tv DW News Deutsche Welle April 4, 2019 4:30pm-4:45pm CEST
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this is not the kind of freedom that mean one. who didn't know when you become a deeply into islamist terror until you see a story come i mean more sitting here in brazil an exclusive report from a destroyed city in the. philippines in the. starched paper living on g.w. . you're watching news asia coming up on the program toxic air cutting life short on the continent a new study says children born in india china and other places across the region are at risk to deadly disease linked to air pollution plus. is it the perfect metaphor for the struggle to women's rights and in power to women from nepal planned to take on mount everest the world's highest peak and.
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old customs with a modern twist some people finally do get their american express black card but in the afterlife. i'm melissa chana welcome to the program it's good to have you with us air pollution is a huge problem around the world and we know it impacts our health now we know by how much toxic air shortens our lives by twenty months on average that's according to the health effects institute in their latest report the state of global air now that twenty number is an average when you break things down region by region you can see how asia stands out in south asia children lose thirty months of their lives in east asia people lose an estimated twenty three months that is five. times
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higher or maybe a better way to think about it is five times worse than what you have in north america or western europe aleutian is now a bigger killer than malaria and road accidents it's as bad as. here's a closer look. donning a face mask part of the morning routine for many school kids in delhi where toxic smog and the city for much of the year. some days twenty times above the w h o's recommended limit for dangerous fine particles in the air. india is home to fourteen of the world's most polluted cities exposure to air pollution cuts the life expectancy of kids there by two and a half years by increasing their risk of chronic heart and lung disease among other illnesses. delis toxic air hit home for one mother when her young son fell ill i also felt that my son was falling sick
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a lot with the pollution you know he was getting a lot of these allergic coughs and. they said that they might either be delays that they're the problem was really alarming. in china the entire population breeds air that exceeds the w h o's safety standard. toxic air accounted for one point two million deaths in china in two thousand and seventeen. air pollution has dropped in recent years due to government efforts to curb emissions. but this time lapse in beijing shows the blankets of smog that worry many parents. i fear the doctor says she's sick because of small and she was in the hospital for six days because of this i just picked her up. to the north and mongolia's capital long but tar a reliance on coal for heating has turned the air hazardous families are making hard choices. this mother makes a three hour round trip each week to see her daughter who now lives with her
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grandparents in the countryside under doctor's orders after two bouts of pneumonia i mean as a mune system couldn't cope with the city air. i think she got sick because of the smoke. we were surrounded by and. now she has some fresh air she hasn't gotten sick. she will get a sniffle here and there but there usually passes easily or. there exodus a stark warning for the future of much of asia's urban areas choking on dirty air. joining me now is dan greene by one of the authors of the study dan now that we're armed with the status and this information has any of the governments responded well we've seen responses and in places around the world certainly there have been
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actions and now it's in places like india with their new national clean air program and they are now saying well we really need to be serious about trying to implement this and i think it's going to be an important part of their election discussion of her having currently the good news is that in china we report that they have started to take action so they see an improvement but they still have quite a ways to go and you talk about china in the report as a fairly standout country are there other countries that are doing a relatively good job compared to countries that are not really doing much. well they they really are at the leading edge of the pack of belting and emerging economies in terms of taking action about air pollution india has started to they have a new program to put natural gas into homes instead of burning solid fuel they are call it requiring cleaner vehicles the cleanest vehicles by two thousand and twenty
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but it's going to take a long time in those countries to deal with these these problems i did other part of the world that really needs this kind of attention in eastern europe has just started to deal with what fuels are burned in homes and how those affect outdoor which. now there are things that governments can do that the macro level but i wonder what an individual can do to better improve the air they breathe one thing that i look at is i see a lot of people in asia with the face masks and i've always wondered do they really work what personal actions can people take well face masks actually if they're well designed and to help reduce the exposure but they're not going for the most part that be the major answer to this question. children can't be wearing these that they're at home in a crib or other places they're not going to be able to do that i can put the a couple things first of all just in your daily actions if you use less electricity
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if you drive less if you do other things that can reduce the emissions you have a lot of control to do that secondly there are on the market some of them are quite well the. machines that can filter the air coming into a house into a house so that least for your children inside their home they would be cleaner but the number one thing is really that personal action to say i'm going to use less energy which hopefully will reduce air pollution for everyone. thank you thanks for having me. men have set their sights on mt everest for decades and it has mostly been men from the foreign mountaineers who visit to the nepalese sherpa climbers who assist them now two local women whose husbands died while scaling that peak will make their climb next month they say they want to force a rethink about the role of widows in their conservative community and to inspire
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other women. they're training for the climb of their lives but it's not only the world's highest mountain these women want to conquer it's also centuries of gender stereotypes and discrimination against widows vastly more. in terms of what we have felt and seen widows leg very far behind were seen differently and is less important the society in general looks at us widows differently. today. for generations climbing has been the realm of men among the legendary sherpas of nepal tradition dictates that women care for the home while their husbands conquer the himalayan peaks but when for dome as husbands died helping their foreign clients ascend everest they suddenly found themselves without some male breadwinner and they had to rethink their traditional roles. through just more after our
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husbands died we just sat home crying and remembering them for a year or two we had no education either. then we started talking and joined guide trainings and mountaineering trainings. stuff so you know when i mean it when it being a widow in a pool still carries stigma in some parts widows even considered fat luck and ostracized but these two women say their own experiences in addition to meeting other sherpa widows who also enjoy discrimination have made them even more determined to reach the summit coming up the city when we are part of the two widows mount everest expedition and how it is that one of the message we want to give is that single women and widows shouldn't be trapped in their homes when we get out there is nothing that we cannot do to be able to when the going was that you could and i mean almost four thousand sherpa men have ascended everest since it
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was first scaled by say edmund hillary and tenzing norgay in ninety. fifty three that's compared to only thirty four women but after shoots towards women who climb off slowly changing and in the last season alone a record eighteen women reached the peak of the world's highest mountain. it's a practice in many cultures the celebration and the commemoration of the dead across the chinese diaspora it's called sweeping day or ching ming and in places such as taiwan and i should also add hong kong where i'm from people like to burn paper offerings for the dead return to taipei where tradition meets the twenty first century. a dream design or. complete with a perfect family. and an expensive car. these intricate models would look at home in any architect's office. instead they being painstakingly
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prepared for the bomb file. in taiwan these domestic dreams will all go up in smoke so the deceased can enjoy an eternity of luxury of the fourth of often to someone passes away these religious thinking that the deceased would want to buy a big house and fortunes would burn these people for eagles. on the day when he is laid to rest. through a thought for their own sense of. burning offerings for the dead is an ancient custom in chinese culture traditionally bereaved relatives but paper money but in taiwan they're moving with modern times. now as well as houses they can have design a clothes and watches. a fleet of sports cars. the latest my ball funds and for everything else there's even
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a type of credit card. we get birthday gifts birthday cards valentine's day gifts christmas gifts during important cations and holidays we show our appreciation by giving gifts when a person is a passed away why can't we also show our left through giving paper offerings to get out and i know. but this level of detail don't come cheap some can cost the equivalent of thousands of euros. but many toddler days are prepared to dig deep to feel that their loved one's a living large in the afterlife. that story and more on our website that's dot com for slash asia and you can also join the conversation on twitter and facebook as well and that's our show. it's clear that spring has arrived with all the footage we've been showing this time. from the largest to live
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in the seventy seven percent talk about the issue. from one part to flash from housing boom boom times this is where. welcome to the seventy seven percent. of people six g.w. . going to get. into a full. time in colors gold is nearest sits in prosecutes now issues i'm misappropriating company fun personal gain. full day it all won't play there's a new twist in the proposed merger the. this is business.
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as welcome. as gold has been rearrested by police in japan less than a month after he was released on bail he had been awaiting trial over claims of financial misconduct gone is now back at the prosecutor's office to be questions over further allegations. this is the moment carlos was taken out of his temporary accommodation and back into the custody of take years police force it's the fourth time he's been arrested in japan media there say his latest detention is related to a file looking at payments made to a dealership in oman. original to arrest someone who is released on bail to take all of his documents including as related to the preparations for his trial i believe is something to be seriously looked at by the international community.
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