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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  January 3, 2020 5:30pm-5:45pm CET

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because. my husband went to peru because of the crisis. if he hadn't gone there we would have died of hunger. this is the the good news asia coming up. signaling and advancing climate crisis. faster than ever. the problem also coming up. that i'm. keeping the music spending the last gramophone repairman in the. indigenous people are combining traditions with the latest trends to rejuvenate
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their culture. and computer programming country tries to play out kids. welcome to the program it's good to have you with us. still being vented at the failure of last month's un climate summit in madrid the signs of climate change keep accumulating. in the himalayas the changes have been rapid and alarming the world's highest mountain range is starving for snow and the rate of the treat of ice is a real climate emergency factor into that the 1000000000 people downstream who depend on him for water did up the reports from the ground. india's pindar a glacier. one of many in the himalayas losing snow mass at an alarming rate.
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swami demand on a hindu yogi has lived here for most of his life. he's seen firsthand the impact of global warming. not hermeticum say should be 10 feet of snow here in november but there's not even a foot right now it wants no for months maybe at the end of december or in a mid january. over the past 40 years between dari glacier has retreated more than 2 and a half kilometers. and glaciology experts say there's no sign of it slowing down. if the glaciers melt in summers and accumulate snow in winters but due to climate change or global warming are some a period is extended and the winter season is shrinking. it means the snowfall period is shorter and the melting period is longer. earlier there's no pull used to
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start at the beginning of september or beginning of october. they used to be spells of snowfall at regular intervals the snow used to get enough time to deposit and turn into ice. but now the snow is melting up until october november. you can ask. and that's happening to more than $10000.00 glaciers across the himalayas it's also disturbing the mountain ecosystem as the ice recedes you for year ending soon. as we said the changes happening in glaciers are putting pressure on the biodiversity in that topography and in that climate. do. you have a. new species has started showing up here last year there was a mosquito and a bad bug new creatures
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a popping up there are leeches and at the riverside snakes have been found 20 to 30 years ago these species were not here. the himalayan glaciers stretch for 2 and a half 1000 kilometers across asia feeding for major river systems the loss of ice could mean a devastating future for the region. we live in an age when listening to recorded music is largely done digitally but good or turntables we haven't probably had a home have now become a favorite for playing vinyl l.p.'s a bit like almost all sound systems need electricity to work in many places and in the access to electricity isn't here to get indeed the timetable for another gramophone needs only to be wound up and one man in delhi is working to keep the music playing. every morning now he's ahmad makes his way through the crowded streets of old delhi to reach his workshop this is where he retires grana
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found a skill his father taught him. they're still produced in india but getting the old ones working again is his specialty. you're doing illustration and 1000000000 the they don't need any electricity in places where there isn't any of these things still get a lot of use and there are lots of places in india without electricity people bring their grama phones to me so i can repair them. until it is. mohammed ali brings in his family's gramophone. this one was made in germany although it's quite old he's very fond of it. of the other unit this is from my wonderful grandfather it brings back lots of memories i'd hang on to it forever if i could but it needs to be reconfigured i love it sound. many of the wind up gramophone come from germany
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is proud to own a good number of them but his favorite is a 940 model from england. man in england electric sound with the gramophone sound brings in a piece listening to this music gives me a nice feeling modern playing equipment makes me uncomfortable. braise us mad son will take over the business one day. so the sweden scratchie grandsons will be audible here for a long time to come. tomorrow my lad there's. nowhere the. tyrant indigenous peoples are fighting for their cultural survival they face
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successive waves of colonizing newcomers from mainland china and japan that nearly eradicated the language and traditional ways of life but as our next report shows young people of one of these cultures the us spearheading a renascence by blending the old with the new. i tell you how the name of a time when nice indigenous culture that had 2 but disappeared here which time one meets the pacific is the homeland of around 90000 at a out many of them live in and around the village of gin usa. at its entrance the statue shows and i tell ya hunting a wild boar just like the old days. today the our tails fight looks very different the village development committee meets regularly to discuss ways to rejuvenate the tail culture of washington they began doing everything from selling millet you cure to attracting tourism so the community can support itself.
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when their own hands are they being when i return to the village for projects after a long absence i thought now all cultures being neglected. when i was studying regional planning in taipei i realized if we young people don't tend to it no one will evolve into. the outer ya'll are among 16 groups of indigenous peoples that have been officially recognized by taiwan. this followed centuries of cultural oppression by western colonial powers chinese settlers japanese occupiers and from 1949 onwards by the taiwanese government. in 2016 taiwan's president sighing when officially apologized to the indigenous population for this mistreatment. go it was a few years ago with the help of the community some residents of january got to see
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the mountains they were forced to abandon a 957 their old village was difficult to access many hadn't laid eyes on the place and decades. here lies the roots of what made the outer ya'll what they are. now recent made where there wasn't much variety but the mountain gave us everything like we also planted sweet potatoes like we were lucky i didn't have to buy anything that i took. up there i realized how much i missed my home village. while the seniors wax nostalgic about the past the younger generation is creating the future. this st john's club began mixing urban dance with elements of indigenous culture and went on to win the national competitions. just jump the bar. in their
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dances reisa symbolically threshed cloth is woven this vision of combining the old with the new has helped to rejuvenate us a whole culture. to just after our winning performance we were so moved we almost cried the audience applauded wildly even the elders thought it was fantastic and a way of passing on our cultural heritage. and. keeping the past alive one step at a time the forefathers of the would certainly applaud their efforts. but more and more of life daily needs and tasks being handled by computer apps their ability to code is a skill that's both practical and marketable i imagine learning to code from an 8 year old boy. he learned i don't know if he makes it seem like child's play
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this budding developer is so good at programming he teaches it online his channel has over 1000000 views. be to joe learn to coding my. he was just 5 years old now he can fix bugs and lead much older students step by step through an apple coding app called swift playground this. was all i have to pass all of the levels in order to teach otherwise if i can't really spell it out when recording the lessons how would that be ok glad to learn this. dad hung taut bead of the code that's made him an online sensation but wants to keep his son down to earth. for a new me it's what i've told him you haven't done anything remarkable. you've only recorded a few videos and the content taught is not so extraordinary just the basics in programming it. parents without
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a computing background can send their kids to classes like this and demand is booming china's i.t. education market is expected to be worth $4800000000.00 euros by next year the push for kid friendly curriculum comes from a chinese state which wants to develop a new generation of ai and robotic experts like coding whiz. and make china a dominant force in the world's cyber future. or the last in the future i hope to use code based on the chinese language so we can write and do more in this computing language. is already leading the way. his advice to his fans coding is a long term challenge so start learning now. the. graph of the day we're going to refer to the him other bundle brands are
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experiencing the effects of privacy and that's it for all concerned except for. happiness is for everyone human penises are very different from us we have a totally unpredictable as the size view of nature. that is climate change regular sex how to encourage books to get smarter for free get over your books. learning merge trailer wait a 2nd. the whole picture of facts is that
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a vague ideas shift delivers. the realities of cryptocurrency to your topics for live in an ever changing digital world that's for good to devise a should or should. the u.s. kills a top iranian commander in an airstrike marking a major escalation in tensions between tehran and washington. across world markets and oil prices surging. on the show greece and israel sign a deal paving the way for a new gas pipeline through the mediterranean but the project is controversial. also coming up the game's afoot interpol has issued a red notice for the arrest of. a lemon and take action against the former.
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this is the business i'm on in berlin what a difference a day makes fresh from yesterday's 1st day optimism as markets reopened for a new trading trading here day 2 is looking much bleaker news that a u.s. airstrike killed a top iranian general ratcheting up geopolitical tension in the region have struck fear across trading floors worries over iranian retaliation and further instability and the crude rich middle east oil prices soaring the missile strike that killed a rounds most powerful military leader ali money marks a dramatic escalation of tensions between the united states and iran the white house and pentagon confirmed the killing saying the strike it down.

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