tv The 77 Percent Deutsche Welle October 19, 2019 7:30pm-8:01pm CEST
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people for information. they want to express. facebook twitter you tube today in touch. hi there a very warm welcome i want to come all right and this is the 7 to 7 percent i was show for africa's. here's what's coming up for you in the next half hour. in the down below we discuss it because he is weak in the like when face when they come back home. he joined ugandans pointing oh steve says on the wall that online i think that you want for life. and in cannes there will be $2100.00 subjects of
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violence just because she's a lesbian. but fost we head to north and god know where a lack of basic amenities and job prospects are pushing many people to the brink so more and more young people are risking the bitterest journey to europe some of them make it others tragically die on the way and sound like have not had not returned home after facing too many setbacks the make the right decision. was made to eat the 24 youngsters cruel thing on the outskirts of time money about 640 kilometers from ghana as capital i'm very happy to also have a go and it's in the east and it's my job. new m.p. me for it worked for me but this wasn't always the case with no education no money and no job i lack of prospects in ghana's nov and region drove
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her to libya after many setbacks he returned to his home country in 2017 however landing that illustrate well in libya has given him a new perspective on life come in australian bob but deplane me i was happy because of lend some sort of lending knowledge let me sit. back and use it only to get something to eat. it's the youth who suffer the most from development problems in no than ghana according to unicef just 60 percent attend primary school. i mean will carlia also wanted to leave during his janet iraq he narrowly avoided death but he survived and is now back in ghana working with after he has people who just like he had lost faith in themselves and in their holy land so if there was all the people to send them to
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school got to stand up and was as a parent has a role to play and 2nd the government also has a role to play most of those children who are still our formal role communities religious resists well you know they don't have access to schools so that you make those basic amenities available there were places you got to start out. of a lot of sort of people that will assess that there is a good assisted to the future bright and. after home has helped more than 200 people since 2007 by giving them support and providing jobs in the region they want to make sure return these have a future as. well as. all money to stop them from going to go to stop them from moving even beyond go to libya places like libya algeria and libya all to europe and search for another distant green opposes. how to now also went after him for support they helped him overcome his past trauma now he's primarily back on truck.
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look at my brother at school years says i look at my mom to this look at myself go my father's norm so i'm the man of the house now. so i'm very happy. how do not dreams of opening his own organization to help support the young people from his homeland. i'm glad the tyros choice to return home has worked out well for him believe it or not he's actually one of the lucky ones either way to me migrants across africa face many more challenges when they go back home from unemployment to stigmatization in the gun via our reporter it can money net with young rita knees and the international organization for migration to find out how they deal with the situation.
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the gallery is responsible for the highest number of people emigrating per capita than any other african nation and that's truly shocking if you consider the size of the population here but now a lot of young people are coming back in fact the international organization for migration estimates that on a monthly basis over 100 return is a stepping right back into this country question is is the country prepared to take care of them and who better to answer this question for me than actual gambians. and we'll begin with mr demba here he is actually one of the people who left the country as an immigrant and you decided to take the back route known because it is your regular way of going how was that journey for you was it worth it how long did it take just give you a little insight into what happened to him to maybe. he could not force you to see the freedom came when he really wanted to do the prison here having a lawsuit going back to you see too difficult to punch the police to. you know i mean you can that you would actually money if you don't bring money do would
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be to you and in most you know when you came back did you have a support system where your friends good to you did they treat you differently no i don't have support of anybody i went to from police just to. tell me don't support do support me but still no no but i don't have support ok let me come are you one of the very few women actually because statistically women from the gambia daunte migrates it's men who make up 97 percent of those people who are leaving and i'm curious to know as a woman if that journey was more difficult for you and if the government has been there for you since you returned it's was very difficult we me i don't talk see it and i lived through a lot of money there kidnap me there after i get there kidney clearly you know i get kidney problems before i am poor mean i need him there i think care of me because that then i was going there. in. i got this that's was my still wish and
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it's very dangerous but they are very take care of me take me to the hospital return me back to you and i thank you so a lot of gratitude being expressed particularly to i.o.m. which i find interesting or does somebody you are a social analyst do you think that the gambia is too heavily dependent on international organizations to solve a local problem. that's for sure because gambia does seem tough the capacity to handle this every right to depend on those international organizations from the national youth to the international organization for migration on the e.u. projects. in the success stories that didn't come but on billboards in the country nothing is being done here it's not ready it's not equal $200.00 b.c. tani's on the better for the international community to make sure that our young people i'm not seeing what i have on look for. pushing mr somebody down here now talking about people who were forcibly treated back into
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their countries but these ones return voluntarily gambians where should they be taken wish will they go but they should come here what i'm saying here is under you know what's happening in libya from the media because according to. the international report the european union lost the disobedience who taught you and me of all young people i'm sorry i can't allow you to say such things without backing . down not fact there's no reason to rewrite. the international report i can send you the link you gave me a study of the stuff that has conflict so some very serious accusations being leveled not just against their will but international organizations are you affected or any u.n. agency or any international organization our role in any country is to support the government it's a bit unfair to say that any international organization will solve the entire problem on its own expertise is in our we assisted voluntary return in
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reintegration but at the same time we understand i.o.m. cannot support returning is forever and i think we all need to work together with many different organizations to address this issue one of them being of course the national youth council the i.o.m. as his writing he said is not here for the long haul what are your plans for people like and. i mean you know 2030 years from now and for the thousands of others who still haven't reached the shores of the gambia i think his arguments are supporting but it's an international organization and it's something. that. he had to compliment a government a very you all part of this government you are representative of government and you're speaking as though it's a foreign entity what are you doing what have you done what we do is basically addressing government in terms of what i do. because it is provided for them ok i don't know what has been provided what i'm delighted is what is coming from.
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this question is to ensure that we work with and we can bring out the example to see the government hospital by the. $10000000.00 and this is invested in times of supporting young people all right let me come to will suffice here because you know we're hearing from the n.y.c. that they have plans these are things that might happen in the future but you know already doing something about it do you think your government has let you down. you know for members. but does not you know if that's not what you think you know. most of the talk a i want to ask itself was another social analyst it sounds like the more we dig into this issue the more complex it appears to be so what needs to happen to resolve it if every step towards resolution compounds into another one we are feeling our young people and we are continuing to feel our young people that's not
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the kind of news i want to be putting out there because we don't have it i mean how can you get national project which should be responsibility of the state. sort of sponsibility use our citizens what plans have the good for the future what we do not in fact of what to ensure that in 202-020-3020 extension 35. what this is happening now is because. i feel good to be a country for these people but if you want to leave anybody who decides to die in the ocean in your own that's a problem you know that's a political economic system as a problem you know country ok on the topic of reintegration as a solution to deter future irregular migrants how does that work how does one become reintegrated back into their own country a lot of this reintegration happens on an individual basis so there are questions of sustainability especially when it comes to how communities are being supported so one thing we want to do with i.o.m. is to shift reintegration to be community based what that means to develop projects
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for attorneys that involve the entire community so we can ensure that other individuals who have not yet migrated irregularly can benefit as well from these projects very quickly dr i want to finish with you what do you think the gambian needs looking forward so that we're not discussing the same thing 2 years from now all these young people are put in so we develop otherwise we'll be doing the same thing government cannot employ everybody but everybody is a businessman some people i wouldn't support consuming in basketball in painting we need to explore all these sectors and see how we can help to develop so they can live in dignity to live in countries will go and look for dignity in some other place and that is what we're thinking about very well and that's where we're going to conclude this conversation is definitely very complex and multilayered at the beginning we asked the question what does it take to get people to stop migrating here regularly so was resoundingly give them something to stay for thank you for.
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a big thanks to everyone who was involved in the debate as always you can watch a longer version of that debate on our you tube channel. those of you who can drive . ok but how many of you can raise a cow over a bumpy gravel road like these. folks carry me but for susan one gift from uganda what are we seeing is how lives dream and she's proved too good it to. do with motor sport fans in uganda will do anything to cheer their teams was when i dream the lim sport has a big following among both men and women 2 2 was but things look quite different in the cockpit. via just over 50 licensed drivers international rally championship.
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almost exclusively men but the phrase one woman who ranks among the best. of all when i had just gotten little did they know that these sorts of cars i was young by then that this young lady who had come up to challenge men everybody despised me that is a lady the speeds. whatever over. mistakes in the national championship are high and susan more often gets nervous when her rivals are on the truck. and fast so you become anxious. but let our own when you get to the tide when i get to the stats and. i drop all the fia. it is not easy. how could driver knows how to give someone a boast when the competition is stiff. so i also tend to
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be a lady more in such a moment when she feels likely to be depressed that the guys are faster than her and there is still i know we are fast. team strategy seems to be playing golf when she's the super lady she's known to have funds can be uncatchable. in 20 living longer surprised me when she won uganda's national championship. she wanted to gain last year the only african woman ever to achieve such wrestling success i remember myself i know i can tell everything. as long as it means so i've lived my life so from the one. to have fun and especially to women belong is an icon of empowerment and to have rollup yes she is a right to be a break and we've read it watched the competition. from one
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strong woman to the next this lady here is mary with me from kenya looks like any other happy woman well what you don't see in this picture is the horrific violence she has faced the reason mary easily and in kenya like in many african countries homosexual relationships some people like mary find themselves living in fear. with. clients which. sometimes i ask myself why. just because i. find if it weren't for mary. you had a hard time guessing what she's been through mary identifies as a lesbian that is why his stepfather cost terrell to the street when she was told
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a child that is why she was so tired by a group of men as a teenager and infected with hiv. they took down. me all of them. and then after me baffled. by the pull of my own. time thank you. and they even killed myself that's because they have done that through my work over just when i was pregnant. and i'm so thankful group who may cause some in 10 years later. i can see the money. has. given me. has some christopher has given mary strength when facing prejudice. and we did this really we did
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because they're bringing evil on the world god created adam and eve not adam and steve. it's not accepted here we counter that and have never learned with that it's our behavior to be creating selves. they are born like that i don't know i see it is i'm not which is again it's good but all the hostility she's saying countered hasn't broken marriage spirit so you start asking yourself. a minute that this. or i'm unique in my own way too because all that different in theirs and make me reza what he wants to build the one love goes with the love i don't know what this world would. mary hopes that one day she won't have to fear prison meant for women and that she might be able to mark she loves. hall.
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and it looks like marry him with his dream come true any time soon a few months ago the high court upheld the existing bank on same sex relationships it's a painful setback not just for mary but also for one of all of us just like mary he feels discriminated against so he got in touch with the love and relationship expert. she reveals what's really behind kenya's anti-gay law. hello there and welcome to the spread a safe space where we get to discuss everything sex and relationship today we got an email from ted and it's a really important question he asked their task thank you for creating a platform for us to be open about our sexuality i recently came up to my friend
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gay and it seems like people around me seem to hate the idea of it i sometimes get bullied at uni and can't seem to understand what the fear of homosexuality is really about can you explain it thank you so much for that e-mail ted and i'm really sorry that you have to go through that but in order for me to explain to you the origins of homophobia i'm going to have to take you back to 181007 before the british criminalized same sex relationship why are you aware that homosexuality existed in many countries across africa and been in for example homosexuality was considered a rite of passage among boys in some kenyan cultures same sex relations were given marriage faces complete with dowry payment in some buntu cultures a woman can marry another woman she's barren and able to bear children for her husband these are some of the examples of practices that existed prior to european and arab intrusion and then we were colonized in our laws were written for us and some things were added into the constitution and then these new religious practices
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are what instilled shame and fear and to be honest homophobia simply exists because homosexuality is hypersexual which means same sexes look everything like sex and nothing like love so based off of this alone it's clear to see that the fear of homosexuality is actually manmade most 1 fear is manmade and passed down through radical teaching as a good thing about fear is that we can learn it by facing it there's nothing wrong with 2 people loving each other as long as they're not harming themselves or other people my advice to you is be kind and gentle with yourself and try to find spaces where people are going to accept you for exactly who you are like here i hope i was able to answer your question and i know that you're going to be great from the cab so much. thank you cause for the insight and if you have any questions for cars write to us. now let's head to beneath from day to rest beaches to historic sites the names biggest city has something for everyone they'll call it for them. takes
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us on a tour of. how. welcome and thank you for being with us my name is. probably. like to introduce you to my city well was born where grew up this beautiful city. welcome to my city my city will. come all loves the vibrant life of cardinal here the semi johnson on locally it seems make sure any trip across the city is cheap and fast come all is taking us to the neighborhood why he grew up his family still lives here the train station is part of the legend of bigamy as well as the market place where my mom used to have a stunning welcome to become a. big army is located in the center of cotton a lot but it's still small i can feel age everyone knows everyone here around
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700000 people even courtney making it means big in c.t. as well as the political and economical capital been became independent from the french in 1960 for almost 20 years it followed a max's ideology which is still visible in the city's architecture for come on the history of this country is also a source of inspiration to the our troops going. on there very much by the on. the other to. come out texas to the most symbolic place in khartoum as you know this place is called martyr square it's a someone you meant in memory of the people took soldiers who fell in 1973 wonder french. invaded by. when we try to work through the government to ban the bomb but you can. come all is not just a politically engaged artist but also
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a successful businessman. in 2016 he opened his restaurant to bamboo gnumeric and esplanade in the heart of the city. bamboo pneumatic has become a meeting point for young people from all over the world visiting benyamin and it's also the perfect spot to enjoy come ons johnson to meet. some cold too hot. for example down the wrong d.c. the long i'm going to see love to see you go but you seem to be on the look. like everyone else come on loves to go to the beach to relax it was a great pleasure to introduce you to my city on this special place and bell which we love so much we are here at a place of pleasure and relaxation a beautiful beach don't forget to visit and see our beautiful beach.
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our show is coming to an end and i hope you know what inspired it entertained or even better all 3 you can let us know what issues not talk to you via facebook or email. coming up in the next edition nigeria's population is projected to double by 20 p. our report to easy money discusses with young people and it's putting a lot of the country how to deal with expected. you've already met a mild raji as a round could you know binny and that's well what is now winding up the show with his piece look colonial enjoy. just. couldn't seem. to dump the merely. male the bad.
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small town germany. changes training and nothing complaining about joe concha. a film about between different worlds and fun town self. goodbye yellow sea. black forest. monument jungle you could. jump. but you're no one to keep. and length of me for. exposing and justice global news that matters w. me for minds. of you'll with words from.
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where i come from you don't want to weigh from a call from station. when i was 5 years old my father took me to his fences and i was focused on the spot. the sports a few months old and to see all sold. fencing as a language and a good sword fight is a conversation. must lead your opponent to understand that thinking knew of the man to get close was. it's not unlikely but tough for him to do really when interviewing politicians oprah and c.e.o.'s you have to wait for the right moment just to get around the defensives then make you know. you have to take risks to get results. i'm going to go 1st and i work at.
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this is b.w. news and i have a problem but british prime minister barak's johnson suffers a major setback to do a little make is approve a delay on the direct citi field close but johnson remains defiant and falce to push ahead with plans to leave by october the 1st the 1st. meanwhile hundreds of thousands marched through the streets of london to defy preps it that demanding a 2nd referendum. and spain's ousting prime minister petro sounds.
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