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tv   Reporter  Deutsche Welle  September 28, 2019 1:15pm-1:31pm CEST

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manager you'd inaugurals men like sick have been stellar through their 1st 5 matches i would hosting shelter would surely put right 6 undefeated raechel to the test the royal blues are having a rebirth under new coach david wagner and determined to stay in the top half of the table. you're watching news up next to the reporter which this week goes inside libya's refugee camps for headlines at the top of the hour i'm rebecca written since then and thanks for watching. welcome to the book is the game here for dealing. with this to talk about some. very little. sleep. good. stuff. i'm not laughing at them.
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just sometimes out of place and laughing when we should have been fixed even for german culture looking at the stereotype of class if you think the future of the country that i now live from. kiev even seems ridiculous grandma day out to eat it's all that. i'm a joke join me to meet the germans on t.w. post. in libya over 5000 refugees are languishing in detention centers in inhumane conditions hundreds of people are crammed into gether they're hungry have no clean drinking water and many are ill reports of human trafficking torture and random shootings are common. they said you're a slave you're black. even woke us up in the middle of the night to torture us when
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the. german diplomats talk about serious human rights abuses so what exactly is going on there and why. our journalist reports from neighboring news there which has taken in 3000 refugees from camps in libya. syria. these images show the conditions in libyan jails they were taken by refugees in different detention centers human rights activists describe the mistrust was so messaging services reestablished direct contact with 2 refugees who've been trapped in a libyan detention center for 2 years their voice messages reveal their plight be faulted their voices to protect their identities. we've been tortured where terrifies were
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suffering and dying from different kinds of diseases. we were kidnapped. we were victims of violence we're starving people have died our life is disgusting so we're appealing for our voices to be heard in the world we're going to send refugees living in the land of hell. to learn more and meet the people who went through the cell we decide to travel to me share this country has taken in almost 3000 refugees from neighboring libya. one of them is an 18 year old woman we'll call amina she comes from somalia while trying to flee from the civil war there she was abducted and brought to a torture chamber in the libyan desert i mean as the doctors demanded $8000.00 u.s. dollars for her release to up the pressure i mean i was tortured while her parents
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were forced to listen on the phone. he was with they changed me up showing me up and tortured me with electric shocks he would. but they tortured men with electric shocks to their genitals and women with shocks to their breasts until they cried and screamed loudly. they did it so they would get the money faster as a possible floor. the torture systematic the methods she describes accounts from many other refugees after a year and a half i mean i managed to escape as you tried to cross the mediterranean she was picked up by the libyan coast guard and forced into a government run detention center when i. lived in the detention centers is 100 percent worse we. love it there was not enough food. once every 2 days we were given a small portion of pastor dry bread and
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a little water it's no way to live for someone who has to stay there longer you people were dying of diseases in in. series that suffered i believe that there are barely any healthy migrants in detention. now i mean as living in a camp run by the un refugee agency she hopes some country will take her and she doesn't care which one as long as it's safe. and a sunday morning really is the united see our as representative here and you share she works closely with her colleagues in libya and knows the conditions there. me what happens in these centers is is the contrary of life is the contrary of respect is the contrary of human rights and it's the contrary of the right for every person to feel protected she believes the international community needs to do more as almost 5000 refugees are still being held in libyan detention centers i think everybody should feel responsible to make this stop and to find
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a tentative human i'll turn it if. we fly on to august to learn how the evacuees from libya are doing the city in central new shares known as the gateway to the sahara but we have never used it why do you want some 1600 refugees all rescued from libya live in this un run camp it's a tent city in the desert. here we need it to him from sudan that's what he wants to be called for security reasons he tells us he was thrown in jail and then sold into slavery the good. people came and bought us like slaves. and they said we will let you we're going to get money for it. but in the end we didn't get any money. or nothing but he said you're a slave be
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a black man and even woke us up in the middle of the night to torture us. him videos secretly recorded by refugees they remind him of his own experiences. from what i saw when i see these pictures i remember my friend who was killed in the jail. he was my best friend. in libya lawlessness doesn't only exist in government prisons the ongoing civil war has left the country controlled by different militias and largely in a legal vacuum. migrants in particular are often viewed as fair game. mariam from sudan was abducted in broad daylight. to give us a good and i went out to go to a shop 3 men grabbed me and forced me into a car when they raped me right there on the street and just threw me out onto the
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road. to this day one is haven't healed she says the doctor just gives so sedatives nothing that really helps. or hurts that i've had it with i'm tired i'm very tired. for 4 months i've been losing blood. i never get better treatment. i'm so tired that for months i've been going to the medical center but i just don't get better treatment. here in new jersey she finally feels safe but she's plagued with fears about her future her neighbor as chefs are concerned. so tell me how are you doing these days not well. that. i feel like i have no future. i've suffered so much. of that. was a little but i want my children to go to school and learn something. so that they
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don't end up illiterate like me. many migrants still come through our get us on their way to libya no one knows exactly how many at its peak some 330000 people a year crossed through august the town has long been a stopping place for people from west africa our route to find work in libya or syria the city profited from their presence but that came to an end in 2015 when north with migration was officially halted the european union agreed to pay over a 1000000000 euros in aid in exchange for closing the border with its neighbors to the north development aid as payback for stopping migrants trying to make their way to europe a deal nobody would admit to officially with this deal i get his main source of income disappeared stores like this no longer have many customers he has been
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affected by the border closure to he calls himself up there as he's a people smuggler since 2015 his job has become a criminal offense so you won't risk showing his face he says the journey has also become more dangerous for migrants drivers must take more remote routes and of a military patrol approaches there just drop off the migrants in the desert and flee many die of thirst. like to the world. you know more people are dying in the sahara than before and you don't know where they are so here is huge so you find them 3 or 6 months after they die so why do you have these like 4 mortars. abdel-aziz also knows about the torture chambers often migrants 1st stop in libya he has his own reasoning why that is so that the migrants largely brought this upon themselves.
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he explains that if refugees can't pay for the trip through the desert the drivers sell them to torture us mainly members of criminal gangs or militias he says after all his drivers have to make ends meet. when was it the booming what if they say i spent money on your behalf i want to get it back and turn a profit or like that's why they started torturing people. for him there's no room for compassion business as business. is because if it didn't do i help migrants. to put up with i do this to earn a living i wouldn't do anything that's against the law to help them along with. many refugees that aware of the dangers but they won't let that deter them to find out why we make our way to one of the so-called to get us on the outskirts of i could us here people smugglers hide migrants away until they are enough of them to
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turn a profit each passenger must pay around $500.00 u.s. dollars for the trip through the sahara. he is one of them he's already set off 3 times but each time he was picked up by the military at the libyan border. now did deserve an up on the route through the desert is not could there be no problem in libya and the mediterranean aren't good either. but what else should i do when you have no other option you must have a clear goal and it that we need and the goal for everyone here is europe there's no question about that as a guinea and man has little chance of being granted the right to stay in europe but that won't stop him. you know very europe wants to close the border. and we the young africans of the 21st century are fed up with europe. or now modern day lit up i'm going to report on even though i want to go to europe i hate europe but
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question that that's why i hope because these days europe couldn't survive without africa if it went off for good reason africa is rich in diamonds and uranium or new premier produce here is the biggest uranium producer way you can and yet we pity its children and if you've been to my country get me a is one of the biggest producers of bauxite after australia and it's going into it with that i leave my study geology and i know that. but who profits from it maybe. the truth on the it makes me angry it makes me sick at heart when i see there's a new phobia the masquerade for me what is europe doing to us. the anger and despair but here but so is the hope for a better life. to
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tell the whole story in a single picture. sense there. in a world what if images. these far photo artists prove to real life needs no filters. down history ever repeat itself. gemini at the time of the weimar republic. and today. just telephone to the shadows of the cons for each. of the future. time out today.
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in 45 minutes. firstly at school with. the 1st claim was. then gore's grand moment arrives joint direct attack on her journey to freedom in our interactive documentary toronto the running time returns home. cook on. because society is becoming increasingly antiseptic. i want to make this one.

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