tv Markus Lanz Deutsche Welle September 11, 2020 10:30pm-11:31pm CEST
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i see a sure i see a star i love you sure. but with the world sat with the biggest composer of all time i can't even begin to imagine a world class horn player single willis for a musical journey of discovery. on a world without beethoven starts september 16th on the w. . thousands of people being held in greece is squalid morea migrant camp and now find that desperate situation is even worse after fires destroyed the camp this week those fires have also rig night at the debate that has plagued a you for 5 years what to do about the thousands of migrants being held elsewhere and the others who are still risking their lives to come to europe i'm phil gale in
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also on the day a russian's vote invades no elections on sunday but can anyone putin's united russia party opposition politicians thinks he can turn the tables and not novosti b.s. united russia has a thin majority here if we can break the majority of us there is convincing sample for the rest of the country if you consolidate forces and go to the ballot box you contingent the situation and destroy their monopoly. to begin today with a story of desperate people from distant countries whose lives big. even worse this week woman due to give birth any day and a 3 week old baby are among the thousands of people left homeless by the fire of the marri a migrant camp on the greek island of lesbos greece has provided a ferry to have some of the refugees and more in the way and the e.u. governments are once again wrestling with how to provide shelter for the 12000 migrants but also with finding
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a sustainable and coherent migration policy. the 3rd night in the open in the parking lot of a supermarket people who thought they had nothing left to lose have lost what little remained. some of the injuries sustained in trying to rescue their meager possessions from the flames and now autumn is coming and the nights are getting colder. that it was a war that never was that it was rare that there was a night like it was. as bad as conditions were inside the cramped refugee compound the situation for the 13000 former residents of moria is now even worse. this cannot be all final defeat in this on lake we cannot be sleeping on this bill is like this. 400
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miners have been evacuated to the mainland. some of them may find a new home in germany. they thought they hardly think they dismissed at the same time i asked the greek prime minister how we can help and if so and his request is that we in particular will take the miners and who have now been brought to the greek mainland we have contacted france and we will work together on this i hope that some other evil states will do this also. i need to unlimited south of the passenger ferry has been pressed into service says temporary accommodation while the united nations rushes tents and sleeping bags to the island. where european governments are preparing to take in $400.00 unaccompanied youngsters from the marri a refugee camp german interior minister jose hoffa said most of them would be coming to germany and france but he's also calling for a more permanent solution. came for it my sins as you call faces i had been
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fighting to finally get home in european asylum policy. becoming one communist of could look at the other i can see often enough that migration is a global issue of enormous importance and ones that will be accompanying us for many years to come. the feelie yari shifting that the e.u. commission assures me in a video conference just hours before the fire that it would present this common solution on september. 6th and september these humans on the loose wrong for leaving very. well i think floor this with get out now so there is a co-founder of the european stability initiative think tank he's an expert of migration he's also architects have been a huge refugee deal with turkey which was signed in march 26th to welcome back to d w let's start with where the e.u.
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is a migrant policy yet another call we have today for the e.u. to develop a coherent asylum policy member states have been arguing about this for 5 years what what is the hold up. well look at this very concrete problem here we have 12000 people on one greek island lesbos and the big question is why are we keeping them on the island. until 6 months ago we had the un turkey had an agreement and the idea was people arrive you assess whether they need protection in europe and if they don't need protection europe their return to turkey if they do need protection they are moved off the island to the mainland but the trouble is that since 6 months we have no agreement of turkey turkey is not taking anyone back to e.u. is not in greece are not negotiating with turkey so these people are actually now on the island of arrived end of 200-1000 they are stuck there it's not clear how
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much longer we want to keep them and answer to the question of why they're there that suggests itself is that they are terrorists pawns in a game of deterrence simply to show how bad things are and europe ok so again we heard one of the european commission is this say well now it is time for us to do something has anything changed to make a new migration an asylum policy more likely to be agreed now but if you ask the member states what to do about these people some think you should keep them on the island. some of said even taken i was just in vienna discussing this with the austrian chancellor and they all string government says even taking 100 children from the island would be very bad signal because then more people would come so the logic is keep them there others think that this is has been defined in in germany that it's unacceptable to treat people this way so you need to find a way to bring them off the island those who need protection and share them in
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europe now between these 2 positions you can find a compromise a compromise would be looking for a unanimous agreement we suppose the compromise is we have a coalition of the the willing countries who are willing to take these people and move from the that is true and i think most people in germany have accepted this logic as well but one member needs to be part of the coalition of the willing and that is greece and the message we got from greece is that it seems greece prefers to keep people on the island rather than calling on the european i mean if greece would not if the greek government would not turns of the europeans and say listen help us re locates 152-0000 people dan we can quickly move to people from the islands to the mainland we can't easily these are not large numbers we can easily house. 20000 people it's been done before and if european countries like germany with a spin off and parliament from a c.d.o.
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parliamentarians calling for taking 5000 if others take a few 1000 as well. but greece needs to ask for it and why don't we hear this from greece because ministers in athens are frayed that if you solve the humanitarian problem on the island since there is no talk of turkey then more people will come and greece will be the government will be blamed so we need to both immediately solve this problem these people are out in the street debt debt situation will only get worse there is a lot of tension on lesbos there's a lot of resistance in the local community i did want to talk about that because a as you say there's there's resistance from the local community they don't want the morea come rebuild they don't want. the migrants there at all so should brussels and athens rebuild this despite local wishes well 1st of all i don't think this will happen we've seen this and i've been on these islands many
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times they'll be roadblocks they'll be violence already there have been attacks in february in lesbos on aid groups a lot of internationals attacking whom this is being read radical local local people in lesbos they have seen their days beat there's a sense of frustration on lesbos and on the other greek islands because they feel rightly that the problem of greece and europe has been outsourced to them don't own them yes and when they ask this is get back to the beginning when the mayor of lesbos or the people of lesbos ask how long do you want to keep these people here at the moment they don't get an answer just do in the last minute let's let's talk about the german chancellor angela merkel has has been a sort of beacon in all of this when she threw open germany's doors in 2050 she's not standing for reelection next year. when she goes do you
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think that germany sort of open door policy on its leadership on this issue will go with. she's done an amazing job for those who arrived even germany but on europe's external border which is also germany's external border what we see at the moment is a complete state of lawlessness every european law every convention the refugee convention a human rights convention is they being broken we are violating. laws and standards in order to deter people lift a message that it's better to stay in turkey lebanon afghanistan than come to europe and that is devastating because that means that the rich comes in and sends a message that even small numbers of migrants. are pushing us to give up on our core values so if medical goes the next year do you expect that to get worse well a i expect this to get worse very quickly in the next days in the next weeks so but i think that there is a solution and the challenge now for the germans is to drop the illusion that there
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will be a european solution to talk directly to the greeks very realistically what is it that we need to reassure the greeks about because they have very very faced with turkey they are very to turkey might put pressure on them what do they need so that they can cooperate with other europeans to solve a solvable problem for macros legacy this would be crucial she did an enormous positive job in germany for those arrived they were treated with dignity but ed europe's external border at the moment we are not treating people with dignity and the refugee convention will be 70 years old next year and it will be drowning in the aegean as we speak at this moment thank you for that very interesting very sobering thought again on the comes from the european stability initiative thank you. and opposition activists in russia say they faced increasing interpretation ahead of the weekend's regional elections
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this week police in moscow raided the office of the open russia opposition group and an intruder smashed a bottle containing a chemical substance in the siberian office of the opposition candidates so a boy come to office volunteers had to be taken to hospital just a boycott was an ally of an x. in the valley the kremlin critic who germany says was poisoned with a nerve agent before the attack on his office did w.'s emily show and caught up with came to hear about his campaign and he's hope that this election would shake up the status quo. yes. sergei boyko prides himself on being alive and edited social media is the main way the politician is reaching out to voters in novosibirsk he's up for a seat in the siberian city's parliament on his you tube channel the politician promises to clean up his hometown and sweep out corrupt politicians and we have a mafia here boyko is leading
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a coalition of $31.00 opposition candidates their goal is to push united russia the ruling party out together boyko says the kremlin is watching the regional election campaign closely. of course and they are friends united russia has a thin majority here if we can break the majority of the novosibirsk and an example for the rest of the country if you consolidate forces and go to the ballot box you contingent the situation and destroy their monopoly. boy goes campaign recently got a boost when he appeared alongside his close ally opposition politician. in a video that has gotten millions of views team expose the alleged corruption schemes they say helped united russia politicians in novosibirsk get rich and buy luxury properties and he was poisoned shortly after filming this video he uses it to call on russians to support the candidate most likely to be united russia in the poll
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a strategy he calls smart voting that we can use russia's the 3rd the biggest city as an example of how to take down the insatiable told that is united russia. novosibirsk is siberia's main industrial hub more than one and a half 1000000 people live here. united russia current li has the majority in the city council and the regional assembly and their campaigning to keep it that way. regional united russia is the party of the president of the government the party of respect. and can we work in the interest of the citizens of the russian federation . but not everyone in the city feels cared for by the russian government. a lot of people live in fear of what the future holds it's not clear who's shops could be close to a cool idea fired. the situation now is
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a far cry from how things why in the ninety's and early 2000 i think a lot of things are good no but a lot isn't. when. we pay taxes like good citizens but who knows where those taxes go. boyko wants to drive the city in a new direction he hopes that if his coalition wins a majority they can turn novosibirsk into a city for its people. people from united russia are not interested in developing the city or talking to voters instead of running the place they are just defending their own personal interests i believe that despite the extreme weather here and the fact that it isn't of the richest place no sabir can be a modern european city i says the main challenge is to convince people their decision in the polling station can break through the status quo and that smart
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voting against the ruling party here can set an example for change across russia. well the c.e.o. of mining giant serve rio tinto has bowed to public pressure and resigned because of the company's destruction of sacred aboriginal sites in western australia the juka gorge rock shelters were long inhabited by their traditional owners the pussy contained a court tomorrow and pinney court of people the sites contain evidence of human habitation going back 46000 years making them some of the oldest in australia rio tinto blew the caves up in may in order to expand iron ore mining in the area and despite opposition from the aboriginal traditional owners the company admitted last month that it did have other options that would have avoided destroying the site's c.e.o. original sebastian jack unto others will step down but remain in charge until march
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next year when the national native title council represents australia's traditional owners of the land in state executive jamie lowe had this to say about the rio tinto resignations or yesterday it is an awkward also calling for any and for n.z. great you were there. on an old 80 and 80 aboriginal where people were one of mourning me racing on everyone that i talked to was not aboriginal not aboriginal. and the aboriginal red. cherry well let's explore some of the matters that are rising from this is dr henry scary tease curator of the indigenous arts of australia at the university of virginia's a clew group aboriginal art collection he joins us from charlottesville welcome to day w. let's start with a quick catch up what were the jocund gorge caves and what made them so special.
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that's a that's a really great question and thank you for asking still and don't just before i said i should say that i'm coming to you from the lands of the monic and people in charlottesville so you know we're talking here about indigenous sites and i think that one of the parts that we need to all come to grips with is recognizing when we live in astray or america that the places that we come from have long and rich indigenous histories. in the simplest scenes the these caves was sacred sites to the point could he could have and can occur to people now i guess most of the viewers would think a sacred site you know something like a church or somewhere where a site visited. each much it's a much deeper thing for indigenous australians indigenous australians will tell you
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that these sites are the visible manifestations of the day and sistas that during the creation time these places were made by ancestral beings who left their presence in these places and so to blow up a cave site like this is really is really to. is really to defile a family member. and i think that one of the challenges that that is faced in a case like this is that it's very easy for. so many many people in the west to dismiss that as being superstition or some kind of primitive religion but really what we say in the science is 46000 years i was more of us religious practice and that is globally significant.
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and what's intriguing about this is whether a very vetting culture if i can put it out that way that says yes we respect think the aboriginal traditional owners yes we do respect that how much real weight do they give to do the the laws of the invaders actually give to the traditional owners if i can put it out way. i think examples like these show the short fall because i think that increasingly as strains of becoming aware that the country that the country is straight has had this long inhabitation and that indigenous people have the steward of these places for a long time but i think that understanding what that really means and empathizing with the ways in which indigenous people relate to these places i think i think there's been a great struggle to come to terms with that and i think that this incident which is
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really the latest incident in in the long run of problematic mining dangers in the pilbara region i think it shows these 2 systems really coming into into into conflict and you know i thought the quote that you had before was a really feeling one that it's very easy for white academics white anthropologists white mining company executives to to to talk about this. talk about these matters in an intellectual sense but i think until this really the guiding bodies and guiding principles laid down by the indigenous people of a straight face kind of thing is going to continue to happen and we see that it's not just an australian problem we see it all over the world you say your your me i think states at the moment on. ancient ancestral lands i wonder in fact looking at
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the aboriginal behind you is this a problem that you have had to wrestle with as you say you know your your university is on indigenous latins your digging with indigenous arts to do people wonder where you or your aboriginal art came from your address to get some giving back. yes well no because you know it to look at the 2 works behind me they say to work some really by contemporary artists 2 sisters when she and john cannot put jerry and what these paintings are trying to do is very much to munich case to outsiders the significance of these places to them and i think that in a stretch it really has been that since the 1960 s. has really helped force the government and mining companies to recognise indigenous sovereignty but i think that the big question right coming to terms with now as as as settler societies is is that for
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so long the ownership and stewardship of of of these countries that we call our homes has been. has been laid on top of indigenous societies in charlottesville for instance they have been really significant moves to address the disparities. in african-american communities and a long and painful slave history in charlottesville but. beyond that is a longer history of disposition and violence towards native american people so i think that really what we're looking at here you know straight with the controversy that this is has has real reason is is a country that is really finally having to deal with to deal with it except forgive
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me for interrupting but i suppose a cynical person would look at it and say now we've seen we've we've seen resignations and that's not a small thing it's a huge company so vats happened but this is this is white man's money but the resignations have happened those caves are still destroyed and that company's. stock market price has still shot up so. just this is really appears to have been done at this stage no and i think that that last point is the absolute key one that we're talking about one system of aboriginal law that values place and another system that values money over nothing else and provided those 2 systems are banging against each other it's very hard to see how they are going to be resolved good talking to us very very interesting thank you for joining us dr henry skerritt from the university of virginia thank you for having me. i
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the to keep the lips on t w. every day is for us and for our pleasure. the idea is on its way to bring you more conservation plays how do we make seduced greener how can we protect animals and their habitats what to do the following place to. meet and make a difference by choosing reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable smart new solutions oberstein said in our. earth is truly unique and we know that their uniqueness is what allows us to live and survive blue why do you assume the environmental suits to global 3000 on t w i'm going mum go like. oh. my
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god says love food for the russian soul. comes here steve. so many different walks of life. some are compact. on close drawing but all of this comes straight from the heart to its former c.e.o. who put one foot in the morning delicious the mushroom in trucks to come up. from the 1st of the logs to their final resting place the russians on g.w. documentary. life on earth one of a kind and. coincidences. where the improbable happened place for us was going to be the creation of our solar system with our planet is
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a bit like winning the lottery. what is. or unique start september 18th on d w. this is to be used for fear and frustration for migrants on the greek island of lesbos refugee stager valley demanding to be allowed to leave the island after a massive 5 destroyed somalia migrant camp leaving thousands homeless and hungry also on the program deadly wildfires sweep across the western united states forcing thousands from their homes leaving san francisco shrouded in.
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france's coronavirus outbreak threatens to control the country sets of bread with nearly 10000 cases in one day the nation's leaders are wary of the return. of the program hundreds of migrants on the greek island of last boss have protested demanding to be allowed to leave it says 3 days after a massive fire destroyed the morea migrant camp leaving more than $12000.00 desperate people homeless the greek government is scrambling to build new temporary accommodation and says the camp will be rebuilt until then officials say most of the residents will have to stay on the island. in the afternoon they hit the streets the former residents of moria and now homeless and angry they won't accept
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camp life again. they're now building a new camp behind the supermarket but we don't want to stay here we want to leave grace. on friday morning the greek army began constructing a new camp in a military area aimed at creating temporary accommodation for several 1000 people essential services which almost broke down completely after the fire destroyed the camp are being restored grieco sorority's arrived with trucks handing out food and drink to the migrants many here are attempting to create some kind of shelter but 3 days after the fire the situation remains chaotic. earlier on friday the greek government upped the police presence on the island in particular along the road to the port of miscellany to prevent migrants from leaving the island lesbos residents to a furious about government plans to rebuild the camp blocking the access roads in protest
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. your borders we demand immediate relief and when the camp shut down this is a good opportunity to close it we have suffered enough they will be years. but these people need a place to stay in the meantime they're stuck facing the elements. well they don't you correspondent alexandra from nominees only as boston has been speaking with some of modernist former residents. 3 days being stuck here are 3 nights old sleeping on the roadside people are getting more and more impatient and angry they started protesting to take marching back and forth chanting freedom freedom and confronting their riot police they told us for you know war still they go once to be moved to and not for a camp on the island they closed down we want to leave nice cannot take care of. many of them wants to go to france belgium or germany one of them told me you
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a chance or germany's angela merkel said we can do it why can't the germany take us all in. i was on the phone knocking on the last boss while fast and forced a mass evacuations across several western u.s. states off a 1000000 people fled their homes in oregon that's a 10th of the state's population washington and california have also been hit. as if 2020 wasn't strange enough already this was the morning commute over san francisco's golden gate bridge this week. small can die from wild fires mixed with the ku pacific ocean in order to produce an otherworldly effect. 1150. crazy 11 in the morning and it's. like the middle of the night it looks like you're right. in that the they are just
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like the weirdest. thing. you know come out it experience it together take a break from work and come out flag. historic fires are ripping through 3 western states and california almost 5000 square kilometers have. firefighters don't expect to bring the blazes under control until the middle of. some villages have already been lost. the flames advanced. hard. very dark and the ashes were everywhere and where the bad. bad. driver in oregon filmed the dramatic scenes engulfed the forest.
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while a bird's eye view reveals the total obliteration the fires left in their wake. the governor told residents to brace for a huge loss of life on property and said this would not be a one off event. we are feeling the acute impacts of climate change we are seeing at the devastating impacts in oregon on the west coast and frankly throughout the entire world. in washington state 2 fires have retard and heartbreak. everything going on close bad everything. is firefighters continue their battle across the west coast meteorologists are warning that it is nor yet even peak wildfire season. nor take a look at some of the other stories making news around the world for minneapolis
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police officers accused of murdering george floyd in may have appeared together in court for the 1st time prosecutors say they should be tried together defense lawyers strongly oppose a joint trial george flood's death triggered widespread protests against racism and police brutality. the prime ministers of poland the czech republic slovakia and hungary of call for new elections in baton rouge in the lead and the release of all political prisoners the vishu grad groups also proposing an economic rescue package for brothers and visa free travel for its citizens and a few moments u.s. president donald trump has an ounce of bahrain is the latest nation to normalize its relations with israel the breakthrough is part of the administration's approach to fully integrated huge state in the middle east united arab emirates recognize israel last month it will exchange embassy france's prime minister caustic sense the government is not planning to introduce a new nationwide lockdown to contain
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a wreck or called had 19 cases instead he's urging citizens to be prudent and to observe guidelines like social distancing and the wearing a face masks france in june at the world strict is locked out this spring and there's little appetite for a repeat. concern over the rising numbers of corona virus infections is mounting with nearly 20000 new cases confirmed in the last 2 days hospitals are coming under renewed pressure despite the worry the government is trying to avoid going back to a complete shutdown. we live users yes the virus is here to stay for several more months and we have to be able to live with it without going into a generalized lockdown once again. and we are aware of the simplest solution research and the least restrictive one on one and. that is the
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scrupulously follow coronavirus protective measures. officials want instead to implemented less drastic measures such as ramping up testing and introducing localized restrictions the length of mandatory quarantines has also been reduced from $14.00 to $7.00 days to make this easier to enforce. persians are apprehensive but they too are hoping there will be another lockdown. you want to thank you and yes we are worried that. the figures are skyrocketing this morning we were really surprised by the number of new cases you know just because i just hope we won't be confined again because it would be a newer deal that's too complicated for the economy and for our personal life at this hospital in the virus hot spot of must say all the intensive care beds for kovan 19 patients are full doctors are sounding the alarm the number of people
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hospitalized nationwide is still way short of the peak reached in april but france is back on the alert the overriding imperative is to prevent the health care system from becoming overwhelmed. and take a look at some of the day's developments in this pandemic will start in india which is recorded the world's highest number of cases in a single day with more than 96000 new infections brazil has signed an agreement to conduct clinical trials of russia's sputnik 5 vaccine with a view to buying 50000000 doses. borders will remain closed and gatherings of more than 60 people banned into the new year and inspected the number of new cases jumped by more than 12000 in 24 hours of that biggest increase since the start of the pandemic. authors in hong kong have begun to censor better work while others have decided to leave the city altogether in the wake of china's new national
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security goal the low came into force in june and publishes subversion terrorism or collusion with foreign powers with up to life in prison the city government says the legislation to restore law and order after a year of unrest. the artist known is on to his use to making headlines his political illustrations have been a regular fixture in the main power weekly newspaper. that was until his cartoon column was axed in july a move he's blamed on hong kong's new national security law. royal. writes i'm pretty pessimistic on the creative front you see some of what you found is accidentally crossed the red line and the space keeps getting smaller i know that some of my artist friends have chosen to emigrate the reality of hell i can
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see it up and go to. him low has already made some big decisions the artist has moved much of his work to a secret location in europe in order to protect it from the authorities. this appears the security law is that it doesn't stick to late what can be done and what can't go away and it's that fear with yours on top that makes you self sense of yourself before you act as if it's already affected our creation to some degree all. i know you're being hurled at all. before the security law was introduced protest art was often used by pro-democracy campaign is they feared their freedoms were being a road by beijing freedoms that was supposed to be protected. now people involved in protests like this could face life in prison. but that won't stop
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our 2 whose own art can still be found in some bookstores across the city. to her. dog out of there you have to decide what your values are and you can fear being arrested any time or regret that you have not done enough to try to make an impact on society. i've decided to persist. in yoga i do although it is. a risky decision but one he feels he has to make. group of senior citizens turning heads in china to be athletes are refusing to take retirement literally thanks to their rigorous training and saying their skills aren't pressing people ha that age. while many seniors
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use hand rails to prevent falls these retirees are turning aging on its head. all the geriatric gymnast and tianjin china are well known for their performances that combine gymnastics with chinese acrobatics. all in the log we started the long tongue gymnastics team 10 years ago i felt very bored after retiring and didn't know what to do with so we started practicing gymnastics. there are now 300 members on the team ranging in age from 60 to 80 but you wouldn't know it by watching their training sessions. so what's their secret. along don't be bothered by old age find things that bring pleasure and believe you're still young that's what i do. the team's leader says he always dreamt of becoming a star gymnast and he's not giving up now. and since you're up
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fleet street. 3 times wanted. to marry much alive. just. make it clear exactly. our culture history. travel extremely wary of. wonder woman we'll have to wait warner brothers pushes back the theater release of its blockbuster sequel as u.s. senate most struggle to bring in crowds disney meanwhile hopes milan to drum up audiences in china. and it's known for its lavish tales of romance now nollywood enters a real life drama as the pandemic cuts the industry. also on the show over issues
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cleaning up. oil spill from the ground the tanker the japanese company that chartered the vessel is now opening its wallet. welcome to the show i'm stephen beardsley in berlin it's good to have you with us warner brothers is postponing the release of one wonder woman 1984 until christmas day as the pandemic puts theater ticket sales in question movie studios continue to reshuffle release dates as they wait the return of the theater crowds warner brothers release recently released another blockbuster tenet in theaters where it's made more than $150000000.00 worldwide so far disney meanwhile released its summer blockbuster molon as a $30.00 video on demand on its streaming service in the u.s. before taking it to chinese theaters this weekend. all right for more on this let's go to our financial correspondent in new york against korda yens warner brothers took an experiment with tenants it released in theaters is choosing not to do that
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with wonder woman didn't learn a lesson there world especially in the united states attendant as far as sightseeing did not do as good as expected and now a wonder woman as you mention there will be postponed and the movie wonder woman if i saw correctly roughly cost about $200000000.00 not included marketing costs $1.00 of brother says having another movie in the pipeline the science fiction movie do you want and it also might actually get pushed a bit further away so clearly a very tough environment when it comes to the movie industry not just but also here in the united states are you and so the studios are pushing their releases what does that mean for theater chains in the u.s. . it's very rough i'm standing here in a minute in front of a real movie theater all of the movie theaters are still closed i'm here in new
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york i'm also in los angeles and those 2 cities are the most important cities for the film industry and if you look what happened for example to amc entertainment at the biggest movie chain here in the country i believe even world white still that stock was down by about 3 percent here in the friday as session but it's not just movie theaters the chains they might be able to survive especially when they act to globally but you also have to think about all those smaller movie theaters around the country they're either not allowed to open all their running on the lower capacity but then also at the end tire rechelle industry for example that also is partly connected restaurants bars and so on and so forth so close to movie theaters so they're all struggling quite a bit right good point a lot of those theaters in malls in. new york thank you.
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well staying in the movie business the coronavirus has rattled nigeria's multibillion dollar film industry nollywood lockdowns and strict new health measures have extended productions and blown out budgets they've also changed the stories that can be told and how they're told our correspondent funny flush our reports for. usually this place is buzzing the students dreaming of a career in the film industry it's been closed for the past 6 months a huge loss for and the mr big name in nollywood who funded the school. its sense of my income for this. project the t.v. series the film in the cinema and. she still considers herself one of the lucky ones able to make money via streaming platforms but nollywood is changing making films now means preparing them because he's 19 in mind we have to have kissing scenes any more as a writer when i'm working i try to avoid
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a lot of those things and very little touch if there will be any at all so we try to write a script not to depict that but it could be boring but for now we just don't have any other choice that almost sounds like nollywood is becoming a bit like bollywood back in the day so it's no kissing policy so many streets here in lagos have served as a backdrop for films and t.v. series made in nigeria. but fulfilling the dream of making it in this industry during a pandemic means you have to adapt smaller groups protective gear longer production times due to current he was an ultimate lee more costs. were coming back no i'm actually. a rehearsal for a family series in lagos the set in the private home of the director said to me the cast is rather. on the set only people who are absolutely necessary some of the
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locations we intend to use we can use we have things in church we can film we have scenes in some restaurants we can bring people together so that this is really affected us so many things in this series had to be taken off the story and then retreat the story to your feet in the situation said dick like so many others has to rethink productions and costs now with the current iris in mind but with cinema being closed there is also an opportunity for filmmakers he says this is actually it's time for online streaming the poor home means that be might be bored if you don't have quality content to see so for me i through feel this is the right time to feed debt to grow up and ultimately make a living the series by sidique will be released on social media 1st t.v.
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you tube before perhaps heating the big screen the pandemic is changing nollywood and those who are able to adapt quickly may benefit once it's over. or right now to some of the other business stories making headlines rio tinto c.e.o. is resigning over the mining giants destruction of sacred aboriginal sites in western australia the firm triggered an outcry from shareholders and the public after blew up 2 ancient caves to expand an iron ore mine 2 other top officials are resigning as well. britain has reached its 1st major post the trade deal with japan u.k. government saying that the deal voids high tariffs on exports to japan like textiles and food items on the japanese side car manufacturers like nissan will see reduced tariffs on parts going into the u.k. and a streamlined regulatory process. over to africa now the pictures alone
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were stunning the turquoise blue waters off cut by a thin dark thread of oil the source was the japanese tanker m.v. walker's sheo which ran aground on a reef and started discharging its contents in late july now the japanese ship with a chart of that vessel has promised a multi-million dollar cleanup. morrish this is famed for its mangroves but now they're under threat after $1000.00 tonnes of oil leaked out of a stranded japanese freighter a team of specialists is doing what it can to clean up what's been called the worst environmental disaster in the island's history now the ship's operator says it spending 8000000 euros to help malicious. mo the accident has had a significant impact on the environment and people's lives in marriages it's good i must. in an event like this it is natural that we as the company of the
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charter of the ship must bear a social responsibility you know. 2000 on. mitsui o.s.k. says the money would be distributed over several years to support the marine environment working together with local n.g.o.s and other experts it would run projects to protect the mangrove forests as well as the island's coral reefs the company said it would compensate the local fishing and tourism industries which are important sources of income for more riches. which is soon expected to unify its 2 domestic currencies while trying to manage the exchange rate with a 3rd us dollar for many cubans with savings in regular pesos and plenty of experience with inflation it's a worrying fit. people are used to queuing in havana but this lines outside a bank not a grocery store the government plans to unify cuba's 2 currencies keeping the regular peso but dumping the convertible variant it's caused much uncertainty.
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when they said the convertible persaud go people who used it for many years have to get out and exchange it that's what i'm doing today because in a few months it might be much harder. right now it's very complicated for ordinary people and for businesses to handle 3 currencies it has to happen and i think it would be a bit of a pill that we have to swallow but it has to happen. the reforms are aimed at fighting the economic crisis and scarcity caused by us sanctions the coronavirus pandemic and the bureaucratic inefficiency of a soviet style economy the government recently announced other measures such as scaling back centralized planning and easing restrictions on small businesses cuba is widely expected to devalued the peso for the 1st time since the 1959 revolution one of the country's best known economists thinks there will be repercussions.
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companies will have an increase in costs and if costs go up and prices go up and there could be inflation. to tackle higher inflation analysts say companies need to raise productivity but they concede that if cuba is to attract pressures foreign investment currency reform is vital. and finally carmaker volkswagen has started deliveries of its new electric car the id 3 was talking it off as a milestone in the shift to electric vehicles critics say the german automaker has been slow to take a luxury mobility seriously folks wagon plans for news 22000000 even vehicles in the next 8 years so far 7000 orders for the id 3 in germany. that's it for me in the business thanks for watching.
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60 minutes on t w. what's going on here. house of your very own from a printer. computer games. better healing. my dog needs electricity. to please deliver stress and show what the future holds. for living in the digital world. d.w. . literature invites us to see people in particular. i like to see myself as the kids by growing up. my objective is to work with. books on you to.
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a meal and i'm good looking but the 2nd season is only. 16 about the environment super bowl society it's still about us but all the planets on the brain dysfunction circle the next person mostly. trying. to kill just the only good sense. in. this is state of the news africa coming up on the program p.p.a. for personal profit from side medical workers and got all contracting called it on the job because there's not enough or takes of equipment but the braised to supply the demand is being undermined speak the event for hospital staff busy ending up on the black market. and the traditional roadside snack that's become a source of sustenance to mice means is now
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