tv DW News - Africa Deutsche Welle February 1, 2019 7:30pm-7:46pm CET
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sending three hundred fifty tonnes of it the first year eleven giving most unfriendly alternative to chemical fertilisers. sixty minutes on d w. going up today don't miss our highlights. programme morning you don't come hard words. this is deja vu news africa coming up in the next fifteen minutes the world has made great progress when it comes to managing a child the aids but in africa this stigma associated with the virus is still very strong we'll be talking to a prominent activist. then the fall house start of all he turns one hundred years old to a modern classic in nigeria. i'm
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christine want to welcome to news africa i'm glad you're tuned in we're putting this stigma on hiv aids in focus today because just a few days ago a south african m.p. made his status public it was ofter an ex partner threatened to expose her on facebook as new more tyros deal so someone is threatening to reveal my status to you all but let me save him the hassle of doing it i have nothing to hide but also some things are not necessary to share with people it doesn't affect but since i've been threatened let me do it because i don't take kindly to threats i'm hiv positive and have been now for ages possibly mall and she went on to say perhaps these threats are a good thing it has made me add my voice to the d. stigmatise ation that is still embedded in our society. so just how bad is hiv aids related stigma in our communities we took all cameras and
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people told us some of the reasons why they wouldn't want their hiv status to be public knowledge. because of this to see my theories on all of the. issues like the general public i would never let people know that i'm a street corner and i feel like only my part in it because my state is my private life but i'm going to keep it's when i say take out there are people. there is in being the bad pizza guy they may be different views that isolates in me from our field arc is something that people should keep in their personal life and told those in their personal lives not something that's for the public to know exactly these vets are i keep it to myself that i am it was easy for house because it's look some people would say ok you don't trust no she has
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a child we. don't go near her don't date her because she has a smile was as if you have a virus it's like it's the end of the world but to talk more about this we've invited edwin cameron he's a judge on south africa's constitutional kolisch justice cameron has spent many is spearheading hiv aids campaigns and activism while comes to. justice cameron it's been twenty since you went public about hiv positive are you disappointed that in two thousand and nineteen people in africa also ostracized and discriminated against for being a hiv positive. i think i wouldn't say disappointed because that sounds as though they've done but it's a terrible calamity for our country and for our continent meant that this disease didn't cilla tended by so much discrimination so much stigma and also so much internalized shame twenty years off to medication become available
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a good fourteen years off the government started providing treatment so it's a great impediment continuing to our management of the epidemic. just as common people as you've alluded to in terms of the grounds that the world has made in terms of the medication people with hiv today can lead very normal and healthy lives and i just want to get your take on why do you think that it's taking so long to sort of steve bank or be the the sort of stigma that's associated with having a heavy. i think it's a deeply personal thing the shame of infection sexual transmission i think it's that it's difficult to explain no other disease is attended by quite this amount of shamanistic internalise internal shame so it's hard to say and that's hard to do and also one must remember it took nearly fifty years in north america to get the
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cigarette smoke down from forty percent to eight hundred percent so dealing with public attitudes to do season two years is always a very complicated thing. just as cameron one says is their private business you know and i think you know when we talk about you know would you be public about hiv status as as we're listening to people before we did this interview and it's somebody is private business but we're talking about how we distinguish ties hiv aids and it seems like that's the only way to do that when public figures like yourself come out and say i'm living with this and i'm meeting a very normal life but then that's asking people to to make public what should be personal what they should be allowed to keep is the only way that we can get to to stake hiv. it would be a wonderful way and you're right about it being on answer good for virals for for nearly twenty two years and i've got almost the same expectation of life as
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a sixty five year old man in good health like me would have without a child b. but i still am one of the very few perhaps the only public figure in the whole of africa who has spoken about the so it's very difficult i don't say that i ask other people to do it i don't encourage other people to do it only say that if they could do it if they could come the difficulty the fear of discrimination of the shy and it would be enormously helpful it would mean a huge amount if we had soccer stars and into ten men stalls and the public figures speaking freely and easily about the urn dealing with this disease all right just a scam way thank you for all the doing all the activism you've put in that is significant. edwin cameron speaking to us there thank you. it is about bauhaus a state of origin
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a scene in germany one hundred years ago it's characterized by the form follows function buildings defined by t.l. lines and an absence off support of ornamentation it was the revolutionary at the time and has influenced all he takes across the wool one major example is found in nigeria the university off if initiated by balls to reassure on. the ferry in southwestern nigeria already sharon's campus for the university of utah is open area and well suited to the tropical climate and it makes a statement for the bauhaus opened in one nine hundred sixty two just two years after nigeria's gained independence the university became a symbol for the fledgling democracy back then modernism was progressive and today to the ideas about how stood for have a future can they still provide answers to the question how do we want to live for
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instance in lego's nigeria's largest city which changes by the minute. you know she no is an architect and a child of modernism she studied and lived in london if it remains an inspiration for her. when we had monism come in that in the years of any post-colonialism the architects that came of the day. i'm not the architecture that has really formed the structure of this it's on the modernism of the forty's fifty's and sixty's still a lot that. goes you know she no one has returned to her homeland today she lives and works in lagos she loves the city's wild and creative side. lego's just grows and grows today it's africa's second largest. city and one of the world's most populous somewhere between colonialism and modernism nigerian
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architects are creating their own design language one that seeks to meet the challenges of everyday life. increasingly their focus is on the mega-cities what was considered as african tended to be within the rules and not necessarily mean need to be realistic and appropriately for the system that we live in we have to face the fact that in the city of some people some people say twenty two we need to live in a smaller and smaller spaces. like a molecular a new ultra modern and up market district phase one of this project is already complete to see if you know what is constructing minimalist housing units similar to ones built around the globe architecture must adapt to changing lifestyles we need to be forward thinking we always need to reflect on. on how living in a city is evolving and changing i mean the whole world has changed in particular.
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the demographic is changing how people live the family units is being redefined and we need to make sure that we produce an architecture that's where flex that. functional economic and space saving so this is the start of the two bedroom apartment so it's open plan kitchen it's really about i think efficient living. apartments like this one are still a rarity in lagos for millennia who aren't home much. everything has a purpose. there's no ornamentation in this property we have used plane of mines and color to really form and i think it's been quite successful but. it's a stark contrast to other aspirational districts popping up with their pompous colonial style structures ornate pillars and decor otieno. considers them a passing fad. caution is always period based there's no guarantee that this
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building in another ten years will be an eyesore because it's got too many of its buildings need to be timeless even the bell household it's then a beautiful building it's timeless buildings can't afford to be fashionable. sharon's university of effect is timeless this architectural milestone is a building with character africa is also part of the house imagine the stuff and international exhibition project that celebrates the bauhaus school its legacy and its capacity for promoting trans cultural exchange. toso you know she know is one of a new generation of nigerian architects meeting here looking for answers to pressing questions and discovering how the bauhaus remains relevant today. what's made by a host so vital to this day and keeps it up way is that it follows very basic ideas so it poses questions like how do we want to live in the future.
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that's it for news africa for now you can catch all our stories on our website that's com forward slash africa and don't forget to join the discussion. the africa facebook page where you just have to know would you go public with your h.i.b. status and what do you say is behind the stigma of hiv aids would have to hear from you so leave you now with pictures of aids activists in the ongoing fight against stigma across the continent catch you again on monday but now.
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thanks. to. start. to. welcome to news from. meryl i'm that someone look at what's coming up today. who won last is your vision song called tast has released a new single and she's responded to calls to boycott this year's competition being held in the country of israel. when you boy light from being shed you spread darkness. capernaum lebanese movie about
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a young boy born into a world of extreme poverty his home favorite for the foreign language. and giants of the renaissance a multimedia exhibition in leipzig set of raising leonardo da vinci and his contemporaries. israeli sing and that's one the euro vision song called test last year with an anthem a female empowerment cold toy now she's got a brand new single and she's been speaking out about this is competition to be held in tel aviv in may speaking out because some office calling for a boycott citing israel's human rights record towards palestinians i'll be discussing this with my colleague david leavitt's in a minute but first the new song. the message about. something.
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