tv Kulturzeit Deutsche Welle September 17, 2020 6:30pm-7:01pm CEST
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we celebrate the 30th anniversary of germany's reunification october 3rd on d. w. . thanks for. the language of. speaking the truth global news that matters w. made for minds. this is. coming up today talks continue in doha to determine. what is the future that gives women and minorities the rights there it's one of the key questions around the force and i'll be speaking to one woman who knows. the costs of fighting for that. plus why isn't the. people there say
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victims of the underground. it's good to have you with us the united nations on tuesday adopted a resolution welcoming talks between the afghan government and the taliban the talks which got underway last weekend in doha bring together 2 sides that are 40 each other for nearly 20 years. been negotiating and diplomats are pushing for a cease fire as a 1st step to a longer roadmap to peace but the taliban have so far only reiterated that he has to establish afghanistan as a quote truly islamic country with no details provided as to what that means there are fears that given the militant groups. that could take away from women and minorities rights that have been hard won in the past 2 decades.
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lay down their weapons. that's the message of these afghan women who marched in jalalabad as the government and the taliban engaged in high profile discussions about the future of their country. the protests brought together young and old generations united by a longing for peace. but i know when our taliban brothers come down from the mountains and put down their weapons then the mothers will be happy that. we support the peace negotiations between the taliban and the government we're tired of the killing of our fellow afghans we want peace. the other message we want to have a say right now and in afghanistan's future society. we call on the taliban to consider women's rights then we'll agree to peace. but the
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taliban's track record and recent comments and doha have some worry that women's rights will be sacrificed in a future deal. taliban negotiators have repeatedly said they want to establish an islamic system in afghanistan. these women have made their voices heard and they're hoping the men in power will listen. so will the soldier corsi is an afghan politician and one of only 4 women who are part of the afghan government's negotiating team in the door harman school say welcome to the program at the outset i'm just going to ask you straight out all women's rights and the rights of minorities on the agenda for talks with the taliban. thank you. secondly we have to make sure that peace talks
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before the peace agreement is something which we do not know when this isn't living up to undergo of this not yet. social status or language or their religious r.c. . dependency they have to see themselves to see themselves in the future of our government we are still at the very early stages where we basically discuss. with a technical issues the rules of procedures but eventually over time. we have to make sure that all the rights of the citizens of afghanistan are peace after that that you said that you have to make sure in the course of time that the rights of citizens were never be preserved and protected but as someone who has negotiated with the taliban before what gives you hope that that
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negotiation especially on the point of women's rights will come to fruition with the polygon. you see we have really as a muslim country we have to live up to the standards of world we have to see what other muslim countries practices to or guess at its worst citizen especially if it was the female gender of this happens if you look at the country that i was in country that if you look at the 'd country or you know apply our neighbors across not in the region outside the region they have thought up over time progress and try to ensure that female gender of a society have it right and the main that they participate is not just a matter of ensuring rights to give a privilege to the woman but also good response about it yet equal citizens like will the so. above so once again cannot be materialized the peace not is
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about bringing cease and stability in the country it's about bringing. prosperity for the people of afghanistan we have to really define what does that mean when we talk about peace because if peace means you make a plea to more than half of the population but who are what i think the more they. want to probably think that we're gradually class does not mean peace peace means we include every mind decisions we there was a higher they're given an opportunity a problem. just. can't be for everyone so therefore i think the problem here has political or military experience extremist groups just realize that to take up one of them have to live with those of the world if we would really define a country that it is going to tell and even the world and the part that we will not be achieved without including or. as you correctly point out of progress on
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how serious the taleban in doha have said that they want to go to a truly islamic country i'm wondering what tom means forgot it sounds women. we lately have. conducted a lawyer which is the grand council and understand. the purpose was to consult people and people from across lots of life including religious scholars woman younger generation one just there's not a whole lot of participated in that we're going to provide an outline oh what is your definition what is the expectation of this process and was it what the the outcome of the invasion in the. country with which will keep it flying by gambling to me time. like with the subject was so and how many extreme
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we also have to pray things and in some cases to be honest we ought to have the idea also shared. by many by some people what did happen and to position which mixes. islam with traditional practices but it isn't easy to simon to take it up on the major work as well as and of the job which is not once not i think it's a tradition so that's what i think would be the main victim of the war and the provision but all of this is there we have a clear clear kind of move mosler so that in the loya jirgah decision and the confusion and confusion is a document that has been when it comes to the rights of the city by every aspect of a sickening where we have 30 seconds left just like
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a quick response from you on this i mean you want somebody who knows what it means to face the thought of on your survive to if that's an issue an offense your hand to stand in a cost all of that assassination attempt wasn't claimed by the thought of all your husband was jailed by the group in the only 2 of thousands i'm wondering how you negotiate with a group that has tried to kill you. maybe very much he did not think this tell him it's not an easy process it's a complicated multi-dimensional process but you talk with people you negotiate with people with whom you share. what you have so many differences i understand that all of us have gone through so much i have been a victim of what i'm like me up and that isn't. like the war but i think to that end i didn't like him so i don't people i don't want to. do not go to the sea and the simcoe that help these other people face we want to
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negotiate i know it's not easy sometimes it definitely disrupt my. thinking maybe my but. we have to really push it because there is no way out. for coffee believe it there for the time being but thank you so much for joining us . india kind of he has the 2nd highest court of us caseload in the world after the united states with more than 5000000 cases reported and dating pieces of 900048 week there is no doubt that infections are surging the government always pointing to india as relatively nor for tenet to do it as a sign but it has stepped in to control the pandemic but there are doubts if the 83000 reported deaths from covered 19 can be the true picture of india's coronavirus fatalities. saying goodbye to a husband and
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a father. mitra died in july after he was admitted to hospital with a fever and breathing difficulties he tested positive for the corona virus but you won't see his name on the list of coronavirus fatalities a muscular disorder was the official cause of death the family are confused. i feel that they are hiding death records otherwise why would they take my father so far away for christmas. the government is saying my father died of my esteem but they have created him according to covert 19 protocol for that little piece of sea it's not a unique story and could explain why india has only had about 80000 covert 19 deaths in a country of 1300000000 people experts are warning that these figures might be misleading saying india isn't counting many deaths a claim that the health ministry has strongly denied. a certain degree of undercounting no doubt but certainly not to explain. to
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number of votes if for example if you look at deaths a 1000000. kids for gellatly it their current number is about 60000000 and the united states vote for james less so population 8 don't lie don't do don't spend 1000000 so you cannot really explain that you're only on the basis of undercount to. death statistics were already unreliable before the pandemic in india with many indians dying at home without the presence of a doctor. the lack of data can make it hard to identify where spikes are occurring as the economy begins to reopen leaving many worried that is surging deaths could be following the latest rise in cases. there's more to. relieve it today with images from indonesia just government officials dressed up as ghosts no one i spoke on people to take precautions to stop the spread of covert back tomorrow so that.
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the train is. the most. summer break. in history. like the way. this. came back normal. to sleep starting to temora the team on g.w. . are scary movies even scarier when they're politically relevant to know monet's stars in a new horror flick about racism in the us. you watch the 49 times. a look at the movie antebellum coming up and later on the show. punks and poverty
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pictures of east germany the country's dictatorship didn't want you to see a look back on the work of photographer how the white house about it. welcome to arts and culture we're starting off the show with a look at ante bellum the new revenge horror movie about racism and slavery in the united states by debut directors bush and rents it's the 1st lead role for singer actress jenelle monet she plays a 21st century woman whose biggest concerns are her yoga regime and her vegan diet but then something awful happens. from virginia. her own academy has a black woman who has it. we are the future. but there are people who want to take it away from her who. kidnapped veronica wakes up in a version of a slave plantation of old can and he belum america's racist past is still very much
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with us. there's so much distraction so much distraction that we have to keep reminding people that this happened if we if we think it can get worse we're kidding ourselves it absolutely. so we have to tell the truth i think this film is going to be triggering from. the from the produces of global hit get out and she bellamy uses the central message that being black in america is like living in a horror movie and she fell and had a socially distance jivin premiere in los angeles the movie itself is being released online. ok. whatever you do and i can't. just. what came from before he changed. that is not possible for me. in her 1st leading role saying it turned actress jenelle monet hopes to have an impact beyond
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the box office rule change requires recruiting. you know when bruton. road change. is going to take media it's going to take film since it means you are reminded that we have to protect black lines and in particular we have to pretend we're. right here emerging. antebellum and being navy with grand social ambitions. of god did w.'s film expert scott roxboro with me now scots are antebellum this looks like a seriously work horror movie i can see called that i mean it's basically of be a horror movie but it's got a really strong political subtext i mean essentially some text is that america's original sin of slavery has not gone away but is buried underneath like a like
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a demon waiting to rain to spring up and wreck havoc right i know one of the producers on this movie is the same her produced jordan people's movie get out a few years back different story want to really kind of the same themes it works like yeah i think so i mean this is almost a new subject honor of black horror films with social messages which i think people really invented with with with get out and if you member that movie was a black guy who has a white girlfriend and he finds out that his girlfriend supposedly nice white family are secretly slaving black people are not so nice the the metaphor there is of course underlying racism of supposedly liberal all white people. feel that a similar thing with his a 2nd movie which came out last year called us and they have a very middle class black family and then they're sort of invaded by a group of doppelganger look just like them black people who want to take the life that they have here a metaphor is the class division between black people. with those fields where they
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work these sort of black or movies they're great because the great horror. films and they also are really socially relevant and they spark a debate i think particularly right now they reflect the debates that we're having in politics and even on the streets of america. let's talk a little bit about gentlemen now we've been watching her for years now she's a leading lady yeah exactly i mean norah singer right we are young a number of years ago as an actress she really came on the radar for me with the hidden figures a few years ago where she plays an engineer who starts to work for nasa as a key figure in the in the 1960 lands there i mean she just survives off the screen she's really phenomenal since then she's mainly done supporting roles i mean she had a small role in in the moonlight the last one the insurance guru i value half a nominal and and she's going to be the new film of the glorious alongside alicia
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condor and julianna moore but again this film is the 1st leading role i don't think i'm going to just move i think she's probably the best thing in it but we have not seen the end of her not the end of her as the leading lady i mean she's a phenomenal actress a double threat actress singer i think she's going to be a huge huge future ahead of her i know you're going to be talking about her much more in the years the come thanks scar arcs for. now architects shape the world we live in but construction is doing serious damage to our planet so how can we make attractive new buildings more sustainable one way plants a lot of that is the way just by german architect in. this stunning building complex in the western german city of desert off will soon be home to shops and offices one being hedges and over 30000 plants adorn the outside you feel when you're trying to bring something green into the city or a quite radical approach onto the rooftops of facades and set an example. to make
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people stop and think. it's a curse stopping in a woman is born and bred and decided off. by a has the largest green façade in europe the hedges have a total length of about 8 kilometers and so primarily ecological to. be experiencing very hot cities and they're getting even hotter much more so for the surrounding areas that's because of the many heats reflecting rooftops of course our roof like this was an enormous help because it not only covers the interior but also in a very cold to my way. home from is widely regarded as one of the world's most innovative architects his designs can be found from europe to australia. and the marina one in singapore some 350 species of tropical plants all integrated into
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this residential and office building. those what it would be growing up here if we didn't build it and how can we give you might say a clean piece of ground back to the people. that's known as replacement. for all. nursery to do it. release the piece of ground and groove the plans on its. it was almost a kind of business in itself. stuffing and hovan has often had to field criticism for example for the new subterranean central station and. construction of the mega project in southwest germany has been accompanied by mass demonstrations since it began on 2010 delays and cost overruns threaten to push completion of the planned date in 2025. back into set off that. joins the ensemble of.
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built in 160 in the shell theatre from 1970 the theater is seen as an icon of west german post-war architecture. has also taken on the renovation work for the theatres 50th anniversary. of. the building from my childhood. and i remember this theater very well i've been there with my parents and many of the people. and it's always been a building i loved and i still love it today. it's an incredibly beautiful and challenging building. now aged 60 stuffing and woman as files to harmonize the architectural legacy with his other than planning vision for the future the locals have already nicknamed the building valley. the regime that ruled former east germany wanted to control citizens' lives and the country's image so one photographer a hard house 5 published photos of life as he experienced it in east germany the
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dictatorship tried to intimidate his work is attracting new attention at a retrospective. a melancholy labor day in east berlin. raucous football hooligan. a child playing in the wreck of a vaudeville car. stone faced men in the metro on their way to work glimpses of everyday life behind the berlin wall seen through the lens of photographer. who moved from a small town address then to east berlin in 1978 he captured the mundane reality of communism much to the disapproval of the author the dreaded secret police that kept a keen eye on him. that this was it was normal to be under supervision lots of people active in the opposition were fearful we knew that he could sweep in on any of us at any time. it was
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a threat we lived with. houseboats was drawn to underground culture a world of misfits and punks thanks to contacts in the west his photographs appeared in many of west germany's weekly magazines and in 1907 a collection of his pictures was published there in a volume called simply east berlin the authorities were furious shortly there after his daughter was picked up by the stasi was. one day they just appeared at her school took her away and placed her in a children's home so they trying to brand our family anti social the home knew the claims weren't true 6 months later i managed to get her back. an exhibition of his work currently on show at the c o gallery in berlin also features excerpts from his stasi file. he had some 40
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informants keeping tabs on him but his aim was never necessarily to show east germany in a bad light a bleak and gloomy as his images are that also steeped in tenderness his perspective was always affectionate. to some extent he lost his subject matter when communism collapsed which isn't to say he missed. people go on about community and so on but it was only ever an involuntary community. and photographer he's what documents. in all its poignancy. in seeing the world but one full of life. that's it for this edition of arts and culture i'll leave you now though with a taste of music from a live stream a vent at the tate modern's turbine hall in london the group or as singers celebrating the 450th anniversary of a choral work by composer thomas tallis it's called them and it's about hope
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be tough it is for me. is for. the children is for. greater good is for fun. and to be toughened is for. beethoven is for every man. beethoven 2200. 50th anniversary here on d w. in deep underlying of climate change. the tremendous of. the to much instant if you. want to do yours today head of the future. shut. deep blue dot com african legacy of against the melting.
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click. whatever we begin to do today were out of c o 2 in the atmosphere and the increase of the temperature. 21st we have to start that fire started to decrease the amount of c o 2 for example now this is actually not a hard problem it just takes will however there are very important economic interests. all in all. who own a lot of oil that are doing everything possible to make sure this doesn't happen and we have to fight them quite trendy 50 ropey well on the way to reliable or doable solar wind i'm optimistic that. we're not totally at set
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pieces. this is newsnight from dublin more than 5000 migrants move into i knew that count on the green time and. the thousands more remain wary of entering the new temp city halted by squalid conditions of the morning but. the coronavirus fighting officials worry about the risk to public health also on the program. i think.
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