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tv   World Stories  Deutsche Welle  June 9, 2019 11:15pm-11:31pm CEST

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that's all but the german had been penalized 5 seconds for rejoining the track in an unsafe manner with this result hamilton remains at the top of the season's driver standings. and washington w. news live from berlin coming up next as world stories the weekend reports this time with a look at ukraine's booming business with surrogacy stay tuned for that the news will be back at the top of the hour on a cold thanks for joining us. what secrets lie behind these. to find out even worse if you experience and explore fascinating and cultural heritage science. d.w. world heritage for 60 years. i'm
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not going to think that it well i guess sometimes i am but those are all things which at that point the germans thinks deep into the german culture of looking at the stereotype of a quirk but if you think you see these are the countries that i don't blame. you don't seem to think for this drama there you go it's cold out there you know i'm rachel join me for me the german from d.w. . post. in this week's edition of the world stories. which are going to use hunting migrants at the u.s. border. babies made to order in ukraine but we begin in london where non-food techs are becoming more frequent they were almost 1300 last year many of them face hole
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some teenagers are afraid to go out of the streets on. a new day a new crime scene last night here in east london a 15 year old was stabbed to death with a knife. social worker paul mckenzie has visited many such crime scenes but this time it really gets to him the victim was a friend of his nephew. too much and you see these are everywhere you see a bunch of flowers years ago and it meant something you really saw when i was there read the request and it's just life is too many to read more the only because somebody wanted to prove something to somebody else that's that's the sort of thing that life has become a point system. and now somebody somewhere say. they know. and that person but. often it's
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a case of rivalry between members of youth gangs but innocent bystanders can also fall victim to knife crime. almost or in some gangs knifing someone is proof a youngster is worthy of belonging to a gang. 13 years old be the receiver not. what happens mckenzie talks to gang members and makes videos to show how quickly things that the syrian rating in some parts of london. why do you carry a 15 inch not crazy big and scared but if you say. could i don't what someone put up with me. 10 or. killed me so are oakland. out on a day. every poll mckenzie feels that the government tells them take knife crime seriously enough he supports an initiative demanding that the government treat the
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violence as a national emergency the president you know you might really. have lost my younger brother who marched through to knife crime this was my son i say oh he was more murdered in 2015. with modest but let me thank god for night crime in the face of february this again is not true. i in some neighborhoods and young people don't leave home without a knife as i think they must be prepared to defend themselves. chasen isaak's was stabbed to death one and a half years ago he was sharon candles eldest son. now he younger children always have to come home straight from school because she fears for their lives jason was killed early in the evening while he was out with a few friends. jess was where 4 friends so 5 of them and yet to run for their lives and they all were in different directions and jessen
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got call on them was stopped 8 times. ron paul mckenzie knows there aren't any quick fixes to the situation the british government has now committed itself to investing in you can strengthening the police presence everyone that is the problem has simply become too large to ignore . our next trip takes us to the border between mexico and the u.s. well in fiction and hundreds have taken it upon themselves to play border patrol the militia group seeks to prevent people without documents from entering the u.s. and isn't shy about flashing its assault rifles. militia man jim bandy is beginning his shift its mission to find and stop illegal migrants. every night he and his friends at the guardian patriots gather in the new mexican
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desert near el paso. where they have been described as right wing extremists but the militia insists they are just trying to help the author already set for them this is carb watch this is an open border and would border patrol being strained it's an unprotected border so we need to be here we need to back up the border patrol. a piece of wall has been built to control the influx of migrants but it's far from complete. at nightfall the guardian patriots open up into action a group of migrants are just entering american soil or crossing after stopping the group the militia called border patrol for some try to escape some of the rio grande. right. not by. militia member children himself is sung to an illegal migrant from mexico but he wants new arrivals to come to the u.s.
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the legal way. back in the day you had to pay for your education you had to take yet speak english get to know the presidents and you know yeah it's hard but that's . a legal way to do it when they just do it illegal this way it cost the taxpayer money more. but it's not just the migrants who might be breaking the law the militia has been accused of taking people into custody at gunpoint an illegal act if it's against their will. seal the border network for human rights condemns the guardian patriots presence of the border saying they need loosely incite fear for no real reason why do we need. what we need a militia. but the guardian patriots have no doubt they are needed as long as president trumps war remains unfinished. until then they say they will continue to watch over the border. more and more
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surrogate mothers in ukraine are being driven to bear children for foreign couples as of sheer financial despair. one pregnancy can and them some 15000 euros. whenever the baby moves i speak to it at night when i read my children stories it's for the baby to. the talia is 8 months pregnant it's ago but it's not hers tahlia is a surrogate the baby's parents live in germany. it's such a happy moment when you hold your baby in your arms for the 1st time i'll be happy for them. to tell his own children only with her for the day for the final months of the pregnancy she is moved to be closer to the clinic and. natalia took the
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decision to become a surrogate to help family finances so that her kids would have it better she tells us her partner earns just 200 euros a month working full time. this clinic on the outskirts of hard to attract childless couples from around the world among them the german couple whose daughter natalia is carrying they were unwilling to be interviewed even anonymously the fear of being recognised is just too great. it's a different story with this woman from germany we're calling her and she's in her early forty's and has 6 failed attempts to get pregnant by i.b.m. behind her adoption wasn't something she has been willing to consider so sorry an exile donation was the only option remaining a procedure that's illegal in germany ana says that is pure hypocrisy surrogacy is illegal in germany but you see celebrities and those who can afford it
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doing it all the same it's when you get back to germany that social services treat you like a criminal. surrogacy is big business and one that's growing in this clinic in how to give couples pay upwards of 30000 euros for a package think ludes the surrogacy and egg cell donation there are no official statistics but insiders estimate that many hundreds of children are born to surrogates every year in ukraine. it's a month since we last met natalia now she's back with her partner and children. would she do it again for now she won't rule it out but one thing is clear the demand is there and it's growing. i know this trip takes us to thailand one of the most popular tourist destinations
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and the world one main attraction there is riding an elephant but animal rights activists say the elephants are often badly mistreated to make them more dos i'll. show time at mesa elephant camp twice a day the elephants entertain visitors with their skills everything looks playful but tricks like this are only possible after long training explains one of the camp managers. if you would like to let your children know english you should talk english to them things there where young same thing with a love if you would like to lead them obey you are lifted on you to teach them things there were young if for centuries elephants in southeast asia we used for transport in the timber industry until logging was banned in the region 30 years ago. with thousands of captive elephants out of work their owners turn to tourism.
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elephant tourism is now a lucrative business but one that's lightly regulated. nina ortman brown is a biologist she advises camps on how to ensure that entertaining tourists isn't detrimental to elephant well being. and welfare can easily be done in a writing camp if you provide the elephant with k. enough food enough water enough rest and and otherwise we found this comfort also. to biologists is pleased with the camp's general conditions for the elephants seem to be in good shape she says but she admits that she often runs into secrecy just like today when asked about the specific methods of training young elephants the camp veterinarian becomes rather tight lipped us and often cannot call but it is asked so their views they just see and hear their call wherever it has. on the
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internet it's possible to find videos of a torturous ritual designed to break an elephant spirit the method has been used for centuries it's a brutal training process that can go on for weeks only when the elephant stops resisting is it released from its agony. animal rights groups are calling for a boycott of elephant camps they're convinced interactions like these are only possible once an elephant has been broken many western travel companies have stopped offering this kind of tourism but with growing numbers of chinese visitors business is thriving ellison tourism is sold as cute harmless fun but once you look at its clothes a darker picture starts to emerge if. you
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. they're everywhere in nature but they only really materialize in no brains. how does this process move what role does alpha section play and how do colors influence on everyday lives we've talked about all the just some behavioral scientists to find out. tomorrow to do it next d.w. . tomorrow's musicians today or. the world's best sephardic usually just listening to the live. highlights from 20 young your classic festival. was really the sunday
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of the feature the book. 60 minutes on d dollars thanks. to the bar slowly but surely with a little bit wonderful stories that make the game so special. feel true for. the brass more than football online. to. get into tomorrow today the science show on d w. today we get colorful how do callous affect people do they influence our consumer behavior. and greenish grade was.

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