tv DW News Asia Deutsche Welle August 17, 2020 6:30pm-6:46pm CEST
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you think it is grandma. it's all that. i'm a child join me again. post. is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we see the screen how can we protect habitats we can make a difference google ideas into a series of google news and on and on line. this is good news is coming up today voices of protest growing louder in thailand. protesters gather in the capital bangkok demanding new elections and a reform of the monarchy but there's also those who don't want any changes. in india the number of total deaths from the coronavirus fos is $50000.00 but the
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government says the mortality rate is still low and it has the situation in hand. and no place to call home i don't shift struggles to call people abandon more and more pets during a covert pandemic. i'm british welcome to do you. glad you could join us for testers in thailand have rallied at the weekend demanding a change in government and greater democracy in the country the mostly student activists are also demanding reform of the thai. the 2 to boost subject under the country's strict. laws protests began in february this year up to the dissolution of a popular opposition party here's more of the movement that is fast. becoming
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a headache for the thai government. a sea of lights. shining late into the night they came in their thousands demanding democratic reforms at bangkok's democracy monument. mostly young people. but with signs of broader support. but day and night gathering at times more of a party it's called thailand's biggest protest in years. a protest aimed largely at this man prayuth chan has led thailand since 2014 when he seized power in a military coup the protesters call him a dictator who rigged last year's election they want him out. of amman the hunter has been in power for 6 years after the elections there are still here
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still clinging to power. i don't think that it's a bad thing for young people to take to the streets i think we need to try and change things i don't know. the protesters are also breaking one of their country's greatest taboos calling for reforms to the monarchy current laws punish insulting the king here at his coronation last year with long prison sentences protesters want a frank discussion of the monarchy's role in thailand. that now they don't know when we're now living in a world where young people are more eager to learn and have access to more information outside of classrooms it has widened up our world we are learning new political theories and other options this is why we are all out here today. but others remain fiercely loyal to the monarchy and its traditions these people held a counter demonstration. for many thais the monarchy goes to the heart of their
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identity they say the protesters are misguided. a long time. and. everything. to want to keep this not. the protesters and their detractors a conflict over the soul of thailand. india reached another grim milestone in its fight against a coronavirus as the number of deaths past 50000 nearly 1000 of those fatalities y. and 24 hour period alone but the government said over the weekend that the country had one of the lowest mortality rates around the world it also pointed to
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a high level of recoveries due to aggressive testing and tracking let's get more from correspondent in delhi monita. india now has the 4th highest number of fatalities from the coronavirus in the world but the government is saying the mortality of it is one of the noise so i'm wondering what the message here is it's all under control. yes we have crossed the figure of $50000.00 deaths due to cold in india but before the suffering the actual single might be even more than that the government on the spot is of course thing that the how do you hide a company leader and we have a video to tell if you did it on the scene for us and all kinds of some side of that coming up that the indonesia figure of a c problem that's been about $256.00 days when you with me that's to go up in about $23.00 days also and much less they've actually so but because well it was saying that the discovery to acknowledge is not actively
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a very good measure to understand the situation because in a match a progression of any fundamental an epidemic more than one people are going to come and that i've had more than most people was sick and the fact the cost to me they said one will people are falling sick the aussie or look at the 1000 people just for the face of everything that a couple of days ago it was or was 60000 cases everything the same the critics are saying that to the bank the whole of the thread is under control and you can't and you say that the crisis is under control and in the midst of all this of course you had the prime minister addressing the nation on the saturday on india 74 the independence day he was talking about measures being in place to mosque produce a vaccine wants as has been given the green light by scientists that's just listening to this one fast money you know and then we continue our conversation. out of them and the many. not one not 2 but 3 coronavirus vaccines are being tested in different phases in india. when we
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get the green light from scientists then there will be production on a large scale. the preparations for that have also been done all and along with fox production a road map has also been prepared to make the vaccine available to every indian in the least possible time a yacht is not open economy say on a. monitor there across london from delhi is on the line with us money in the home of the prime minister to say in food sound like in very spinning its hopes on a vaccine i mean how far along is india's vaccine development programme well as the prime minister mentioned them as independent bases that india is looking quite appealing she lacking kind of these 2 will be the which have been developed in this in this c.r. in this scene one is a social one can exercise because one of the all clear vaccine is has gotten the
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permission to fund the safety when facing one child under the seat in the city to india which is the base in the city or for me in india but the folks i think that the tribes when you go on to the end of the sealer and about expecting that the production the stuff in the early 2021. years also doing over the democrat is now moving into one nadya's where health care coverage isn't anything like it's in the cities how consigning of development is this money. was raised as you said it's a consigning the development we're talking about who donated which are acting and lodging as watchdogs there have been reports of who donated as emerging of course quotes in the past couple of weeks the problem of course is that they have been fragile and has confessed up so to the living conditions are anything not up to them up to these plus i think there is such a law saying that it's very much possible that somebody who may be needed an urgent hospitalization may not be able to reach the public system if you're on time or
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even get a problem medical consultation that we've gotten from this is active any talent and people are no politeness patient local community monotonous patient that they are of stuck months ahead of us. there's a record span of money is not true 3 in delhi thank you so much for that. month response to the coronavirus pandemic has been criticized by a nobel laureate to send the well respected economist was speaking to the head of did asia department they were all to go just talk to send have to say. to. india 70. instituted their heart. that's known that it was done without paying attention to the interests of the poor i thought warmly . everything would have those would be married you.
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couldn't get it. to buy and we sort of. thing in income and buying food with it and they didn't have. to and so i think it was not done. in a way that would have had to really made before we. and there was never a prize winning economist on the sand and you can watch that entire interview in full on our website www dot com or go on the coronavirus continues to disrupt life as we know it across the world but it's not only humans that are suffering from the consequences of the pandemic a dog shelter in indonesia has been overrun with canines what abandoned by their own some out of desperation some out of fear. an enthusiastic welcome for some
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a somali as she starts her work day the shelter she runs in jakarta is now home to around 1400 dogs and. most of them arrive injured the dogs that used to live in a home and have been abandoned are usually depressed when they're depressed they don't want to eat and they're also more susceptible to disease the moment the more . normally some $120.00 animals arrive at the shelter each year but since the start of the pandemic somaly says she's taken at least $700.00. dollars out of the years that it's become a sanctuary now not a shelter anymore because there are so many dogs and it's very difficult to find someone to adopt on. animals to feed means higher costs for the shelter somaly has now taken to social media seeking donations she's worried about what
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will happen if people don't respond. or i had our gang was no longer got out like what if there's no one else to help. if i take the dogs there's at least a chance i can extend their lives. but if i just leave them outside it will be the end for them and they'll die. while the economic impact from covert 19 is forcing some owners to give up their pets experts say others are abandoning their animals over fears they could carry the virus. sociologist daisy maine says that requiring people to take good care of their pets . somebody but there's no legal protection for pets and unfortunately animal owners especially in the city aren't displaying the values and the ethics that they should. educate
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a based animal welfare group is trying to educate arness to keep their 4 legged friends. and the dogs at this shelter hoping i kind shimon will give them. a call about us from very different things i'm on a lark that's a part of their there's more stories on our website. we're back to more of the same vibe here that. passionate drama competition rivalry marketing numbers was here at intuition love hate money. fans friends find stamps and found.
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how is a virus spread. why do we have it and when we'll. just through the tax and weekly radio show it's called spectrum if you would like any information on the drawing of virus or any other science topic you should really check out our talk ask you where you get your podcast you can also find us at. hard to imagine a world any more without photoshop in the last 30 years the software has changed not just photos themselves but how much we can trust what we see will look at the impact of digital manipulation coming up on arts and culture and billionaire heiress yulia stuff once you to check out her video art collection online and for
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free and the photographer who hangs out of planes and helicopters tom hagan's aerial shots show a world changed by the coronavirus and by global warming welcome to arts and culture 30 years ago in 1990 s. a computer program called photoshop 1.0 at the market the software made it possible for the 1st time for large numbers of people to digitally improve or manipulate photographs of course photographers had already retouched and altered photos by hand since the 19th century but now fake is the norm we ask photographers how they see it. ever since the advent of digital photography the response has been using photoshop to brighten or emphasize. these images.
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