tv World Stories Deutsche Welle September 8, 2019 11:15pm-11:31pm CEST
11:15 pm
for halim de vo watching data of a news coming up next a look behind the headlines in world stories you can also find the latest news around the clock on our website at state dot com i'm rebecca roberts in the end and watch it. i'm skilled at the volume or that's hard and in the end this is a me you're not allowed to stay here anymore we will send you back. are you familiar with this. with the smugglers were alliances. what's your story. ready on what numbers of women especially are victims of violence. take part and send us your story we are trying always to understand this new culture.
11:16 pm
another visitor another yes you want to become a citizen. in so migrants your platform for reliable information. this week in world stories. mexico miss ingenue years murdering women. yemen hospitals are on the brink mistime we start out in germany honey telescope is one of the few remaining holocaust survivors she passed through to concentration camps now she's been honored with a german national prize. she is one of the last holocaust survivors alive today
11:17 pm
i need telasco wolfish was deported to the auschwitz concentration camp in the 1943 by then the nazis had already murdered her parents. there waiting to be put in the gas chambers it was a situation that what was in you know very difficult to describe to people nowadays who live more or less normal lives it was music that safe glasgow wolfish life a talented cello player she was chosen to play in the auschwitz women's orchestra lascaux wolfish has now been recognized for her relentless fight against anti-semitism with the german national price the award honors those who have strengthened the bonds between germany and europe. after cut us off with me when i left germany after the catastrophe i swore to myself that i would never stand on german soil again but that i would never buy things from germany. my children can
11:18 pm
confirm that german was a synonym for murder and manslaughter for robbery and everything negative that you could imagine. after the war glasgow wolf ish and graded to england where she became a successful chalo player it was decades before she was able to step foot on german soil again glasgow wolfish sees it as her responsibility as a survivor to warn about the current political shift through the riots in many parts of the world like here during the holocaust comma moderation in the german parliament i think everybody is going completely mad. you know we had 7 years 70 years of peace nobody remembers what it was like not to have peace yeah but i mean this is saying what goes around comes around i mean it is very very depressing and i think you have to be very very careful lascaux rother sas she has little optimism
11:19 pm
for the future and her view what matters most now is trying to mag young people understand the danger that's in the air. blast mexico on the u.s. border is a stronghold of the drug cartels but it's also the world capital of murders of women now juarez has launched a special task force to stop them. and particle is a policewoman in the mexican border city of juarez. she's part of a special task force designed to eliminate domestic abuse. we respond to imagine she calls we get at least a dozen of them in a single shift that's. the 1st order of the day is interviewing witnesses what is has a 1000000 residents and the highest rates of violence against women in all of mexico over 100 women were murdered here last year alone and yet he suffered
11:20 pm
domestic violence at the hands of her ex-boyfriend so she has a special sensibility toward other abuse survivors such as this 15 year old girl whose partner is 17. let's just get the feel of let my dog you depart his behavior he's very aggressive and suddenly he started beating me up pulling my hair and strangling me. by the time and yelling at her colleagues arrived he's long gone the officers can't arrest the offender but they take time to talk with the survivors making sure their children are safe and explaining the women's legal. right. at. the start i suppose i would we have to make it clear to the women that they've just experienced a crime that they are victims of a cycle of violence in their families and that they need psychological attention to
11:21 pm
help them get out of the situation. it's our job to empower than the most vocal of those employed outlook besides identifying suspect and he advises women who want to report their husbands to the police every day. women under threat in what is can also turn to a leader. who founded a shelter for those fleeing domestic abuse. 11 women are currently living here with their children. 11 players and i think either also feel that the women here simply exercising their legal rights by seeking prosecution in the name by way of but some investigations can take up to 6 years that means offenders are free to commit violence against women in that time in the violence here i want to move that meanwhile and go is preparing for her next shift as a policewoman she always hopes to prevent the worst but she can't always do that somewhere in what as a woman is murdered every other day. by. the
11:22 pm
war in yemen has hit the country's hospitals especially are almost everything is in short supply dr firearm iraq does what she can to save her patients under often intolerable conditions. things can change in seconds at this intensive care unit in aden this is john not she's 18 months old and has been diagnosed with malaria and malnutrition she's hoping between life and death that a 3rd of what either of those did you request oxygen there is nothing the oxygen bottle and the room doesn't work in the heat. dr fatima must improvise it's not the 1st time she has felt helpless steam inhalations is the only option available for at the moment. it's not just now paralytic
11:23 pm
concrete see her breathing is so flat so she needs us to go right away fatima's shift is just beginning the oxygen bottle is delivered after all make it many children do not for fun the fact that oxygen cannot always be provided on time is depressing when she began her medical studies before the war shortages were unheard off i was feeling optimistic i was really looking forward to graduate but it's just so difficult ordering even for doctors considering you know what i've got here in the coming happiness comes in small doses here this father is relieved his daughter is gaining some weight for now they're not enough doctors and most of those here must work unpaid. these children are new patients waiting in the hallway for admission. 14 i was not prepared for this level
11:24 pm
of stress after a 24 hour shift she finally find sanctuary at home photography helps or to unwind at the age of 26 she finds her job overwhelming it makes me feel that i am not still working and just forget it all and live in an all in the hospital and starting a new life maybe she wants to continue her medical studies in germany her father a geologist used to live there in the 1980 s. papa do you think the war never and will end in shallow the love require a lot of time how long am i to be there this is nobody lives but we hope the war ends for a children because the. people are suffering and they are in bad shape there's no stability nothing nothing no salary no jobs the youth is lost. with a future so bleak fatima doesn't know how long she will stay in yemen working on
11:25 pm
paid she wants to continue working as a doctor to help people but she also wants better opportunities of her own if possible outside of yemen. or last start breezy rock biologist honduras or has always hoped against hope that the extremely rare persian leopard had survived the long years of for now she has proof the leopard is making a comeback. summer temperatures can exceed 40 degrees celsius here and kind of in the kurdistan region of iraq. that's why biologist and her colleague other like to get an early start. they're looking for traces of the biggest predator here. that's considered the spirit of canada. they look great it's a flagship species so it's very important it's on top predators so it's on top of the food chain. the fashion that is virtually invisible. people who live in the
11:26 pm
mountains of. it that very few have ever seen it. even hunted who's been working and doing research here for years now has never encountered that in the wild. that's why they use camera traps. so this through our growth. and we get a lot of pictures of them on our camera trials which is a good. indicator of the prey and availability for the persian heard this is one of the reasons why we can't approach on my production right. so this leopard is the. 1st photographic record of the persian leopard for iraq that we had . this through this we did rediscover the persian leopard in 2011. this one is a new individual that we discovered in canada in 2017 and this way we know for
11:27 pm
sure that we have 3 i don't live in and roaming these mountains. wealth wide the population of us to make today less than 1300 disgraceful yet ferocious big cats is listed as endangered. for years now has been negotiating with iraq your thirty's to establish a protected area in karada. that seem to have paid off $2300.00 hectares of mountainous terrain to be designated and make sure that. the locals have to be convinced as well for years of unrest forced people to leave so there aren't many left and the younger generation often look for jobs in the big cities. well but for me the leopard is a kind of natural heritage i'd like to see more of them in these mountains on. the
11:28 pm
new nature as if it's also meant to attract tourists a much needed source of income. a tourist lodges now being built with the support of the i.u.c.n. the international union for conservation of. a lot of people wouldn't expect that this you know iraq is for vacation and for having fun but actually i can promise that this region is very safe. the isolation of the mountains in the kurdistan region of iraq is the best protection for the leopards. only if the area is left untouched it says how does the spirits of qatar have a chance. alexander
11:29 pm
from people in our series on tomorrow today we want to see what he saw to experience what drove the journey merica following the footsteps of greats like. last stop. and the river in tropical forests unique biodiversity. to morrow to do next on digital. it's a classic among germany 50 trips frankfurt but it's exciting contrasts from the skyline to be old town and some of every culture around the site are called table voice that i'm eager to try to do in my life in the station district. 13. bos'n it's as if they don't need to keep
11:30 pm
a lot of the books over for over that's in home the 4th and for the most news in that they can then. miss the bottom of the valley that the last dragons in this world has called a halt to 2 year. degree books on. you know. welcome to your weekly dose of science pun tomorrow today. our journey in the footsteps of alexandre from humble continues to the orinoco river and south america. in the neighboring amazon basin huge fires are raging but not all blazes are necessarily bad for the environment. climate change isn't just affecting the rain forest how can we future proof.
23 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on