tv DW News Deutsche Welle August 3, 2019 5:15am-5:31am CEST
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your platform for reliable information. to take one step for man to face the. time. on trying. to overcome. the world it's time for. coming up ahead. business news africa coming up in the next 15 minutes nigeria's east more than a 1000000 people have been displaced standoff trapped by violence as a decade conflict. and often groups rages in borno state also on the program i challenge. you we will meet nigerian animates this work
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was screened at the outcrop animation film festival of. the film funded and why it's a gift. for writing always. the same kind of story that i'd like to go to. my life because it was. before. i've come to the news africa day and we begin in nigeria where this week has seen more than 100 dead in a series off clashes and attacks between regional forces and is a missed feiss in the country's wealth east military sources say 20 troops and more than 40 killed any of this weekend on lake chad a base of the multinational joints tossed their troops on the jerries regional
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allies as seen repeated attacks since 2014. nigeria's presidency again claimed this week that. long as surgeon c. had been quote defeated but even his admits that the north of the country is still a violent place blame in what it says is a mixture of remnants criminal groups and jihadists from the muslim and west africa president mohammed a former general has previously said the group will quote beaten. so where does this leave the people who live there doctors without borders say as the conflict in borno state means many of the 1800000 displaced people now suffer from mental illness. is a town southeast of my degree where about half of the 70000 inhabitants are displaced people some live in camps others in the host community wherever they are
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there is not enough psychological support for them. many of the displaced people have suffered terrible abuse would like you to listen to the testimony off too much or that's not her real name she's a victim of groups. i'm 17 operates in and they forced me to get married and i got pregnant they took the baby out and they damaged my blood and the general it was difficult to have the baby out now and he died young. i had another pregnancy i had an abortion and got pregnant again. and i cut one once enough to rule and i escaped out came to. my 3 pregnancies and if they were in the same man. my guess today just spent the last 21 months working in my glory as an advocacy representative full doctors without borders and they have medical activities they call it joins me now i have
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a high cost in fact i want to stories sounds like rape is being used as a weapon in this conflict how widespread is that i'm in it is true that these do you know but to much there is something that we see and hear of quite often even bought in the states. at the moment we do not have any indians up knowing the extent that section of land it's used as a weak point to follow what we do know is that people are getting very risky to the government's giving employees to camps and let me know as well is that we try to provide citizens medical services does that right either signal by it is not on these easy because of factors that are mentioned in the us in stories that like the news and good tippers guys. write a question you've spent the last 21 months in in borno state what did you witness as you will work again. what i witnessed was the extent of
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human suffering in the states people continued to be displaced by couldn't it that has been going on for 10. people continued to. consequences as seen in the evidence as the. parties of the conflict continue with the concrete. what you see as one is a. brick download process in society it is very difficult for the people enough that i can speak to trust other people to gain any strangers coming into the. places of hard beaton's so we continue to see the disintegration of society is where we see as well because they see. access to basics and he says it is true that humanitarian actors have stepped up and continue to provide humanitarian assistance but it is far from the very minimum package of said
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he sees that people. saw this conflict cost an advert seen at the nigerian military and these autographs as rate of enraging for about 10 years now how has that affected services like primary health care. as of today many people were left reliant on humanitarian assistance coming from humanitarian act as like doctors without borders and many other humanitarian actors in many places of in particular up on those states there is no sequence at this of these no a state citizens with a medical said disease or education or whatever else because there's just no sit and said bins in those areas over to the insecurity and we continue to see continued displacement in many parts of the state. is as you mentioned by the health care in particular foxes doctors without borders people who have no arses to
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vaccinations at the seams so we see the common and very simple diseases like malaria like diarrhea like like measles arctic too many children all going to the neck of basic vaccination is that these needs that should have been up and it will hold for the children. cost and no call from doctors without borders thank you thank you so much for samantha depends in the face off me until attacks by boko haram and other groups many people have fled to outside nigeria that's the case of deborah that 18 a young woman is building a new life in portugal a country which unlike some of its european neighbors is still welcoming immigrants portugal has it all has become that's right almost 2000 refugees since 2015. 21 year all dobro ceratin makes parts for watches in the city
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of those central portugal just over a year ago she fled nigeria and was rescued from the mediterranean now she lives in a small apartment provided by the local council. is good because now i'm walking in. and i know. they're braze coming to the m a for your current program that helps refugees to become self-sufficient in the host country portugal welcomes refugees to come but a shortage of manual workers and the drilling population. forcing it's good for our country's economy and the population growth. companies themselves are asking for migrants now because they help the local economy whether it's in
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factories or farming. and in food and the mayor agrees he say's the new arrivals like their brother are helping to develop local businesses. animation film festival has emerged as a focal point for the wider animation community in west africa it's a platform that supports promotes and office animators across africa the opportunity to showcase their artistic work while since nigeria's nollywood is already the biggest protest on the continent is there any hope for the upcoming animators in the country. quadrant studios knew a short animation film as
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a tell us street rock in lagos trying to live the nigerian dream from this studio on a suba and has co-founders say they want to create unique stories that reflect african reality is. how we should stop the street shoes and who is not we come explore on top of the wall i think it would do that's. good once we buy the next generations of the new generation of. scientists people in the broad spectrum of society more than themselves. their short film has already been screened at international film festivals now they want to make a full length feature film out of it. but any c.e.o. of us says they need better infrastructure more skilled animators and cash in order to achieve that there are only
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a few animators in nigeria and small animation companies like quadrant studios struggle to catch the eye of investors. i think people. from cleared all got some. programs to do with the markets get market feedback and hits the market with we. see the series. or any type of production. one man that knows the nigerian film market very well is movie director needs hakim or lie on his movie wedding party to it is the highest grossing nigerian film of all time. and he is expanding to animation films he has a team of 10 animators working on various projects he recently released the trailer for his short animation film queen or here. i will no longer tolerate.
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that. let me make this it's a film that is based on the nigerian female legend queen. my lego was fully funded through donations on crowdfunding site kickstarter. back in and says that with the right investments nigerian animations have the potential of riding on the success of nollywood and even taking it to the next level. i think it goes into the point right now where you feel like you seen it all it feels i was telling the same kind of stories and i think that's why people get excited with this all my life because you know there wasn't anything like that before doesn't a lot of these parts about. even though many small teams don't have the reputation and experience of nollywood and as positive of a promising future for animation and nigeria. and that is that for now for me is that because you can catch all our story on how we have spies and facebook
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page we need you now to dribble out of the show with the cost of this week in senegal 60 young people from 29 african countries played with n.b.a. stop us film extracted by. alexander honeymoon boy our series on tomorrow today. we want to see what he saw to experience what drove him on journeys through latin america following the footsteps of the great scientist. our 1st stop ecuador climbing the
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