tv Business Deutsche Welle April 22, 2019 8:15pm-8:31pm CEST
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stencils humboldt allowed to net his seventy goal of the campaign don't mean move the point behind leaders dion. you know. we have four games left and we're concentrating on the next match nothing more we've got to prepare for it properly in this invited to. that next game is the dollar be at home to struggling shaka on saturday. and that does it for me on my last. business africa is up next with carrick alfredsson i'll see you tomorrow same time. and.
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go to the new zero max channel. closed the final story. with exclusive. the must see concerning. your own. place to be curious minds. do it yourself networkers. subscribe and don't miss out on. a woman in sub-saharan africa has a better chance of being in work than most of us systems around the world sounds like good news there is a downside she's also much more likely to be exploited in precarious paid work for the family that women around the world. also on the show was
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a crisis in zimbabwe after the rainy season came late this year many farmers are having to splash out on their own wells. and floating assets how a man created his very own tax haven of a few plastic boxes and he's now looking at a possible death penalty for it. is his business africa. is in berlin welcome the international labor organization says some three and a half billion people around the world have a job though conditions and pay very enormously according to region and gender and holding down a job doesn't mean that you are actually earning enough to live in sub-saharan africa a comparatively large number of women are actually in work while three quarters of the men in the region have a job so do sixty four percent of women that may not sound good but it's a far higher percentage than the rest of the world where fewer than fifty percent of women are in the labor force but secure jobs are scarce and women have to
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struggle with that insecurity far more than men a third of working women work for a family company doing things like selling its products at the market only sixteen percent of men work for their families businesses but in this form of work the particular in particular that tends to be very precarious and liable to financial exploitation social security like in europe is practically non-existent let's bring in our correspondent george are in barrow in nairobi joy why is that in africa so many more women are working than in other parts of the world. well there are reasons for that and that could hardly be explained by the nature or the role that women play across the african continent in fact they resist study that says that women in africa how the highest share of want to bring their is across the world but their business is having to be small businesses and small scale to it
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is that they are involved in and therefore they are less profitable and made to yet more work expectant of the women across africa so this means that women actually have to literally beg for a seat at the table is there any public realisation that women in the workplace are disadvantaged in sub-saharan africa are people are not politicians aware yes politicians are aware and we are a number of countries not just in not just kenya but around the african continent that i trying to embed this in the law to try help achieve gender equality because the gender inequality is really white but what we're seeing now in countries like rundown we are seeing more women being involved even in politics in the legislature as well as other managerial positions women have also being brought into boardrooms
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and being given. positions as board directors but then they are still a lot of strides that need to be made for this to be. for us to actually say that we have achieved gender equality it might take some years but a lot of progress has been made in terms of women now being able to access more education as well. being the key word what about education are girls being sent to school in sub-saharan africa in the same way that boys are. well that's a tricky question because over the past day and more girls have been having access to education and while the gap is still very wide of course for it is being given to the boys but now we are seeing morgan aviation's coming out and helping the girls who come from disadvantaged families who cannot afford to pay their own tunisian to schools and getting them education also we are seeing girls who have
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jumped out of school being a real entity even into spaces or back into school to help them achieve financial independence for them to be able to have collateral sure all of the future and this we can actually say has has really made a difference in in helping to achieve or exists bridge the gap between the boys and girls who are going to school to help them achieve a much brighter future is still a very wide gap but definitely a lot of progress has been meat toward n.p.r. in nairobi thank you very much a police in algeria have arrested the country's richest man and four billionaire brothers from the powerful community family thought to have links to up to lizzie's put a fake i would step down as president earlier this month following weeks of protests against his room enough brothers accused of using insider influence to obtain unlawful advantage family as business interests in
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a range of areas from agriculture to civil engineering here eskom author of various army chief viral to crack down on government corruption. and zimbabwe access to drinking water is still a big problem for wide swathe of population livestocks and crops in agriculture also suffering this year a late onset rainy season has exacerbated the problem even in cities drinking water is becoming scarce and those who can afford it are looking for their own solution underground. water is scarce even in urban zimbabwe every day twenty water trucks like these leave the borehole clinic in the capital harare to ferry out supplies it's a lucrative business the state isn't able to get enough water to the populations in many places people only get fresh water once or twice a week frustration is rife. still more to should be easily accessible to everyone
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but we have to use it sparingly because it's hard to come by and. the reason the borehole clinic has such easy access to a large fresh supply of water is simple company specializes in constructing wells. on the outskirts of harare has splashed out on bore hole since then water has not been a problem the harvest is plentiful two tons of tomatoes a week. it's a showcase example for borehole clinic's managing director. of the economic situation as challenging as where and is no need for us to sit back and when the port it's close it's not going away and it's gone how can it change anything with this realisation we have created solutions that provide on says to that car intel what is sure to give in zimbabwe. but those solutions don't come cheap this unit cost ten thousand u.s. dollars it's affordable for larger firms but not so much for residents in many
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parts of harare borehole clinic wants to drill there as well but it doesn't have a mandate from the city authorities that means that constantly flowing fresh water remains is simply a dream here. and now to some of the other news business news across the world the white house has announced the end of waivers for countries to import iranian oil to the u.s. has reimposed sanctions against iran last year threatening to punish any country that buys iranian oil though it granted iran's h. main buyers of all waivers to the sanctions allowing them limited purchases for six months the countries affected are china india italy greece japan south korea taiwan and turkey which already said it would not not respect the sanctions oil prices rallied by about three percent on the news brant crude is hovering around this seventy four dollars mark per barrel there are fears that removing the sanctions
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waivers would reduce all supply from a market that is already tight but u.s. officials say any shortfall can be picked up by other countries as the u.s. itself and saudi arabia recently increased production. the trumpet ministration has issued a blunt warning to nations buying oil from iran after may second there will be no exceptions to sanctions norway various nations that continue to buy uranium oil will be made to suffer more we're going to zero going to zero across the board we will continue for sanctions and monitor compliance any nation or entity interacting with iran should use its diligence and err on the side of caution the risks are simply not going to be worth the benefits pump a.o. said the u.s. had granted enough time for the affected countries to wean themselves off a rainy and oil and find alternative suppliers. before washington re-impose
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sanctions against iran last year to run produced around two point three million barrels of oil per day that's around five percent of global i pushed until now washington had granted some importing nations waivers on the oil sanctions china and india are the biggest buyers of rainy and crude recently they've stepped up their purchases along with south korea italy and greece on the other hand if managed to cut their demand turkey had been fighting until the last moment for sanctions waiver extension. pump they all went on to say that there would be no grace period for those economies to comply despite sanctions iran's oil exports are said to have increased around twelve percent by the end of march but it's hard to say how accurate that figure is iran conceals the exact in mind by making good use of its armada of oil tankers the second largest fleece in the world.
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whether it's your computer at home or at the office your data better be protected with a passport and that better be not one from one of those from a new study by the british national cybersecurity center that you can. break the most used password of them all and the weakest is one two three four five six twenty three million users think that's secure enough to use this one four five six seven eight nine also pretty weak kwesi safe maybe at first sight but it's simply the first six letters on the computer keyboard also easy to break names of people names that people can guess those of loved ones for example ashley and michael actually topped the list in britain closely followed by would you believe it liverpool according to experts something like this is a pretty good chance no one can ever access your data not even you think before you go tie. thora teams have told to show all the floating cabin of
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a fugitive couple wanted to live in international waters in order to be free of any one's country's laws and just possibly texas to. try to chat. to explore what they describe as societies and governments. and been charged with violating ties sovereignty and that's a crime that can be punishable by death in time. for me more business news stories check out com slash business. with news africa up next.
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a current affairs documentary. in sixty minutes. some people for information. they want to express. on facebook and twitter both today in touch from the us. this is news africa coming up in the next fifteen minutes a standoff in sudan tensions are escalating as protesters in khartoum fall to stay on the streets until saddam gets a civilian government this is with the military collapse and made in africa by africans the creative entrepreneur as he say's you're starting to hear more of that
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