tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle January 27, 2020 12:30pm-1:01pm CET
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glints beethoven is for her glade is for the. beethoven is for slavery tovan is for the beethoven 2020 the 250th anniversary here on. welcome to global 3000. cops cycling in delhi we learn about an initiative that's creating much needed employment opportunities and caring up the city. in our new series work places we find out just how much potential disused ships still have to
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offer. and we head to a pioneering restaurant in marrakesh where women are being helped to earn a living and lead self-determined to lives. caring for children looking after sick relatives doing the housework such tasks are still overwhelmingly the dumain of women and girls according to the nonprofit group oxfam every day around 12000000000 hours of such work are undertaken worldwide all of its other pay men on the other hand are commonly paid for the work they do in germany 72 percent of women have paid employment the e.u. average is 67 percent while in morocco that figure is just 21 percent of the country's strong patriarchal traditions make it hard for women to achieve financial independence hard though not impossible.
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when for timbs there are mixed in the morning her mother and sisters are still asleep she's the only one who has to leave early because she is the only one who has work. her father died when she was very young families without any males in the household often face an uphill struggle in morocco when her mother ran out of money for tim's or her to leave school. and if you don't have a father or at least brothers people say what does she expect to achieve in life it's over for her. but i'm not settling for that i'm going to make something of my life. for timms or is journey to work takes an hour and a half but she doesn't mind this job is a big opportunity because it includes training. at the women's restaurant amar the day begins with prayers for the trainees and their cooking instructors.
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it's a moment of quiet before the work begins. today if the terms are as turn to bake bread the others get to work peeling vegetables and cutting up meat the trainees include single mothers widows and former house servants women who have very little standing in iraq and society. this instruct is divorced something which carries a strong social stigma but that no longer bothers her. now i have my own money everything's changed as a divorced woman i didn't even dare take the bus on my own before. then. in addition to the practical training the women are taught food science as well as french and english the teachers say many of the trainees are shy at 1st they hunch their shoulders and avoid eye contact but then they gradually start to realize they have no reason to be ashamed. i feel like through the love and support that the
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receive here and that the creep for each other in a sense. the bully they come into their bodies in a way and they begin to smile and to carry themselves in a certain way with a certain posture for many women here life is not easy we've come to an advice center on the edge of america yes a woman who was the victim of a knife attack 3 years ago tells the social worker how a stranger started pestering her. when she brushed him off he cut her face. he also slashed the tendons in her hand that the woman managed to get back on her feet but she still suffers pain. and to make matters worse many people tell her it was a fault. you often hear things like you must have put on too much make up or made yourself attractive you provoked him but it's not true. not all the cases here
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involve physical violence but one thing is clear women who don't keep to traditional roles are often marginalized equality of the sexes has been anchored in the moroccan constitution for the past 8 years but the i'm rich in law was the expectations placed on women haven't changed much. the women these days have a lot of fancy ideas they want to go to europe go shopping no one wants to live like we used to. have if a woman leaves the house to go to work she has no protection and men could take advantage of that because. i think it's ok for a woman to work but it's better if she stays at home especially when there are children who's going to look after the children otherwise. around midday the 1st guests arrive at the amal restaurant and the kitchen starts to have. the menu always includes traditional moroccan.
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under the watchful eye of her instructor for tim is learning how to perfect the slow cook still. she really wants to get on and make something of her life at 1st she was very shy but she's slowly getting there were very happy with her. training last between 6 and 9 months they were provinces stringent the school has high standards when it comes to punch ality hygiene discipline and responsible. there's always one cheney who drops out but there is a complete the training nearly always go on to find permanent work the nonprofit organization finances the training using proceeds from the restaurant it also runs a casing service and cooking courses for the public. morocco was missing something like this they've really filled a niche with this idea the women have the opportunity to find work and respectable
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work too. and it's nice to try and find opportunities to support the local culture . in this case help women become more independent more empowered we could have a nice life for one more. during her training for tim's or a $100.00 euros a month as far as her family's concerned that's a lot of money. she proudly shows where she burned herself in the kitchen at work her mother is suitably impressed. head says that she's such a brave girl. she's always had lots of plans but i could never have paid for it myself then go ahead every time i hurt myself i learned something new it'll soon he'll anyway and one day i will have made it. when she's finished her training for tim's or plans to work and save up money eventually she hopes to open her own restaurant she says amal hasn't just taught
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her to cook it's also told her she lives. in. 2 worlds with close economic ties europe and asia how do they address social justice and what are working conditions like. we visit 8 countries on su continents to find out how europe and asia work together on a new series where the place is. there's always plenty going on at chittagong harbor almost all of bangladesh as foreign trade flows through here. the port city is known all over the world as a vast graveyard for ships but it's also a place where more and more ships are being built for the international market to.
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the western marine shipyard is one of the largest in the country it was founded 20 years ago. we have hundreds of thousands of bangladeshi and emirs. were there. in your friendship in there on the war. truck here in. all their life. today some 150000 people work in ship building in the country. around 2000000 bangladeshis are thought to depend on the sector and that figure could soon see a significant rise after the demand for new ships is growing the global shipping fleet is aging.
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and some of the ships that have taken their last voyage end up here. turns them back into raw materials europe's biggest ship recycler can take any vessel to pieces whether warship fishing trawler. or russian sub 98 percent of a vessel is recycled here it's an economic sector that appears to have a bright future in europe the e.u. tried to change the way of recycling ships so they wanted to prevent ships you know european ships going to asia and that's why they started every year flagship we wanted to be recycled place that we. saw today we got i think 26 year yards 3. have this license. the e.u. shipped recycling regulation has been in place since 2019 it stipulates that all
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ships now sailing under european flag can only be broken up under strictly controlled environmental and working conditions supervising how the regulation is carried out however is left up to individual member states. were triggered by the appalling working conditions in asia this 10 years ago a 1000 people on average were being injured here every month but the western memory has taken steps to drastically reduce the number of accidents at the facility the company now even has its own infirmary. you need to form of a safety regulations to stay safe and plops you have to take all the required protective measures. and if you're working off the ground you have to wear a safety harness. if you follow the rules it's safe to work here it's the always using. the front i was. yes of course.
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but despite the rules not everyone wears a safety harness when they're off the ground we can enforce very strictly but it is more like a culture where it did start for them too. but you know i would still i would not except you know it. is absurd. you know denial is not the. answer. in belgium all 50 workers at the recycling facility where helmets fire resistant clothing and gas masks when necessary most of the crane operators welders and metal workers aren't permanent staff members at galu they're on contract in spite of all the heavy duty machinery many things in the yard still have to be done by hand. yes
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found this is on his feet all day it's his job to ensure everyone is obeying the safety regulations. so. employees are given training on how to run center a time clean materials many subcontractors also work for us and they also have all the necessary qualifications. the belgian company has developed its own eco friendly ship recycling process it exports 850000 tonnes of scrap metal every year to asia among other places that material is then used to build new ships. those shipyard in chittagong has already built and sold ships in germany and denmark as well as to companies in india kenya and many other countries that makes the workers here proud. if you get
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a job like this in bangladesh you do it with great enthusiasm we're all part of one big family here. his boss has big plans for the future. and. next years. we. step into. in higher. than what we are building now. the government is also promoting ships made in bangladesh and supporting the industry with subsidies investments and favorable bank loans in just 5 years exports will generate $4000000000.00 u.s. dollars in the country. with more ships worldwide the work won't be drying up in belgium either every ship has to be
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retired at some point i work here that one year as a crane operator and look. it's great to be here. i love my job. it's great that. tracking down more yummy treats this week to colombia. is a town of $30000.00 in more than colombia. everyone here loves are able. to fried corn cakes stuffed with a. huge the best ones can be had on one of the town's major thoroughfares. your lane is more terrace family has been running their fruit stand for 10 years
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she's the 2nd generation to do so. the dough for this snack. it's made of corn meal and water your name is forms it into a round flat. which she cooks in very hot oil for 2 to 3 minutes until it puffs up then she cuts it open to make a little pocket she spawns in some seasoned minced meat then cracks in all raw eggs and closes the packet be a rape case ready for some more deep frying. the river from where oh it's not just any old street food every summer the challenge even holds a festival in its honor for good reason. that.
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there are hardly any other employment opportunities around here so anyone who can make a read has opens a stand like mine. who will yell a nice often works from morning until after midnight the 37 year old is a single mother of 2 her earnings go towards sending her son to law school. who feel still my kids are getting an education thanks to this business so i'm proud to be in a record that there's a lot of ana in making iraq and whatever where. young ladies has regulars from rwanda go but also feeds lots of truckers who stop for a meal each corn cake cost the equivalent of $50.00 euro cents not exactly cheap for colombia but for the customers it's worth every penny. and. down the stretch between. the stone is known for its.
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especially for. what we believe taste delicious really delicious. now what i mean i also i love my business i'm a. no i am it's such a good feeling when a customer comes i'm really pleased and i like this. and they had that i mean they were. yemenis will be spending many hours cooking today here in our apricot has been officially named part of the regional cultural heritage. this weekend label idea as we look at one of the most pressing challenges facing how to deal with all the rubbish we create in our reporter. visiting indian capital and discovered some enterprising solutions for the waste problem.
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as india prepared for its annual republic day festivities with a big army parade a layer of thick smog hung over the proceedings no surprise and. just 10 kilometers to the waist in the present. environmental activist. has had enough. because of pollution almost a 1000000 and a half people die in india. because of. hope a 1000000 people die in india because of water pollution these problems are on our knees so when you actually see that rounding and you think it could be better know it's small. in the last few years delhi has made headlines internationally as the most polluted national capital on the planet and the rivers flowing through it are toxic and it has a huge problem with waste management. a dump in the eastern part of the
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city. around half of all the waste produced in delhi ends up on mountains of garbage like this. they emit poisonous gas into the atmosphere and poisonous fluids into the soil. indian cities churn out more than $60000000.00 tons of waste every year and only around a quarter of it is collected by municipal authorities. unofficial waste collectors and pickers do the rest of the work. the poorest of the poor live in this quarter of the city many of them came to delhi from elsewhere . they collect and store any waste that might bring in even just a little income. the residents are not in any way acknowledged or recognized by the state even though they play such a key role in the city's waste management. it's.
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only have a. little boy who's going to collect it if not us who don't take no responsibility for their own waste especially not the people who live in big houses that was if we didn't collect it it would pile up in the street and stink so badly no one would want to go outside if we stopped collecting it for 2 days everything wrong. it's estimated there are between one and a half and 4000000 waste collectors and pickers and. they live on the fringes of society with no access to education social or medical services the work makes many of them. not far from the impoverished quarter of them lendu john heads up the organization sway chair which translates as free will it's a nonprofit charity then he had the idea to start giving some waste
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a 2nd life by recycling it into products that had value again that led to the founding of the charities commercial arm called green the map of. trash the pink has no life or no future and that's what being the map and 3 top books on right now up cycling based think that we actually up cycle for example a lot of tire in india is actually born to buy you know. that's very actually meet interesting wallets out of our those tires and to top back it's been congesting our landfills for a long long time plastic is similarly soviet report that can be actually bring in innovation design and utility and and make some interesting products. more and more people in india are leaving the countryside for urban centers which are already overwhelmed by the flood of new residents. in india the growing population has increased overall waste by around 50 percent in
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the last 10 years. the government says that's down to changing consumer habits. tunji to early and also came to delhi from villages they're now so articles for green the map today they are visiting the site are bizarre to buy materials for in order. that this market you can get anything you need no matter what it is everything you need to make a bag from in a tire tubes for example like fittings buckles zippers thread you can get everything here. ali came to delhi after finishing school he says there was no reason for him to stay in his village his uncle had found a job at green and was able to get ali into the company it was the best way to help his nephew avoid the typical destiny of new arrivals to the city face terrible
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working conditions for little pay green the map purposely employs many people like ali trying to give them a shot at a decent life. lots of boys from my village have ended up working in factories or on construction sites where they have to carry around the cement he used to build high rises. their jobs are a lot more back breaking my work is great. i'm proud that i am helping to reduce garbage making something useful from it instead of throwing it away. you know it is. the proceeds from green the map help pay for projects pushed by switcher which are aimed at improving air quality and encouraging greener policies in the city but then london just says there's only so much the charity can do on its own delhi produces almost 10000 metric tons of garbage we're not up cycling 10000
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metric tons of garbage duty one it's also not my responsibility or are responsible . we are committed to this 3. man is all based on the state's responsibility so it's very very important to really not take of the aspects of governance from this management governance is the job off the government and we need to hold them responsible for that. is what we are is a very very tiny model. but it actually inspires people locally nationally globally to look at how there is a possibility it's not something which is discarded there is a life in a beautiful view that you can actually provide. this year the mountain of garbage in eastern delhi will grow higher than one of india's most popular landmarks the taj mahal turning some of it back into useful products is a small stop one of many needed to stop the country from slowly sinking beneath its
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in 30 minutes on d w. every 2 seconds a person is forced to flee their home. the consequences of the disastrous our documentary series displaced depicts dramatic humanitarian crises from around the world. fuck a thing we don't have time to think i didn't go to university to kill people but actually that day i mean i hate. people feel for their lives and their future so they seek refuge abroad but what will become of the course to stay behind it's a plain bagel my husband went to peru because of the crisis that i wonder if he hadn't gone there we would have died of hunger and i want to found god.
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displaced this week on. you don't know and. i'm not thinking out of the gym i just sometimes out but i stand up in the research of most things deep into the jama culture of looking at the stereotypes of the classics but if you think the seeds of the truth i don't blame. you didn't see me taking a scrum a day out to eat it's cold out there bob no i'm rachel join me to meet the gentleman from d.w. . post. in the army of climate change. for most of. the. people. want to use today how close are future.
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dot com for their service to the making. clear cut are. you. putting. the blame blame blame blame. this is the dobbins coming to you live from the last living witnesses gathered to mock 75 years since the liberation of auschwitz survivors and one the dead today to honor those killed at the nazi death camp with anti semitism on the ice is a sense of urgency to remind the was what happened that.
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