tv The 77 Percent Deutsche Welle July 14, 2019 1:30pm-2:01pm CEST
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b. and b.'s heritage. in 45 minutes long. story some people go for information to provide. the means they want to express. on facebook and twitter today and in touch. while come to one another edition of the 77 percent show well africa's you eddie my god jr. are you on that that's a 5 years old if you said yes then you're on the right place because this show is all about you coming up on the program. in south africa to discuss the roots of the
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violence against migrant. we have discovered that love a city that has a lot of times i mean. either germany explores the secrets hairstyle. we have the brown you said the spread because all of us love i'm going to. but 1st we bring you a disturbing story from south africa's largest city johannesburg and the township of soweto it gang driving by in a phobia has been terrorizing migrants this report shows that a phobia at its worst but sadly is the reality for many migrants in townships across the country. when nelson mandela came to power in 1904 said i'm an equal who left somalia for the rainbow nation to escape panda and he's a really good dude and your life is a shopkeeper in johannesburg today everything is going on oct 30th 2018 and
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angry mob stormed his shop in home and bandits to the ground go money to escape but his girlfriend died in the flames. adamantly you know i was born. i see i don't have. anything in anymore. i lost my girlfriend i was down it was a rose malcolm dinner it was everything. sue was telling myself that get me back. but do great community take me out so i decided no. don't go to. chaucer by. the incident was just one of the $139.00 documented shop lutyens in south africa in $3.00 to $18.00 motivated bones in a 4 player every month in townships like white city but african born foreigners are
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victims of violent hate crimes many locals think they are responsible for low wages and job losses. to meet as in a 4 week again who often target foreign owned stores its leader calls himself the deaf and to him foreigners are not just easy targets he holds them for responsible for his own misery. you go to join a spare great know every corner you go to to put in for him because that's working that foreign policy in ways working it's a job for a south african was supposed to be making the south africans now they are dependent on crime money and money from government it's not that people don't want to wait but the people they want to work but there are no jobs there because the foreigners the are ticking all shores so obviously we are going to call these neighborhood is controlled by gangs even the police don't enter the slum which is built on top of
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a dam only drugs help make the residents lives more bearable they project their frustrations onto foreigners who they believe better off. i have to do this if i don't do it then my family will suffer in my kill will not eat i see how many soldiers i have my soldiers must eat they must move my soldiers with. my soldiers more if i don't have anything 3 really 3 please god will teach you i live my friend and will pray to the lord to forgive us. because he knows we don't have jobs. before their reach tonight the gang members smoke some here only they see it's trying to strike again . but not all south africans have the same attitude as gaddafi in his main
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neighbors helping him get back on his feet after the attack they give him blankets food and most importantly the strength to carry on. with the lives of $1000.00 and i quote right that's not right we are all humans we should treat each other with respect and show born to he is human no matter where he comes from. we have a hand on his neighbor's neko has restored his old shop he hopes he will be able to restock soon but those responsible for the death of his partner still have not been found monaco says the police did not want to investigate the murder of a foreigner he still feels the culprits might return at any time. now it's great that he has some good neighbors to support it reminds us that there still is a good side to humanity xenophobia is a serious issue that needs to be addressed in south africa especially as a long way to go in dealing with it to get to the heart of the issue we send our
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reporter money to alexandra the township of johannesburg known for frequent outburst of violence against foreigners he spoke with residents and migrants alike the problem of xenophobia. the 77 percent is back on the road once more and this week we are in johannesburg south africa specifically the township of alexandra and it's here that we've witnessed some of the west skirmishes related to sin a phobia it's not a problem exclusive to south africa but why is it that it seems to be flaring up quite often here well i have a very good looking panel here who are going to help me answer that question and i want to start with ray who is actually a resident here what is the current situation in south africa in a spazz in a phobias concent. as for now like currently it's like. before we would find cases where by like foreigners are actually being violently attacked by local residents because of the furnace obviously so yeah i want to get to
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the food affinity you are actually working with a consortium of refugees and migrants here in south africa why do you think that the flare ups here end up being violent i think in south african context quite a number of issues that in south africa we get now to be addressed issues of service delivery in communities where the local residents will be crying in a force attend basic services to be delivered in their communities and when the government not coming in forefront in developing such kind of critical basic services. that local resident with then turn up with a foreign nation. out there and that's where they take foreign nationals because they are the most vulnerable groups in the community is the only serious like as you can see like most of the sort of we can actually we really do like when things was a little time we pull up. start drinking and everything like that while for a while foreign people move away from their countries to come sort of we can study
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. and when they study interns who get the jobs that they once let me come to little here you are a university student how is the representation in your vast city is it. what we're hearing there that south africans are busy lazing around and it's filled with foreigners i think if they're foreigners becoming interested in africa legally that was going to be like a little bit easier for us because if they come legally in south africa like most of their foreigners here they kill our fellow brothers and sisters they kill your fellow brothers us exactly so that is a problem do you mean literally killing like murder exactly like you would say. if they kill and. they look they don't. like find fingerprints and stuff i want to see if by show of hands how many here are foreigners meaning not south african. yeah ok so how does it feel for you to hear that foreigners are coming to
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this country and causing crime this situation actually is going straight up to all of you here or the speakers so as you sit at the foreigners kill your brothers and your sisters right the only thing that's going to come in my mind is that i need to self-defense myself which means when you're probably going to pull up in my house and try to take me definitely i'm going to kill him why because you want to i'll take me he wants to kill me and at the same time this awful phobia i've never seen a black person go. because because because the scene is right since like all of us all of us we really belong in africa. i really just want to understand from you ray do you feel that if the foreign nationals were for some reason or the other to vacate this area that life would suddenly be ok you're hospitals a family not entirely of course the country has
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a country is going to have its own problems but i feel if the illegal foreigners were to be shifted things would be right i don't understand this please help me understand because let me ask someone who's documented does it change for you when you have your papers there's a perception of other south africans against you as a foreign a change or is it still the same still the same they still see you as like a foreigner because at the end of the day they don't know who is who is documented you know i mean like i could come from i could be like from literally in this neighborhood and everything and be a foreigner and then it won't change you from here legally or illegally they will still see me as a foreigner let me come to you son. because a lot of things have been said and you're talking about documenting people we've heard that it doesn't matter the perception is still the same all those things that show us that i'm from the sotu i'm from mozambique i'm from this particular country
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you know why you need to do that so that everywhere you go you're able to prove yourselves as to who you are but now we have different forms of pressures that of forcing people out of their homes economic migration is one of them climate change is another one so what do we say to those people you're not welcome in south africa no no no no not at all was saying people need to come to south africa legally there's nobody who can go to any other country illegally that isn't everyone who's coming here in the counter or calling our must be to commend that because you cannot come and in actual fact i'm saying if you are coming here and we find you roaming around and you don't have any legal document to be here you must have deported to our country what do you have to do how do you feel about that most of our leaders and most of our community members they talk about people being documented people to access people to access asylum seeker status or if you status but the very same people who are saying that they don't have an idea how difficulty is to access just
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a particular asylum seeker status in south africa currently in the whole of $54000000.00 population of south africa we only have 3 refugee reception offices that deals with asylum seekers and refugees how do we make sure that in 2024 we're not in south africa talking about the same thing well if documentation is riling then it's important that on the dotted line the government must listen to the people and documented the foreignness documents about those who would love to be documented because one of the studio types that were you undocumented maybe everyone says they are undocumented so easy an assumption it's a stereotype too much you can eat beans in but when i function is undocumented any muscle lucian's if like some other people who are areas they don't have their i.d.'s and things. then that's the. reason why i keep saying that our leaders are not doing their jobs so what's the solution what's the way forward the way forward is that. we need we need to get the way to them and find
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a way to the people find rich that firstly to the political leaders is to out statement which are very fight and very fight because if they unverified statements encourage their division among communities secondly the issue of documentation it does not just rely on my face it also rely on the policies in place so we need to educate each other and when it's africa ok on that note i suppose we can end this conversation it's a pity really that we can go on and on forever but as you can see the issues i mean yeah the biggest one here for me being documentation documentation documentation i don't know what you took from it but thank you for watching. thank you edith but it's a shame that most of the participants failed to condemn the attacks on killings violence is never the answer and i'm really disappointed that people were trying to
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get justify it no one has a right to attack or take another person's life but what do you think you're going to have your thoughts on the topic by engaging in the debate on our facebook page and you can watch a longer version of that street debate on our you tube channel now let's take a deep breath and move on we're taking a trip to tanzania biggest city that has allowed its home to more than $4000000.00 people including a group of. charter crew show us around. check it out. hello this is such a cool we're going to take you on a ride in there is something. major
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. and i'm it must be for short together from the white chatter crew tanzania's finest collective who proudly called dar a hood but before we check out das bustling center we head into major favorite coffee shop in one neighborhood how do we get there would at 3 we would buy judges we would means of transport. but. there's nothing better than extra coffee from your favorite barrister served with his tasty sweets of course. afghanistan you know those like us. graffiti isn't new to dar in 1970 many young people started to search for greener pastures elsewhere but before they left they took a piece of charcoal and route their names on walls around the city just like here
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in the coffee shop as a way of leaving the r. mark young people who are coming from lacrosse like i want. to be with and country and. their marks were called chata and now just like back then young people are still tied in their names around the city as a way to be remembered whether they are leaving the country altogether or entering the hustle and bustle of dar. dara salaam is east africa's biggest city and an economic powerhouse to watch a crew plan to do a graffitti piece as one of the city's big bus terminals designed to noon but unfortunately they run out of spray paint but they are in luck here are the markets in the city center you can find almost anything you're looking for so it's the perfect place to grab some spray cans right you can see here also you can take 2 or
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3 days. you can do good if ensures the fine maybe just room so that's the challenge ok so maybe it's not that easy but eventually what shutter crew can get started the 4 friends have learned how to make the most of what they have to the street art the coop to keep the free spirit of doris salaam alive which continues to attract artist and activist from all around the world. young people from marvin gaye's you know the doris alarm was the only place where in the seventy's and eighty's revolution around the world from malcolm x. to all of them at some point they've been in this city so this is call it their version r.e.c. . so what's the what charter cruise biggest dream encouraging more young people to express themselves with graffiti art so what are you waiting for grab a can and chatter chatter. thanks to the watch out our crew for showing
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us that. so you should definitely put that on your travel list. next report is also about aughts to be more specific millions of african women spend hours in the solemn chair undergoing the painful and time consuming process of greeting the i have and getting extensions our very own either community is there live an example of that. millions of women swear they braided hair they spend i was undergoing the uncomfortable process of getting attention. edith can money is one of them african women getting your head done is no walk in the park i can tell you about for free it can take hours and with you know people pulling of different directions it can be very painful but today we want to go beyond the half styles i want to find out why women are spending so much money so much time on their head why is it such a big deal why is it such
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a big identity maka for african when. you can't trust anybody with your precious looks but edith knows that she's in safe hands like movies and that's how markets. will be $450.00 euros a year to hear. the beauty you just need to be smart even the bible says the hazel months in the movie if you must be teased from here in new bring you need to also make quick flowers on top of your braids. ok so most men in the community go to school the women tikrit will be here but it's not a one place be exploited extensions are the most fulfilling way to grow and many women still on the we can live up more and more young women and rejecting any natural options a growing number of the hairstylist natural hair. i think there was one big lie that we bought and you know even when we look at what peoples have the wind
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silky and straight to want to be like that but why are you know our hair doesn't naturally grow streety grows kinky clients are making a statement for women and for the kind of parliament building what if you want to join the natural movement do you want to be squashed commitment it needs a lot of commitment just the way you take care of a baby or something it also needs the same care. so natural doesn't mean you can't quit the old city. so when we say our hair is so strongly rooted to identity does it mean that if i choose to where we. i lose my identity as a as an african woman absolutely not absolutely not i still wear weaves and weeks and i braid my hair and it does not take away from my identity as a natural natural head african woman it's just a way to stitch up your style or even going to have even great an actual hand without you know subjecting you to constant money. and of course
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also plenty of room for him to join a team we can train him to be. well better you than me i don't think i can pull it out of last she thus like me for me i don't need to read my write well today we have a brand new segments to share with you on the 77 percent it's called the spread host kyra lucas. has and says us questions on sex and relationships and nothing is off limits but if you don't believe me just watch. hello there and welcome to the spread in a safe space where we get to discuss everything sex and relationships today our e-mail comes from a lady by the name of time diesel and she says hi kathy can we discuss consent under the influence of alcohol last weekend i was out on a date after
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a few drinks i ended up going home with this guy and woke up the next morning having no recollection of what had happened the night before and had me thinking when sleeping with a partner for the 1st time if either or both of you were drunk how do you gauge consent. while that's a big one 1st let's start by defining consent consent as an agreement between participants to engage in different sexual activities consent isn't always verbal but verbal e agreeing to participate in different sexual acts helps to form stronger boundaries let's paint a picture to better understand your question so you're out with somebody for the 1st time you go to a nice little restaurant you're having the food is great the music even better and the drinks just hitting the right spot so much so that it gives you the courage to make the 1st move you say to your date hey i like your clothes i bet they'd look better on my bedroom floor but you both laugh as lame as that joke is there was an element of truth to it you have more during conversation is flowing flirtation is
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being reciprocated and before you know it's mid-sentence whom your date for a kiss on you look at this point you probably think that your date is ready to go all the way right wrong this is why verbal consent is one very important just feel free to ask do you want to come back to my place and even when your date says yes it doesn't mean that they want to sleep with you maybe they're just interested in interior doors are you know you see the thing with consent is that it can be withdrawn at any time and the absence of an enthusiastic yes especially when it comes to sexual interactions just me. because it sometimes really hard for. well to understand the basics of consent here is a list of things that consent is not silence is not consent what somebody is wearing is not consent consent of another time is not always consent guiltiness somebody into saying yes is not consent somebody's sexuality is not consent someone's gender is not consent and somebody's drunk is definitely not consent the
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greatest thing about sex is it can be so much more beautiful when 2 consenting adults agree things we are sticking need to engage so place and have fun from me. till next time good bye. thank you for your refreshing me honest advice and welcome to the 77 percent. now if you want to get in touch with us or if you have any questions about our program write to us at 77 a d.-w. dot com we are reaching the end of the show but yes what to expect in the next edition of the 77 percent. with young people entirely. beat on unemployment and migration. we started the show talking about violence and hate and now we ended with some much needed love.
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in 15 minutes spotty w. o o o. o o h 2 s. early the interest guy function is booming capital i love berlin the summer the multicultural metropolis. we're duramax series the band on the planet the sun like stars to me i love even was sure it was a certain look like the toughest race like me fights as the 50 missions 50 stories and 50 fairly personal tips on berlin's a very best in terms of. book no limits or length of really long d.w. .
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i am a. guy i've. been 15 years since the movie my being. deep was the 1st man to walk on the moon. as a small boy he dreamed of the stars. as a pilot he flew anything no matter how to introduce. a church or go to the poll. as an astronaut he took part in the greatest adventure in history. the hero a legend or simply
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a showman being who was neil armstrong. was his destiny starts july 20th on t.w. . cut. this is steve every new year's live from finland frog celebrates bastille days with the fos just play off had gentry at military prowess also coming up. with the president talked about her country's renewed tensions with russia and the song time if it is to join the european union. to add
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