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tv   World Stories  Deutsche Welle  December 8, 2019 10:15pm-10:31pm CET

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but i mean essentially it works out for a lifetime i've been on that so maybe it's a good video for you know for sure alex forrest watching thank you so much for bringing us that story he was news from bahrain coming up next wild stories the week in reports with a look at deprivation on having a home for your company and by think. it's coming. from the adventures of the famous naturalist and explorer. to celebrate click some go from him books from 250. barking all before you took discovery. expedition him boy. in the eye of climate change. this is just.
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what he is today kind of their future. d.w. dot com negative against the making it. could turn. this week on more stories. of georgia beating the drum for reforms. coming rather than playing in normal life for children in china but we begin in chile here as everywhere in south america the gap between rich and poor keeps
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growing many people are forced to live in slums where conditions are cut a strike. day at the mic this is my house this is. where a friend of mine sleeps. i got me this is my room come on in of the way i'm not ashamed to show it to you i gave it away this is where i sleep it's a bit messy because on the weekends i like to rest. in and york you know and i believe in the virgin and in god. it's thanks to them that i'm here when i 1st got to santiago i had to sleep out on the street. that has lived in this camp in central sun tiago for 15 years he became homeless when his family rejected him after he came out as homosexuals here he found acceptance albeit own made within the camp limits. as one of tens of thousands of people
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living in the slums of. according to a recent census there are 802 camps in the country over 47000 families in situations of extreme vulnerability. the chilean n.g.o.s calculates 50 percent of them are forced to live in the shanty towns because they can't afford rent this so there are a lot of people who move to these camps because of safety concerns that you are they believe the comp is safer than the districts they can afford to live in. many of them also immigrants but that's a much smaller fraction. of. his n.-g. o. tries to involve the camp's inhabitants in what's happening in the country in a meeting in front of the shack they share their thoughts and ideas about the recent up people. protesters demand dignified living conditions for all chileans a reality that has long seemed out of reach for one of the founding members of this
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camp. this is our toilet it's a bit dirty. this is where we relieve ourselves and. we can wash here we can shower here we can cook here but it's not dignified. because of that this is my bedroom. my blanket my stuffed animal my bottle of water. and my candle because i have no electricity here. my biggest wish is to get out of here because i have children. i don't want them to see me in this situation. going to sleep i don't want them to see me like this it's not the future i want for them. it's nothing outrageous he's asking for access to shelter and adequate social services or human rights one
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and go to work every day hoping to save enough money to someday apply for subsidized housing the fact that they might never get it is just one of the many reasons chileans are still talking to the streets. but that's. not a good worry is adamant that georgia's electoral laws have to change last summer she took part in protests and was badly injured so the government had initially agreed to reform the electoral system it went back on its word like a good memory refuses to accept this. michael mori wants to make noise. over the terms that i can put the things i can't say with words into music. music helps me to control my feelings. i chose to learn the drums because they allow me to express my anger my resentment my happiness and my depression. says she's always wanted to learn
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how to play but the 19 year old student only started lessons 2 months ago after she lost her left eye during demonstrations in the summer. in june thousands of protesters demanded the switch to a proportional electoral system in georgia when the police used rubber bullets and tear gas against demonstrators hundreds were injured including marco the government was pushed into promising change. since her injury the government has been paying marco's medical bills but now that the ruling party has gone back on its promise of electoral reform her frustration at what happened burns even stronger but. i'm still angry of course i've accepted the reality of what happened. i can't change that anymore. i've become the victim of injustice. my face all of me.
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and when i see that that injustice still hasn't ended and that we haven't won at all that just strengthens my anger that rage essentially takes over me. but demonstrators are determined to keep taking to the streets until the government concedes snap elections and changes to a proportional electoral system to many mako has become one of the faces of the ruling party's broken promise whether she wanted to or not. that of voice of the people is very hard to ignore the voice of the people is the biggest governing force for a country not individual politicians and when a country is democratic you can get justice you just have to fight for it and that's how i thought while i was just. marco is taking her case to georgia's courts she doesn't plan to give up her fight and neither do the protesters.
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how their relatives behaved during the nazi era. this is a to boo question in many german families. we need a young woman who was revealed her. family members nazi past. when lena agita nissen looks at pictures of her great grandmother one of the things she looks for attributes she might also have not come to you was the head of the german midwife cessation when she was in charge what the nazis called and worth the life had to be reported. to the for the purpose. that meant that children born with disabilities had to be killed. and these are processes my great grandmother was responsible for.
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that is so cruel that you get goosebumps. even now. little conti you must not conscious and innocence grand uncle as the gnat is subduction or he took part in human experiments and this new rant about her and just this past when she was 14 but she only began looking into treason plea when right wing populist i.d.'s started getting ground in germany like many families innocents mostly kept silent about the past. this in this part of a group led by peter began event which brings together descendants of nancy offenders and holocaust survivors his jewish grandparents probably shot by hunger in nazis he says this picture of them has always been the carrier of his family's sadness the nazi past is still a taboo in many families he says. perpetrator
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generation never talked about this process guilt. feelings of shame. they were going on subconsciously they transmitted them to the next generation. as time passes to tunis and feels the urge to break the silence she has plans to turn her family's nazi history into an art project she feels making this past popularity is important to prevent its repetition. probably rather than plain that's normal life for 7 year olds in china the parents are worried that school alone is not enough. that's where they fill their kids' leisure time with foreign languages math and sports. it says a major impact on the family's whole life. joe even waits here every day at 330 for her son's class to end she quit her job so that she could spend more time
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raising shall show. the 7 year old spends 7 hours a day in school but that's only part of his education but the roof archer. joe ing has organized a schedule of activities for his afternoon of love love love love love or hate they start at 4 pm with a talk about the day's homework like many middle class parents in china she feels the regular school curriculum isn't enough for her child it's common for families to pay for additional classes and tutoring. that. just. shows extra curricular lessons including good chinese swimming exercise and math chinese parents spend an average of $15000.00 euros annually on private tutoring by 5 45 pm show showers
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finished his math and english exercises. he and his mother take a break for dinner his father works 12 hours a day so shall shell barely sees him during the week chinese children are already being trained for their later workload. rara shift highs i think i have enough time to play if i get my homework done quickly i have more but if i'm too slow i have less sometimes i have an hour a day sometimes 40 minutes or just 20 hours it depends on the. chinas technophile society enthusiastically embraces new teaching methods especially if they're more playful than traditional learning by rote but joe ing sometimes asks are selfish she's pushing him too far she. says it that many children are now in china excellent students but then they fail an important exam and they can't deal with the frustration and they jump off
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a roof top what matters most to me is to raise a healthy personality. that's an issue that's much discussed on the internet in china the competition to enter the best schools in universities is fierce and there is one thing that has not changed for generations chinese characters require a lot of practice. at $930.00 he's finally done bed time. he just finished 12 hours of studying and activities. and now it's sunday but he's not off today either show shows parents have decided to limit his activities on weekends to one class per day on sundays he gets tutored in physical fitness another tough week is over for shall show in the afternoon his parents have something special in store they're taking him to a museum. the
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school play just as it seems. to understand the world better we need to take a closer. to . what is humor of half the others it is the. knowledge of christmas the coolest clueless feasts at the christmas market and listens to the visitors expose themselves. into the cash to give becomes contemplative and explores other markets in the back
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and peddling. 30 minutes. i'm not laughing at. because sometimes i am place and nothing with the time and i don't think deep into the german culture of. new jersey will take this crown the day i. you know it's all out there enough time rachel join me for me the german monkey of course. hello and welcome to tomorrow to day with the focus on the nobel prize science awards coming up. we look at some groundbreaking discoveries about the evolution of our universe and the earth's place within it. check out some more earthbound discoveries and new medical treatments that draw on. and
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we ponder what it takes to come up with such revolutionary insights.

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