tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle August 7, 2020 10:30am-11:01am CEST
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come to the place where we reflect on society. he's in germany to learn german look in the. why not learn with him d w z learning course because fake. welcome to global 3000. they're beaten degraded and killed by their partners for brazil's women their own home is often one of the most dangerous places there is. waiting for a winter climate change in russia's arctic poses huge challenges to the nimitz people and their herds of reindeer. but 1st we meet the courageous women of sudan
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they fought hard for war rights and they're not about to give them up. in december 28th teen protests erupted in sudan the spark was the country's worsening economy but soon demonstrators began to demand the removal of longtime president omar al bashir the women were on the front lines of the protests and for good reason for years they've been denied fundamental human rights. alba shares ouster open the floodgates of change sudanese women gained new freedoms and could lead more self-determined lives at least in the big cities. but there's still more work to be done and the brave women who are at the forefront of the revolution aren't giving up. by an early is a 21 year old medical student in khartoum in late 2018 she joined the crowds in the streets protesting against the regime that's when she decided to take up time
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boxing as a form of self-defense. i. didn't have to sit down and then sit down is not a safe place for a woman to get it and if it gets accosted and abused what i want to be able to hit back and defend myself on that you had that self-defense. trainer mohammed near promotes gender equality in 2018 he opened the doors of his martial arts center to women a bold move in a traditionally minded muslim and male dominated society until recently he and his female students could have been lashed for this. in the beginning when they 1st started it was coming in we actually for a male trainer to teach females in general appearance without so we kind of had to be at the beginning a little bit on the cover you know keep our doors closed. change has come to
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saddam women have left behind their traditional roles at home they go out they work they serve in the government women wear the driving force behind the protest movement and to this day they sing protest songs. that. a group of women from many walks of life including doctors engineers musicians and psychologists have joined forces to make sure progress will not be undone they call themselves the guardians of the revolution and continue to fight the establishment . months of mass protests contributed to the ouster of longtime ruler omar bashir in april 29000 the military then try to quell protests a crackdown in june killed and wounded many demonstrators but the protests continued until a transitional government made up of army officers and opposition leaders was
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formed. one year on the guardians of the revolution continue to fight for their rights. and to show solidarity with women in need. to use of camille is a psychologist who devotes herself to female emancipation. and now in the coronavirus crisis where helping tea sellers cleaners and other women who are an urgent need of help. the government isn't doing anything for them. the group gather donations and buy food disinfectant and protective clothing they distribute the items to hospitals and to women in poor neighborhoods who have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and have been left with nothing. this volunteer work is also a way to keep the ideals of the revolution alive.
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in the city. has had to fight with her family for her independence her parents work abroad and she lives with her grandfather when she wanted to go to the united arab emirates for a thai boxing competition he said no. without his permission she could not go. but i was against it because it's incompatible with the traditions of our country. this is all new for us. if. she is so small. they get. in the end he relented by and he went and won bronze now her grandfather is very proud of her.
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useless gun neo and her 3 daughters enjoy their new one freedoms riding a bike and wearing trousers that's all new for women here they want to allow to exercise out of doors until recently. to get there they love to ride their bikes and go roller skating other girls say it's too dangerous but mine like it this generation is becoming more courageous and maybe my girls get it from me right with her so i'm in the right. and issue close to the heart of women's rights campaigners is female genital mutilation they are pleased that it has now been outlawed most women in sudan have been subjected to the dangerous and debilitating procedure. of camille would not let her daughters be mutilated in this way. just imagine a young child who doesn't know what's going on and feels terrible pain whenever she your unaids whenever she moves rigid but it imposes such limitations on playing and
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running it's shouting. the fight for equal rights is arduous and won't be won over night by an olive for one is a fighter who won't give up. as i did because if we want equality and nothing less that men should stop saying i'm crazy because i box it should be considered totally normal like men playing football in a pool at. the pace of change in sudan right now is swift confident and independent minded women will make sure equality and freedom. prevail . lineman's against women is a worldwide problem and in many countries women have few if any ways to defend themselves. according to the united nations 243000000 women and girls experienced sexual or physical violence by an intimate partner over the span of one year. latin america is especially dangerous the w.h.o.
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says that more than a 3rd of all women there have experienced violence at the hands of their partners. the problem is particularly acute in brazil. the most dangerous place for women there is their own home and the isolation brought on by the coronavirus has also given rise to a shadow epidemic of domestic violence. the husband beats up his wife at home. this video may be 2 years old but it's still very upsetting to the victim christianity codify your and her mother. my song that you wish at the time i still hate my husband might change we don't even married for 4 months i had dreams he was the man of my life i called him my prince. it was wonderful until we got married. but then the violence of the ground.
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and he destroyed our family. and i. 'd just journeys then husband it was a wealthy and influential diplomat when they argued he would start to hit her and cut her with a knife. his journey installed a surveillance camera then one day he tried to strangle her. which every morning i was used to being pushed around punched in the head. when he choked me with a telephone cable that was. it's terrifying. i mean the most horrible thing that's ever happened to me. and i was finished right in my mind's eye it was like a movie. i thought of my childhood or my parents' washing. and then i knew i had to end the relationship thankfully i had the video as evidence being see. violence against women is
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a growing problem in brazil every 7 hours on average a woman is murdered because of her gender and the rate of femicide is rising the coronavirus lockdown has only made it worse the state of seattle is no exception and. this is where maria dippin your lives she's at the forefront of the fight against gender based violence in brazil she was paralyzed when her then husband a shorter one night in 1903. but imagine. he wanted to go home for of his crime to school i was sleeping when i heard a loud bang i wanted to move but i couldn't film i thought he had killed me. with the help of her daughters she sought to have him brought to justice she was also among the 1st women in brazil to go public with the story of domestic violence but it was a struggle and the outcome inadequate. to have
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all that i was outraged after the 1st verdict he was found guilty but he appealed and did not have to go to jail at that i mean my i withdrew and wrote a book about what had happened. and about the contradictions in our legal system when the perpetrators are men. for the last quarter argue in brazil men dominate society. sure of machismo has developed over time. now courts go easy on men machos receive light sentences. as think that. many of the opinions kept on fighting she called on parliament to increase the penalties for gender based violence against women a new and stricter law was finally passed and it bears her name. right
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means the judiciary can now take much more decisive action back then my former husband only spent 2 years in prison now under the new mary other penya law the term would be much longer attempted femicide warrants a tough penalty. but as you might know if you put it you know. what's more thanks to the activism of mary or the opinion a new kind of police unit has been established named after her especially to deal with domestic violence against women it was set up 8 years ago. the patrol comes by to check on christianity comes by you know at least once a week. she really does to go out nowadays because she's frightened of her former husband. the officers want to evaluate the risk he poses. for us and we are concerned with how the women are
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feeling and the dangers they face for me this is all very new and interesting. maria de pena has changed me as a human being and as a man with them. christianity still gets threats from her ex-husband he was sentenced to 3 years house arrest but is nonetheless allowed to go out she has an electronic device to warn her if he's nearby. not ready after the alarm has. gone off. that means he had his electric concord monitor too close less than 200 meters away he's even settled a man on my mother. and that was yeah. it was a flash. the government in the capital brasilia certainly isn't doing much. the far right presidential year bo'sun out of as just 2 women in his cabinet
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women's rights are anything but a priority for him funding has been cut the achievements of activists such as maria the opinion face being undone at the end the women policies of the government make many women lawmakers furious them with everything the only all the measures designed to combat violence against women including women shelters or at risk was comforting it was with the funding slashed the few shelters we have will probably have to close soon. get out beyond it's a disgrace for purcell i want my boy a bit of an eye view mary had the opinion i was recently declared an honorary citizen of sao paulo courage and activism now widely respected but the battle is far from won. our society is still very sexist to change that we have to invest above all in education but this government is not doing that . christianity kind of by your hopes the nightmare will end one day.
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and that her ex will leave her in peace at all or. if women such as maria depend you have not spoken out i might never have found the strength to report my husband and he would never have been sentenced to 3 years house arrest and. despite the courage many women display gender based violence remains a massive problem in brazil. repression and discrimination are part of life for many women around the world on our new facebook channel d.w. women you'll find stories about those taking a stand and inspiring others to do the same d.w. women gives a voice to the women. in
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our global ideas series we focus on the growing impact of climate change this week we turn to siberia where record temperatures of nearly 40 degree celsius have helped fuel massive wildfires. our next report takes us to russia's ya malone minutes region where a camera crew spent several months documenting the profound impact of global heating on the area's people and wildlife even in the depths of winter. every autumn herds of reindeer are driven down the young peninsula in russia's optic north of. the herders are members of the net people who have traditionally led nomadic lives. to cross the frozen river which is several kilometers wide at this point at night and with great caution. climate changes making the ice fin up by the nights when it's cold there's less risk of it breaking. this group reaches the far shore at daybreak
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there accompanied by anthropologist alexander volkova who's been studying the life and customs of the nets people for many years. families living in the main problem is the condition of their parents because they're different from their reindeer and their future means to good condition. that future is anything but secure the arctic has been warming at about twice the rate of the planet as a whole. for the next herders it's becoming more and more difficult to travel their traditional routes. ice forms on the rivers ever later in the season forcing the families and herds to wait. and lots of families have no way out there is no possibility for them to move
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threatening situation for all the northern ranger caring way of life so to say. the reindeer need to keep moving in any one spot there's not much to eat and they would quickly starve to death so the herders need to move with them. to want a half 1000 kilometers to the east in the capital of the republic of south also known as yakutia killin is on his way to the institute for biological problems of the cryo litters and that's the region where permafrost prevails he's a biologist and studies wild reindeer whose numbers are declining. the head of the institute in a club called is worried. i don't you know. if you're in the cross ask region there used to be more than
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a 1000000 reindeer but there's not the latest count. there are just 3 or 400000. that's led us to pay special attention to the problem but it. we want to know what's happening to our reindeer populations but. you can hear them when. the 2 biologists say climate change but also human interventions are behind the steep decline in numbers one growing problem is competition between wild reindeer and herded reindeer. is on an expedition on the menu river which cuts through one of the main routes of migrating wild reindeer. in order to find out more about their migration patterns he wants to attach transmitter collars to as many specimens as he can catch.
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were the devices have been adapted to the conditions here in your cooties. they're waterproof. and they can withstand temperatures of minus 40 to minus 50 degrees celsius. for. the team have to be patient that watching out for any reindeer swimming across the river. when they spot one they have to act fast. put it.
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bluntly believe. all of this young male probably weighs more than 130 kilograms. the procedure can be dangerous for the man and is probably a bit of a shock for the reindeer. the transmitter is designed to fall off once the battery is empty. but. when they take the animals portrait for the database and let him go. they've attached such devices to more than 40 wild reindeer so far. the data have already revealed that migration patterns are changing. the rain to head north to cooler summer pastures earlier in the season every year and in the winter they head deeper into the more southerly forests to find enough to eat and that's where the competition with domesticated
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ones is growing. you spoken to get wild reindeer i've always been seen as rivals of domesticated hurts it's impossible to breed them where there are lots of wild ones where there are both populations herding is hard domesticated reindeer often run away and join the wild ones and they compete for grazing. food is becoming scarce even in the vast and undeveloped far north of russia. based on data from the tracking devices strategies to be developed to mitigate competition among the diverse populations to benefit all of them. but the changing climatic conditions are also a challenge in particular the rising temperatures. the herd of families and the rain to continue that track self to that winter quarters in the forest they still have a long way to go. as conditions change the risks they face are changing too and
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the pressure to adapt is mounting. the very future of their way of life is at stake. fighting for a better future. demanding justice. taking their lives into their own hands. entrepreneurs bloggers human rights activists many of these women rarely stand in the spotlight but they move our world. women who make a difference in our impact series. i doubt if it is not is not just didn't let it in the making of mind but it's also very powerful in a way that it's breaking so many bad. and kids that are allowed to be kids again
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just plain simple enjoy their childhood. and on and on profit in buying me a deal from the foundation. the right to leave their own children. i just believe that working with these kids and giving them what they. truly need it's not about dissolve the truly needy is a danger in. me. being above by the world is such a bad piece and it's filled with such bad elements and you know why if somebody had a criminal and all of that in this world but if you trace it back it always goes back to their childhood. with guy needs and love and empathy i think we can relieve the change the way this whole world functions.
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devotedly what is right to believe what's meant to evade being a child who never was all these things are very. good people you know and because there are so many other problems all soldiers still ball the keys i do you never then i mean who would believe in a child is going on we saw a game it becomes even then each other and for us to articulate this but having said that i mean of the mind is even worse if you ask me because i can be a bit of a dolphin he says. mislike like me today you can't see it but it's happening all around us mental health and mental well being is very similar people can't see it so if you don't see it you don't think it's a problem. we walk with almost 55000 kids every need and unless and until these kids are mentally nitish are able to understand was right from wrong by themselves. and nothing is going on in egypt 'd.
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this is news coming to you live from berlin lebanon's leadership faces growing anger over corruption following the deadly blasts in the capital beirut security forces fired tear gas protestors outside parliament international donors pledged aid for rebuilding but demand top level reforms from within. also coming up officials in germany sound the alarm spike in coronavirus cases there are fears the birth turning holidaymakers could bring the virus. and concerns over the reopening of schools.
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