tv DW News Deutsche Welle June 7, 2019 7:02am-7:15am CEST
7:02 am
this is the news africa coming up in the next 15 minutes defects of climate change on africa care for all to see on in kenya where changing rainfall patterns make it difficult for hedda's to feed their livestock has been developed to help farmers find the right place for the animals to graze and even in some of the most when not to do it one of the most john is no doubt the. sound of their pasta when it's and it's. also coming up. she and her family fled from war to insults around uganda 3 years ago now needed for any house found work as a seamstress she's one of many refugees who are giving you work permits on land to help them settle on a raise that terrible memories of the past. welcome
7:03 am
to the program i am eddie my god julia stories in the bed but fast new developments consent in sudan the african union has suspended the country over monday's violence in ha 2 on twitter the a you posted the a you peace and security council house with immediate effect suspect that the parts of the republic of sudan in all a you activities until the effective establishment of the civilian led transitional authority is the only way to allow the sudan to exit from the current crisis. recent images from hot tombs are just a tense stand of the issue makeshift barricades put up across streets by demonstrators to block the security forces elsewhere in this than these capital so those rapid support forces sit in pickup trucks mounted with machine guns as the god main routes the central committee of sudan doctors says about 100 people were
7:04 am
killed on monday when soldiers and police cleared the sit in by pro-democracy protesters outside the army headquarters that major authorities put the figure. we had to kenya now where more than a quarter of its population is dependent on pastoral animal husbandry but nearly 90 percent of the country's lands or semi arid and change in rueful pods and make it difficult for many headers to find pasta for the animals it can be a situation of life and death and the communities need all the help they can get that's where a newly developed comes to the rescue the provides vital data that enables head as make informed choices on where and when the animals come graze. northern kenya is wide open skies wisps of cloud hold the promise of rain to come where there's water there's pasture and that means fodder for the precious life stopped.
7:05 am
for years to pay and. experts with this. radio stations but the experience of generations can fail in the face of climate change if the rains don't come no mites can roam in vain the stock arrives at the market we couldn't not at all and you are in text service is providing fight it's enables had a son to make informed choices. i wouldn't have lost so much life stuck had i been using this app last year we lost a lot when we moved them to outsmart most stood on the way when we got there there was no pasture on the way back we lost more livestock if i would have had this ep then we wouldn't have wristed that we have come here directly. from
7:06 am
nairobi's climate project says the app can help as across east africa i think as a project we have a target over 300000. people in. march and we feel right now we're. in the or. we. will be with $200000.00. climb markups the service will help pastoralists build up resilience so that a drought will no longer always mean an emergency. joining me now is michael okotie assistant director on climate change research or where they can yeah i will cultural and livestock research organization michael many thanks for joining us now tell us how dire is the situation and what climate change got to do with it. ok i
7:07 am
think in the best sort of setup in this country of. climate change these are no distress us for the press or letter names it beats a big jumble and we say so but it fits the resource base which is a lifetime for bashing the faster lines and facing because in these in these in these 2 pronged areas one it affects process and for the species that laughter most depend on then. and this is in these regions which are fed slash workouts mostly we do to the risks that are about to do less stroke lead going down and to the extreme and also see left of deaths or planet related but on the flip side we also have issues that constrain. mobility or adaptive capacity in security t. population increases and they shrink a natural resource base we. have a question plenty of change now that obviously tell study it is
7:08 am
a very serious situation how are the pastoralists been dealing with this so far. let me say that it best that they both read the letter. from the left or the left. most of them into natural resource is going to 11 years but we need to be keep being some of them out without going into a negative that legislates chapel or banning. would let loose like gondry says no and also out of a bashing and sound going well how can you sustain this late what always and the rest that we book proport action and also put up about it but for the life of definitely so diversify and has been very keen now how important is the use of technology in dealing with a situation like climate change. you see social systems of reach and active duty i actually see that policy changes faster than kind of just got just
7:09 am
a drive behind but most of the committees now i have received this policy changes with you but the problem is that going to get really. well. mobile phones to get to where the information planet from inside this is to know where you have markets it's really fastest from the from the past what is the south of the new somebody because i know markets is it. my life i did any bending develops my off to be easy and i know the price is the out. so it helps the best way to put it to put these losses in the production systems yes ok michael i wish there was more time cause i'd love to be educated more now how important technology is to climate change well michael teeth with a kenyan like a cultural and livestock research of his asian thanks for your time thank you welcome. now while most countries stranding the our borders and 10 are we refugees
7:10 am
uganda is welcoming more people than ever approximately 1000000 refugees mostly from south sudan now call uganda home the united nations credits the east african country with one of the most progressive and generous refugee policies in the world the government has made significant strides to ensure freedom of movement and access to work for refugees edith phony and her family 11 example of this. symbol sims teach but as teach you do for any question tradesperson makes a new dress surely recently was able to train as a sim stress as part of a youth and it project destruct from a terrible memories in 26 students she fled with her family from water in south sudan to uganda. on our way the rebels came they took our property torch it us in different ways and beat us. it's like millions of others from
7:11 am
south sudan as well as rwanda or the d.r. see edith and her family found refuge in uganda there are 48 here functions differently compared to the rest of the world people are not just confined to a camp like in kenya refugees who arrive here immediately given a work permit and a land which is provided by the communities and their neighbors who hand over parts of their land they also receive monthly benefits we have ash and food as well because when we give them food get that is restricted to the 4 that we've given them but when you give them cash they have the option to buy and supplement what about dead dead dead at least so it's option. ugandans have a strong willingness to give to those in need for 20 years they also suffer during the civil war the people here know what it means south sudan where the most recent civil war broke out in 2030 leading to an ongoing conflict between rival factions and ethic. patience only exists in the region titers juggle their food you discover
7:12 am
suffer much money district is happy that there are food able to find a new place to call home in uganda he believes it benefits the locals to the presence of this woman and us mindy's so many people have been employed not not not in a cellar from a disability but it is where under we pay a tax when you look at the infrastructure development we have constructed access what odds in that if it is a tremendous well constructed discourse of course structed had to say. but there are also negative aspects such as i gradually dwindling including with supplies in generally 29000 alone almost 6000 more if we just arrived in uganda but they stuff it in country and wants to keep its borders open and can only manage this influx with the help of it money list for the time being. and us policies continue to be put into action you just saw the verified use will be self sufficient like some
7:13 am
stress it is phony. finally whoever thought of putting a go pro camera on an african penguin. well 2 is such as of nelson mandela university in some a strand that's who and look what happened. when the beds dive down below the waves of stony points out africa 1st they swim down 30 metres deep. to find the anchovies the love to eat and then they head the fish shows towards the surface so they don't have to dive so far down the next scientists believe the bats again work as a team driving the fish towards the light that makes it easier for everyone to catch up. that's all we have time for on d.w. news africa check out our website facebook page for more stories and you can see the details there on the screen thanks for the time goodbye on to see you so.
7:14 am
how about taking a few friends who could even take a chance on love. don't expect happy endings. literature looks. for state school in the jungle. or 1st climbing lesson. doors grandma with arrives. joining a regular on her journey back to freedom. you know work interior good documentary jewelry an orangutan returns home on the w. don't come to tanks.
28 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=958068673)