tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 8, 2019 11:30pm-11:46pm CEST
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correct content teaching the next generation by mental projection. using all channels available to inspire people to take action. and returning to doing something new for the next generation the ideas the environment series of global 3000 on t.w. and online. the fact that. this as did every news africa coming up on the show know and insights with the islamist insurgency in mali we get an inside view from the form of this message the conflict is set to continue unless there's the fundamental change in the government's approach toward government cannot fight the jihad just because they do not have the right policies in place they don't help the civilians could you have a spa much better organized. contacts she left the company to bring back our
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girls she's fighting corruption on forbes to be president of nigeria all the as aggressively joins me in the studio. i'm eddie michael jr you're welcome to the program france is asking its rupee and partners to send more so just to mali and other nations and the region has seen an increase in attacks by jihadist militants only last week 40000000 so just died in clashes with militants from sesame needs reinforcements from his fatness involved in training the mali an army so that its own soldiers can focus on the fight against insurgents yes a senior french diplomat speaking at a security conference in senegal on monday. we are committed to working alongside all friends in the sahara. working alongside mali. mali is not
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alone in facing this situation. france is particularly committed to the anti insurgent operations in the sahara. jihadists seized large parts of northern mali into into 12 before being repulsed milledge means avenging by friends the current absolute in violence shows the issue is far from resolved our correspondents funny 5 minutes before my jihadi fights in the muslim capital but michael his message the country remains vulnerable to the jihadist threat. somewhere in burma i'm waiting to meet a former jihad is will he turn up it was a struggle to arrange a suitable location finally we meet at a place he deems safe enough during our interview he calls himself but daraa he wants to remain anonymous he's hiding from both government and jihadi since he says but daraa is 35 he spent 3 years to down sardine the militant islamist group active
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in mali since 2012. are joined because life is hard here when it announced to the government they don't care much about mali and people. when you can go to school you are seen as special as noble so if you cannot it's like you are not a citizen of this country. there are several armed groups in mali answer dean wants to impose sharia law across the country various groups selling to al-qaeda and the so-called islamic state in recent years they have expanded from the north to central mali and into the neighboring countries. who are governments cannot fight the jihadists because they do not have the right policies in place they don't help the civilians the jihadists
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a much better organized. unemployment a lack of resources and a crippled government mali is an easy place for jihad is to find new recruits. this country has become a with you for jihad is that again means that it's a blind spot. and we are seeing the growing threat of islamic militancy. citizens are growing weary of the instability in mali. that young people will join the jihadists. because there's no work. we all have a family so one should think about whether it's good to join you'll kill people this is not good. can ever that chair a lot of people leave no one's to fight many of them returned as dead but i don't understand. why there are explains that before he joined dean he was teaching the koran and that was also his job with the militants but when he was
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asked to teach from a book describing how to carry out suicide attacks he decided to leave. some people killed others even when that person recited the shot there is no gold but gold muhammad is the messenger of god. i saw they killed certain people but is not our carry. they also killed innocent people. is just one of many in mali frustrated with the lack of opportunities he left answer dean in 2018 since then has been hiding. so organized in our studio today we have a prominent woman of the african continent. led a global campaign to feel nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by boko haram
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a stream is this yes run for president and her country saying she is fighting for the soul of nigeria africa's largest economy and most populous nation is former world bank vice president for africa she also co-founded transparency international one of the well the leading organizations against corruption. as aggressively many thanks for your time you are always on the move what i have to distaste while i am . i am. spending the next couple of months working on the outlines of what i call fix politics and that is a focus on the brooklyn system of political competition in my country as well as on the continent in order to enable a better. sets of outcomes when we do our usual democracy ok talking about politics well. big one for you you run for president in nigeria and
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you said you were fighting for the soul of the country what do you mean by that well you know it's really struck because the country that i come from nigeria is one that globally everyone sais has so much potential so and yet as a platform to be law and back to below its possibilities and that's because governance has not been. you know really well done the bad governance is clearly no and as an obstacle to growth and development and when you analyze that for a day you would realize that what usually happens in societies that you see dominant bad governance is that there becomes a discussion of of the of the busiek numbs and values of society so that bad behavior gets rewarded good behavior gets punished that's that's
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that's of distortion and so if you're going to remedy that situation you've got to fight because there are vested interests that are not interested in recalibrate in just a very perverse reward system that that that that that benefits them but then is a source of sorrow to the rest of the people ok and i know you you talked about fighting and you're fighting for a lot of different causes you who founded the bring back our girls campaign. niger are you satisfied with the fight to bring back the remaining 112 girls left not one bit satisfied we have a 107 get out of the 219 that will regionally abducted include in one gal who was part of the next batch of girls that were abducted literature so 100 and typed in school girls that are still missing the 107 girls that are
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back in school one all 6 of them except one that is living is still a trade. but for the $112.00 it's almost silent on the part of our government today hadley ever talked about. but baffles me why while that he should not it should but for lead me would any sense of empathy shared humanity with. revenge very strong and we do not think it is right to forget them so the a member to be forgotten we made a commitment that we will keep reminding our government about them and that's what we continue to do that's certainly a good cause now also cool fund of transfers international what would you say about the strives africa has made in tackling corruption overall well i would say that africa is not a continent because different countries have made different degrees of progress to regression but one thing that is said to me is that there is much more open because
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of course we live in the world of openness that is forced on everybody by the i.c.t. revolution information communication technology and so you find that there is absolutely much more scrutiny of government no matter what country these days in level of social media presence so there is more public discourse and now that's important because the demand side for good governance on prosper and see is driven by. an active citizenry so in terms of that you see that africa is not doing badly terms of the institutions and systems that prevent currents of corruption there's a whole lot of work yet to be done and then finally in terms of sanctioning bad behavior oh my goodness we need mush law vibrancy of prosecution and judicial processes by the courts and then share in that the rule of law when the woman is
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bigger than the law we need that. now the number of lions in africa has dropped by more than 40 percent in the past 2 decades that's left the species vulnerable to extinction the reason is mostly to do with the loss of habitat people killing lions who are livestock is also a threat you project in tanzania aims to help headers live side by side with the big cats while ensuring no loss to your lifestyle petra saitoti is on a mission tracking lions to save them you will staley across the muscle i stepped watching their moves was one goal informing her where to go with their cattle to keep away from the big cats. when tracking wildlife in the bush we check every path we go across fields maybe we see
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a lion's footprints then we check to see if the footprints are from a lioness a lion or a cub. when a lion eats a cow warriors hunts down the predator they depend on their cattle for income and food but who is lion monita is like petra this doesn't happen as often as before the organization african people and wide life has trained fish to my size to patrol the savannah. it has also helped more than a 1000 the households to build fences to protect livestock a cannot. explain several years like 9 yes that's the time i've had a fence i've not been attacked once the goats and all cows absolutely nothing. 2 years ago 15 lions were killed in retaliation for
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a life stuck death here so far that number is down to 3. that's a phenomenal news africa you can catch all our stories on our website on facebook page my colleague christine will be with you tomorrow also the next time it's goodbye. what's the connection between bread. and the european union dinos. correspondent at the baker can stretch this line with the rules set by the team. cuts no smoking recipes for success the strategies that make a difference. baking bread on d.w.
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. after the fall of the berlin wall nov 9th to w. hello and welcome to news from the world of arts and culture is what's coming up on the show today. we follow in the footsteps of a renaissance genius leonardo da vinci who spent his final years not in italy in france. and the german photographer. and his fascination with water in all its forms. we
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begin with a new film about the most legendary woman in science maggie kookery radioactive is currently doing the festival circuits and all man scott rocks for a quarter with it's a rain in director marjon satrapi zurich film festival in switzerland he'll be here in the studio in a minute but 1st his reports about the film scientists changing. careers scientists rebel and feminist in a new film also topic in this extraordinary look at the 2 time nobel prize winner and pioneer of the science of radioactivity you change the world. such crappy remembers her own mother holding the scientists up as a role model for any mother who was preparing her daughter not to make it with mary and become a good wife and wanted a better thing for. to become independent and be someone then you know i company something this is the example she's one of a sample you would give to your child.
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