Skip to main content

tv   Business - News  Deutsche Welle  November 4, 2018 6:02am-6:15am CET

6:02 am
turkeys present rich of time to air to one inaugurated one of the country's largest infrastructure projects on the ninety fifth anniversary of the republic's founding it took just four years to build a massive project from scratch something proud airport chief executive countries some soon lou doubts others could match. of the is being billed the turkish capital of turkish workers turkish banks and turkish no hope and this is this is this is pumping all our southwestern ohio and i really given a suit is place we did it and that's that's makes me very proud it's europe's largest airport with an initial capacity of ninety million passengers a year this is just the first of four construction phases within a decade it's set to become the world's largest. where this app or istanbul hopes to become one of the world's biggest every nation hops
6:03 am
if you now fly long distance frankfurt paris to london chances are you may soon be changing planes here instead but the project has come helped build the project in record time say they faced horrible conditions such as lack of safety precautions fatal accidents and of being paid late or not at all chima spent nine months working at the airport he says when he criticised conditions openly he was fired. only. just in mid september there was a very bad accident again that when you go seventeen people were seriously injured . and eyewitnesses even say some workers were killed in the studio. anybody who speaks out about it could end up on jail benghazi and doing it may be the world's largest airport but it stained the blood of work. to do that in
6:04 am
a. country some soon lou admits there were some problems but insists they've been rectified. workers demanded. certain implements in india for their needs we took the necessary measures. at this moment we provide that. we are providing a better service for them and that's why from my perspective the issue is on the control and the workers are happy some sulu says he wants to look to the future and not the past where there is still a lot left to be done it is turnbull's grand new airport. german engineering giant siemens is investing six hundred million euros in an innovation center in berlin it's called future campus and it aspires to become germany's silicon valley it will be home to research labs and high tech production facilities for startups
6:05 am
as well as welcome space for affordable housing in a city with a housing shortage it will be based in the company's birthplace zeman status which is already the company's largest production location with eleven thousand workers. german mater rest have filed a class action lawsuit against volkswagen for emissions cheating it's the first such suit in german history only made possible by new legislation the plaintiffs say v.w. deliberately cheated them by using software that artificially reduced emissions test results class action is common in the us where v.w. has already had to repay the purchase price of diesels to most of its customers. germany's unemployment rate fell below five percent in october the lowest level ever recorded by the federal employment agency less than two point two million people were employed here the rock solid labor market is likely to further boost consumer confidence and household spending in europe's biggest economy which is seen domestic demand overtake exports as its main growth driver in recent years it
6:06 am
also highlights the country's growing labor shortage. germany holds to the compact with africa summit in berlin this week and the government here pledged a billion year old foreign investment fund to boost business in african countries it's aimed at small and midsize german companies that tend to shy away from africa and have little experience of the risks their. compact with africa is a g. twenty initiative and has already attracted a total of two hundred forty three billion euros in pledges it's hoped the investment will curb illegal immigration to europe by creating jobs for young africans. south africa is one of few countries not at war where adults are more likely to be out of a job than in one joblessness is particularly severe for the country's youth seven out of ten young south africans are without work. paul obama loco could easily have
6:07 am
fallen into a trap of remaining idle. in south africa youth unemployment is that really bit because whereas they invested in each and every house there's a there's a young person who's sitting home not having a job you know taking that light skills to get a job rather than not from a local travels thirty kilometers a day from her home in wasilla township to her m.b. a youth employment platform in inner city johannesburg since its inception in two thousand and nine the organization has offered workplace skills and basic training to over four hundred fifty thousand unemployed south african youth placing fifty five thousand into their first jobs. your computer skills how to write a proper that you need in your four month you need and then how to present yourself how to talk the body language when you are in a way place the skills they teach as the program's aim to get any in south african
6:08 am
ready for the job market and they link them with prospective employers within south africa. private sector. i'm tax break and body language so find somebody in the room actually it was. the south africa's unemployment rate is higher than that of the u.s. during the great depression of the one nine hundred thirty s. around he believes addressing this begins with helping south africa's young people we have to connect people who are excluded out of the formal economy into work you have six million young people growing that number growing every year who are sitting at home highly highly talented without any opportunities to threat to social cohesion it's a strike to step into a future after weeks of preparation remo loco is ready she's landed a job interview at automotive supply a tiger will entire for sales and technical advisory position. so how did some
6:09 am
lives. here and be partners with leading companies who think it's become a fundamental matter for any south african business to incorporate youth employment creation opportunities into their call mission. we must take that leap of faith to say i believe in you you have potential i would mean to give a guy doing before i provide you with skills to go out to the market if all goes well pooler in loco could soon be swapping unemployment for a promising new job. the british government has promised an end to austerity budgeting generous tax cuts and a cash injection for health care but in the southern english city of portsmouth residents don't expect any benefits after years of spending cuts. some schools in the city have even asked parents to support their running costs and expectations have reached rock bottom here. at the door to me so
6:10 am
how special they say cut back all the classrooms assistance now the classes to pay . to get the doctors now you can't get i think it's that h.s. is being. destroyed. caesarean was just. one down there's no one even think it was stable. in london finance minister philip hammond announced a budget that includes two billion pounds extra for mental health services more than twenty eight billion pounds will go into new roads over the next five years but it all falls flat in portsmouth. so for the highest i may not get on this planet fifty five years and i haven't seen anything but. they all are whatever house you or your doorstep he's going to do with something or she's going to do something the man in the street is never better off. fifty eight percent of
6:11 am
portsmouth's voters. voted for breaks it and the government says the new budget depends on the outcome of the brakes of negotiations with brussels in the event of a no deal it says it would return to was all over again. iranians earning average wages can afford little nowadays the value of the iranian currency the rio has crumbled food imports medication and electronics are now out of reach for most u.s. sanctions to frighten foreign investors german companies that recently return to iran are already pulling out again the trump administration threatens to penalize them otherwise. that's left. looking for a job once again. her employer germany siemens is leaving. currently the economic situation is very difficult it's not just depicting foreign companies
6:12 am
but iranian ones as well i've been writing job applications since i was told i was going to lose my job but i haven't had a single reply yet. seventy days been working in siemens human resources department for three years before that she worked for a norwegian company but that company also pulled out of iran because of u.s. sanctions so every day is says she's reliving a bad experience she does her shopping in the evening but now she has to consider if she can afford even the most basic foods like milk and shops owners know used to customers scrutinizing prices. they were told that the prices have risen so high i know that my customers often pick up a product only to immediately put it down again after seeing the price you know they really only buy the necessities. back home she watches the news the future of her country depends on international politics especially on decisions made in the
6:13 am
united states that we are normal people pay a high price we're losing our jobs and can't afford to pay the rent anymore the nuclear nonproliferation deal was signed and now one of its signatories is pulling out and i still hope there holds up and we can once again look to the future and they should. separate a little faith in the european union's plan to develop a trading platform with iran too many companies have already pulled out of the country leaving behind many people like her. whose livelihoods and those of their families hang in the balance. sometimes books are more exciting than real life. raring to greet. mom. what if there's no escape.
6:14 am
the literature list one hundred german plus treats. says her first day at school in the jungle. first including listen to this. event doris grand moment arrives. join the ring to take on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. tore up the reputation returns home on t w dot com tang's. it was a shoe made cuts of. the first global disaster of the twentieth century. the more to end all wars cost millions of lives. world war one. summer
6:15 am
marks the hundredth anniversary of its end. what has humankind learned from the great nor. has it learned anything at all the book. is real peace and impossibilities. the book. nineteen a. not for god w.'s november focus.

26 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on