tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle June 3, 2019 5:30pm-6:00pm CEST
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why do they keep such a low profile. to catch a glimpse. of her it is hard. to describe the super rich starts to turn. dog. welcome to global 3000 this week we meet because that family's desperate to track down relatives detained in chinese reeducation camps in india employment opportunities are helping women break out of traditional roles in a male dominated society. but 1st we head to sierra leone where domestic violence
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is still common now some innovative schools are teaching men about gender equality . according to a u.n. study in 2017 around $50000.00 women worldwide were killed at the hands of intimate partners or family members that's an average of $137.00 women every day and those are only the reported cases it's likely many more such murders are recorded as suicides or accidents globally one in 3 women have experienced sexual or other forms of physical violence more than half of all countries have laws against domestic abuse but in many places such brutality has a long tradition. in sierra leone the problem is being tackled through education. i used to meet my wife i would come home late and bang on the door. and walk out without pause.
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we never sat together and talked there was no peace between us. is. time and time again he beat me for no apparent reason just because once to boo talking openly about domestic violence has become commonplace in the book ever since male villagers were sent back to school almost all of the husbands here regularly battered their wives just like them are us where i come. from many families life was hell. sometimes i can see the end up with my uncle and i saw how he beat his wife me so i copied that he behavior convent as an adult i did the same to my wife that it will be out. of my. nowadays ammara treats his wife with respect he helps with the housework and accompanies her to the doctor things he never would
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have dreamt of doing before instead he regularly got drunk and spent time with a girlfriend and beat his wife. but not as you might think. i lived in fear and i cried a lot i know that it's awful i couldn't leave him because i didn't want my children to suffer. it was he treated me so girlie and had a mistress. here. and wellness would do for. one the father the father a mother and the others attend twice a month. what are they going to do it was the. ringback discussions can get he went teachers like a nurse educate students on the necessity of changing their behavior one that's deeply rooted in sierra leone male dominated society. a man is the head of the
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family he's the breadwinner and has all the rights many see violence against women as a fact of life and poverty makes the situation worse some of them sometimes if men can't bring home any money then the women ask about food if they don't let up after that and the men get even angrier gets angry. also didn't have any money or a job and he beat his wife. now and husband school he learns about gender equality and that his wife is his partner not his property. and that to me. i mean i drank and smoke which up and then i'd let my frustrations out on her do we if i came home later and my wife was there i would kick the door and she asked questions i would hit her. we took up be done. and his wife hala are
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carrying water home together. it looks harmonious but however remains traumatized by li experience of abuse. has been helping out at home ever since he joined the husband school is still how is wary her memories. now going out when he started beating me i just used to hide but then it got so bad that i had to leave for a year now things have got better he doesn't beat me anymore and the children can finally attend school but he still gets in a bad mood and is threatening when he doesn't have money. gender based violence isn't confined to husbands beating their partners every year thousands of women in sierra leone fall victim to sexual exploitation. 14 year old sought help at a women's health care center in the capital freetown. she was sexually exploited by
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a man known to her family now she's pregnant. there's not enough to eat at home. a man gives me some money if i sleep with. violence and exploitation were a part of life during sierra leone's decade long brutal civil war in the 1990 s. the country passed a domestic violence law in 2007 punishing abuse by up to 2 years in jail but it's difficult to enforce women's rights even with a special police force designed to assist families and women in particular. if women are given education. because we have created. as for us a no. economic women are not given the power in a little do business they don't have the source is like getting loans from you know
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. you know that is something to do for. there today about a 1000 men attend the 15 husbands schools in sierra leone when they're accompanied by their partners the sessions are called how mama and that's when debate can get heated and loud. but they are dealing with their problems openly and with them on file it's. going signal make out you know what i've been referring to. we set a good example to our children then perhaps the next generation won't be to it's women seeing the need. it's difficult to change social structures that have existed for centuries but here in the village. they're trying to do just that. women worldwide regularly campaign against physical and sexual violence including in india where thousands of women are killed every year by intimate partners sometimes all it takes is not
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bringing a sufficient dowry to a marriage the world health organization lists poverty as one of the main reasons for domestic violence think how can give a woman the highest social status and potentially save her life. it's 8 o'clock in the morning ok lush pressure up and he is making breakfast and getting her children ready for school. her husband is a day laborer at a marble mine in the area she'll be leaving for work soon as well unlike most other women living and india's rural areas pressure apathy has a job. thank you it's very difficult because my husband had to take care of all of the bills and expenses that's why i started working now be a fine because i can help is where the. dole water is
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a small town in the western indian province of roger stan. the streets are filled with men going about their business women are a rare sight traditionally they tend to stay in the background. times are changing but slowly pressure up and he still feels safer when she covers her face out in the street. before work she drops off her son 6 year old kush want has just started school. for a few years now has had a job at south now it's a cooperative that employs many women in the region around would a port. the organization teaches the women all the skills they need for the job the clothes they sew are sold online and in a dedicated shop the profits are split. wages aren't based on working hours but on output. and i thought settles on the fact that there is it isn't as easy to get to
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work and real fast. we. are not easy to get 3 pieces done a day fellow. who day porter is a picturesque city that lies about 30 kilometers to the south of delhi water hope it's a popular destination for tourists. yesterday at sadness headquarters are located here as is the shop. it sells a range of accessories and clothing manufactured in the area of any of. the cooperative was set up over 30 years ago starting with just 15 textile workers now over 700 work for it it's enabled women from nearby villages and poor neighborhoods to earn
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their own income and bahman comes with financial independence and the woman isn't own something about all she has a state is in the family otherwise the family members were looking down on that she didn't have a say in the family have all been given may. be some of the men's themselves on educating their children as driving professional course like medicine in certain businesses we are finding 3 ready generations of the ring locking. in many areas people still stick rigidly to old structures not everyone is allowed to go to work at a factory to reach as many of them as possible sub now also lets women work from home . the project is bringing change to society here in the past women of different castes would never have sat next to each other but working together has fostered respect. because of them bad luck again with the i can get work from the
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outside and work at home in our family we are not allowed to go out and work. so we set up this group of family members a told me that you know i don't have a little because initially we were 9 of us women didn't be invited others to join us and now we are 17 to 18. but he argued with a good view of is that they are totally willing. the women of have come a long way they have health insurance coverage and are eligible for bank loans and scholarships for their children kailash pressure up i think he wants her daughter nice to have access to opportunities she never had she hopes the 13 year old will one day be able to pursue a career and lisa is also determined to follow her dreams she wants to become a doctor. the people's republic of china was founded nearly
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70 years ago alongside the hand chinese the country has 55 official minorities the autonomous province of asian jang is home to most of the country's muslim minority including 10000000 we go and $1500000.00 ethnic kazakhs but they're banned from practicing most of their religious traditions and conflict in the region is rife surveillances also widespread more than a 1000000 muslims are currently thought to be in chinese reeducation camps many ethnic has x. have fled across the border but has extern is economically dependent on china and offers them little protection. so fear is an ethnic cause like it was severely traumatized by what she went through in china. she was held in a detention camp for a year it was like prison. due to the danger involved there are no photos of
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conditions inside. instead she's drawing illustrations of what she went through. she's now in hiding in kazakhstan she doesn't want to show her face on camera because she still scared of the chinese authorities. we were only allowed to shower once a week. after 15 minutes they turned the water off even if we still had shampoo in our hair there were cameras everywhere even in the shower in the toilets it was total surveillance they could watch every single one of us at all times. even in kazakhstan she's terrified they might find her. too was seized and imprisoned in china because she'd used that kazakhs him card. captors put a black sack over her head she spent here in the camp. then she managed to get to kazakhstan. come up. in what they call them ridge acacia in our
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training centers but you're locked in there is no training you're not there of your own choosing. they put us under pressure they didn't torture us basically but mentally like in prison. we were held captive and denied our freedom they bombarded us with communist party songs and speeches in chinese. that the whole of. china says its combat in islam is terrorism engine john but says most of the people in detention weren't even religious all that everyone felt terrible in the camps we were locked away scared frightened of being interrogated and wondering why we were even there we had committed any crimes how much they are all right. many ethnic kinds acts imprisoned in china have relatives in kazakhstan
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who are deeply concerned. as a human rights organization in marty it helps people find their relatives in china its head is said it john b. lash the organization collects testimony about what's going on in china's camps it's mainly intellectuals writers teachers and nurses who were seized and held in the camps china has now officially acknowledged the existence of these camps which it says an educational purpose. estimates that half a 1000000 cars x. are or have been in chinese detention. wars and every day more than 150 people have a week at the information and do we think it really is. torture inside. and before we could do it in 42 to sleep because of his
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campaigning for the rights of kazakhs in china he's now under house arrest in kazakhstan in the summer of 2018 he posted this video on you tube. 5 year old uk your wants to find his father who's disappeared he's a cook working in china where the pay is better. months later the father was back home with his family now marty he's also frightened of the chinese authorities and doesn't want to be identified. this was. and they fed us a constant stream of chinese communist songs from morning to night. and then they tested us again and again to see if we had learned by heart. new. methods that are familiar from the days of mao's cultural revolution in north. we
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weren't allowed to complain about the guards they tormented us all the time and shouted at us and they beat us and we couldn't say a word they treated us like animals. since 2016 china has been cracking down on members of the kinds of kids and weaker ethnic groups in the province of shin jiang their majority muslim. is among the many cousins to flee china. she's a seamstress and hopes to find a job in our marty. theory that. we can't live in china anymore. however they want to destroy our cars that culture and that of the kirghiz and we gores. they want to make us all chinese.
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but i want to keep my religion my identity and my roots. the humor says detention so-called reeducation surveillance and torture will only breed hatred for now she's found a new place to stay. sophia 2 is better. than the gods in the chinese come like wolves. that are ignorant and that our eyes are so cold. in. also fears drawings bear testimony to her suffering and that of her people still in the camps. this weekend label ideas we discover how centuries old traditions are protecting coastal regions from the effects of climate change our reporter linda travel to
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mexico outside the town of paris and all the aztec planting technique is helping prevent flooding along the coastline. because i see myself as an aztec that way if not i carry the roots of my culture within me. i've worked in farming since i was a boy my grandparents once grew vegetables such as letters on this land today the work is done by my father my brother and me. a cyclist pedaling to his chin i'm part of a sustainable farming system established by his aztec forefathers 500 years ago champus are artificial islands made from modern reeds and separated by come out there to pick least 300 metres long and 50 metres wide to this day farming is done by hand with no help from tractors or plows for the. buckets to take the water and
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the mud that we need straight from the canals and we transport it all in our boats . after drying out the mud we plant the seeds in the resulting soil it's a technique used centuries ago by our ancestors the aztecs and it's very efficient . if you see in this. style harvests the produce from his chin on to 5 times a year he sells the vegetables to restaurants in downtown mexico city. the historic center is just 20 kilometers away. but you know i'm pose a one of the last remaining i waste in the sprawling mega-city. 500 kilometers away on the coast of the gulf of mexico floor on this cruise is hoping 2 numbers will make her life easier. it will be empty again she catches fish and craps for a living but today's catch is modest she set up 20 traps which vince not just ate
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craps. at the sea every other than there used to be a lot more crabs here at this time of year there already be really big ones but there was nothing today normally we'd have more crabs from the current come but that's not the case we're really noticing the change. for the craps finding refuge along the coast is becoming increasingly difficult due to deforestation mangroves have suffered especially heavy losses and have been depleted by over 30 percent over the past 40 years. that means the disappearance of a crucial protective habitat for local animals. these people and determined to revive those havens in a regional mangrove planting scheme nobody here is bothered about getting their fingers dirty. it's
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actually kind of fun. you know. the men are building temples just as the aztecs did 500 years ago little islands of athenry to provide homes for the mine grapes to thrive and we don't want to put it on the market but if we're using the technique because the land is so deep in the water the plant wouldn't grow without the support of that you know it would be blown over by the 1st gust of wind. both will be. among grave reforestation scheme it's organized by city. from the pro nutter a conservation group. they initially have difficulty reintroducing mangroves in the coastal regions. they wouldn't grow because the water level was too high. and. it's surprising to see this algae numpad technique from central mexico one that's being used here on the gulf to help replenish mangere. and it's great to be
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creating a link to our heritage and also that people from that region are involved in the project. and. used to be everywhere. but they've now been replaced by pasta right up to the shore grazed by cattle in the traditional fishing region. you know living through on this cruise and her family a pinning their hopes on the conservation group and the champ has. once the mine gray forests have been restored that hole of fish and crabs should grow again as well flo and her husband and son took part in the planting project helping to reestablish the old ecosystem. my moniker i was practically born in the water in the river i never went to school well up it all out of bucket but one of the few things i do know about the world is how important the mangroves are for us and the
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entire system for all the species for everyone and everything. will be basically built. back in the center of the country the suburbs of the capital have been creeping ever closer to the 2 numbers in recent years a sale and the other farmers are concerned about their fields the biggest danger for this old method of sustainable farming is humankind itself. when the peace wherever people go they pollute they leave trash everywhere including in the canarsie eventually they fill up and dry out and you can't row down them anymore the canals become dirty. i mean. and i say i would like to see his children take over his chin ample one day passing on a piece of that heritage. that's
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you're going to one official estimates more than 1200000 venezuelans live in colombia legally and illegally. why return to. to visit friends i don't think i'd ever go back there to live you know what i live there again i don't know so i'm not sure. bearing witness global news that matters . made for mines earth home to millions of species
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of home worth saving. google ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world ideas that protect the climate boost green energy solutions and reforestation. using interactive content to inspire people to take action global ideas the series of global 3000 on t.w. and online. rock n roll. come up. sinful rhythms can tell by the charts. no evil feeling that you feel when you think. past lives of music. stopped.
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no one is more popular than jesus upcoming book religious morality preachers or subversive. passion with some marketing potential by placing a warning label on music products. rock and religion clash that brings many parallels. to the 2 really soderbergh consumable. cars the devil and rock n roll. 71 t w. e n.
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this is it every news live from berlin a deadly assault on protesters in sudan term war breaks out in the capital hard to wear a military crackdown has killed more than a dozen people will look at what it means for efforts to end the army's grip on power and put a civilian government in place also coming up u.s. president donald trump is not all come to buy queen elizabeth at the state at the start of a state visit to britain many in the u.k. are unhappy about the trip we'll find out why and alex.
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