tv DW News Deutsche Welle September 11, 2019 3:30pm-3:46pm CEST
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and who knew it belonged to any. experience. financial destruction starvation. crisis for government to call for. the selling out of the country. to do in case fear no hyenas. start september 18th on d w. d w as a show coming up from persecution. of us what has become the only means of survival. in. refugees. as an eyewitness account plus. and it's. like it's been a shock to be shot off
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a forest fires. in the region. by british welcome to news asia it's good to have you with us they fed rate and. also to sell their bodies just to survive a grim reality for many women and girls a group that escaped what's been called ethnic cleansing and genocide in myanmar. most ended up. in sprawling camps in cox's bazar in. camps which supply a sex trade that everyone knows about but doesn't talk about a team of double reporters by doctors bizarre want to cover or just fast becoming a 2nd tragedy for a government. in the world's largest
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refugee camp in bangladesh the life for women and children is particularly difficult. this woman fled from me and ma with her 3 children and husband after their village was burnt down 2 years ago. my husband left me and my children after we came here and it was difficult for me to make ends meet i didn't have any other option and i want to live. any other option that is going to work as a prostitute now when she gets the call she travels to the neighboring towns outside of the refugee camps. on the telephone there is no other job i can do like that but i can't do anything else if i remarry my new husband will take care of me but not my children. that it's impossible to say how many reading the refugees end
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up in the sex trade here many as young as 14 according to local engineer thousands of women are trafficked across bangladesh and even abroad lured by false promises of jobs and marriage. we wanted to gauge how widespread the problem really is in the tourist town of cox the tsar roughly 40 kilometers from the camps we got in touch with a pimp who posted to have several rango women on call. hello. show you some girls and if you like them you can take them if not you can read. oh ok see you in an hour. a bit later a reporter meets the man at a prearranged point and gets into an auto rickshaw with him while we follow behind a reporter secretly filming the entire encounter.
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first stop is a hotel which serves as a brothel to begin with the manager seems suspicious and denies having any prostitutes then he shows us pictures of a few women on his phone none of them seem to be wrecking. around 10 pm the pimp sends a rectangle woman to our hotel she's too scared to talk to us when we reveal we're journalists because she's worried the hotel might tell the pimps but she confirms she is a 23 year old wrecking a refugee she says she's a victim of her circumstances. back at the camp the sex worker we met earlier tells us 3 are not allowed to work and there have been several police raids on hotels doubling as brothels she herself was recently released from jail. to the us on it and i'll let you know if i can find any other way to make
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money i'll have to go back to this work if i do i might get arrested again. but she's likely to take that risk again because for now she doesn't have a choice. and faced with such a bleak future writing a women remain easy prey for the pimps and traffickers. did every reporter. is with me in the studio you just saw him in that report. out of the report provides this rare insight into a problem that has only been hard. of the never seen in this fashion do these women have no the option of usually they don't have any other option because one of the common doesn't consider or doesn't recognise them as a defuses so that's what they don't get any kind of facilities that refuses usually get according to international law so for them they're not allowed to walk in my mother's they are not allowed to get education in mind of this then are not allowed
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to move pretty softly they are not allowed to go outside their camp unless there is a any kind of medical emergency so for that reason they're not allowed to walk at all but there are some brought there by local n.g.o.s there they can work as fallen and then again they get very little amount of money which is you cannot compare it with the regular stuff and it often it's like that the government doesn't annoy it or they do it in a secret way so what you're saying does that look like the bangladesh government is part of the problem and not part of the solution another government says that we are providing them relief we have provided them shelter so they don't need to work and they don't want to make it as if they're defuses because if the government acknowledges them as if it is then they will have many other rights that the government doesn't want to give them and why does the government more want to give them these rights that's
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a very good question because. but whether the government wants to gate of them in a way they want that men might take them back so they are focusing more on. their want international community to walk on that direction that do something so that the myanmar it is to take them back last month that there was a repatriation at and that it failed completely because say that they will return but they need some kind of issuance or guarantee that they will be offered citizenship in myanmar they will be recognised as a ruling in myanmar and also they want safety and security in iraq and the state so they haven't got any kind of assurance for these demands there is a very human aspect to your story i mean you're talking about women who talk about ordinary mothers ordinary sisters ordinary daughters and now a lot of them are having to prostitute themselves out and they come from
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a very conservative background as well how are these women coping with this and how do they see the future that's a very difficult decision for them i would say i mean they don't know what their future looks like there is though it's completely uncertain they're living in an uncertain situation so they don't know what the future looks like and that's why i see they have some kind of despite this and so they are despite to get out of this situation if possible and like being and human traffickers that they use this and they try to and of them to go out of the camp to find some other places for a bit of a life so it's very easy to manipulate them in a way and what about the local bottom of their shoes i mean ultimately these refugees live amongst the local bondo the issues are they getting any support from them or local bunch of issues perhaps viewing them as money making opportunities have a crisis that might sound when i was there 2 years. when it started in august 2017
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i was there after a few weeks and i saw people are welcoming them there was kind of they are muslims who are muslim so let's support them and they need our help this should not die out this would not be guilty by me and my military but nah it's changing it's slowly changing there is a growing conflict between local community and rolling gas and there was a killing last month and after that like for treating us where kind of killed in crossfire in bangladesh they call it crossfire but even x. organisers say so way of killing ruling us or killing people by this it would force us and we don't know we cannot verify that but there are incidents like this and it's happening and you can see the tension between us and local community it's growing slowly i've also heard from him from his own the last time are you speaking about this thanks so much for coming in.
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it looks like mist but is actually smoke smoke from forest fires that have ravaged jungles in indonesia and malaysia and that's prompted a dispute between the 2 neighboring nations well the who is to blame for this blanket of toxic cases thousands of firefighters are trying to douse the flames that have pushed equality in the region to on him the levels. this is not a children's hospital. it's a classroom but this is the last lesson for the day. concerned stuff worry it's too dangerous for the kids to remain here the air they're breathing has become toxic. several 1000 out of schools have also closed down here in the real province where the air pollution index has hit the hazardous level. residents have been flocking to hospitals citing respiratory problems. he
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feels. almost as a doctor said he experienced shortness of breath due to the small but he also has a fever and a cough so basically it's caused by the fumes got. a few after treatment see things easy again the doctors say there are many similar cases. but in our intensive care unit facility the average number of patients with the er spirit create problems has increased by about 25 to 30 patients a day but i feel the suffering is connected to forest fires raging for over a month indonesia has deployed $9000.00 personnel to combat the flames which were seen across the sumatra and. and also in neighboring malaysia.
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indonesian authorities say satellites have detected 3600 fires in the region such places often such deliberately to clear land for planting. and shared borders means shared air. in malaysia the drifting smoke has kuala lumpur skyline irritating the capital's residence. at night. the view of the smoke is not good. to look us. up it's a bit difficult to breathe because the air is so dirty. malaysia says it remains concerned about the persistence transponder haze and has offered indonesia help to extinguish the places. but indonesia says it's not alone and accuses malaysia of not being transparent about its fires but whoever's to blame both nations are
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bracing for more days of noxious air. more stories on our website you doctor dot com for was flashed up at 6 today relieved to know that images of broken go women hundreds of thousands of for bomb living as refugees in the bombing of the having fled their homes. take a good personal way i already with all the wonderful people that make the game so special. for all true fans. of. the book up more than football online. where is home.
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with your family scattered across the globe. with the book turning back to the roots get my mug. shot finally from somalia. urgent assistance to. the family starts october on. a. good deal to connect east and west. to hong kong exchange is promising with a surprise visit to buy the condom stock exchange will tell you what to take over could meet. also on the show your young son to live in the city do you mean need your own calm. goes to the front for us all to show to see if you can't beat the
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sweetest. and india promises to be a multi $1000000000.00 market but e-commerce soon thomason gets ready to be part of the action. but country doesn't want to get johns well in the t.v. with us so the hong kong stock exchange has made a bid for one of its biggest european rivals the organization says it has offered more than 36 $1000000000.00 for the london stock exchange group the proposal envisions a single exchange joining europe with asia the chief executive of the hong kong exchange shots lease says the deal would quote redefine global capital markets for decades to come. now our financial correspondent susan a standing by at a nother eggs change out of the frankfurt stock exchange conrad's interesting bit but given the current politico.
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