tv World Stories Deutsche Welle September 28, 2019 11:15am-11:31am CEST
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and security forces. you all watching d.w. up next world story the weekend reports i'll be back at the top of the hour as always with more headlines don't forget you can stay up to date with all of our stories on our web site that's d.w. dot com thanks for joining us and see you soon. the fall of the berlin wall become long before november 989. recently heroes of eastern europe we talk to those who began the struggle for freedom and those who showed personal courage all that no good book will score you go no telephone call for almost every you know you've been in the courtroom we have to go
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off to war didn't surprise me i saw it coming 10 years before the flood sure and. what does it take to change the course of history. raising the iron curtain starts september 30th on d w. i get a look at. this time on world stories. threats to freedom of the press in kashmir. why kenya is masai are keeping peace. but we start off in peru where the tom she company has received a hefty fine for illegal logging it's a victory for the environment and for farmers who refused to sell the firm their land. it takes roberto vasquez 45 minutes to reach his land
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on the way he passes the entrance to the tom she plantation. he doesn't know what the firm is up to here it supposedly grows cocoa but not on this land. it used to be home to 70 farms neighbors on all sides but repaired of us is now alone since the hunters saw their plots. and they were meant. to this place used to be our paradise we had all young bananas up pineapples he just needed to go up the mountain to catch a wild boar or a deer here or in a possum at night you know everything used to be close by that's what we lived on now not even a rat here anymore because the company has destroyed the animals didn't try habitats not the other. the farmland often stayed in families for generations
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providing food throughout the year prepared to vasquez has planted mix crops to harmonize with the natural environment ensuring the plant enjoys decades of fertility tom she offered him $5000.00 solace or about $1500.00 for his 20 hector a parcel. with thousands so lazika me that will last a week and then watch their people have sold their loud don't know where to find work now they're looking at what their neighbor has in his garden so they can steal his crops but of those that i have are not. an aerial view shows the crops being cultivated on the time she plantation there surrounded by tall trees that block the view from ground level. over exploitation is destroying the ecosystem throughout the amazon an hour away by boat around the town of the ketosis the signs of deforestation are everywhere tropical wood is transported down the nanny river
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a tributary of the amazon ancient trees in the area have been wiped out sometimes the logging is legal often it's not the environmental consequences are catastrophic . here in the amazon there is a exploitation of the word on a moles fish or you. know a goal not to such a degree that it's just senseless. roberto vasquez wants to keep fighting for his land and his environment he wants his grandchildren to have a piece of land that they can farm here in time she aku and peruse amazon. on august 5th the indian government stripped kashmir of its autonomy that increased tensions with neighboring pakistan which also raise claims for the disputed region
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ever since journalists have been hindered from doing their work in kashmir. the newsroom without internet phone lines almost by connections this is in 2019. spock bantry a reporter for national newspaper. the computers at work simply to write stories on . to get his work to the people's headquarters in another city he has to save it on a pen drive and take it to a media facilitation centered on by the government. the center has one internet connection and 5 computers for hundreds of local national and international journalists. it's also where he can catch up with other reporters on what they are hearing but these aren't the only hoarders he and his colleagues in kashmir face. it's very difficult to get off from version 4 that instance already and want to be
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really careful and you can say there have been so many journalists have been someone about the officials why did you grab from this information this against sort of against a threat and of course and also. there are occasional briefings like today when reporters are invited to hear from army and police official that's the focus of the briefing however is not on the situation in the media randi it is on pakistan and its alleged efforts at infiltration. officials insist that the past month has been the most peaceful and kashmir and shutting down communications has been a legitimate means to achieve that we have not. and this is. again this is. one of the many. the ones in the west of the block. but it isn't just troublemakers that the government as what it about dogs on the media are evident when security forces don't camera as
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a we reporters cannot argue. so obviously to say that maybe. unofficial channels are amplified because dress events do not trust local papers on national television news. they believe those journalists are following the official line from the hindu nationalist government and refusing to portray the hardships on the ground. good news we don't get any news the indian media reports feeds news this is schools are open and shops are open traffic is moving but look around you you are in the heart of she's not good but shops are closed schools are closed people are distressed. yours i watched a story fic we can't trust the media anymore we can't trust what they're saying. is grateful that his editors do not dictate what he can and cannot write but he why he is that all journalists do not have that freedom. they don't even go to the
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editorials not a single comment on the street and what has happened to the people not a single government there is question there are some of those approaches but it's local business for the bushes in. their right to speak freely want simply be destroyed when the phone started ringing again. 80 years after the outbreak of the 2nd world war the are holes in archives in central germany as a valuable resource on those persecuted by the nazi regime often it's the victims children who want to learn more about their parents and ensure that their suffering is not forgotten. is the son of a prisoner of war he drove for 2 days from france together with his wife to visit the hours in archives a few months ago a team of investigators there informed him that they had found some of his father's possessions. and the spaniard joined
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a french resistance to ring world war 2. denounces imprisoned him in no income and haven't a concentration camps this is a very emotional moment for. he was arrested in cups. in france i think after his boss denounced him he was a resistor during the war he was involved in the resistance but. just. shoppers sees his father's possessions for the 1st time in a ring with. a pen i watch and a russian card because of that there was some point did you feel when you held as objects in your hands. well i felt.
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i had prepared myself a little bit. for. i felt how young my father once was. and his used to say in my life i took more blows than a drum ever could you look at. the archives the whole ties on some 17000000 victims of the nazis. in many cases all that remains are you note cards of each individual their arrest to transport to a concentration camp everything nazis felt was worth recording. written proof of this systematic horror 8 decades after world war 2 began. to hope to hand back personal belongings to the families of the nazis victims. sayed upon receiving his father's passing on the facts we need to forgive but who will never forget dealing
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with the past is no easy task but especially here in germany it is a duty of remembrance of. the messiah people in east africa mainly herd cattle and live a nomadic existence but increasingly drought is leading them to change their way of life in kenya more and more my son are deciding to become beekeepers. ploy to forest is a great place for bees to leave their north roots or pesticides and very few people . if the members of my side people who do live in the area traditionally collect wild honey in the forests it's a boreas and dangerous activity but last year about corner and 14 other men went into the beekeeping business setting up 10 hives in the forest they don't take up much space and they are environmentally friendly. and you have to
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get money and. give it to and the folks there who uplift. the life. like no greater number of. young men don't take their kids work to school and getting him money. through this. and. it has become very hard to make a living the traditional way and some in a magic past terrorist some asylum and still have as many as a 1000 head of cattle. but nowadays they are the exception more and more looking for other ways to make a living. a major reason is frequent periods of drought that means dried out pasture land and less for the
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cattle to eat and drink another reason is that the land where they graze their heads and strength it also has to be shared with wild animals. a couple of 100 kilometers to the north east in nairobi these african beekeepers can use only commercial company devoted to the development of the beekeeping and honey industry most of the 20 employees make cards for 2 beekeepers this more mt of town is so far produced and loiter is not sent to nairobi it is sold in nearby villages but if production is carried out and if movie keeping projects i starved the future of the industry in kenya may prove to be sweet.
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here's how the marian celebrated their october best. they've been flocking to the shell theatre for 150 years. a small original at the world's biggest public celebration. new romance news. whatever the season whatever the reason munich is always worth a visit. in summer in winter. but above all during october deludes biggest fear bad. i can't understand why so many people killed here every year again and again. 16 t.w. . literature invites us to see people in particular that i like
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