass producer. to celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of finland's independence they've released collections in the typically finished believe but the designs them sounds remain unchanged because they mirror the finished mindset. we are very near nature. we like simple things our nature is quite clean and and poor and simple and that maybe affects their zion and also our desire for how their design should be so
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it's its functionality today but still. a beauty with simplicity maybe the country's pioneering design are also too heavily on nature as early as the nine hundred thirty s. . laid the groundwork for the worldwide success of finished design. in the 1940's and fifty's. revolutionized industrial design with his icy looking glass where. frank did the same with his robust timeless drinking glasses high quality craftsmanship and a nod to nature arche even in the sixty's when synthetic materials became popular. more than a billion pairs of the iconic fiske r.'s orange scissors have been sold to date and who are old left his mark on the swinging sixty's with these round chairs. these mock lamps made a name for hardy koskinen in the one nine hundred ninety s. building on the success of his famous spree to sesame. but finished design isn't
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only found in museums such pieces exist in ordinary homes where they're handed down from generation to generation it's something children grow up with. your mom has been an independent country only forty one hundred years now so we need to find something be some things that are common to everyone and design was one thing that kind of bond whole nation together because it was the democratic idea that we should have good design for everybody and a better everyday life where everybody and design was use a key people in the ingredient of that so i think that's why he's on it's become sort of court order for all things if you say that for the french for example it's a bottle of wine that symbolizes french french people are france in total for friends in surface considers. fashion designer you dana constance sees herself as part of this tradition she's been selling her colorful collections made from sheep and reindeer pelts under the owner label since twenty fourteen she hopes to create
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the fashion classics up to morrow. i really wish i hope that the fashion design and the fashion as an industry will come more i recognise them all in finland and there would be more understanding towards the fashion industry and the fashion design us well because i really believe that we have a really strong design heritage and now it's the time for a fashion absolutely the international customers who flock to her store get frys to hope fresh design talent from finland adding extra color to the country's design landscape and making sure the next one hundred years will be as successful as the last. well anyone who's got money to burn these days is well advised to invest in art as the prices are going through the roof these days just last month leonardo da vinci's one day went for a record. breaking four hundred fifty million dollars that's nearly three hundred
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eighty million euros and the market for contemporary art is also booming or cashing in on this is the lead parts auction house in cologne where three works by get the world's most expensive living artist just went under the hammer. not spying on the us six hundred thirty two front get out of the. blue for nonsense winds. the human . front ones if such titles are switched off for an arts which doubles. the atmosphere is crackling at this auction of contemporary art at colognes better action ears among the objects going under the hammer are several works by german painter. says there's nothing more exciting in the life of an auctioneer than the day of the auction itself it always brings surprises who will bid on what how why will they go. killing n.j. fun zelda nick has been one of the directors of germany's largest auction house
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since twenty twelve his work begins long before the auction itself it takes months to prepare an auction one of the most important aspects is staying in touch with collectors potential buyers and art sellers parents auction house has been in business since eight hundred forty five it's the oldest family run option firm in the world. some paintings we've optioned off two or three times already to say in one thousand nine hundred seventy five and twenty seventeen the trust that we've built up over generations is naturally something you can't buy with money. can. dollars in terms of front of annoyance of dollars and the next one falls. we're not aboard any more than one hundred five thousand valma i'm more than. a buyer paid one hundred five thousand euros for a book of illustrations by care. it's one of the german artists earliest works now eighty five years old they say has been experimenting with various genres of
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painting since the one nine hundred sixty s. even minor works by him fetch six figure sums based on what is the star of the art market among all living artists of his works command the highest prices the online database art now it says that all told us works have earned more than eight hundred million euros in auction in two thousand and fifteen his abstract image sold for more than forty million alone. with your heart which there is a fascinating artist it's no accident that his work sets new price records and is unbelievably popular among collectors. was a title entre from god to be sure but six hundred thirty three. was begin with six hundred dollars. collectors can also bid for works at lent parents auctions online the auctions are live streamed and bidding is in real time the art market is going digital roughly twelve percent of its business in two thousand and sixteen was on
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the internet that's more than three billion euros an increase of fifteen percent from the previous year collectors like from berlin appreciate the advantages of digitalisation the forty five year old himself founded an art collectors platform called independent collectors to make private collections more accessible. and the collecting has a lot to do with discovering and so for collectors it's fantastic that it's now so easy to get up to date information. and at the same time it's tough to keep track of all the influences and. russians and information are in. the challenge today is to find your way and keep a balance and. let pass is also trying to unite art collectors from all over the world in an online community one task is to convince collectors
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to bid on where they may never have seen in real life let's use as videos in which experts introduce works of art. that i think there are situations in which serious collectors can buy art works they've never seen before . but mostly you should stick to only art by artists whose work as a whole you know well and any moment so despite at least there's popularity no online collectors bid today on his tate a landscape the painting goes to a bitter who is present in the auction hall mamma. sold for seven hundred fifty thousand got thirty and i. think your. natural catastrophes are the kind of thing that most of us try to avoid like for instance an erupting volcano with its burning flows of molten lava and spitting flames but in iceland we met a man who sees things very differently and i cannot see god sun is
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a photographer who specialized in volcanoes and when one of them blows its top you can sure that he will be far away. fiery destruction and breathtaking beauty at the same time these photos capture the moment when. they were taken by icelandic photographer. rush but. you have to be creative you have to be told. he loves it when comes to life he gets the closest possible whether with his s.u.v. or a small play. of being very close. you know. it's
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a distance. most difficult. things are happening but you know i need to. ragnar first rose to fame through his photos of iceland's most famous volcano. the ash it produced when it erupted in two thousand and ten grounded flights across europe ragnar took ten thousand photos of the volcano. to sing for them to see europe's in its south because it's. the clouds of the one thousand. everything everywhere that you can see the. you just stay there. and if. for more than thirty years no ragnar sigurdsson has been photographing landscapes and nature motifs all over the far
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north from greenland and norway to the north pole. but few places have as many natural wonders as his native iceland known as the land of fire and ice its one hundred thirty volcanoes and hot geysers of shape iceland's national identity. it's not the kind of just i think the whole nation is like that we all love us. i mean sometimes it can be many of us can be life threatening but we have been blessed the past decades we only have. kind of. what you called to is their actions. a photo shoot at a crater landscape. it was created by
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a volcanic eruption thousands of years ago. capturing images of the volcanic rock under different light conditions fascinates ragnar sigurd's. he's always aiming to try out new technologies and techniques. using a drone he experiments was unusual perspectives he says he's always on the hunt for the next killer shot. and there's always another day another light another. perspective. another way to do it or wish. you'd never it's never done. ragnar sigurdsson remains true to his favorite subject the next volcanic eruption of icelandic is sure to come possibly with just a few minutes notice.
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well it's already an old tradition in north america of course where people love to brighten their holes for the festive season with all manner of lights and sparkling christmas decorations and meanwhile here in germany the custom has also caught on but one house in particular in color in the state of lower saxony has shown its way to fame as the biggest christmas light extravaganza in the country and so we visited role folks to see how and why he does it why. our board. it's not just tiny tots whose eyes are all aglow when big and small gather on the first weekend of the advent season to watch them lights go on. five hundred thirty thousand of them in germany's biggest christmas light display on a private house and that's a record. was for your just overwhelmed by all the lights as it could no way i could do that i have problems just getting one string of
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lights up it's fantastic like. the man who attracts christmas mummers to calm lower saxony every year is well fucked. the pensioner who loves his company. will always just jump for joy when it all comes together i it's that week of happiness especially when it gives people joy and they go oh. i think that's the best part of it the worst thing that can happen is if it starts raining and. then i flip the switch on the remote negotiate because you know then of course the people all go. luckily that rarely happens months of work have gone into the extraordinary christmas display. close wife no mean supports his passion for christmas lights. or she's in charge of the decorations in the house she decides how it gets done. and. all
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of. these if this passion gives him a lots of energy and happiness. well for designs every aspect of his christmas might extravaganza himself it all started in one thousand nine hundred nine when the couple visited their son in the united states houses all around were covered with lights. and whole never seen anything like it in every aisle it was more beautiful than the last the front yards had moving reindeer and santa claus on them and we said let's do this at all just for us. every year it got to be a little more but she never thought it could take on these dimensions. but. the yuletide spectacle now involves a massive amount of effort and expense to have it ready in time the seventy year old retiree has to begin stringing the four point three kilometers of cords in the
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summer. with this winter predicted to be a wet one he's had a special high voltage line put in. the movie by a blow dryer at least once a week with a. guy that he doesn't have any other hobby he's put his heart in as it has and i let him know. my god some people never had a childhood so they have to make up for it some time. he estimates that he spent around one hundred fifty thousand euros on the decorations so far the folks have to pay some three thousand. just for the extra electricity they use in december a little private christmas market helps to pay for it all the need you need these the on the base and i hope this year we'll see even more shining faces that's the whole point of doing this does is in dad's ahead. and he gets the money. they have up to five hundred spectators every weekend his wife sells mulled wine and sausages
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while both checks the lights to make sure they're all working and he keeps coming up with new ideas that come as long as my wife joins in and just can't stop. their leg and we'll keep doing this as long as we're able we really enjoy it yeah it's not just to make me happy but above all the people who come. on the produce or. the couple have been married for forty two years now for seventeen of them they've been lighting up the holiday season. and all that brilliant note that's all for this edition of our highlights so until we meet again all the best from us here in berlin and happy holidays.
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odd. but don't you pass being branded as dangerous cranks can find. it struggling to regain its credibility clock now for the first time ever the executive level opens its doors to journalists. and the top managers respond to the question how dangerous it is. fifteen minutes long.
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what drives the economy. to see a cod. the media in germany always has its finger on the model of the mars odyssey dolly a model. beat the germans a new and surprising aspect the muslim culture in germany. with american keep take a look at germany it is synchronicities as their traditions every day lives and language can just come out of. so i'm ok i'm good shit. because the trick i am going to d.w. dot com beat the germans. losing your homeland
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because of persecution in society. starting from scratch in an unfamiliar country five people who found a new home in a foreign land. with their stories books and music they've built bridges to the past and into the future. after the escape from starting december seventeenth on d w. the father they. are going to. be a. human rights day
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on d w. this is d w news live from berlin and there's no let up the ante us protests in the middle east demonstrators in the gaza strip express their burning us. filleted to donald trump and benjamin netanyahu is the latest i'll burst of anger at the u.s. president's decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital also coming up. under human rights day we go to uganda to see how peace activists there are helping victims of the devastating civil conflict so.
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welcome to the program i'm mary in evanston it's good to have you with us fresh protests are flaring in the middle east and other regions today in the wake of u.s. president donald trump's decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital in the gaza strip hundreds of palestinians took to the streets burning posters of both trump and israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu trumps decision marks a reversal of decades of u.s. policy on jerusalem. while for his part the us president has said he was only recognizing reality that's despite of warnings that the move could jeopardize the middle east peace process. as another dawn breaks on jerusalem more israeli police stand on guard they fear further protests palestinians here in rage by the
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u.s. decision to recognize this contested city as israel's capital their anger has echoed through the arab world at an emergency meeting in egypt on saturday arab leaders urged the u.s. to abandon the move saying it was a violation of international law. not of commercial overhead but in this l.m. we call on all of the world's peace loving nations to raise their voices clearly and to reject the u.s. president's illegal decision. we call on the world to recognize the state of palestine with east jerusalem as its capital. the palestinians say president mahmoud abbas has canceled a planned meeting with u.s. vice president mike pence as clouds hanging over the white house washington looks to have lost its role as a piece in middle east balance the diplomatic reverberations extend further israel's prime minister cooling many european countries hypocritical.
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while i respect i am not prepared to accept a double standard from it i hear voices from their condemning president tribes historic statement but i have not heard condemnations of the rockets fired at israel or the terrible incitement against it. no more mcdermott. netanyahu made those remarks before boarding a plane for a two day trip to paris and brussels for water expected to be tense talks. our correspondent tony kramer joins us now from jerusalem for more so tiny israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is now in paris he's holding talks with french president and manal micron what's likely to come out of this meeting. well we understand that this trip had long been planned to meet the french president and also to meet the e.u. foreign ministers on monday and we understand that mr netanyahu was supposed to
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talk more about iran and the nuclear deal but now we expect some frank discussions about the two slim crisis which is now a diplomatic crisis as well because we heard mr netanyahu speaking before leaving you just heard it in the report he accused the e.u. leaders of applying a double standard saying that they're criticizing the recognition of the capital of israel by the u.s. president and not criticizing the use of rockets and hamas is firing rockets towards israel so we are expecting some frank talk there maybe also some tense discussion we have to wait and see when he meets the e.u. foreign leaders but we also expect you know we want to see what that you foreign leaders have to say to him and good role they're going to take on in this process well there was also an emergency meeting of the arab league yesterday and they issued a statement calling on president trump to reverse his recognition of jerusalem as
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israel's capital but is this declaration going to have any impact while this is still to see i mean it was expected that the arab league will issue a sharp condemnation we heard that from almost of the arab countries shortly after this decision by mr trump but also you have to know i mean the arab league has always issued statements but they haven't been really not implicated in the israeli palestinian conflict i mean for decades to have issued statements but they have no plan of action and i think also you have to take into consideration that all of these countries have to own strategic interests so it's good to see whether this will be followed by any action taken by the arab league and by the arab states themselves. well today we've seen protests in gaza also outside the u.s. embassy in lebanon tiny can you tell us quickly what is the security situation like in israel itself while the situation especially in jerusalem where we are
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looking at has been quite calm but there has been an attack today stopping attack in a very busy area. at the bus central bus station it seems that a young palestinian attacked a security guard there with a knife the victim is said to be in critical condition though the police said they're thinking that this is a stabbing attack but they're still looking for the motive so this could be something that the security forces have feared that the violence will spill over that you might see some of these what they call. young palestinians who are so angry about this decision to just go out and carrying out these attacks. kramer reporting for us from jerusalem thanks for that update now today is human rights day which commemorates the signing of the united nations the universal declaration of human rights in one thousand nine hundred forty eight but nearly seventy years later human rights are far from universal and our next report we meet a group of rights activists in uganda they're helping victims of the conflict
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between the government and the militant religious cult. st joseph's hospital in northern uganda. here some two hundred patients are receiving treatment of the wounds they sustained during the lord's resistance army insurgency. millions were massacred mutilated tortured in sleeves and raped in the conflict between the l r a and government troops victor archon and his organization african should have network provide support for victims who until now have never seen a doctor. because i have no problem with forgiving those who injured me as long as i'm healed it depends on my ability to become normal again but defines whether or not i can forgive. omar james will walk again victor uses these success stories to convince the un and
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the european union to fund his project. make peace tangible to people in justice and that's why we say people physically. it will hop into space for. many painful stories. in february two thousand and four troops stormed the victors hometown and massacred hundreds of people many were abducted including victors older brother omar jeffrey here at the memorial site the people of commemorate those who were lost. the contest lost just too much the debris dip. in the country needs. a prospect for national reconciliation. in twenty fifteen victor was
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nominated for the nobel peace prize since then he's turned down prestigious job offers abroad because he knows that ugandans wounds are still a long way from being healed. now to some of the other stories making news around the world the twenty seventeen nobel peace prize laureates have been presented with their award at a ceremony an all slow campaign group i can was recognized for its work for a treaty to ban nuclear weapons and expressed concern about what it calls an extremely dangerous situation in north korea. at least one person has died trying to escape huge wildfires raging through southern california around two hundred thousand people have been forced to flee their homes the winds that have been fanning the flames are finally starting to ease but firefighters say the danger is still extreme. police say three people have been arrested in connection with an
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attempted arson attack on a synagogue in sweden's second largest city gotten borg no one was injured the incident took place after protests in stockholm and malmo against u.s. president donald trump's decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital. celebrities from galaxies and near and far hit the red carpet in los angeles on saturday for the world premiere of the latest star wars movie the last jet i opened in u.s. theaters on friday you know formal reviews have been released yet but lucky ticket holders say the film more than lives up to the hype. well a dark swedish comedy has scooped the biggest prizes at the european film awards the square is a searing satire of contemporary society it already won the top prize at the cannes film festival and has been nominated for an academy award last night's glittering ceremony here in berlin puts it one step closer to winning that oscar
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it can become a we could become a bit repetitive here the square. swedish comedy vásquez sweeps the night scooping six prizes including the most prestigious award for best film the cast and crew chose to skate for thank you speech and expressed their joy in a different way to get in we have to do this three get it right. so let's do the countdown happy scream three was. for square is a lighthearted look at the hypocrisy of modern society has sent us on the trials and tribulations of christie and for creates a lot to museum in stockholm. kristin drives an electric car and say's all the right things about poverty and world peace invest film his high minded idea was
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a put to the test and have sex with them. how how often which t.v. you think women. they you don't know him very well and have sex with them. you know their names. yeah yeah. always oh yeah yeah so when i make. things go from bad to worse in another on forgettable scene a performance artist goes a that's a posh fund raising dinner. the best film of a european film awards often goes on to win the academy awards and in fact addition holds up direct to rebrand could be picking up another prize the oscar for best foreign language film.
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our i'd been does the club dortmund has fired their coach and hired former cologne coach. here in places peter bosch whose dortmund side hadn't won a bundestag a match in the last eight tries last season helped cologne to a hugely successful season as all the club rise in the standings to fifth place but just just last week he was fired as cologne could not find its way out of last place in the league. not mine the most obvious after i left cologne i didn't have my eyes set on george mitchell but. this is it's just as surprising for me as it is for the rest of you. i watched dortmund like i did other opponents how they played the game like when they were in the champions league but see the legacy in. well a couple of teams that have climbed their way past dortmund in the standings are
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glad. well dortmund tries to regroup after eight matches without a win to teams mounting steady climbs in the bundesliga saturday's tightest as they can match up saw take on shelter both teams have been mounting steady climbs of the standings. the host started the match in control after twenty two minutes christophe karama coasted into the back post unmarked one nil third. after the break cut back went for a second. but this time greater was denied by ralph ehrman. shellcode took advantage thanks to a bit of luck yannick vestigal turning into a new color jury's cross from the wing. and go one one surprisingly shellcode took control after the equaliser. missed the mark here.
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and then failed to find a white pass yond sama. it stayed one one affair results in the end. you're watching the telly news coming to you from berlin i'll be back with more at the top of the hour i'm hearing i haven't seen thanks for watching.
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because that's all of the speculation about the financial strength of daunte your bank has pushed its share price to a record level. us the u.s. department of justice is seeking to impose a record fine on a bank for misleading investors. we've been in the headlines last year full a number of the wrong reasons and this didn't help. journalists haven't traditionally been welcome here now we're allowed in to ask all
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the questions we want but how honest will the answers be how endangered and how dangerous is this bank really. visitors are greeted by a globe everyone is meant to get that don't your bank is only german in name with a global bank. we'll be speaking to bankers and financial experts and will be looking at the figures and asking about old burdens and new risks. and. this is the management floor on the thirty sixth story high above frankfurt you can see a long way from here from the top of the world down there looks pretty small. bank has more than one hundred thousand employees in sixty one countries it's a huge company with more than thirteen hundred subsidiaries and assets worth one
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point six trillion euros. which makes it sound like it's the government you have to be told no it's not that but it sounded german stability they've been there for one hundred years you can easily assume that whatever they do is right for the but you have to reflect that it's always different people since july twenty fifteen the top dog here has been john cryan he came in to overhaul the bank he's british rational and modest with a subtle sense of irony every tuesday the members of the board gather here frank for that thirty fourth floor but prove the crisis has been the number one issue for the bank since twenty sixteen badly performing loans fines poor share prices so i tend not to feel too much stress and i hope that's not just a surface feeling and underneath there's a lot of stress but generally i tend to be fairly relaxed and maybe
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a little too logical sometimes but. i think that's part of the role one of the new men in charge on his way to the weekly meeting marcus schrenker formerly the chief finance officer is now the president and co head of corporate and investment bank and the deputy c.e.o. this is the first time a television team has been allowed to film a board meeting the bank wants to regain trust and it needs to the combined annual salary of the people in this room is a good twenty five million euros that's a lot of money but much less than their predecessors got the ones who plunged the bank into the crisis the big money was yesterday today's about jon cryer and he's here to clean up the bank his mandate to exude confidence questions even on the right is co-head of private and commercial banking used junk ryans other deputy the board members of deutsche bank speak english meetings eight men and two women from five countries who attend by video conference if necessary we're going to look at the bank's past to try and understand its present and future. of june
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twenty sixth the i.m.f. published the results of an investigation page twenty nine contained a frightening sentence deutsche bank appears to be the most important net contributor to systemic risks. so how dangerous is back. and i often do when one of these dominoes fall let's assume this one folds because this bank has lost the trust of investors it could be that this bank folds too but then the risk that even more will for is very highly we call this earth heard effect and we distrust the entire banking system on the back of the steam voice. to me bankers as all long been in the top five perhaps it's in the top three
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globally in terms of these risks. it's about the culture it's about the structure you've been through a number of c.e.o.'s or changes in executives and it seems like you still have the same problems so that's an indicator that these are really deep seated and hard to deal with that's for us what the i.m.f. was highlighting there was basically that dodger bank is one of the most network thanks in the world from its to stand by you deserve it but this thing's in that's why we're called a globally significant institution on but i. i personally see that as a logical consequence of our business model but there's aunt and i'd go as far as to say that it's a confirmation of the significance of deutsche bank and in the whole system of the doj and banking because our system. not a warning but an honor it's all a question of interpretation or translation.
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and someone had kindly translated into german risk and connectedness into a fairly which if i'm not mistaken means dangerous in english and i didn't feel we were dangerous when either a danger to ourselves not of the system but of course we're a big bank and hopefully we have a lot of connections. in order to try to sixteen it immediately became clear how small the step from risky to dangerous really is on the sixteenth of september the wall street journal published a sensational story the american department of justice was demanding don't your bank pay several billion dollars because of irresponsible mortgage lending practices suddenly the most connected bank in the world seemed in real danger. it was an interesting day we were all in milan for a management board meeting that we had to think very quickly about how to respond if it was to be expected that this figure would cause shock waves in the media and on the markets which it did. good in and made in one in mackinaw said alcatel and
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that. yvonne's if we were certain that the fold scene billion wasn't correct but we will also certain that we'd get a strong kline's response as a result that was a worry as the problem is that you can get a problem from people expecting that to be a problem and a sort of on the side problem called. junk crime the c.e.o. had just been in office for a good year he was brought in to clean up a bank that was already suffering some reputational damage he was taking completely by surprise by the announcement in september. i have to say my initial reaction was a bit one of irritation. not least because the communication of that number would inevitably be misleading and that's because we had no intention of paying that amount and we said so i think with some force on the evening on which we we found
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that it had been made public as soon as the fine of billions of dollars had been announced the hedge funds struck they didn't just sell deutsche bank shares on mass they also talked loudly about it share prices fell and that's exactly what the hedge funds were banking on so what you saw that that lingering uncertainty did cause some of the clients of the bank to to think about their positions at the bank and whether they wanted to maintain those positions and so within a couple of weeks i think it was around september twenty ninth we reported bloomberg reported that some hedge funds very very small portion of some ten hedge funds out of eight hundred plus customers how to indeed shifted some of their balances some of the cast cash positions elsewhere amid concern about the solidity of the bank this is reminiscent of what happened two thousand and seven two thousand and eight over a period time clients pull money and it snowballs very very very quickly it has the
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potential to be exponential. the share price had been edging downwards for months after the hedge funds publicly withdrew their money for all to see the share price plummeted to a record low to act and cause the share price went down to nine the lowest rate i can remember because underneath the moves and the other one come. that meant the bank could be taken over cheaply or it could be broken up it could be propped up by the state or it could disintegrate further into bankruptcy. the chancellor tried to exude an air of calm but in doing so just showed how serious the matter really was. surgeon mark macdonald i want to say about deutsche bank is that deutsche bank is part of the german banking and financial system that we would like all businesses even if there are temporary difficult his to develop
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positively i mean why was she so nervous don't you bank is at the heart of the financial system closely networked vajra vast number of deals what would happen if it went bankrupt we asked banking expert professor hunt's pay to book off. dodge a bank is essential to germany we have to save it that could cost the taxpayer money that means europe would have less money in a really bitter situation that could mean that the german and the european taxpayer would in directly pay the fine to the americans. left alone can you take a dutch about that sixty votes to push. things became hectic in winter twenty sixteen khalfan war was to negotiate the fourteen billion dollars down to an acceptable level the clock was ticking the matter was supposed to be off the table by the end of the year. as it's now you're sitting in
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a room in the department of justice in brooklyn in a normal meeting room on its own. and both sides present the matter from their point of view of the dinner went to not opinions differ and so you make office and account of office over the course of days and weeks or mental institution on the board ongoing on the board all those. negotiations cost money and trust the longer they take the more of buffalo lost. to the hollands of course we knew we'd have clients who would react to that with extreme irritation and we've done a lot to prepare ourselves as well and when you have such to be learned you always risk losing client money all the clients will say that if they have business in mind they'll put it off and come back later when everything's over and often in the for income don't be dumb enough for bias. coming down clients colleagues and
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shareholders imparting confidence around the world twenty four seven nothing was more important losing trust means losing money twenty thirty million month after month the bank had to put a stop to that but hell. come on in a bank can you trust a bank that's been landed with such a big fine the whole institution could be at risk even if there's not much of substance behind it banks live on trust of. the banks reputation was badly hit the only solution was to look ahead to the new management decided on a policy of openness bank spokes person judge i can doff invited us to participate in a conference for senior managers. if we behaved more way and all of you know that you can fix things or so time and. you can
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do something what you know you cannot try to be some people you have to live what you want to be but what do they want to be open incredible that's why we're allowed to film but the spokes person also reveals a fear of too much openness you'll see exactly what we want to show you the bank's own self-confidence has taken a knock and see if we exact up was when you told people in the past you worked at deutsche bank there was no further comment as it was a first class address from a reputational standpoint that was one of the reasons why i chose my job because it stood for solid training that uncle if you had the chance or a good fortune to train a dog a bank it was a great way to get your career going about us in poland she going to school food yes the fifth of december twenty sixth seen speculation about the fate of don chipp bank had now been ongoing for almost three months the united states was still demanding fourteen billion dollars the international business press was invited to the dutch a bank's guest villa the address of past glories for
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a confidential background briefing. if the journalists trusted dacha bank a little bit more after this evening it would be a big step forward. it was a tense period and i personally wanted to take some only. ship of the situation was a very important situation for the bank and we wanted to clarify the matter as soon as possible but of course in those negotiations you never controlled the timetable and it took a little longer than we would have liked it lasted much longer than expected and the discussions were wide ranging what would happen with the fourteen billion pound the bank intend to make money again in the future without profits the bank would still be a risk and dangerous to the whole banking system c.e.o. john cryan in the middle flanked by the co-heads of investment in private banking they are the crown prince is one of them will probably replace crying at the head of the table after the cleanup operation is finished if everything goes well.
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private banking boss christian saving tells matty as book one of the seven german regional buses to talk to his clients personally and calm them down tell the people out there that will make it will get through this fourteen billion just as we've survived all the other crises in a hundred and forty seven year history. scott target and there were days and even weeks when i had twenty meetings a days because the clients wanted to find out for themselves what was going on at the bank do you have to tell clients that the bank remains strong and stable at the same time you have employees who are worried you larceny comes from the news or mom but it wasn't just clients who were involved hundreds of branches were two hundred
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and eighty eight were closed down five hundred were left tens of thousands of employees were worried about their jobs. bank actually has a different background it is traditionally sent to the german business world. think germany is a perfect example of a country that did extremely well. with a very let's say conservative approach to finance focused on the customer focused on the corporate sector and so on. you never bill you did not build the modern german economy on the basis of speculative financial activity. some other countries such as the united states had more of a tradition let's say in that kind of speculation you did not praise from a former i.m.f. economist no less but for a long time don't your bank was embarrassed about his german business. original book is on his way to meet
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a client the give them packaging company. in western germany. the king is a shining example of germany's small and medium sized businesses or s emmy's it has factories across europe and most recently in canada. the boss is certain with its course plastic packaging america needs german yogurt pot technology. i think we have some clients but i don't want to have people in north america who i can talk to about a new customer base and even new contacts who neuer contempt but that's an easy call for the international dacha bank from the days of american talk with luggage in touch with colleagues in new york we have research analysts for the food industry and i can put you in touch with covers of amman can talk to your stone from bag to wall street and international network.
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william schmitz works for dontcha bank and he's happy to be of assistance. oh yes absolutely you know what i'll do is like that when i get back to my desk you know post some data on some of the volume trends in the u.s. and other food and beverage side you know look at some of the trends in the u.s. food retail environment. the german yogurt part goes to america that too is one investment banking is about. investment banks as a company businesses and states as they conduct their deals or if they want to sell shares or bonds they advise companies when they float on the stock markets and during merges and they juggle stocks foreign currencies and financial products of all kinds investment bankers are the ones who make that really big money for their
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institutions. such as banks investment bankers dreamed big and went to the homeland of capitalism the united states brought back some really big risks the deals scared the i.m.f. and caused the american justice department to spring into action they decided in one thousand nine hundred five more or less that they wanted to radically transform themselves and shift from being what i would. described as a somewhat stodgy conservative european commercial banks basically lend to heavy industry to a new high powered high respect they would engage in investment banking to ruthless trading and do securitizations. required a talent and ability but they did not help. you get in there so often when you see i remember we went to
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a university campus to attract students to work for deutsche bank but few showed up here the nikkei the column. so they bought in the case of deutsche bank they bought. bankers trust to get into the investment banking business in this country. bank after bankers trust hundreds came because we were suddenly part of america america's. best investment banking in. investment banking in the united states says change from being about underwriting and giving advice to being about frya treat trading him issuance but the shift. has meant taking on an increasing amount of risk. if it's made. him a mere haziq. proprietary trading
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means trading on one's own account and it fueled a gambling instinct banks lend to each other money on particularly favorable terms it became possible to trade in stocks currencies gold and derivatives to an extent that had never been seen before or for the profits of the banks and the bankers who took home huge commissions bought proprietary trading can go wrong too. all that mattered back then was taking part in the game the bills came in years later they cost billions in cash and the equivalent in trust. and should jane was one of the first to get involved it was right at the heart of it he was rewarded by being made c.e.o. of dogshit bank. and shoes ami had conquered don't you bank from london the future seem to belong to it under its leadership the bank made huge profits for years the higher the risk the higher the potential return quick money
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for tough guys who like to gamble. some firms view themselves as sort of swashbuckling wild west cowboys. who are going to take crazy risks. because they know that they'll make money. bank paid something like sixty five billion euros in incentive bonuses to their staff over the period from one thousand nine hundred far more that's an extraordinary amount of money and you got people getting as much as one hundred million or more in bonuses in a given year and they were incentivized to take extraordinary risk and that
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produces a problem or a risk and sooner or later something goes wrong and went wrong in a big way for dorchin. they couldn't quite control what they set in motion. by may twenty fifteen and shoot jang couldn't keep going shortly after the a.g.m. it was over for him. i think proprietary trading led to excessive risks in the banks and we really don't have to repeat not or something like that were to happen again i don't know what the banking sector would look like afterwards if there was even be one left it's i could imagine banks being nationalized but i don't think that would bring about an improved just for. the bank also promised to clean up its act in derivatives trading a risky business closely connected to the crisis. when you buy derivatives your gambling on future outcomes if you think that
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a currency or a commodity oil or signs of pork will be worth more in a few months you buy a derivative for this product if you sell the derivative as soon as it's worth more you're in luck and you've made money. in times of economic growth when the innovation is happening other kinds of people are attracted to vacuum. and they may they may be at risk lovers. if i want some excitement in their lives and they sure got it derivatives in the united states triggered the global banking crisis and ultimately threaten dacha bank with the billion dollar fine so what actually happened. don't you bank and others had packaged and sold mortgages in deliver to us without telling investors that those mortgages were as they say sub prime in other words there was
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a high risk of default. that acquired mortgages many of which were faulty they obviously knew that a lot of them were faulty they continued to pack of them up into mortgage backed securities and sell them off around the world as investment and that wasn't all employees it don't your bank even gambled on their own shares falling in other words on their own clients losing money this sort of excessive risk taking is now frowned upon at least if we're to believe the many compliance officers risk managers and regulators in the bank they're under the supervision of this woman who used to work as director of financial stability at bank to force banking in may we go back to a kind of boring activity and and that's fine i would charge as i mentioned on your knees too to manage risk for all other people. read to people we need we we are there to manage their risk which means that it might be not
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always very fancy but that something that in fact gives you a value added for the global economy as a whole and so that's something that may be looked as boring but i think it's something that is useful for the economy and that should be rewarded shortly before christmas twenty sixteen the size of the fine don't your bank would really have to pay for selling mortgage backed securities became clear don't you bank was able to talk the justice department down from fourteen to seven point two billion dollars. so you say to me is this a good deal for georgia bank it's an incredible deal for do it your bank they take seven billion of their shareholders money they give it to the justice department who extorts them and basically rules on whether or not they can do business in this country and the whole thing goes away. the american state would only get three point one billion dollars directly the remaining four point one billion will be offered to clients who'd lost money the bank was obliged to cancel the debts of
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homeowners who defaulted and support communities harmed by the crisis. but. the biggest case was almost off the table but it was just one of eight thousand those who work in the department of justice won't have to worry about their jobs just yet dodge a bank is like a major law firm with a banking license. there's this unfortunate number of eight thousand legal cases it's not always a bit misleading because if you look more closely the cases that are really significant or relevant are no more than twenty the significance and eleven. these twenty account for ninety percent of our provisions for legal disputes and on
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the books that long for it. that means the seven thousand and some other cases result from our day to day business and aren't in any way on the usual. shift what does is going to give you these things that may or may not be so we'd like to check that and compare the stats with those of other banks but other banks don't publish the number of their lawsuits dacha bank even publishes its fines. over the past five years it has had to pay out fifteen billion euros. and very disappointing when colleagues have behaved in that manner. and what we need to do is obviously learn from those mistakes and ensure that to the maximum extent possible we don't allow them to recover. that's why internal controls have been improved. here at the brand new risk center in berlin six
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hundred fifty scientists and traders calculate everything that could go wrong from acts of god. to bad speculations. we are thanking ellington called horse fishing in the field of coal mines i mean is trying to make sure that you comply with what you should comply with which is not any hose and regulation which is a ballerina but also at the end the company would like to comply with honor so what society yet at noche would expect banks to go play with. that all sounds good but what does it look like in practice there have been more new cases under the new management russian clients were allowed to launder ten billion dollars of dirty money through georgia bank and last year the bank still didn't have its huge derivatives business in the united states under control so the regulatory authority
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sent a watchdog he can do what he wants and the bank has to pay him british regulators are critical of the supervisory board. the all thora he considers the making of such statements by don't you bank to being reckless the seniority of the individuals dealing with them responsible for this issue is particularly concerning . we can read in the company report the level of funds they're still expecting here . don't you bank started the year twenty seventeen with seven point six billion euros set aside for the litigation risks and fines that's more than in the entire previous history of the bank. the bank paid millions in fines and claims it doesn't do deals like that anymore but what derivatives skeletons are still in the closet it's impossible to tell from the outside how dangerous this risk is all that's known is the value of don't you banks to rivet if told phobia.
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cannot. the stand up the figures you read big enough to be taken really seriously but you're not exactly scared but these are signs will sometimes or from. you surely don't believe that these positions would still be tolerated in today's world and in today's regulatory environment if they weren't properly secured and seen as stable and play hand up because he had the option of b. because in both believe we'd like to know with almost five hundred billion euros in derivatives we'd like to know how much risk they entail checks have to be constant and comprehensive the chairman of the supervisory board assures us they are we can't test that. after all it was this enormous
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deliberative portfolio that led to the i.m.f. declaring don't you bank the biggest source of risk. in american banks are not really comparable but even among european banks don't bank has the most derivatives on its balance sheet thirty percent of its total assets. in february twenty seventh seen john cry and went to the world economic forum in davos in switzerland it should have been a slightly less fraught environment but everyone there knew that the fourteen billion dollar threat was just one of many dangers hanging over him. as the global company that can endanger the rest of the money delete don't your bank is still far from being over the hump there's the risky big derivatives portfolio and in addition the bank is ending too little and spending too much.
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how can a bank spend more. and it makes the board is accountable to this man. lightner head of dacha bank supervisory board hired them all. a month do you sometimes feel there's still a lack of cost awareness in the bank yes. bank needs to be overhauled reducing costs almost always means cutting staff and that's an expense in itself. golden handshakes cost money but regain trust and security. risk isn't that why on earth if we're cutting sixteen thousand staff around the world four thousand of them in germany
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the us and the hip these are big numbers and they're not nice but that's what's needed to make the bank more profitable again. so how does don't you bank want to do new business we've still not heard a convincing answer to that question john cryan is making cutbacks and savings at the same time as investing billions just to keep the place going. computer systems are an example they were set up in the sixty's new technology has been added over the years but it's not compatible with the old technology don't you bank currently has thirty eight different operating systems. minus ms and skipped into it as far as i know no other large german bank has such an outdated system and i'm skating in and out. globally dodge a bank second biggest location is india ten thousand indians have been doing manually want electronic systems can't do through automation. that's now to be
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phased out billions are being invested in computer systems while the bank has a general hiring freeze two departments are exempt compliance and i.t. . they're urgently needed in the derivative business in america for example computer failure nearly caused a total collapse in twenty six doing but in spite of urgent warnings by the supervisory board the computers weren't repaired. unfortunately looks like torture burnt did not have adequate recordkeeping so they went for. the weeks after an outage in two thousand and sixteen without knowing what their positions are or if you don't know what your positions are you could have an open artery and you could lose an awful lot of blood or be dead before you discover what your position really
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is that's not at all good for reestablishing trust in investment banking is big money at least being made here or just solid but rather boring retail banking actually bring in more. once you take into account all the bad deals investment banking made a loss of eight hundred eighty million euros last year while private clients generated a profit of six hundred and ten million euro's. if we're to believe the bank its investment banking sector has been overhauled that's the anyway don't you bank can remain a major player in the financial industry and play with the big boys. but which of the two crown prince is marcus shank and christians a ving stands the better chance of becoming john prine successor one day is also clear self-confident head of investment banking.
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we booted the bowls back out of the penalty box and emerged from last year with a no score draw and that wasn't an easy year but at some point we've got to win the game we have to get into the opposing sides home often score a goal. a no score draw but the competition is forged ahead even the small comments bank is more profitable now don chipp bank who's the only one to make a loss again in twenty sixteen. we want to know how at risk deutsche bank really is and how dangerous in mid may the shareholders held at a g.m. . car fund or the. chief legal officer is visibly more relaxed than half a year ago. and the shareholders are also in a better mood than they were just a few months back anything was on the cards back then even a bailout with taxpayers' money that's all in the past now compared to past crisis
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meetings the twelve hour meeting is a walk in the park. the riskiest bank in the world is no longer the most dangerous the bankers have become significantly more modest he's been after almost two years as c.e.o. i'm convinced it's not going to bang contributes greatly to the well being of our clients and society as a whole. again but that's hardly recognized anymore nor looked at comic as in. the man in charge is making an effort and has learned german even though dontcha bank itself is becoming less and less german a chinese billionaire the ruling family from qatar and an american fund are all major shareholders they want to see profits again banking means good risk management if the bank risks too little it doesn't make money if it risks too much it goes bust if it gets into bed with the wrong people it loses trust and money.
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real estate mogul donald trump was a major client of deutsche bank but then there was a spat and their business relationship folded. the private bankers got trumped back along with his family and son in law lawmakers in america are now asking what a don't shit bank and our president up to. donald trump is in the process of relaxing strict banking regulations in february twenty seventeen he signed an order to the secretary of the treasury the tough controls introduced after the financial crisis should be relaxed as quickly as possible. they need each other. i'm talking about in the pre presidential era they need each other because donald trump was couldn't get financing from other wall street firms and he's the kind of client that deutsche bank in this country ends up with because they can't
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crack the top tier of clients and so it's sort of a symbiotic relationship that the two developed over time. it's a difficult balance between making money again on the one hand and not messing up on the other. if that your bank can't achieve this balance things will remain difficult. it's all about good business and trust. defy a good deal because they actually i think the question of social acceptance is the main risk for deutsche bank but then his aunts and healing yes i dare say as there if we don't manage to get broad swathes of the population in the media and politicians to understand that it's an important requirement for the success of the german economy to have a globally competitive capital market oriented financial institution and to support
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it publicly and then we won't be successful in the long term that's dumb down the line for us technique to put it we have to do a lot on to achieve that and whether we'll manage it it's a skill remains to be seen as an. but that's the main risk we have is failing on a day i think to don's but off the coast as close to as good as fuck. if you're plausible you'll be accepted it's all about trust but also about the figures and deals what's ultimately decisive is the deals the bank does i'm the ones it doesn't. so what did the bank spokes person say again you can face the. time issue. you can't do something what you know you can't find to be so off list what you want to be.
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i'm a mother like two billion other mothers around the world i have one wish the best for my child. in this is silly season in which breastfeeding is often frowned upon and on its will for me to abound with profits is more important than my babies will be how do i know how to make the right decision. milk. fifteen minutes on d.
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don't. they know me like. they know what police think. and soon they'll even know how we feel. i'm not a real person i'm still just a piece of. scientists around the world working to measure our emotions. so hopefully i can be a helpful piece assaulting. a virtual person as a therapist or a robotic as a teacher neither would have human empathy what does a machine need to do to create empathy and a medical context what i disclose more information to a person or to a computer in this case. a few dozen feelings of the instruments that steer us and whoever can control these feelings has great power over us by the composite of the rhythms instead of feelings measuring emotion starting december sixteenth on t w.
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this is d.w. news live from berlin and israel's prime minister prepares for a tough talks with european leaders after calling them hypocrites for their response to a wave of unrest in the middle east benjamin netanyahu is meeting french president of monel micron in paris on his first trip abroad since trump's controversial decision to recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel also coming up on human rights day we go to good ganda to see how peace activists are helping victims of
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the devastating civil conflict there. plus the best that cinema in europe has to offer this year have become a bit repetitive here the square of. a dark swedish comedy wins big at the european cold war and that brings all the highlights from europe's answer to the outskirts. welcome to the program on the area evanston is good to have you with us. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has started his visit to europe where he's meeting french president among a large crowd in paris and e.u. foreign ministers in brussels netanyahu is visit is being overshadowed by a wave of violence in the wake of u.s. president donald trump's decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital in
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lebanon a protest outside the u.s. embassy in beirut turned violent security forces fired tear gas and water cannons crowds the lebanese government has condemned trump's decision calling the move a threat to regional stability other what western powers agrees saying the move could jeopardize the middle east peace process but netanyahu has praised decision and accused european leaders of hypocrisy in their response so what kind of reception is he likely getting in paris i put that question to our middle east correspondent tanya kramer well we understand that this trip had long been planned to meet the french president and also to meet the e.u. foreign ministers on monday and we understand that mr netanyahu was supposed to talk more about iran and the nuclear deal but now we expect some frank discussions about the two slim crisis which is no diplomatic crisis this was because we heard
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mr netanyahu speaking before leaving you just heard it in the report he accused the e.u. leaders of applying a double standard saying that they're criticizing the recognition of the competition off by the u.s. president and not criticizing the use of rockets and hamas is firing rockets to israel so we are expecting some frank talk there maybe also some tense discussion we have to wait and see when he meets the e.u. foreign leaders but we also expect you know we want to see what that you foreign leaders have to say to him and good role they're going to take on in this process. well there was also an emergency meeting of the arab league yesterday and they issued a statement calling on president trump to reverse his recognition of jerusalem as israel's capital but is this declaration going to have any impact while this is still to see i mean it was expected that the arab league. condemnation we heard that from old most of the arab countries shortly after this
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decision by mr trump but also you have to know i mean the arab league has always issued statements but they haven't been really not implicated in the israeli palestinian conflict i mean for decades to have issued statements but they have no plan of action and i think also you have to take into consideration that all of these countries have to own strategic interests so it's good to see whether this will be followed by any action taken by the arab league and by the arab states themselves well today we've seen protests in gaza also outside the u.s. embassy in lebannon tiny can you tell us quickly what is the security situation like in israel itself. while the situation especially in jerusalem where we are looking at has been quite calm but there has been an attack today stopping attack in a very busy area of jerusalem at the bus central bus station it seems that a young palestinian attacked a security guard there with
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a knife the victim is said to be in critical condition though the police said they're thinking that this is a stabbing attack but they're still looking for the motive so this could be something that the security forces have feared that the violence will spill over that you might see some of these what they call attacks by young palestinians who are so angry about this decision and just go out and carrying out these attacks. tanya kramer reporting for us from jerusalem thanks for that update. now the winners of the twenty seventeen nobel peace prize have been presented with their award at a ceremony and all slow the group i can was recognized for its work towards banning nuclear weapons the group's director of beatrice finn warned a single moment of panic could lead to widespread death and destruction she also expressed concern over recent tensions on the korean peninsula. and today is human rights day which commemorates the signing of the united nations
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universal declaration of human rights in one nine hundred forty eight but nearly seventy years later human rights are far from universal in our next report we meet a group of rights activists in uganda they're helping victims of the conflict between the government and the militant religious cult. st joseph's hospital in northern uganda here some two hundred patients are receiving treatment of the wounds they sustained during the lord's resistance army insurgency millions were massacred mutilated tortured in sleeves and raped in the conflict between the l r a and government troops victor archon and his organization african management of network provide support for victims who until now have never seen a doctor. because i have no problem with forgiving those who injured me as long as i'm healed it depends on my ability to become normal again but defines whether or
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not i can forgive. omar james will walk again victor uses these success stories to convince the un and the european union to fund his project. make peace tangible people suffer justice and that's why we say people physically. it will hop into space for its twenty. minute stories. in february two thousand and four troops stormed the victors hometown and massacred hundreds of people many were abducted including victor's older brother omar jeffery. here at the memorial site the people of commemorate those who were lost.
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the contrast lost just too much the debris dip. in the country needs. a prospect for national reconciliation. in twenty fifteen victor was nominated for the nobel peace prize since then he's turned down prestigious job offers abroad because he knows that you gun those wounds are still a long way from being healed. now to some of the other stories making news around the world and at least one person has died trying to escape huge wildfires raging through southern california around two hundred thousand people have been forced to flee their homes the winds that have been fanning the flames are finally starting to ease but firefighters say the danger is still extreme. police say three people have been arrested in connection with an attempted arson attack on a synagogue in sweden second largest city goes on berg no one was injured the
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incident took place after protests in stockholm in malmo against u.s. president on trump's decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital celebrities from galaxies near and far at the red carpet in los angeles on saturday for the world premiere of the latest star wars movie the last jet i opens in u.s. theaters on friday no formal reviews have been released yet but lucky ticket holders say the film more than lives up to the hype and dark swedish comedy has scooped the biggest prizes at the european film awards the square is a searing satire of contemporary society it already won the top prize at the cannes film festival and has been nominated for an academy award last night's glittering ceremony here in berlin puts it one step closer to winning that oscar. it
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can become a we could become a bitter repetitive the square. swedish comedy vásquez sweeps for night scooping six prizes including the most prestigious view was the best film the cast and crew chose to skip fair thank you speech and express their joy in a different way to get to know we have to do is pretty good right. so let's do the countdown happy scream three a one. i. wonder if a square is a light hearted look at the hypocrisy of modern society has sent us on the trials and tribulations of christy and for curator of an art museum in stockholm. kristin drives an electric car and say's overwrites sings about poverty and world peace invest film his high minded idea was a put to the test and have sex like. now how often rich people treat women
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they don't know very well and have sex with them. you know their names. yeah yeah. always oh yeah yeah so when i make. things go from bad to worse in another on forgettable scene a performance artist goes a that's a posh fund raising dinner. the best film of the european film awards often goes on to win the academy awards and in fact addition holds up direct to rebrand could be picking up another prize the oscar for best foreign language film.
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all rights to the sports news now and bundesliga club dortmund has fired their coach and hired former cologne coach peter schrager he replaces paid a bush whose dortmund side hadn't won a good as like a match in the last eight tries last season the help cologne to houston a successful season that saw the club rise in the standings to fifth place but just last week he was fired as cologne couldn't find its way out of last place in the league. most. after i left cologne i didn't have my eyes set on george mitchell but this is it's just as surprising for me as it is for the rest of you. i watched dortmund like i did other opponents how they played the game like when they were in the champions league. while the writing was on the wall and dortmund at half time of saturday's match up with braman peter
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bhatia side had picked up only three points in the bundesliga in the past two months. dortmund are again far too passive and were pushed up to twenty six minutes with maximilian eg a star and giving brave in the lead. it was a superb effort which led dortmund keep a woman becky well beaten dortmund failed to muster a single shot on goal in the first half farms and clip bosses were livid. they finally equalized on fifty seven minutes with pm rick obama and credited with the goal is to get on strike it did get the final touch it makes him the bonus league as a record african scorer with ninety seven goals. braman a made of sterner stuff these days and just eight minutes later they were ahead again tago gary selassie making it to one then to braman celebrate their first away win of the campaign bush failed to get the win he needed to guarantee his job.
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and a couple of teams that have climbed their way past dortmund in the standings are glad and shelter the two teams squared off in saturday's tightest match up through. the host started the match in control after twenty two minutes christophe chroma coasted into the back post on mox one nil. after the break went for a second. but this time greater was the noid by ralph. shall cut took advantage thanks to a bit of luck yannick best turning into a new colored jury's cross from the wing. and go one one surprisingly shoka took control after the equaliser. missed the mark here. and then failed to find a white pass yond sama. it stayed one one affair results in the end. and
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a quick reminder now of our top story. demonstrators in the gaza strip have set fire to images of u.s. president tom tromp and israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is the latest protest over trump decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital. you have to date now in detail for you news thanks for watching. crime fighters the new season of radio crime thrillers based. investigative cases that will keep you on your toes. great fighters stories at the best idea ever so every young person needs to listen to crime fighters and share tell a friend tell a friend tell a friend. crime fighters don't miss it. i
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must. get back at harvey the. thought.
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that my. phone beeped to let me. know sort of the boat by far you know stuff will sink up. in a spot the iraqi army for. fracking was actually small manpreet we seem to be seen to benefit cattle side would be. to. push the i was this medicine back to and my fourth and fifth that our last one was the before that unless it. is for alice sea air and when you.
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want it to be and when to get it back. and why whiskey yes faintly. from the very beginning of life the mom and the baby should be together. they should have a strong foundation built their confidence their capacity and power. to feed the future or be their enormous wealth we've just got even and it is not only food but it's also medicine because breastfeeding. and be always hope that they will give what is that even a power of their resources it should not be the corporate greed that should feed
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the future or but it should be the mothers. look at this morning if you over chad except maybe. what fun in the woods when that was a child out of the joy they have when day children able to grow strong and they have lived. in detroit chad as life with all the benefits benefits we cannot deny this child benefits us a country of the what we must protect. me
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. that i be sowing the. fires last so he too are left. with buddha sam pretty own need to but i'm lawyer. for ya. mystifies ac that out by the back. is a two on. the you one at the. iraqis out they as up in the back . by. a alleys only two.
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of them a leg a get a bag i know that. i'm oh yeah and i'm a better noncommittal in a why but by may mean i mean i'm. mr hugh. is the bug has. been former delta corp of the moment the male female. specially made the engine of us want to do a festival that may have been made. it was listened to good q two good for. substance from two where limited any d.c. train if you don't. have damage of animosity and if you don't see a problem to do it set up problems that you need up there sean keep us from office if it don't. come before melanie man. said fam to invest and back to cure the disease but if you missed while the film these
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two. levels of peace acknowledged multiple to measure could see yet more interest from the vessel. and you can see i was able to. gel it into the time he came to me off on any surely to be. sitting on the form assumedly but. i decided beforehand that i was going to bottle feed for a number of reasons why i had to breastfeed. actually when i was twenty three and i was told at the time that i may not be able to breastfeed and i knew that at the time i had known that since and that's always kind of it's always been in my head so maybe i have adjusted my shots a long time ago and i just always knew that was what my experience was going to be i did a lot of research before i made my decision i did read about the benefits of breast
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feeding when i weighed the benefits versus some other downfalls it was still a decision i felt confident about for my family. so this push on to reality i'm fit she's going off to save the many with his. charity to do something to you what are you going to please them americans they are not people who are new when the angle on the. imports from the debate is from going to get more nuance you need to get the bad you to do to them know. what they want. to be an actress you could. really be. sure would be more appreciated isn't he.
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in the plan is if you keep your cycle j.d. to continue. to cut home maybe more home cooked meat off the registry key to see the. every child has a right to basically your traditional nutrition is a gift that every government must give could be actually underfoot. prevention is that better than a cure it is also a cheap. look at the long term benefit this is a life long and this we cannot deny our children. since one nine
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hundred forty eight when beecher was established a number of deaths in the world of being dramatically reduced. as been a bit of a shift in the type of deaths that we see now. we have seen a reduction of that's due to infectious diseases but now we see more deaths from chronic this is a lot of the children under five don't make it. there are many ways to stop this epidemic. one of them is really think good nutrition from very early life. could you titian starts with early need of breastfeeding. breastfeeding should be initiated in the first hour of life. there will be introduced this fad of
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mortality. in terms of money proportions but. many countries now a struggle to which i go to visit. many countries. are struggling with their bit is at the very end it is. than ever before in history and look at the. why because they have never predicted this fifty. doctors health workers do not get good training in you should and particularly in for nutrition that's something which is missing in the medical treatment is not receiving the rat attention and we would need to have better trained health workers. they studied medicine but they have never studied fully the first they give you money with the best feeding they were not thought about there is
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a formula. about health expressed if you are working. there is the lack of support from the obstetricians a lack of education on the nurses part and the doctors' parts in the hospital after the birth. and what often determines what they have problems is how many interventions we have during labor and birth which cause problems with breastfeeding and then when they run into all these problems sore nipples the baby doesn't think the breast to be getting enough milk from the breast the baby's got collagen the answer to everything is just give the baby formula. and it's not surprising how many mothers have difficulty with breastfeeding there are clinics in many cities helping others the problem with some of these clinics is that there's a wide variety of people in the breastfeeding clinics some of them have just the
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very basics and they don't know how to deal with difficult problems. something that's so critical to a newborn's very survival feeding we are not trained to know anything about it it's across the board anybody dealing with the breastfeeding mother we are all under educated in this area we say and do and talk about things that are not evidence based. in the end we destroy mothers and their breastfeeding. we undermine them we disempower them. really we should trust the mother's body to know what to do with birth should trust that it's going to go well for the most part. however when the baby comes out all of a sudden we don't trust the mother's body anymore now we must overregulated we must
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put it into rules we must say oh no no no you must follow these rules you must do it this way whatever happened to the trusting of the body. only back to. back you know. from a sandwich. as you can last see. that these are all back to the receiver. and i'm actually as a finds out there i'm actually quite one of them. and who figured there so i don't want. to or i didn't know who. it was so yeah by the clock i saw. it's.
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oh with my first two word natural on your birthday she was actually a week late and they wanted to do so i said no more than away finally i started having some contractions amazing let's go and there were a lot of women are waiting in the tree before they sent us to her and delivery and then a doctor came in and said do you want to get up there trask and i said well i don't know sure and she said well if i break your water then they're going to send you up there but just don't tell any of the doctors that i broke your water and it didn't break naturally. so she stuck her hand in to her now borrow her hand to her elbow and with her nail broke the water. tanks and now my waters broke down and all of
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a sudden i have people coming to me with concert in madison feeling me i had about twenty people and a little around. and my husband like whether or not they said to my husband the same urgency section she's got about a minute to live before we take her own she's not her heart rate is zero they take the baby out i had my eyes closed i didn't even know about six hours passed and i was finally able to hold her for the first time. what i found out later was that by breaking my water early she went into the birth canal but there was no water left and she got stuck in her heart rate stopped. it's all because they wanted to. move everybody merely a little things a lot quicker than i would let nature take its course. because you can't necessarily badly you do studio. the introduced been found since of the batman magic you ask people will be in you for months i want to prove so now for my you
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soon as you can see here looks to be to do battle in time we end up. paying my space so. my old kalamata. shallow mom when we spray some of us sixteen baggage on a camel just get back to our family and need to get. home and then we want to put the bad things sometimes one should confess back to the room and the kids when she. was home or back to the sociopaths. most shy moms i was in the business with me and. so these are guests that i received in the mail from the formula companies.
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nestle and from you know and i actually know my friends have received things from the mark i have not. bottles and formula. and coupons i received a diaper bag from nestle as well. them to me i was not expecting and actually arrived after the baby was born and i'm not too sure exactly where they got my information from i think it might have been from the hospital because this is the brand that the hospital uses. even i have the measuring tape that they use to do wonders measurements on a right after he was born with a mark and it's actually branded and female from the hospital so. and
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this bottle i know came from my prenatal classes at hospitals while they had them in a basket for everybody to pick up at the beginning of the class. in the one nine hundred seventy s. it was so tragic for mothers who thought they were doing the best for their babies and to leave this corrent just consequences and they believe the billboards and the advertising and receive these three samples and to end up with a dead baby and have to carry their dead baby home in a car that just broke my heart.
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many yes they go mint has faced the challenge of child mortality. but when you came to issues of now legislating the international order of breast milk substitutes it was a you know all and tedious process. it requires an advocate because they're why i lot of vested interest from the private sector. and the was very. extremely resistant kenya had that very unique situation we had a public have anthony titian ministry which was staggered with preventive actions to what reduction of child and what. when you look at they have a budget i hear
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a chunk of this is spent on corrective services. what is it that we have treaty what is it that we have cooties maybe of the disease that. is the only preventable we quoted that is clues of breastfeeding actually contribute to that bus than to be duction in funding what i think. there are governments globally that have done very good work in addressing the marketing and have legislated how companies are permitted to market the product enable their product in their jurisdictions never the less there are other countries particularly producer countries such as the us canada some of the
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european countries where the products are being produced and where there is a very strong lobby to protect the industry from these types of marketing regulations because of course that would impede their ability to label and promote as they see fit. it's a huge industry they are lobbying for hospitals to give out their gift packages and information and to doctors to recommend their products they're not getting a gift basket with a breast pump or with supportive advice on how to breastfeed again and on how to get on the formula the world health organization came up with guidelines that were adopted by many countries and many countries implemented it but the united states did not. marketing is a huge business our great country and i believe there is an economic incentive to discourage women from breastfeeding but whole industry makes a lot of money off of having packaged milk as opposed to breast feeding in the
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governmental policies supported their economic interests not the health interests of the mother and the child. the philippines imports five hundred million u.s. dollars yearly a baby milk product. and the meat company says here in the philippines every year they rate one billion dollars. every year and comes from the pocket of the poor women who have more children. it's a big issue it's marketing by the milk company of just one product imported products but glamorize to advertising they will be the policy shuns to endorse the product through television through radio magazines billboards even through text messages there yes no mercy advertising of milk
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products they entice the government officials they entice the lawmakers to break the law and weaken the milk. i think there's this misconception that somehow nestle has reformed and the other companies have pulled up their socks and become responsible but it really look at the statistics that are being put out by end of seven by the w.h.o. it's still huge is still well over a million deaths related to not breastfeeding globally every year and when we think of how many years this is growing and how many years the international code of marketing of breast milk substitutes has been in place through the one nine hundred eighty one and when appropriate marketing still continues and we still. drago trying to implement these provisions to protect breastfeeding and then you add up all the years and all the debts it should i think in any other context that many
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children died i think we'd all be horrified and outraged we'd want to do all we can and yet year after year we see the infant formula companies continuing their inappropriate marketing. and i'm not going to butting in the money how do you know you guys who will do some very. well you know no one was there oh my do not remember men that.
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may remember that their bread in the well up and some of the better for me even darkness. i learned by nailing their bread i don't. shop but i will. be ok. in bare bread. this is their brand you can drink this at it as it is male drink this is the milk that they bought because this is the cheapest one but unfortunately if he says here that this male drink is not suitable for him fine feeding. and he's not. also this male they also put this in coffee. shops like coffee creamer.
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there is so much misinformation going on on television on the radio there is. formula milk everywhere so a lot of mothers think that for new love milk and and breast milk are are just the same. this is an even formula but they don't have the this thing shun between formulary because it's white fungus it's whites it's this thing. so i'm dying to know the problem moved in from formula flooding into emotions is that still happening it's to how he was a big emergencies this ignited cover and yes the philippines has been here so many times you know how to get over of emergencies and yet again it was devastation you know everything was destroyed houses anyone's ability to cook shows you have the fundamentals which is why you guys.
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the be. the best in emergency response and it was a call for donations yes many of the humanitarian agencies to look around are saying no unicef w.h.o. older ada saying no we can do this these are breastfeeding occupation it's a woman thing that we don't have to bring into the place in the middle because there are we just need to support these women to breastfeed and yes there's this donor driven assistance comes in saying you need this formula and we're succumb from. the secretary of health and the secretary of social welfare. you need to play broadcast that over region to be that the nation should be given without considering the consequences of the your years of respiratory ailments and or the risks involved on the health of the
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mothers and the children. but of the above who not only had the gun in one hand and heart and then the only room in the metal bands who were people. like what i would not really but i'm a better man you got us now you believe the year no be made i mean i'm going to win yeah on how what i'm about. and what someone in the government the onion on sun. want to thank by i will be a. son and winning i'm not that and you knew that they did all. the it in a billion. dollars in new. all this effect is
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house as of getting from the new surge of incense used infant formula before the crisis is three quarters of them have received in from foreign religious in twenty four hours and to me that's marketing it's a nickel marketing and breaks my heart actually the media haven't got hold of the truth. and the channel this milk the nation through the department of social welfare all moms every mom with a baby outrightly given at the nation of. the nations with one month two months and on the third month no more donations coming through or she's left by herself in poverty she's pushed through the wall. they think this disprove that it's good it's important that it was given for free it's a good song they would rather gift that than breast feed. exam
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on their own and they wouldn't the department of health and other international agencies come together to assess there were reports that many of these that they give medical attention are formula fed and they declared that the percent of children ciro the five who were given the bed are suffering from severe malnutrition if you're going to give infant formula for a baby you've got to ensure that it will be for the rest of its feeding lunch so if done no nestle or johnson come along and say where donating formula they are responsible for seeing. to use supplied about individual drone. i think facebook was. the best sungevity remember when rick was full of that moisture limit and then a. cure listen this you need a c.
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like you got yourself a normal dentist said he was. developed small really matter and. you know to create human milk for human babies skin so in a kennel proposal mom all that is awful do need you to mess around then took a piece of metal back to the killing. don't sell this woman or you believe it was. on they did immoral while not in a market opportunity memo. a demotion we can say who some of pretty. poor twisted you live put up to be brutal. from the very start i really wanted to breast feed my b.b.
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my milk supply was not enough so i have to search for some donations somebody told me to post on human milk for human babies philippines i saw there that there are milk request in donations and many mommies called me for their milk donations. he's. got twenty five bags of meal. a breastpin hundred people b.b.'s and i'm proud to be a weapon there's everything the baby latches on my breath feel so filthy living in belike my children are still i can help them i can give them a breast milk without any question. i don't have any concerns about the health conditions of the. mothers because they think they are preparing their milk
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for their own babies so it's still see for other babies. it is the responsibility of the family the community that he should be given the use of natural resources it should not be afforded disempower specially the mothers . of these three men are the ones who are vulnerable they have no power economically and politically they should be given. the education on the latest information on how to feed their babies. the government should recognise investing a social support in aiding women for to these nurturing powers to have
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a healthy population he says the least cost most effective efficient action. i'd be. as a working mother and one who had a child while i was in the city council. i was the first woman to give birth while in office many men had fathered children but i was the first council woman to give birth while in office and i raised my daughters while i was working we are alone among three countries that don't give paid leave one is the land. and the united states of america. we know that women are working and they have to work. one of the bills that i've introduced is to give paid leave for the birth of a child for two weeks as just two weeks most people need their salary and this
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would help with the expenses of having a new child i believe as you get more women elected they will carry more of a women's agenda we are roughly twenty percent of the united states. congress we're fifty percent of the population so we get true parity you would have to elect a great deal more women. to know as a mom. that i. love my meds because that can. double every time i'm just a banker. the best against all. show messy took the five. belts to get my tooth to my contacts to be. back with them on leprosy ability that rahm. really don't. know who i got. married when. i was. there fatima.
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complete i even. close to. buying something called entire didn't value to the pop rock we talked. to a new friend from the thing is my self amy's mom. i laughed for. she wanted to be done in a strong. performer. there was don't know for. sure that it is she was with ality. and for that. i'm absolutely the exception being the mom is formula feeding when you pull
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a bottle in a circle full of moms everybody looks everyone's kind of curious and that's ok i don't know i'm a curiosity but it's something different. it didn't bother me to watch other women breastfeed or to have them breast feeding him any more than it should bother somebody that i'm bottle eating in a room and went to lunch. i did feel i was questioned for my decision which i thought was strange you know why did you choose to bottle feed i don't ask women why they choose to breastfeed i felt that i had to justify my decision i stuck to my guns on this and i know i did what was best for me in the face of a lot of opposition and i stuck to what i felt was most important and it's worked really well for us. there are some people who are stalwart. jaja mansoul like very gung ho like oh my god how dare you. people push ideas oh so busy listening to you know all these
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parenting blogs or the pediatrician or let your kids and i frog with him. so. i thought it was ok understand the reason they said there might be a man or a nervous tyldesley in this piece of flesh that they were fighting. and to side with nervous discretion. after six months of her lifestyle sitting on its sipping on milk nostril sniffing on piss trying not to buy a hit on toilet roll just then says i wonder one of these public loo feeds of friends. because i'm gay and tired of discretion and be imposed. and mommy drown drenched in the fast feet in months of her beautiful life really nervous animal quick and one in everything right. surrounded by family to last step down the house. it took me eight weeks to get the confidence to go into town now and the
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comments around me cut like a knife as i'm rushing to the point of view of the always feeling not in my eyes. because i'm given a male that's not in the book so which in the cocaine generation five pounds would stop wassim from pyramid sales pitches across our green globe and female breasts. and as there are just a sharp dumpy wade smith top shelf off a man armed and embarrassed to face a small flash of flash my offense and i'm not trying to parading i don't want to make a show but when i'm told i'll be bad just stay in a home and i'm sure the milkmaid has love for this fox all the cussing and worry and looks of disgust as another mother tons from nipples to powered up ashamed or embarrassed by comments around as a whole to head out and pull my cardio cross and she sits on the neck and made by everyone's got a thing for god's sake jesus drag. so did saddam mohammed and moses and both of their fathers can mesh and she run brigade them but darn i'm sure they would do it
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is nothing on the mother's side embarrassed on home soil it lives in a country of billboards common intake by towns where they drown in pollution and so we're told kids die and they knew that they doing in towns but pennies a save it likes weeks when they are paying for one thing that's always been free so no more when i sit on these cold toilet it no matter how embarrassed i feel if she said i was in this country of billboards covered in tits think i should try to get used to this. but i'll basis i guess i see. this. but clutch.
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i. just. want to build up. a fake.
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two extremes. one patch. the divers nicklin that would like to push down a small hole then next go a world record in dynamic apnea free diving. under the ice. without things dying at the limits in thirty minutes on t.w. . they are at the other day.
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when the elite. elite to. the. human rights day own d.w. . losing your homeland because of persecution in society. starting from scratch in an unfamiliar country. five people who found a new home in a foreign land. with their stories books and music they've built bridges to the past and into the future. for the new skate starting december seventeenth d w.
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this is the w. news live from berlin israel's prime minister holds tense talks with european leaders after calling them hypocrites for the.

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