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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  April 19, 2019 11:30pm-11:46pm CEST

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interactive content the next generation goes to church. using channels available to store people to converge. and we're determined to build something here for the next generation global india's beautiful arman series of global three thousand on d w and online. this is deja news africa coming up in the next fifteen minutes the fight for tripping me shelling continues in the libyan capital as the warlord highly fatah moves to take the city from the e.u. and back to government at least two hundred people have been killed since the strongman dawn she's offensive two weeks ago will learn why foreign policy con find common ground on the topic. and we capture the story of the hassle in the city all poor. play young people are not getting the state's fabian's old defacto.
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i'm christine wonderwall come to news africa i'm glad your chin day in and the lawn call over libya by the world health organization who say more than two hundred people have been killed and hundreds more wounded this week as fighting rages over the capital tripoli the call comes as the united nations fails to agree on taking action to stop powerful militias. in his attempts to overthrow the un backed government in the capital now with fighting also intensifying one of the regions in libya at least twenty five thousand people have been displaced in recent days i'll be discussing the dynamics of this nation's farah but first this report on the situation on the ground. denying zahra loci to ten kilometers away from the center of the libyan capital tripoli a new wave of displaced people lined up to see food and water. supplies managed to
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escape from the clashes we tried to stay in their homes but we couldn't anymore because the shelling intensified. since the fighting began seven thousand people have had to flee i never alone and this is what they are fleeing from rockets fired on the neighborhood of abu salem in the capital tripoli. grad rockets hit indiscriminately they hit innocent people in the middle of the capital it's one of the most densely populated parts of tripoli with. the rocket fire has been blamed on forces loyal to commanders after two weeks ago his self-styled national army. advanced on the country's capital tripoli adding another layer to the almost eighty year old conflict in libya. qatar's forces said they would take the city within days but prime minister faiza said rogers international recognized government has
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resisted strongly with the help of armed groups from various western libyan factions. but that's coming at a price hundreds gathered in tripoli to attend the funeral of a government backed fighter. takeover bench on this criminal who's killing our children he's coming to invade tripoli. have to learn a blame the rocket fire and what it calls terrorist militias whose grip on the capital it says it is trying to and. for more on the story and the plays in it i'm joined by. another let's let's get straight into this and talk about the timing of all of this why is anyone have to going for tripoli now. that he will be weakened now because you have to share power with a you won back. overnight in tripoli two months ago he was in abu dhabi with the head of the government of tripoli's raj and people were talking about a kind of
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a peace deal that was being brought and there should be elections to the end of the year so i think if the house didn't fund really to share the power with the other governments you want to try to seize the power in tripoli and also the moment where the jury and the government there are june army was preoccupied with the demonstrations inside of your ear and be the only leader of libya so that's why he sees that moment and actually maybe he succeeded in terms of the that the the conference that was in mid april. you know in the auspices of the u.n. was canceled so kind of success ok for him ok so i mean he is the man people would be reading about it and hearing about right now we've put a bit of a bit of a portrait on him let's have a look at that and they will continue our conversation that it. is by no means
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a new comer to libya's political scene throughout for decades the military strongman has shifted from the center to the periphery and is now a default front of the conflict in libya. once a close ally to mamma khadafi have to spend more than two decades exiled in the u.s. following the fall out with the former president have to return to libya and twenty eleven during the nato backed uprising that ousted and killed. he rose to become one of the top military commanders leading rebels. in twenty fourteen he started consolidating his power and now controls territory in the eastern and so the regions of the country. now he has his eyes on the capital tripoli where in twenty sixteen an internationally recognized government has been installed but has since struggled to exert control over the country and numerous militias around the city. have to reportedly wants to become the head of libya's army following a national reconciliation deal with his group the libyan national army to become
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the country's armed forces but with his forces at the gates of tripoli after may calculate that his move can be used to grab power or be leveraged to extract demands during negotiations. ok that is so we know more about his ambitions now but it's about trippy is he going to be able to take that city he planned take tripoli in two days when he launches offensive two weeks ago no it's two weeks he did not succeed so yet on the other hand he wanted to kind of a swift power grab and and soft power grab but until now we have seen lots of deaths and casualties and many many people displaced so we don't know how much power he actually has but it doesn't look that the this will go as he actually initially wished ok let's talk about the foreign policy we know that there was a u.n. security council meeting on thursday night and they failed to reach a resolution on peace in libya part of that is rated due to the fact that they
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couldn't agree on the have to why is that there are many powers in libya competing over libya we have a kind of a bloc in the arab world that's saudi arabia the united arab emirates and. egypt the neighbor the eastern neighbors of libya and they see in the strong man the strong military man who can bring stability to libya and can fight extremism on the other hand we have a un backed government which is supported by the u.n. and by italy mainly but still there are the conflicting interests france also. plays a very big role in that so. also in other countries like syria that you know the security council cannot agree even on a smaller reserve lucian regarding libya so we have kind of
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a power struggle but it looks like france at least will take no more moderate. position between that these two governments competing governments half there and the un backed government so it's a very complicated situation right now del cyrus is arabic department thank you. now that hustle is something we africans know all too well our next report takes us to angola and the city off where the majority of the population is yet and the infrastructure isn't in place to provide for the me see appetite for a good education isn't catered for by the schools and colleges that exist but some industrious yif are taking matters into their own hands. and go in the second largest city it's a young city more than half of its one and a half million inhabitants are under fifteen years old they need cool universities
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the kitchen of training and jobs. but in state the education system is in a dire state it's the same story all over the city in the problems begin at primary school. ashfall are those meals they sent we have two thousand six hundred ninety pupils that's a lot but we only have fifteen classroom hours lots of people have to learn outdoors where they have the sun dust and noisy traffic to contend with this does not live up to educational standards. that. the hours for the crisis can be felt throughout the school system all the way out to university with high tuition fees low quality and meager job prospects there are currently ten thousand university students in one bill and that number is on the rise many of them will get
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a degree but what is that really worth. the quality has not improved that means that a lot of students have degrees that aren't really worth anything at all they just pieces of paper that's a big problem in. may he was against all odds there are some success stories in. stories of young people who hedge their bets like hairdresser and student edna central. with the money that i earn here in my beauty salon i can pay my tuition fees and make a living but it's business. edna is thirty one years old and always dreamt of being a successful business woman and she's not satisfied with the one business leader she wants to open more silence and have lots of employee youth oh and alongside her work she also studies marketing in business at a private catholic university. but
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to get the meds she wishes fees alone set me back twenty nine thousand kwan's a month with study materials on top of that we're talking fifty thousand pounds a month only the materials and books are expensive and particularly hard to come by and one by province. fifty thousand kwan's of that one hundred forty euros invested in her studies every month like edna more than seven thousand students in one go to private universities. much hungerford question here despite all the difficulties lots of young people grow out and find work to finance their studies on the same. me too i'm kind of dog is also fighting for his future he and some of his money is a wedding photographer he doesn't have a proper to do yet so he set up a walk space in the corner of his living go. fish
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the queer for photography is definitely my artistic calling it's what i do in my spare time that week and my clients respect my work because i work with passion and i have noticed that there is a market for what i do and god given. direction depends on two jobs mitten could also is also often also pretty to other school that compares young people with university but it's a temporary position and far from stable. these days we need that time b. i certainly don't want to be dependent on my teach our. young people in one bill and indeed all of the cannot rely on the state to provide them with a stable future many of them have already figured this out they are finding their own way through a dippy flawed system. some inspirational staff and that is it from
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africa you can catch on news on our website or facebook page with a view of our with images off the colorado marathon event in egypt by for now. sometimes books more exciting than real once. every turn. what if there's no. list. german must treat. time to take.
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time to such they are no. fun for the troops. time to over come down trees and connecticut. it's time for. the deputy is coming up ahead. mines. hello and welcome to news from the world of culture today we just have the one topic because this year is the one hundredth anniversary of bali house this is the legendary school of architecture and design the stuff of the nineteen nineteen from there are so many events taking place here it's made germany a top tourist attraction the lonely planet travel guide has ranked its second in the world as the most recommended travel destination of twenty nineteen. now
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house revolutionized and influence some many things but actually only existed for fourteen years so first of all let's have a look at this iconic ol school. with the bow house began a new era of anesthetic revolution that has endured to this day with its clear and simple lines bauhaus broke with tradition and turned the world of art and design upside down its founder vital b.s. was a visionary who wanted to radically change the way we build work and lives. he founded the school in one thousand nine hundred environment eastern germany but six years later it moved to tessa where brought forth some revolutionary designs. often strict industrial functional. but also sometimes colorful and exuberant.

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