tv Focus on Europe Deutsche Welle April 16, 2020 9:30am-10:01am CEST
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and the christian population. occupied the city center until. president detectors or sponsors because. this is not the kind of freedom that we. how did morality become a gateway to islamist terror. an exclusive report from a destroyed city. in the sights of i.r.s. starts may 20th on w. . l. o. and a very warm welcome indeed to focus on europe with me peter craven and we begin in vladimir putin's russia a russia that tolerates little in the way of protest and those who do have the courage to take part in demonstrations such as this rally last summer are
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increasingly branded as extremists who then face the full force of the law. that's only a cone on found out at 1st hand what it means to get on the wrong side of the system when her son was taken into detention now and italia and other mothers who founded a campaign group to take up the battle against what they see as arbitrary injustice and monstrous sentences. that conan is a fighter as she heads towards the courthouse in northern moscow with her son daniel her determination is palpable a strip of polka dot cloth is the symbol of her movement mothers against political prisoner it's several individual protesters stand in solidarity for the accused outside the courthouse they say this is a show trial. igor lease news and maxine martin soft have been
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accused of kicking a police officer at a protest last summer both men insist they are innocent but the court rejects their appeal and sentences them to several years in a prison camp the judgment hits their families hard is there to support them her son was also put in prison after the moscow protests but daniel was lucky after just a month in pretrial custody most charges against him were dropped and he was released but not sense of injustice hasn't gone away. it's strange. to do it should be the judge the state prosecutor the government to feel guilty. might she used to keep but instead it's us who feel guilty. the boys who were released.
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the parents because our children are free. there have been several mothers marches in moscow already including this one in february of last year now the protests have grown into a movement. down with the police state they chant here. when thousands protested ahead of elections to moscow city council last summer their demonstrations were not authorized and the police crackdown on opposition protesters. government officials have responded to protests by warning of the dangers of a revolution. we all know perfectly well that it is impossible to solve our problems on social networks are on the streets. of course people can express their opinion freely that is totally normal so people have to express their opinion within the framework of current law of course you can find those laws good
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or bad but you have to keep to them. otherwise our country will end up in a very dangerous situation. that talia used to stay away from politics but that was before her son was in prison the 48 year old animal breeder lives in the countryside but she regularly visits her 3 children in the capital since her oldest son daniel was arrested here in this apartment that talia is in touch with him all the time she gets worried after all she says that in russia anyone could become a target for the author already. it's been half a year since they searched the apartment and arrested him but it is worse now because they see how these cases always follow the same pattern you realize how powerless you are against the system. the mothers aren't alone surveys conducted by an independent pollster showed that the majority of russians now believe there are political prisoners in their country at an event with lectures and a flea market the human rights organization opened russia is collecting money to
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provide legal assistance for them. conan is here with several mothers from the movement there are over $200.00 of them now with more joining all the time they send letters to detainees and want to fight for their children together. you got when you see me i'm with you no one is stronger than a mother that might but when you're alone it's hard to achieve anything i know that because i fought for my boys for 2 years. and when the mothers movement formed i realized there are a lot of people in our country with the same problems and the same feelings that he should probably and i think you should want to thank you shashi any of those the president would preclude what happened to us could happen to anyone here but by fighting for our children we're fighting to protect everyone else in russia to. finally. the authours these seem to be aware of the potential force a mother's movement could have though they've tried several times natalia and her fellow activists haven't so far managed to get official permission to hold another
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protest so for now the corn and often holds one woman pickets which don't need authorization that way she doesn't have to worry about becoming a target for the author already is herself ok let's now go to the arctic north of sweden home to the indigenous sami people once widely known as lumps who are traditionally reindeer so now the summer of one a 30 year battle to regain control over what they see isn't so strong lands the case was brought before a court in kiruna the northernmost town in sweden and the man behind it is matty barrett who runs a nearby reindeer co-operative he's delighted with the ruling but not with the furious criticism that he and other sammy herders are now facing. at 1st glance it's a once her wonderland sweden's north so far north it was thought to be the end of the world. the ground is barren the spruce small snow covers the ground most of the
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year. forest is home to the indigenous sami people and their reindeer. for the sami the forest means everything head of gary a cooperative of reindeer owners near corona is monte berg who has lived here all his life he suffers almost physically when he has to go to the city. carcases have repeatedly forced him to go to the unloved city for 10 years he argued there and represented his people's cars before the supreme court at issue where the hunting and fishing rights. the verdict was unexpected the indigenous people and not the state are to decide who is allowed to hunt and fish on their territory. everyone should be happy the judgment has shown that even a normal person can assert himself against the state. but
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not everyone thinks of the verdict was just after the verdict repeatedly received angry calls some swedish hunters see their hunting rights threatened. more. than a month hunting and fishing all the things people are passionate about appear. many hunters are afraid that we saw me will now close the forest. and we won't but 1st come the reindeer then the saami and then the of this. is sometimes directly related to the reindeers enormous space requirements this is noticeable when we make our way through sami land to lars. reindeer can bring traffic to 0 even on the european route 10 the main trunk road in this area. there are approximately 300000 reindeer in sweden and only the saami are allowed to
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own that. lars is busy feeding the one year old calves reindeer are very hardy animals but without an extra daily helping of masin like and they wouldn't make it through the winter the snow covers icy the plants underneath inaccessible. your knock heads the saami cooperative of you when he was hurting reindeer into another pasture a car stopped and somebody. 20 meters away the driver shouted you know if you let your reindeer we'll shoot them. i thought to myself these people are really aggressive. the last thing he said was if i see one of you rain your hood us alone in the forest i will shoot you too that really scared me. repeatedly reindeer are getting shot the owners get a small compensation but uneasy remains. if we are familiar with the races and
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what my father had to listen to especially near the big mines in. but since the verdict hatred has really increased. but it's not only about reindeer and their grazing grounds there's a lot more involved the samea live on land that has many important raw materials. it's still the state who has the say on who gets the mining rights. in the. forests wind and water power timber everything's here. you had a decision fiends. a start in the state would like to exploited whole part of this issue on. the way marty berg the wind turbines not far from his house on an old slag heap are 1st and foremost a disturbance
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a piece of industry that interrupts the peace and makes the reindeer nervous. the covert fight for mineral resources and the sami area has only just begun. but it's encouraging that now they have the law on their side. well we go back in history now to nazi germany where jews and others who faced religious or political persecution were often stripped of their citizenship they were forced to leave the country all fled to avoid being sent to concentration camps where near certain death awaits it later that germany's new postwar constitution contained article 116 a guarantee that citizenship would be restored to victims and their descendants but stefan for his firing is one of the many who supplications have been turned down
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and now say it's high time for germany to do more to keep its promises. stefan foist fan was born in berlin in 1937 but has lived in the u.k. for as long as he can remember my father was austrian my mother. was german. he was entirely cierra she was part 2. stepsons family fled but then on the eve of germany's annexation of austria in march 1038. my father's men met my mother in town somewhere and said go home fetch the child bring a suitcase with me to the station tonight. to leave to live with his sister who was married to the. chief rabbi hot on hand the next morning so my mother's older sister told us that because tucker came the next morning for us because my father longer had that same immunity of being austrian under the nazi regime tens
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of thousands of jews were stripped of their german citizenship now stefan is fighting to get it back. article 116 of the german constitution in able germans persecuted by nazis as well as that descendants to have their citizenship restored stefan's up location was rejected high was to my fury i have to say. rejected on the grounds that my father was austria and that if he had stayed on prickly i can't believe what i'm saying but this was the letter. to the point where. the having a german nationality for jews was taken away. then i might have qualified but we would have been dead by then the complexity of
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a number of exemptions has led to a debate in the german parliament britain felix coachman and his wife isabelle founded a world wide lobby demanding a more inclusive law to prevent exclusions from article 116 they attended the parliament's discussion in late january the motion for a new law was narrowly rejected given that the government already issue to decrease in august 1900 to ease restrictions but some descendants are still facing bureaucratic hurdles. the decrees of discretionary. relief are facts of life but 116 is a fundamental basic rights and people pretty can't get where they can't get back their loved ones who they lost they can't go back in many cases their property the can't get back jobs that they've lost but they can get back one thing and that's german citizenship younger generations are also affected marcella marx's
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grandfather georg fled germany for brazil in 19372 years after the nazis had imposed then you're a member grace laws she too has applied for citizenship i thought that this was. something that we needed to do to honor my family especially because they had been in germany for so long my great grandfather fighting in a world war one her 1st application was rejected on the grounds that her grandfather left to germany voluntarily a 2nd application is still to be decided on. stefan foist van has also applied a 2nd time the new decrease now take his mother's german nationality into consideration but his patients with german bureaucracy is wearing then. it's been a it's been a fight in which i feel. both
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engaged and ready to give up. i feel you know if if the bureaucracy is service structure. that i'm not going to go on fighting like hundreds of other applicants are stefan can do for now is why. now for decades people have been fleeing from afghanistan a country tormented by the taliban until recently they tended to seek refuge in neighboring iran but the economic crisis has prompted a growing number of afghans to try and make their way into the eastern turkish province via however as marty saw the tally himself an afghan refugee showed us in deep mid-winter the journey can be treacherous or even tragic.
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this is turkey's eastern province a fan bordering iran it's seen heavy snowfall in recent months almost daily afghan asylum seekers try legally to cross over from iran into turkey here but they're often tragic stories rarely make the news. we're meeting mark diesel tunney who managed to flee afghanistan 4 years ago and now lives in turkey today he's on a voluntary basis helping other afghans who have fled here as well he shows us a local cemetery he recently discovered. this is where many asylum seekers lie buried who died in their attempt to wreak safety. most are afghans. while we arrived there was empty and now it got all like this like 1520 or 18 people and this symmetry was started by dad. mom
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says many afghans try crossing over into turkey in winter hoping there will be less border police due to the cold but the mountain route is dangerous some migrants fall down ravines or freeze to death yet marty says many are willing to take these risks to flee from violence. the situation right now in afghanistan is really horrible and it could get worst the situation every day get to terrorists and people are just trying to leave afghanistan toward a better future to out a better life iran's capital tehran some 1000 kilometers to the south east for decades tens of thousands of afghan refugees used to flee here. but now that you ascensions have brought the country's economy to a standstill many migrants are finding themselves out of work. they can't make a living here anymore and are forced to head further west towards turkey.
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back in turkey's van province marty and a friend are on their way to visit an afghan family that's just arrived mark this friend discovered the couple and their 3 kids by the side of the road one day last and shivering with cold. he put them up in another family cellar. my place mccool of taliban occupied our village they took everything we had my crops my farm and they wanted my daughter too. so i sold my shoes my children's belongings and we offered afghanistan good quality. in any bunch of people we don't even have any money to buy food god is my witness today we borrowed 5 lire from a poor person puts me to shame it's. you know going to. have horrible we don't know what to do. well but i've
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sworn that i'd rather die here than beg people for money was. the room where the family will spend the night has no heating it's freezing cold mark the wants to organize woman blankets for them as soon as possible but the family cannot ask turkish authorities for help because they might end up being deported. the people dress the arrival and the turkey actual end of one or bridge the hour without any money they can pay for their lunch for their breakfast or for their dinner so how they can not they can move probably they cannot do that so this is their a human term organization like you in the united nation you uneasy or. in december last year the un refugee agency u.n.h.c.r. staged the 1st ever global refugee forum in geneva together with the turkish
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government. the summit largely focused on syrian refugees in turkey. the e.u. provides financial support to the country to help it take care of them. 'd but there is no financial assistance for afghan refugees 'd. up until one and a half years ago afghans could still apply for protection from the u.n.h.c.r. but since september 28th seen turkey alone decides who is and isn't entitle to help . and human rights organizations now accused turkish authorities of failing to support afghans in need 'd we asked the u.n.h.c.r. white cease supporting afghan refugees in turkey yet received no answer. marty does not understand why the u.n.h.c.r. has withdrawn its help. he himself was of 40 protection but what about all of those who arrived after september 28th and why he wonders is the e.u.
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not helping. cemetery staff begin digging a fresh grave but don't know who it is for iran also doesn't notify afghan authorities when one of their citizens dies abroad maybe their families still waiting in afghanistan that my son is just calling me maybe tomorrow or today but unfortunately they are saying just in here and the cemetery and the curves so while i was aware of this i was really sad and i was just really sad about this horrible condition that refugees have said here. this sign reads symmetry for people without relatives. to mock diesel tahnee this place bears testimony to the suffering of refugees in the 21st century. it's truly a desperate story it it seems as if there's no hope that things will change in the near future. now on a very different notes they grow on the ground they have
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a flavor that is famously impossible to define and they can be very very expensive i'm talking of course about truffles and one little village in france's deep south the rich are wrong jesus' name is known as the truffle capital there's a truffle market and even in the local church and a mule truffle mass and it's an event that can prove very lucrative for the parish . this church service in reshare ocean southern france is held only once a year. the community comes together to celebrate truffles the patron saint of truffle hunters saint anthony and a time honored tradition. truffles are very important for this region to symbolize see earth the fruit of. and in france we like our traditions. instead of money the collection basket is filled with truffles also called black
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diamonds. just outside is the weekend market where the only thing on offer is truffles the best chefs in the country sell deceivers it's the market every weekend in the winter he explains what to look for when up and so i can cut off a little piece. this allows you to look inside. this one is nice and black with fine white veins you fell for it our grandfather was a truffle trader my father still is and i am. in most respects in this region trades and professions stay in the family the home is still sacred and customs are honored it's a rather conservative friends. everyone knows and trust one another in this tight knit community paris and its tax laws seem far away. play mall has a loyal customer base chef look by you creates dishes revolving around truffles you put a little truffle. hazelnuts almost on a sandal the salt and pepper and that's all the truffle aroma will develop and the
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starter is ready on it and we all have a family member or friend who works with truffles. and you never quite know what qualities the truffles will be when he's at all possible says i mean. so you're always eager to see them. never come past else i'll just under 70 says the auctioneer to this gentleman. who the brotherhood of the black diamond auctions off the 3 kilos of truffles collected during the service for $5350.00 euros and so the weekend comes to an end but the tradition lives on one. great story and that's all from focus on europe this time around thanks so much for joining us and if you'd like to see any of our reports again just go to our home page on d.w. dot com or visit our facebook page to the news stories and to come back next week and stolen by by untruth.
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enter the conflict zone you're off to you the lawyer goes on with no a car intended in sight but who's really trying to stop it my guest this week here in munich is the country's foreign minister mohammad abdullah al muhajir must come to thousands of civilian casualties and be enormous human suffering the full being from the food complex the food. in 30 minutes on d.w.m. . each stuff tell us my story. come to keep the
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fans me. keep him and i'll use to maek i'm not to. advance on the secrets of my name to. the book. the body. not tied down did. i mention song to your. voice. on doing crazy thing in the full time. how to handle our new lives in times of the koran offend them x d w reporter keep your job slicker is not strong and she's looking for answers and thankfully with the help of the a few of the party bosses. thank you that is not life as we know it shops
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the be. this is g.w. news coming to you live from berlin germany analysis the 1st step towards lifting its lockdown and reopening the economy. we have to understand that as long as there's no facts we have to live with the virus just father michael says beginning next monday small shops can open for business again but social distancing measures will stay in place also coming up a gloomy economic outlook for asia the international monetary fund says they'll be 0 for roads in the region for the 1st time since the 960 s. because.
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