tv Bares fur Rares Deutsche Welle September 28, 2020 1:00am-2:01am CEST
1:00 am
sure of germany's reunification. to preserve w. . this is deja vu news live from berlin tensions in the caucasus fresh violence erupts between azerbaijan and armenia the 2 former soviet republic it's republican accuse each other of reigniting a long running conflict on their border. also coming up for anti-government protests in belarus the opposition declared their leader of the true winner august selection calling today's rally her inauguration. a bonus league of perennial
1:01 am
champions by our munich took a trip to hoffenheim on sunday for what some assumed would be a foregone conclusion. a 1000000 book rough welcome to the program an old conflict boiled over into new violence on sunday as armenia and azerbaijan confronted each other over the disputed it no go no carb region both sides have reported casualties and accuse the other of starting the fight the area is internationally recognized as part of azerbaijan but has been controlled by ethnic armenians since war in the early 1990 s. kill tens of thousands of people there the international community including germany and the united states have called for an immediate cease fire. conflict is always
1:02 am
smoldering in the region of nagorno-karabakh but after sunday's attack on the capitol steps and not heard it might be on the verge of erupting again some even fear a full blown military conflict the fighting is rooted in a decades long territorial dispute though internationally recognized as part of the by john armenian separatists control the region and the south corpuses both sides accuse each other of starting these latest clashes highgrove the last days of the armenian people have been prepared for the possibility of a war because we realize that there are mina phobia and hatred with which azerbaijani dictatorship has fed its people that for many decades could not lead to any results other than war. hong kong. it is no secret that the initial fire including artillery fire was launched by armenia and the 1st to die whereas the johnny serviceman. of azerbaijan gave
1:03 am
a decent response to the enemy and the enemy could not move an inch. likely job with. beside him it. most of the footage that comes out of the region is provided by either the armenian or the azerbaijani ministry of defense the latest fighting is the largest outbreak of the dispute since 2016 the conflict dates back to the dissolution of the soviet union since then both countries have claimed the nagorno-karabakh region as their own territory a conflict that remains unresolved. on sunday both sides declared martial law with immediate effect meanwhile leaders from around the world are calling for deescalation. roman gonchar rankle from russian service told us earlier about what reignited the conflict. we do not know for
1:04 am
sure because there is no independent verification on the ground what exactly has happened when the sunday morning so we can only assume that maybe a while on the on which side we don't know someone decided to use the international situation where there are other conflicts and the international attention was drawn to them to try to maybe gain ground or try to push this conflict which is very long as you rightly sat by john showed signs of growing frustration with discount flick not being a result for decades you must understand azerbaijan is much stronger than i mean it's bigger it's has no money is military powerful so the president or was it by john made some remarks in germany sever i saw him in unica this week security conference saying that he doesn't want any compromise but if he she spoke to the prime minister i mean you know. who suggested to negotiate but as i by john was not
1:05 am
willing to yield tens of thousands of bellaver sans have gathered in minsk for a 7th week to call for alexander lukashenko to step down sunday marks the 50th day of protests since the disputed presidential election in august that lucas thank those opponents and much of the international community say was raked look sankoh denies electoral fraud and was inaugurated on wednesday in unannounced ceremony. still no end to the stalemate but these massive protests just won't stop either the demonstrators are determined to oust alexander look at shank 0 who last week swore himself in for a 6th term in office on sunday they mocked the man they believe is clinging to the throne. was me feel like.
1:06 am
they're here. and that's why he made his secret race if he did not ride it again. opposition leaders that plan that to kind of skya dubbed sunday's protest the people's inauguration protestors came bearing her portrait they believe she not look as shank 0 1 august disputed presidential election. and today we're celebrating i don't know always will be sick in your lives but you know the ration of our presidents step on the channels here. 50 days of protest but there's no sign the question goes government is about to go and it is still trying to push the people off the streets. in gomel and other cities peaceful protesters again face the violent police response according to officials police detained at least 200 people there are.
1:07 am
thousands have been arrested in the last 7 weeks and many of those detained have applauded torture and abuse in custody prompting international condemnation so everybody is looking around other coming out and i say everybody has the screening of being worried that maybe they will call but there are so many of us. despite a huge government crackdown these demonstrations haven't been crushed but they have so far failed to push look at shankar out leaving bellahouston crisis and at an impasse. earlier we asked about his necke connally in minsk if he sees an end to the protests in belarus any time soon every time that these protests seem to be reducing in size then the better since come and surprise us every time the police comes in and makes mass arrests it seems like the next week there are more people out in the streets i think he's
1:08 am
a little cinco has no idea what this is going off 26 years in power and in his 6th term after that and over a show last week that secret inauguration which he didn't even. having the russian guess a little international guess at that event i think for now it seems like the regime does have some stability reserves civility the security services are still open now but you know these massive police presence is costing them huge amounts of money choice keep those people rule and other hand the protests to show no real sign of being intimidated by anything the government for now when you talk and they say we we we're tired of being afraid we are not going to go back to sitting home and keeping quiet let's take a look at some other stories making news around the world u.s. president donald trump has dismissed the new york times report about his income taxes calling them fake news the article stated he paid no federal income taxes in 10 of the past 15 years trump is the only president in modern times not to make his
1:09 am
tax filings public. us democratic presidential candidate joe biden has condemned donald trump's decision to nominate amy kone barrett to the supreme court biden said trump was using the court to overturn health care reform passed under barack obama he urged the senate to delay voting to confirm the pick until after november election. at a news conference friends french president said he remains committed to save lebanon from collapse said he was ashamed of lebanon's political leadership and their failure to serve the people he blamed hezbollah for attempts to preserve the status quo. around 62 percent of voters in switzerland have rejected a proposal to reduce immigration from the e.u. switzerland isn't any member but citizens of the bloc can live and work in switzerland and vice versa the measure to stop that was put forward by the populist swiss people's party. in switzerland if you want to change the law you have to put
1:10 am
it to a vote one issue on sunday's ballots an initiative put forward by the populist swiss people's party it would limit the number of e.u. citizens who are allowed to live and work freely in the country the party claimed having too many e.u. immigrants would diminish the wealth of swiss citizen if passed it would put a strain on the economic relationship between switzerland and the e.u. and also limit free movement from millions of swiss citizens but a recent poll by the national t.v. station astra shows more than 60 percent voted against the measure. this initiative goes against my convictions it is part of the ongoing sabotage of bilateral agreements by the swiss people's party i'm not at all in favor of even less now because this is not the time to isolate switzerland for peace. but if switzerland had to withdraw from these agreements i think we would be the real
1:11 am
losers we live in a time where people are trying to scare us so we crouch in the corner the coronavirus is not helping with this and when it comes to globalization people tend to say we need to shut it down but i do not think this is a solution for me. this one assumes. a number of other issues were also on the ballot including the purchase of new fighter jets the right to hunt wolves to keep their population down and weather to 2 weeks of paternity leave the latter motion unlike the move to entry movement with the e.u. is likely to pass. byron munich were back in action just 3 days after their u.a.e. for super cup win this time against the reigning bonus league champions went into the clash undefeated in the league since last year but their hosts this weekend are no pushover. thank you so weary byron stepped on to the pitch in hoffenheim
1:12 am
unbeaten in 2020 but the hosts appeared to have a plan prepared to smash that winning streak. and it took just 16 minutes for the goals to start oftentimes air mean big check cheech powered a header home to put them in front. less than 10 minutes later and byron were left stunned again this time the honors went to mr barr. but the visitors even though they were carrying i paced battled back and joshua kimmage made it to one with this cracker going into the half time break thank you. often time took advantage of a flood to munich with a relentless attack in the 2nd half the last bit to set up andre crumb r.h. to make it 3. the little i. was. the final blow to byron was in extra time when crime rate scored once again this time from the penalty spot and confirmed munich's 1st
1:13 am
defeat since december last year thanks for one the final score and hoffenheim go top of the bundesliga table. in sunday's late bonus league a match 5 and ended a one all draw despite both teams having plenty of chances to score a winner males papers in got the ball rolling for freiburg after 11 minutes perfectly placed corner from. and papers and was there to help us but also scored from a set piece. fired in a free kick a few minutes before half time shot deflecting off the defenders leg and into the net. at auto racing in. one the russian grand prix for real. sunday after that was hamilton collected 2 time penalties for the race had even started hamilton was hoping for
1:14 am
a 91st formula one victory to equal ferrari great michael schumacher record for career wins but instead he can only finish the. defending champion and this season's leader lewis hamilton started the race in sochi in pole position. but his hopes were dealt a setback when stewards issued 25 2nd penalties for making practice starts outside the designated area as he headed to the grid. instead it was his team mate. who racked up another win former sadie's red bulls max 1st stop and finished 2nd with hamilton having to settle for 3rd. doesn't that it's done i'm going to. take the points that i got and i thought the right fit so right it would come back for me. to take me i didn't really do much to so much as it and. that nations about to i celebrated his 2nd victory of the season while hamilton will have to
1:15 am
wait to michelle schumacher his record for career wins. the next time you're watching you know your news as more dot com and that. wherever your smartphone is can also follow us on instagram and twitter and you have your news i'm way. more news top of the hour thanks for joining us. to say. that will never be. connected to the highest levels of government. why do journalists. have to die. was threatening to spark. to me years later the reasons are
1:16 am
still unclear. the case of jump. starts september 30th on w. letter we were. when we were. 80 percent of americans at some point in our lives will experience hardship listen all. that matters to. us. this week on the world story of. the united states how coronavirus is driving people into poverty israel where white storks used garbage to regain their strength but 1st we'll start in germany the courts are currently dealing with
1:17 am
a serious case of sexual violence against children again because dick mom was sexually abused as a child now he's raising awareness of the suffering of other victims. as a child marcus dyckman was sexually abused for almost 10 years by 3 different perpetrators and his home town of curtain you have to learn today he's returned to the scene of the 1st crime this is where a shooting gallery owner at a fun fair lured him into a caravan and raped him. but. i have this movie playing in my head that i haven't been able to start since the trauma how do you i'm lying here as a little boy 5 years old with shoulder length blonde hair and make it on a bed with creased white sheets in. the shooting gallery owner was lying naked next to him for 4 decades microstate man repressed what had happened today he drives his motor home through germany and fights for justice for other victims. i've always
1:18 am
had to somehow figure out for myself what's right and what's wrong because you don't believe anyone anymore you don't trust anyone. the under a huge victims in the baggage blood back case probably going through something similar 130 investigators are now working on the case the largest known abuse scandal in german history so far they have identified more than 80 suspects but there are 30000 leads to other potential perpetrators persons specter of exchanging child sex abuse photos and videos on chat forums. if you read the chats in particular and you get the impression that by communicating with each other the participants reinforce in each other the believe that their child abuse is a socially accepted sexual preference for the nth many perpetrators have no sense of wrongdoing it's
1:19 am
a case of appalling dimensions and goes far beyond germany according to the senior prosecutor marcus dyckman is still not free of his trauma with his group he supports other victims the group wants the statutes of limitations for sexual crimes to be eliminated as for the trial against the main suspect he has hopes that will extend beyond the baggage cloud back case. a signal is now being sense that the perpetrators can no longer feel safe and that they will now be dealt with severely. and set off again to continue his mission of drawing attention to the fate of abuse victims it's become his life's work. not one that he chose for himself. in the u.s. the pandemic has now claimed over $200000.00 lives more than anywhere else in the world but the virus is not only a threat to the health of the people it's also a growing economic threat to more and more u.s.
1:20 am
citizens. total stumbles the use of himself as a lucky guy the 35 year old stonecutter and resident of phoenix arizona just from new full time work after several months of unemployment. now is right around the beginning of the pandemic the hours went from $40.00 to $20.00 within 2 weeks i went from 20 down to. almost 0 at that point i did have to file the unemployment way for that stuff to come through 1st time i ever applied for. unemployment payments from washington and from the state government kept him somewhat afloat but then he fell behind on his rent and that had consequences despite and there is only a governess executive order to postpone addictions just a week ago thomas was addicted his new home now the del rio launch motel where he's now pace around $300.00 per week. now i haven't even it's going to be very hard to
1:21 am
get a new apartment great for ken vote for president as an organization called arizona tenants advocates thomas case is just one of many he's dealing with every day the pandemic puts people out of work then many can't pay rent anymore they get thrown out of their homes and onto the streets and that in return fields the pandemic again it's a no win situation it's a lose lose. situation there's there's no. proper. solution here until we get a handle on this virus and you know especially if you've got people out on the street you know conveying the virus from person to person to social group to social groups there's no one that's going to be safe. safe is something julie brewer hasn't felt in months she says her husband a chef was furloughed early on independent make and then got sick with copd it she and her son were also hit by the virus the summer was the worst since all of us
1:22 am
catching kobe and now we're everything that could go are on our own julie has a rare never lodge a condition called stiff person syndrome she can't work and receive social security and disability payments it pays the rent but that's it i am $53.00 left out of my social security disability after paying her rent and. you know crying trying to figure out which bells going to be paid are we going to have enough food left over am i going to have to go to the food bank. julie is afraid things could even get worse for her to have family in the shadows of arizona's capitol building in downtown phoenix this tent city for the homeless is growing every day. south africa is also suffering heavily from the pandemic around $3000000.00 people
1:23 am
have lost their jobs because of the coronavirus crisis along with their income for rent and food many are now turning their backs on big cities and trying their luck in the countryside. when you needs water she can no longer open it she could like a few weeks ago she lost her office drop in the city and move back to her village she has to collect water from and they burst. this was i'm hoping to get more on training so that i can connect my way to st pete because everything in the city do is inside the house so there's not sort of outside. except going maybe jogging oakum to wake. her daughter's remains in the village while their mother spent 80 years of the city working to support them trips home where it wasn't making sense and were because i had to pay rent home. at the same
1:24 am
time i took some money to my kids home and also with the percent of us looking after my kids so it wasn't balancing at all so i thought i might as well just come back home and be with my kids and do something here. for me and my family now the 38 year old is turning a pastime into a profession and her small house she bakes breads and this fits. she receives up to 7 orders a week and has already made enough to invest in an oven a daughter's cell powered they are happy to have their mom back home. what did you miss most of the interview the most places. when her friend to talk to. and after living in the city since the scheme to offer advice. many of us is on the boat 'd being mary having kids didn't the state and some not so many young women uplifted or independent but getting to see women that
1:25 am
there actually turned out in the night as it encourages me it helped me go on how to move and it hasn't even begun. cultivating fruit for export is just one of the business opportunities she could explore a year in the village. i wanted a certain critical place this small place is like oh i'll be sending. he felt and take us so that people do not have to go to town to get peterson because so they can only get it here locally the worst of the little money that i'm getting from breaking is one thing that i've been trying to save so that i can be able to do that cynthia tom bonnie is happy to let her daughters moved to the city to continue their education but she is certain her own future lies here in the country so. our last stop
1:26 am
israel twice a year the country is a stopover for white storks on their migration route between europe and africa one of the best vantage points for birdwatchers to see this natural wonder a garbage dump. time for break for flocks of white storks in the jordan valley and the occupied west bank at dawn on you thought of just yasi leisure mess up early to observe the birds at this huge garbage dump twice a year distorts navigate their way thousands of kilometers from europe to southern africa and back israel and the palestinian territories are like a bottleneck they're one of the main micro tare routes for millions of birds. because they avoid to fly over their mediterranean so we are like a highway because or treasure between 3 called good and so we are lucky to have in fact 600000 stalks were flying twice a year over year although almost all the world population of whites talks about how
1:27 am
that $50000.00. i think said that 1000. so we are lucky to be in the best highway of the job and stokes. rather than taking a shorter route over the many terrain unlike smaller bats stalks fly over land to catch up or streams of whom at pockets to write a thermos to conserve energy. the landfill is like a pit stop for the storks to just stay for the night to rest to feed and gather strength before setting off on the next leg. in the last 10 years they are not to look for. natural places or your culture feats but for garbage that of course they have plastic bags and stuff like that which is of course dangerous but they go where they have these before although bird migration happens twice every year it still amazes us was studies to birds for decades unlike most
1:28 am
humans to storks don't need g.p.s. to arrive at their destination. we had one stall that was amazing for 15 years she was going every you fold the same nest in your book and then a 1000000000 to this same tree near kept a year after year. if they have strong winds she can compensate and she knows how to go up and say the cub exactly where she wants to go because they're doing it for billions of years. it's time for this truck to take off every day they fly between 300 to 500 kilometers next on the egyptian sinai before they continue their exhausting journey towards their winter home in southern africa.
1:29 am
he doesn't drive in circles. because he believes the way to keep. the family like the world champion is a un climate embassador. delhi he fights against air pollution and for people's health. could he can i see on the starting grid for a clean environment to read the. next. d.w. . in. the end it feels. good. trendy not only for interior design but as a building material as well and in australia the 1st and luxury hotels are made
1:30 am
1:31 am
here is equivalent to smoking 10 cigarettes a day. as a farmer you raise from drugs. electric mobility contrapuntal and un climate the mass of the. i want to understand why things are so bad what is being done to improve the situation and what lessons can be learned from those fighting of pollution on the front. i have a few. morris from all the formerly races i did long beach or wong my. belief systems theory because he goes around the house started to think he's going to make a street that is a full season. 3. is makes for me was the one i want
1:32 am
to see a little bit to the 1st place thanks for meters from the finish line. it looks like. he went sideways crossing the finish like crazy mad for him then in that moment was insane. and of course championship winning trophy which was the most important one for the best deal for my career one of the best day of my life the season. it seems to me the season linguistic. great memories i was mauled i came off my water temperature pointing
1:33 am
caught dead this was generation one formally this was the 1st ever electric race car from. being discarded actually being born in the race was a whole super nice from a vision point of view because i believed in it when nobody did. i always think it's a moral duty to use the knowledge that your quiet you know profession to try to. make society better somehow and i always try to understand how motor sports could make society better because in the end like my mom used to say you go around the wrong the wrong you arrive in the same place. which we would formally was actually when the i clicked and said look this is not
1:34 am
only funny motor sport gives a direction for the future to showcase and to push technology towards not only a better future but cheaper increase quality of life so air pollution and global warming sold more efficient ways of transportation which means less c o 2 footprint for 1st. is not for regular reef right he's really using he's platform to explain his ideas for those he's very interested in him bill moore. i think you when. you have a very good synergy and scenes for my he wants to be. the benchmark for sustainability is concerned the u.n. was very close together and fully they saw there was a good fit to have me as an ambassador and for me also i was on there to be chosen and to accept the. to help them to promote and to act on these matters.
1:35 am
so much because he's very concerned about pollution we've got a future to put in your home now we have a baby he is going to bring things there it's like what can we do see you know change it a bit and he's really concerned about the quality of their and he believe. we have this device now it's a flow quality controller that measures pm 2.5 which is articulate math there are 2.5 microns basically you can fit. 20 of these particles in the with of a human hair some very very very small particles that lose very deep into your lungs these particles are solid particles so when they are in your body they can cause a huge lot of harm this particle exist in nature but most of them you know in
1:36 am
a city are made by cars combustion electricity cooking. currently is measuring. very low levels here so we had 19 pm 2.5 it's it's it's super reason. in the standard 9000000 people die a year of diseases directly related to our pollution. had joined the e.u. and keep keep became much more aware if like researching everything he can watching over the comancheros that he can and reading all the books and listening to out of books and sometimes he comes and say like and if the to stick from out of nowhere and it's like how do you know this so he never stops. over a 1000000 indians that die prematurely every year due to a pollution cough of the children that have a normal duties in their long. 50 percent. of
1:37 am
those huge. having a child i think is very. i think it changes a bit your order of priorities what do i need to do to create a better future for my son which means a better future for humankind in general. we are very very fortunate people have a very good standard of living for example i can install an air filter and people are always side a closed environment. if i want to but most people cannot afford it the people will have the worst off dissin are in the future will be the less fortunate people in the people who need the help the most so for me this is this is a key issue. and i think this is where technology can be so disruptive it can
1:38 am
create something which includes more people by being cheaper and better for the environment and for themselves this is this is the tricky part is what you are all looking for to achieve is what electric cars will achieve an electric will be it will achieve in the future. i had the 1st experience and ended 2008 i did the action a formal one demonstration there and there were like a 100000 people or super excited so the heat the passion of the indian people was also but the conditions that i saw there it was it was pretty bad. i think if you will see a shocking reality i sing these will be good for him to better understand the size of the problem the peace face.
1:39 am
what i'm looking for is really to see life and kill. billions of people are going through in their day to day life how deep is the impact that these technologies are going to have in their lives the. day i met my god respected journalist and environmental campaigner. so i know this looks crazy but in fact. to me there's an order to this chaos when in the only cities that this market is away and a lot of the orthogonal so to can buy some pods from i phone or a car here and i do think that. each of these shops they have very specific parts it's like you have the clutch you have their
1:40 am
conditioning you have suspensions for the uses of parts of to the very last mile and actually you get the benefit of him using one of my polarities. you've got a lot of interesting time right now because it's just the onset i want to recall that evolution is still ok i don't really understand why evolution is so bad is that because of power generation is a debate goes it's a complex concept it's not anyone has this is why finding the solutions is not easy for so many that it's been you can go to mission on it sacu one final. order it's going down on cambodia and. said suppose electric cables here seventy's do to send it to city demand comes from cool stuff from coal and coal is extremely polluting so inefficient and polluting the but is key that part of it is that
1:41 am
a huge bump in the shipping need access to energy at the same time there's also from the prime minister as you said the need to be a one trillion dollars economy. mean feeling into we'll be feeling indian debt him till plays into to keep my cool so there lies the challenge. so bob this is a. yes that's the shot and this is electric right yes let me see the batteries i think so i did a back inside back to the bank for about 3 years so my job. limiting the intake can only do keep in just one charging how much it cost will be around $2000.00 if you want to buy it i do not have to be in the mediation in the very cool around my. insurers in the letter to kill because a letter is jews because the best cost benefit was going to the king when the took on the bicycle is that if you mean used by the poor who are anyways using clean
1:42 am
sources of energy when using public transport the challenge is how do we get the people of delhi who have full cars in one house to say please give up your cars i move to public transport. with over 10000000 cars on the lease roads it's a huge challenge to encourage people to move to cleaner forms of the beat. there's also another transport issue that faces india. typically india all moves through its trucks the trucks carrying a lot of essential supplies from construction to move to wedge to bullets. all these trucks run on diesel and these and as we know emits a lot of b m $2.00 and as far as the new shin's concerned 20 percent comes from but he could still wants the legislation the regulation of all definitions trucks so all of them
1:43 am
to a client of scientific everything is when you see him are no control but they're supposed to do it once in every 2 yards and they don't do it because it's expensive and so you need to be on top of the technology and i think what one should remember is that the poor people who believe that many of them spend their lives on stuff so they'll be sleeping in the truck incentives every day coming thousands of kilometers how this one gets that the truck drivers are also hit by the deals in the majors. salukis i wanted you to meet shon the. dreaded to see the female mechanic of the pleasure to meet you. tell me a little bit the story of the throat you get from me gunning. down. crime nobody that we don't know. about them where no community will be good to me that you can remember. what about your health how do you feel.
1:44 am
when your room and the one in the. game is too innovative technologies bring the cost of transportation down and at the same time we decrease the amount of pollutants our friends have to. grow up in an image of you. have you got a very bad knee go to. go to the mainland you know go and no go offend you. so are you hopeful about the future or do you see any true flint needed to denver that at any point even the inability not to. go thank you very much and good luck for your future future of the kids. eyeopening place to be it's a very good to see it and talk to people understand the real means they are the
1:45 am
worse in the exposure to pollution and these not even on the top of their priorities. so a lot of times when as environmentalist with suggesting don't know there's only been in india we i think forget that everybody has a livelihood off it so i think it's really important in the air pollution issues to also bring in social issues and how it affects the poor and if that knowledge they don't make for a cheaper more efficient way of in this case transporting goods it will not be accepted by this operation but if it is cheaper to operate people start using it. ok in the office we have to climb up a building today because the something i want to show you this is a sight to behold it was meant to be a landfill it's now about. the biggest amount of 1st ever seen in my life.
1:46 am
history more we have 4 of those yet and production of garbage per day would be at around $11000.00 tons per day and the poorest of the pool will end up there with their bare hands picking up some of the garbage to recycle still really pull people out exposing themselves every day to this hazardous weeks remember landfills also relieves me paid a soul that's combustible that catches fall and again the people here you think they're in healing on. the levels just imagine how high it must be even on an average rainy day of the doctor and then measure better just measured suppose like super hard. the people that are most affected by the pollution are the coolest because the eat
1:47 am
sleep and war called side bar knows the local families she wants me to meet ok you know chris this is a typical community even to live by the roadside oh. you have. to have a lot of problems with the risky though that a recovery is out about the positive. married people you know you'll be falling for literally a. living useful thinking your lawyer got some credit there tanny have thought out that the power not you saying the smoke not just on the cooking. but also there are blacksmiths communities and one of the big causes of evolution is open teachings like this and the fact that also the occupancy in was in just the mono smoke actually that is the worse for the point rise that you lose in the big bull's eye on them to get the handling there is that pam finds out i have a steak that is grandma to much in
1:48 am
a bar god did not order with the non-atomic never plan to stand still modern man at that. she doesn't even know that she is a person living in the most polluted city of what what is the roadmap for for the governments to help the families and the people in this state politicians don't see it as something getting them votes maybe some of the none other than the one carrying it out to get them in the courts that god that the admin has a lot of purported at their work but i'm gonna play a modest aren't that good at that. this is completely outside my reality of course more than is that is the goal of the it is much a bigger problem than ours but it's still bottom of the list. these people share the most impact that gentle and able to stand by themselves and lenny thing about their depend all their pollution on the warhol the food on the shelf. they have to
1:49 am
live here and no choice i just put myself and my son in this position and it's a humbling experience and you'll feel. the flu so said just because you can all do anything about it is so many people in such a poor condition. technology can play a huge part in combating. just a few miles from the overpass there's an office beauty some interesting innovation this is the potholes which is also called the money plant in india very easy plant to grow and it's greater to move in formaldehyde from the air no indoor place will ever have c o 2 less than outdoors because human beings give out huge amounts of carbon dioxide but here because of the plants the c
1:50 am
o 2 levels are lower than even outdoors. have the capability to daly's in this recent simple nobs which converted c o 2 into as you believe to be the sense of area it's an indoor plant which gives off a genetic night and removes carbon dioxide at night so if you can't have a proper filtration system for outdoor air and fresh air then you put lots of these in the room and your carbon dioxide levels come down. and that's the 3rd one it's part of the family this is one of the best plants and giving oxygen during the daytime. clean up the air remove them all the time chemicals remove things like ozone moxon's. 35 year old building and it can be done here. but if. this is a cooling tower. that's right out of the air conditioning system and the you also use it for the system a very able to the air in the summertime down to 27 degrees when its outside is 45
1:51 am
degrees without any air conditioning because of the cooling down for ration of what . is 0 artificial light like this is the our sun light spectrum of the sun's light for photosynthesis is coming through here the vacuum tube so you touch it it doesn't it's not hot because of the vacuum tube and the mirrors which concentrate the sunlight true into this room. you see those leaves moving over there the air is coming through of mechanical filtration system all the particulates from outside all the gases are. moved they're coming into this greenhouse the plants are getting that air they're doing their magic they're making oxygen and reducing the carbon dioxide levels yet they're also removing the microbiological pollutants the bacteria and viruses and that the root zone heats up the bacteria and the viruses and the plants become even healthier because of that and so from the other side then it gets pulled out of
1:52 am
this room and then goes into every air handling group unit in this building so every person in the building gets a little slice of the greenhouse a little slice of the of the fresh air of the fresh air very nice what is the bottles for we run a business center over here a lot of our clients don't want to filter our normal water that they have they want to they want bottled water we are a 0 waste facility over here so all the waste has taken the driveways to separated the bottles are taken and we make progress out of that so fresh air fresh the water 0 waste other cover these beauty a few very bad and there needs improvement in my system that's it's basically a human right to be able to breathe clean air and what has been done here what is incredible is that it is a full circle and then this is so easy to be implement that if could be done here it could be done anywhere. from. the center for science and environment is looking at ways of bringing about change
1:53 am
at a national level. in a developing world bank india environment is not about pretty trees and tigers it's about the connection between survival of communities and choose to build use of natural resources now bearded the dodig point we are seeing citizen science emerging here people going on that their sense of what it is and see what they are breathing this conversation is moving action and launch more plasticky this city has shut down for who'll be used daily has banned all the dirty fuels but even after doing. all of these are not small measures to do so and pollution levels by these 65 percent to meet what we define as clean air and how do you see technology playing a part technology has played a dramatic role this is perhaps the only major vehicle producing country in the world from after g.h. in the yard of 40 should standards that was keep you out of 5 and go directly to
1:54 am
yours. and you must have seen this what we call the. freedom in one. i almost died but i said yes to come and rested me in for a suit by 2030 or you they can still be that tree that's huge amish and in brazil be they want to start discussing about the electrical bill it interested it. hearing that actually makes me very proud of these policies from the indian government towards the electrification of.
1:55 am
it's very different when you have a life like this is very easy to say here let's fight air pollution or disease of that or but when you go there and you see the reality and see that the problem is so much more complex the biggest challenge that i see in india was how to create economic growth in a sustainable way everybody's bringing the same air but most people suffering are the poor people i think the doctrine of electric cars will change society for much better but we cannot just regulate and mandates people should drive electric cost we need to be cheaper than current technology so it's accepted we are already getting better off that we were in the seventy's and eighty's and ninety's even there in delhi they are ready with good policies taking call for other forms of producing measures dana ball mobility and power generation it's a process. if you have the opportunity and the chance to push technology forward in
1:56 am
terms of to make society better should do so. we already use multi-sport 70 years ago to create one way to push electric disease for me very clear doesn't matter where you're from this amount which country for how much money maker we want i think you should be trying to make society better there is a there is a duty for that for them.
1:57 am
1:58 am
a luxury hotel away and finally alvin would. the romex. coming up on the whole of. mexico as producing school lessons in a t.v. studio. because everyone has a t.v. he. can make education accessible to the poor in times of the pandemic. more to create even more social inequality in mexico. 30 minutes from d.w. . that is for me. is for. beethoven is for him beethoven is for her. and beethoven is for.
1:59 am
beethoven is for every non. main tovan 2020. 150th anniversary on d w. how does a virus spread. why do we panic and when will all this and. just 3 of the topics covered and the weekly radio show it's called spectrum if you like and the information on the chrono larysa or any other science topic you should really check out our podcast you can get it wherever you get your podcast you can also find us at dot com look for it slash science. every 2 seconds a person is forced to flee their home. the consequences of the disastrous
2:00 am
hour documentary series displaced depicts dramatic humanitarian crises from the world. focusing we don't have time to think i didn't go to university to kill people who did not act that way i mean a handful of people feel for their lives and their future so they seek refuge abroad but what will become of the person who stayed behind. displaced starts october 16th on d w. this is news and these are our top stories dozens of civilians and soldiers are dead after military clashes between armenia and azerbaijan flared up over the disputed region of no going on every fighting broke out of the area that lies within azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic army since 1904.
27 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=572189898)