Skip to main content

tv   Kulturzeit  Deutsche Welle  September 8, 2020 8:30pm-9:01pm CEST

8:30 pm
60 minutes d w. w's crime fighters are back with africa's most successful radio drama series continues in the only disowns are available online and of course you can share and discuss on w africa's face for other social media platforms. to me and now. this is deja vu news africa on the program today said it goes government is at a fire over its handling of the devastating floods the large swathes of the country are under water and off to increase it into rainfall people whose livelihoods have been destroyed save the government has been snow to act. and you're looking at a maternity ward with many women have had to get better will be talking to the deputy h o about the state of health care in the central african republic. that
8:31 pm
we meet the sound autist using poetry and song to explore how colonial power was western sexism to her birth country cameroon. and i'm to see one to welcome to news africa thousands of people in senegal as capital debt call home after a stroll at the weekend brought nearly a year's worth of rainfall in a single day this is video from a densely populated suburb of to call some residents have to be evacuated by canoe local media reports that at least 4 people have died in the flooding across the country the government has come under fire for its response to the disaster.
8:32 pm
homes swamped. and the sandbags haven't been much help. flooding has become a fact of life for families here. and far deeper than this water is the frustration which keeps rising even as the flooding subsides. in this stack a neighborhood people feel they've been forgotten and ignored for years. since 2012 the state comes in makes promises that unfortunately we still don't have proper pipelines and drainage that's why the water can't train we've had demonstrations we've done everything so the state has us so that it will come and help us it's really hard. to believe. it's almost a decade since senegal's government launched a 1000000000 euro plan to combat flooding this latest disaster has seen critics questioning what's happened to the funds former prime minister abdul him by slammed
8:33 pm
the country's leaders on twitter writing but who are we kidding the floods plan has been intentionally abandoned the 750000000000 would never spent flooding ceased to be a priority after i left the government. the priority here is simply survival or senegal's president's well wishes tweeted after the disastrous weekend and not enough many feel his promise to launch an emergency response is too little too late and with more rain forecast this week the worst of this flooding could be yet to come. on its story is from the central african republic where a peace accord signed 18 months ago has brought some response to the war torn country but after 4 decades of conflict and violence many institutions are in dire shape health care is one of them the nation has one of the world's highest rates of infant and maternal mortality i'll be talking to the w
8:34 pm
h o's director for the cia are after this report from a maternity hospital in the city off. the delivery room in the marconi section of the old movies because people in in the far east of the central african republic this part of the hospital is nearly abundant only untrained unqualified health workers there he. is the middle who's never received formal training as a midwife but she's been delivering babies for the past 18 years jason profit from good driver has a midwife because the state hasn't sent anywhere yet on why you. can't believe from women home to give birth they can i'm up on these bricks well laid down here to deliver their babies. the maternity ward is in an advanced stage of dilapidation the birth rate in this part of the country is very high among girls as young as 13 women give but here we did it delivery materials the risk of
8:35 pm
contamination is very holy. deplores the situation found out who she broke who live in mostly give birth at night there's no night in this delivery of him anywhere in the hospital i turn on the light on my phone during the birth if. i'm a mother myself i do this job because i don't want to see women suffering and giving birth just anywhere near who shared their pocket. many trained hill to work as a scared to come to this part of the country because of insecurity in the region on the other side of the hospital compound is the surgery. the operation table is damaged there is no equipment or medicine available it's a local who is also self trained zune a super formation vision i'm not a trained surgeon but i operate on patients because there's no specialist here
8:36 pm
since i started this job some patients have died either in the resuscitation room in the wards or in the neighborhoods or schools and for these young i can't remember the number of deaths because it's been so long i can't see my people die like that you know that's why i do surgeries simple question. see the central government here in bank you cannot meet the needs of found out about populations in many parts of the country like in harborough and workouts are looking to fill the gap to assist these sections of the hospital in emergencies right working for district to reestablish itself in the area. and i'm now joined by the ducks as they were involved in and out of the w h o he is from the organizations the cia our office welcome to day doesn't use africa so we've seen just an example of how dire the health care situation is in one particular city in the central african republic but give us a sense of just how bad the health care system is in the country and the w
8:37 pm
h o's presence so to us are going to probably because one of the most. the worst call security in the world that has the highest maternal mortality that falsifies child mortality on the 5 for planet that means that you know less than. 4 out of 1000 children moved up for only. good little reached a 5th birthday less than mine. and it has a very own sufficient number of those professionals across the country this affected by a long lasting. political conflict doesn't ration is very the doctor finds it and that in the report reaches and we soul untrained people who are performing surgeries is there an effort from the w.h.o. side to increase the number of medical professionals in the country.
8:38 pm
yes there is we're supporting the effect of feel federico sciences in bunky the problem is that a large proportion of. being killed a central african republic pays for emergency relief funding and those type of funding doesn't support the long term investments in health systems that you would need for training health professionals who to think you know to train a medical doctor you need at least 6 years to train a midwife you need a year and a half to 3 years the pen's which which love you want to have and these are long terms investment that usually don't this could be in the new care and emergency funding i'm not willing to give. an aussie adults and how much of that the state of the health state of health care in the country is tied to the political situation situation and what needs to happen from from way of.
8:39 pm
well it is very dependent because without peace without frankly if you cannot implement any programs for example right in the same project so the. vaccination team was taken hostage by one of the groups so the military conflict very much affects the possibility to live up to deliver health care services including sub space ship basic programs such as human as. program ok that stops as a foreign fun. he is from central african republic office thank you. now as a musician explores what it means to be at home in both africa and europe she was a child when she 1st cameroon to chamouni korea has spanned both and trains now her music reflects their intertwined history.
8:40 pm
sound art meets slam poetry and you had me but also is a tale of heartbreak and cameron. you. seem to crying out on the same time. you get one dripping down when she says women in africa used to have more respect before european colonisers brought their sexism. had such an impact also people mentality they were purposely raising also the culture of the people stumbling over imaginary of a black man the attention 1st century. i couldn't. trust. in africa you know as a woman need to step back and not say so much but just be smiling and cooking and helping those structures i was not used so.
8:41 pm
there was 10 when she 1st left cameroon for germany one of cameron's former colonizers. mother moved with her and her brothers to pursue a ph d. at a german university. here it was a dream lessers small as child white culture is. everywhere it's the norm it's the standard so when you know as a 10 year old that you're going to europe it's like the. but as the only black girl experience not just racism but. how to explain africanus to europeans she felt even her mother's generation had lost the answers. back to cameroon singing in english french and german.
8:42 pm
and. there is. this. week. that kind of music she says couldn't keep up with the energy of cameroon. she went electronic and experimental the style she still creates now as a mother in berlin. germany. more with people who are like germany to them. and that. the legacy of colonialism is written into berlin's african quarter. many african. live here from boeing comes here for cameron and for. these days she says she's more at ease navigating her complex identity. what i discover with them through bad is not that important but it's ok. to move also in that space of not knowing
8:43 pm
and uncertainty while enjoying the journey is who may be called the closer to war. and that's where we'll leave the property and today as always you can find all stories on our website at www dot com poll it's nash africa for also on twitter and on facebook told next time. stories of people for information. the fans want to express g.w. on facebook and twitter up to date in touch follow us. life on earth one of the kind and.
8:44 pm
coincidences. where the improbable happen. to the awfulness we're going to be the creation of our solar system of the planet is a bit like winning the lottery. what is more unique stored september 18th on g.w. . welcome to the show but lynne's opera houses are cautiously reopening with strict time gene and distancing regulations we'll find out how that works for an opulent offer of production and also coming up. german photographer and is a veteran on the world's conflicts. most recent work looking up effects of climate change in sub-saharan africa. and we pay
8:45 pm
a visit to the sun not one landing in the land gallery isn't a list address for highly original contemporary design. 6 months after theaters concert halls office and cinemas were shut down ad hoc by the coronavirus pandemic there are hopeful signs that culture will prevail opera houses in vienna and here in berlin have held their season premieres and for berlin's deutsche meant an extraordinary performance for extraordinary times. the joy kicks off the new season not with grand opera but with the groundbreaking simp project which director mary eve seen your whole interweaves beethoven's 7th
8:46 pm
symphony with less much changed jazz music dances and live video she would like the experiences of female refugees on the way to europe. it's a fiction. but at the same time it's really kind of documentary fiction the contemporary individual fates of refugees as representative of the nightmare faced by tens of thousands the story of from senegal who survived the dangerous crossing of the mediterranean sea. she faces insecurity fear hunger and physical violence the dancers transform the traumatic ordeal into a breathtaking choreography. it's denser because a scene that's the bodies of these women it's treating as an object saw i wanted because they are it both ways buddy to to see many things and. i think it's
8:47 pm
a mountain persecution but at the same times of physical persecution. for me was the best way to show. baby talk was originally meant to debut in the french city of metz but the current virus pandemic put the project on hold the premiere of the doctor on pack involves major restrictions only $450.00 of around 2000 seats can be occupied audience members must be one metre 50 apart and the 90 minute show has no break so that therefore i can remain empty fortunately in this piece the orchestra is on stage. this is. beginning we're not going to lose that now applying the distancing we're always each string player has to have their own music stand i think that would not have been possible in the orchestra pit but it is possible on our large stage acoustically it takes some getting used to
8:48 pm
because there further apart but it works because we have walls at the back so the sound is reflected into the auditorium but it's a constellation we've never had before to to coronavirus. corner beating to. baby door makes effective use of limited possibilities hard hitting music and theater production with a deeply humanitarian message. and adrian kennedy was at that performance last night at the deicer open your 1st night back at the opera adrian how was it while it was a very special occasion for performers and audience alike it felt a little bit exclusively for an occupied seats left and right very strange really the orchestra and performance got
8:49 pm
a special. beginning before it even started the show successfully juxtapose. in 7th with this intense. tinge music from the young quartets and that worked remarkably well with this brilliantly acted and danced refugee story at the end got big applause from the relatively small audience all audience that was a starting to the season but not an opera per se and yet they want to go ahead with a brand new production of wagner's ring cycle that's a pretty big deal that is a big deal and it's the 1st new ring cycle from the deutsche welle for 34 years the famous time tunnel ring from good's friedrich premiered in 1800 forms last performed in 20 something a new ring is a once in a generation challenge for any opera house and this one is being touted as a ring for the 21st century it will be directed by steph and her haim and it's been
8:50 pm
on hold because of the current virus pandemic but now with about he is almost ready and could crimea as soon as september 27th ok and true to form for wagner not obviously it's a marathon or problem with at least 2 breaks in a massive orchestra how is that supposed to actually work in times of corona it's difficult but the story has been working together with the husband and wife team of opera loving doctors who've been provided free freak ovitz testing every morning when they get the green light rehearsals go ahead at noon this process will now be applied to the musicians who will have to be in the pits because it's a big orchestra for wagner and the latest news is that in berlin the distance between audience members may be reduced to one metre the minimum distance
8:51 pm
just in time for the premiere so that's good news too but as i say we have to wait and see nothing is certain ok so the vacuum is actually the 2nd opera. in the ring cycle what happened to the anger that was actually supposed to have premiered in june we should get see that next year story short for actually did porn the production of rheingold but this was a special minimalistic rowing gold 990 production for 22 musicians and was performed in the open on top of the opera house car park ok so obviously door to open just itching to get back to performing opera thanks very much for bringing us that story and we'll look forward to the vancouver thanks very much a.j. and kennedy. well another slice of reality this time in black and white comes from photographer and whose work in the middle east and the balkans has appeared in publications like time magazine and the new yorker and now over the years his photos have more witness to the effects of climate change on war torn region like
8:52 pm
his most recent project in africa region. looks. like chad in africa for thousands of years people have lived from fishing and farming. but this is actually the scene of one of the world's greatest natural catastrophes 20 years ago the lake had already lost 90 percent of its water mass now climate change and extreme weather events are frightening the livelihoods of some 50000000 people. german photographer and the spear is documenting the situation. few 1000000 people live in the saddle region over the next years and decades their livelihoods will disappear they need to go somewhere they will go somewhere the question is where. spirit has seen firsthand how the climate crisis has led to conflict war and icky and terrorism extreme
8:53 pm
weather events are on the rise harvests have been damaged or destroyed and large areas of the like are no longer accessible. the twinned ling resources are no longer enough to sustain the population and are fiercely fought over villages have been burnt to the ground. and the spirit has worked in syria afghanistan and in the balkans he uses a wide angle lens forcing him to get close to his subjects spira has photographed local farmers of warlords and islam extremists he understands the connections between hunger war and religious extremism around lake chad. horan comes across the lake at night recruiting men and of course the offer of $500.00 a month and
8:54 pm
a kalashnikov is attractive for someone who sees the entire livelihood disappearing . has traveled to nigeria where the conflict between nomadic herders and settled to farming communities has been escalating for years it's considered one of the bloodiest civil conflicts in the world spirit accompanied muslim fulani herders driving their cattle self during the dry season but with grazing lands diminishing conflict was inevitable the herds fed on the farmer's fields the pharmacist shot the cattle and in revenge the nomads burnt their villages both sides feel they are right. reforms paid off we heard the story of the christian farming communities too. that was in this village called pari that was attacked by the fulani and completely destroyed dozens of people were massacred. over 1000000 people from around lake chad are currently displaced due to hunger war and
8:55 pm
extremist terror. spiros photographs witness to the devastating effects of this kind of violence. well to say that she has an eye for good design is really something of an understatement that's because orlando seems to know in an instant different young designer or perhaps an object has the right stuff to make it a collector milan gallery has been a career springboard for many a big name over the years and in it you can find absolutely everything from cookbooks all the way to chaise longue. unique wild colorful and always out on guard rossana orlandi is gallery on the lawn is her very own cabinet of curiosities and created by tele is. being included
8:56 pm
in an exhibition here is an honor bestowed to only the most skilled some even call this gallery the home of designer. paul mccartney said the room is where you can feel comfortable if you spend time here today said when you meet with other best that this is where i find new inspiration. young talents recommend a new design is to me and i know that so listen while. many up and coming artists went on to be famous after having appeared in her gallery at the moment she's most fascinated by colorful silicone. this versatile material can even be used to create tableware italian designer alessandro she felt came up with the idea. i spoke with them at their yeah they use this material for anything other than. it doesn't break well it's. been nice you can even drink from it each new object that catches her
8:57 pm
eye is a fresh thrill to her make her. now all she has to do is find the perfect spot for it in her ever growing temple of design. and that place looks like marvelous fun well don't forget to visit our website if you'd like to find more from arts and culture or to catch up on any of those reports again and without all the facts until next time we share this case.
8:58 pm
kickoff from guide to taking a clear stance against racism. common form is that. we talk to a soccer referee a club president. and a professional basketball player. they are taking action against hate on and off the court and the soccer charm to calm him down to 30 minutes on w. . more. or. we know this is very time for the coronavirus is changing the world changing our lives so please take care of yourself keep your distance and wash your hands if
8:59 pm
you can stay at how we're d.w.b. for here for we are working tirelessly to keep you informed on all of our platforms we're all in this together and to get them from a concert. to save everybody stacy stay safe stay safe please stay safe. sleep. carefully. don't be sued me if you need to be a good. actually. discomforts.
9:00 pm
subscribe. to. this is. from berlin tonight leaders of the opposition are they trying to flee the country or being forced to leave a drama played out earlier today at a border post between us and ukraine protest leader. was either trying to leave or resisting deportation. tonight. also coming up coronavirus from the world is fuelling skepticism and. we'll meet
9:01 pm
a man who protests.

39 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on