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tv   Jamal Khashoggi  Deutsche Welle  October 1, 2020 4:15pm-5:00pm CEST

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but the pandemic has also left many and precarious situations especially those from abroad who receive less state support others planning to study abroad have not been able to get to their universities at all and are even having to juggle assignments across different time zones. this was not how mean dean imagined student 10000 you're going. to get before. and i don't know where i would manage if 10000 you know because it's no job i'm not getting any help from the government . is studying for a doctorate in economics at a university in australia she wanted to be there in the spring but is stuck in berlin. you know she has to keep up with her lectures online. going to. work you go through 12 pm their time is flying out of our time here and so i have costs and their time i have to be away here to em. despite the
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irregular hours has gotten used to online learning. at any point in time i'm going to go back to the lecture check my notes i can just do that i can just look at them and we watch the lecture and yeah actually it gives me a little bit of. you know a little bit of kind of support and. she gets financial help from relatives and is trying to make the best of things until she can finally get to australia. i mean house didn't like living on his own in empty student housing so he's moved in with friends but he still has to pay $300.00 euros a month in rent to the university hostel he feels germany has let down foreign students like him. they're living their dream to supermarkets so these are all going to the economy so maybe somehow they should find do we. keep
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us back in this situation i mean hasse's whole family in bangladesh has been infected with the coronavirus i don't want to send. your parents have lost most of their income and are counting on their son's education for a main house that's a big responsibility i get out from this part of. my dream my. dream of being. to feed my caddy it goes the it all can be jeopardized i do not know that these things because if i tell them it will be more stress for them and i don't want these for them i mean haas is hoping to find a new job and renew his visa so that he can get on with what he came to germany for to study. now get ready to meet a young woman breaking stereotypes and blaze. trail's literally to become northern
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got his 1st ever licensed female tractor driver and she's not me on the wheel over pairing her vehicle she's encouraging other girls to try out. whenever her truck to roll some across the bumpy field. she was a rush of joy she's the 1st female truck to drive. the money to integrate the farms on the outskirts of tamani with $26.00. that she have made her a role model for many young farmers. out of the 1st. region . and then. also excited. when i came to it so i'm nice to see your mom facing history to driving a truck. and do today. like my joint.
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just a few kilometers away he came up to a radio station. where he also hosts a radio show. she gives advice to farm. region she office tips and advice for. good reason and the right kind of harvest the much virtue of people in ghana are dependent on. small farmers often luck specialist knowledge. young woman also benefit from the program the land how to increase yields and provide better. benefits i can sell the eggs buy food for my family and i can give the eggs to my children to call them so they stay home they will be my. turn.
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to always welcomes positive feedback she's now qualified as a senior. this means she can repair the truck to herself and offer more tips about truck has she spearheading a path for other young women like yourself and is keen to convince them to enter the world of agriculture comparing it to. farming then you can get some money so if you're going to farm and you make money on then you help your. radio presenter truck to drive a role model he came out to is driven by the support of obvious she dreams of a future where even more truck to drive it's like we'll be able to feed themselves and their families. and now another success story in iran in the canoeist has been boosted it has bit to represent a team of refugees at the tokyo olympics next year say. trains and competes in
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germany after fleeing his homeland back in 2015 while now after all change he's one step closer to realizing his dream. issiah is more motivated than ever nearing in refugee now has a clear way forward to next year's olympics in tokyo he's hoping to represent the refugee team of 3 youths and from the international canoe federation. we've now decided it will support site competing for the i.o.c. as refugees. fled iran in 2015 after taking this selfie in front of milan cathedral at home that was viewed as him converting to christianity punishable by death germany gay felt a place to train and compete he's since been working hard both out on the water and in a complicated process of severing ties with the rainy and rowing team wants him to
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avoid a conflict with iran the international community federation had insisted its rules meant it couldn't grant him refugee status even though he has documents proving otherwise. bass was a hard journey 5 years long i just cry if i want to go to the olympics i have to give 100 percent to be there. now fazlullah needs to meet the sporting requirements the selection ultimately in the hands of the i.o.c. . usually. whoever has such a story behind them clearly deserves the support of international sporting bodies therefore we hope that common sense prevails. seek. after the setbacks for hopes the federation will keep to its word so he can concentrate fully on his sports. now the fact that a visual artists cross zone or
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a boundaries is not a particularly new phenomenon the great must do sean was mixing it up at the beginning of the 20th century whatever today thanks to modern technology the division between the divide rather between different genres has become more porous and artists can blend the different styles with relative ease while this so-called of a life is the subject of an exhibit and by. laurie anderson gained fame outside the art world with the song superman which reached number 2 on the u.k. charts the video to the hit single is on display in the exhibition lives. we asked music journalist and pop expert christiane bose to explore the show with us. artists also make music as an act of liberation from the rigid rules of garden.
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and that's what this show is about the freedom of art and the way fine artists disregard the rules of their musician colleagues fearlessly and innovative laid. out yoko ono has shifted between performance art and music for 60 years she's considered a punk art. he's going to her voice cracks and if you look at different kinds of heavy metal singing for instance it pre-sale just so much looking for very little or. my the exhibition contains a number of challenging acoustic experiences but there are also can you sing and catchy videos icelandic artist cock knockout tunes one addresses the role of the artist in his work in his music video the one he appears as a pop artist. unconventional
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completely bypass in the classical rules of composition that's a common denominator of all the video displayed on the filling screens in the film this can stop. by mike kelly an art star of the ninety's also had a band destroy all monsters. with a group which is fine art and which is music they're very closely related to. the political artist's collective noir slovenia should couldn't stop or use will the new heart also makes music under the name light provocation image and sound here they cover freddie mercury head. on and then the former favorites
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clean crumble away in a rock music lived in boarding rock talks about freedom and sells you fascism and here is a band that uses fascists that excel and actually sells the freedom of the occult and i can fly higher. whether it's deliberate rule breaking or just out of a sense of fun the 50 music videos in the exhibition show artists who play around with rock or pop star poses dissonant provocative them delightful. they're watching every news coming up next indeed every news asia shot by police during the hong kong protests last year we meet 2 students who say they were victims of excessive force plus helping indonesia's child prisoners build a life away from crime despite limited resources and an ocean harvest to indonesian islanders are growing seen wheat to pay their bills after cold it stopped tourists from travelling to bali. that story and
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a whole lot more coming up revering sure better change just a moment to play iraq and tell it on behalf of all of us here thank you for spending part of a day with us. blah . blah blah. blah but.
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the because dance much shows in politics i'm for democracy. when our us will not back down in the face of police violence propping up the authoritarian regime. they continue to demonstrate and to mom before socratic presidents step down and i saw my audience women says look i shan't go out on the upcoming. 60 minutes all. we know this is a scary time for the coronavirus is changing the world changing a lot. so please take care of yourself keep your distance wash your hands if you
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can stay at how we deal with you here for we are working tirelessly to keep you informed on all of our platforms we're all in this to get on together to make it. stay safe everybody. stay safe a safe increase in stay safe. this is some the story of a stubborn rice farmer from thailand. his problem pests. his credo no chemicals. and he's trying to. step. through. the students of the past comes to. training
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successful. budget that. starts october 15th w. this is the w.c. show coming up today on china's national day our claim that hong kong is peaceful again and. that is what the city's leader is saying for peace at what cost we are too pro-democracy activist coping with the bullet injuries suffered at the hands of police last. supporting child prisoners in indonesia need the woman making sure the juvenile inmates receive the attention they need into the show's overcrowded prisons. and a sea change in jobs due to covert 19 some indonesian island does turn to see we'd fall. after the call of
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a spend dried up things from the tourism sector. i'm british welcome to d.-day. lad you could join us thousands of police officers were deployed across hong kong to prevent any major protests on the 71st anniversary of china's founding police denied permission for an animal in march of civic organizations to go ahead but despite the ban scattered protests did take place calling for greater democratic freedoms for hong kong freedoms that critics say have been severely restricted specially after the introduction of a new security law just 3 months back. the territories leader katty lam credited the new law with returning peace to the
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territory. going for you some of you over the past months and indisputable fact is that our society has returned to peace our country's national security is protected in hong kong and our citizens can again exercise their rights and liberties in accordance with the law provides the young. now many argue it is that same law which is making life hard especially for pro-democracy activists in the city did a correspondent for the cong speaks to 2 who survived being shot by police during protests last year. and shot as a protester the 1st in hong kong government's demonstration and the city's history and the chinese through a life changing moment for the 18 year old student keep he was shot in the chest during a protest on chinese national day last october a pool that shocked by the police nearly took a slight as he was last only
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a few centimeters from his heart. a $1.00 for a shot and killed the legal wife many protesters including myself. well prepared to make sacrifices and even get wounded when we took to the street. is what i thought of losing my life in this movement. highly but i was lucky enough to survive the gunshot. so you know it's all a child died or function. this is going to shops that should go to school strikes now one year later but it's only a struggling what is more the injuries but also 3 criminal charges by the hong kong government which has sent him behind bars for up to 7 years and other student protests to choke me face the same sentence he's also among those shots with life around. these pills can barely use his basic and paying having his spine is
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fractured a kidney and part of his liver removed trauma looms over his everything life attempted robbery obstructing police and the state from yesterday was just a 22 year old be thought of as court's 3 months why why are. they ok the police officer didn't warn me at all it's unreasonable for him to use the most lethal weapon immediately even though it was unarmed i've been so traumatized that i dare not pass by the shooting scene again and i often cried i can't stand for long periods of time and have to go to the hospital whenever the pain gets to one bearable. who is justified firing life but that's a self defense wall came in child caught it excessive force home close call to prove to privates prosecution files by an opposition lawmaker over the officer who shot child but the justice minister took a rare move to intervene at the french request the case is that charges they're
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planning to pursue it is are equally against the police don't eat the same but they all thought he would just take his legal age to happen cation. by claiming the chance not reasonable the authorities found out to bring what they call rioters to justice what it can south and have been arrested and over them were prosecuted have a fine time not a single police officer in the best prosecute a lot of. despite numerous might. manifest the intolerance against dissidents what we protesters do is team to be wrong the authorities sleeplessness troublemakers who want to protest or my right to speak up will be suppressed even more severely. the stakes are even higher now as people can be jailed for their speech under the national security law . but i believe the movement isn't over yet. it's just continuing in another form.
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the students feel hopeless just as the pro-democracy movement to find a way out in pursuance of justice they will try every means. to free to do so. next but it appears there are too many prisoners and not enough prisons in fact there are twice as many people to 140000 that the facilities can hold which means overcrowded prisons and it also means that children juveniles are often placed with the adults with very few resources to help them cope. these young people's futures should not be over yet that's the view of you steve proba watty who's pushing for better ways to deal with indonesia's juvenile
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offenders. she began working in forensic psychology in 2007 combining her interests in mental health and law she now works with child inmates in indonesian prisons like this one in john bunn it's a general population facility with no special provisions for minors except for the help provided by justi provo watty. children who have problems with the law have many psychological issues. they should be given special assistance but most indonesian prisons did not have psychologists on staff. so those in charge of these kids should 1st try to understand why they are frustrated or angry. secondly like all children they need activities to keep them busy and at the end of what i see. jumbling prison was built to accommodate around 200 inmates today
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around 800 are crowded into it's the prison director is grateful for the specialized help for juveniles. and the community profit out of it is extraordinary help robel what he cares for these children in prison you know him one no i don't think that she also encourages them to engage in different activities i don't know how to get the young lady. almost 10 years ago used the pro bowl walk to help start up the room a hottie halfway house. it's now helping children deal with the challenges and psychological strain of adapting to life on the outside. would be a good thing is i'm not going to. get in the fantasy there are 2 types of children in this place like children who are still going through a legal process and those who have left prison. they stay here for 6 to 8 months
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and receive psychological care. and they also learn different skills here. those skills include finding a new path in life. i thought i was hated because i was in prison but i was told that my criminal case could be dropped with good behavior. but i'm still a teenager but i'm doing my best to prove that i have changed. to. use the pro ball watch he hopes that indonesian prison authorities will also change to better care for the children in their custody. i don't know about his travel restrictions the wild have hit the tourism industry on the indonesian island of bali that has meant lost jobs and of course reduced an exe but some locals have now turned to a traditional form of farming for some financial support during some very trying
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times. he gave a dharma putra tends to his marine vegetable patch just a few months ago he didn't imagine he'd be passing his days as a sea weed farmer but the pristine waters off his native violent of new celeb on down and valley provided him with a lifeline after the coronavirus pandemic. what can we do. i feel sad because we lost our jobs and now we have to start from scratch like it or not we have to start again due to the situation. see with farming a new dates back to the 1970 s. the mineral rich vegetable has many uses once it's harvested and processed from foodstuffs to cosmetic ingredient to our gallant 1st allies or bust many islanders turned their backs on the tray didn't recent years as
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a tourist industry boomed heyday dharma earned his living as a diving instructor until coronavirus restrictions prevented his customers from travelling like many indonesians dependent on tourism he was left struggling to survive seaweed farming offered an opportunity to pay the bills though it's harder work than his previous job and for fewer returns so. i'm optimistic that i can survive with the seaweed business. once tourism returns i will go back to work in the tourism industry and my wife or farm see wheat. i can help her after work. it's uncertain when the tourist hot spots a new celeb will be able to open their doors again authorities say indonesia won't be ready to welcome international visitors before the end of 2020 so now instead of
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sunbathers seaweed lies baking in the sun. gated dharma thing seaweed farm tourists could even become a tourist attraction in future another lure alongside the beaches the yoga retreats the sunsets. some beautiful sunsets on that's it for now be sure to check out our other stories on did up a book. on facebook and twitter top we leave him off with more images from indonesia the ones that are about to see are from. on the island of sumatra this is the. province at a practice session in a stadium back tomorrow the same time and see them about.
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combating the corona pandemic. where does research stand. what are scientists learning. background information and news. hour corona update. 19 special next on d w. beethoven is for me. it's for. beethoven. and beethoven is for. beethoven is for every.
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beethoven 2020 to 50000 or verse 3 here on. the coronavirus is pushing more women to seek illegal abortions as lockdowns limit health care. there are $25000000.00 unsafe abortions every year almost half full terminations worldwide. and now the pandemic is approaching hopes of progress argentina's president promised to decriminalize abortion a 1st for latin america. well this remembers the point you remember this whether it be outbreak has put the reform on hold indefinitely. colombia was also close to being abortion instead of top court has ruled against it. in
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developing countries one in 3 terminations is carried out in dangerous conditions women in africa are at the highest risk of dying from an unsafe abortion. the statistics are nice they're a reality whether you're for or against abortion and not even factoring in lockdowns sure the restrictions have exacerbated the situation but this isn't anything new each year in kenya 2 and a half 1000 girls and women die from unsafe abortions it's a leading cause of maternal mortality especially in low income families and i'm robey correspondent my hero met a survivor in the atari slum. we call her mercy but that's not her real name she was 16 when she fell pregnant her mother wanted to finish school so she forced missy to abort the baby for fear of repercussions she hides
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her face. in there i went to a local medicine man i stayed there for 3 days he gave me herbal medicine and i took it and. on the 2nd day i started seeing blood in that i was very afraid. there were people who were aboard and they seemed fine in that i thought i would die. the. it's estimated that in kenya 7 women die each day from unsafe abortions abortions are illegal unless the mother's life or health is in danger or if there's a rape case that's why women come to this man he's well known for carrying out abortions along with other procedures even though he has no medical training mercy came here too she paid the equivalent of 8 euros for the abortion in the interview however he denies performing abortions but still he wants to hide his identity.
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i'm not. given an injection drug unless sent home so the pregnancy can terminate there many of these women die if there are lucky they do die if they're lucky the pregnancy terminate safely it's usually bad however if. he resigned i mean by in most cases women need professional help after the abortion the international aid organisation mary stopes is one of several n.g.o.s in kenya that offers these post-abortion care services but there's a lot of uncertainty says daisy adela. we don't have clear guidelines national guidelines on money doing this possible should care so society going to football should subsist therefore this stigma that envelops goes down to these women no doubt who has no option and doesn't know where to time to. of course merci would have preferred to see a real doctor 3 years later she's still suffering from the traumatic experience
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because those men will just give you some kind of medicine and then tell you when the pregnancy has been terminated they only want your money in the end you're the one who has to suffer in a battle. despite the stigma she faces from her community she thinks every woman should have the right to a safe abortion. where he is seeing a press officer a human rights watch east africa so how has covert it exacerbated the situation. same to you you know thunder mix always have an adverse effect too much time on health we saw with their boiler and their make in sierra leone my channel health access was very limited and now with the coronavirus and they make the same is happening to us the warning that the disruption and their lack of access to contraception. in middle income countries in low income countries about $7000000.00
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to be about $7000000.00 unintended pregnancies and this is the time for governments to step in and start addressing maternal health even as they're thinking of coronavirus because we are seeing women right now having to be discharged from hospital much faster and hospitals are trying to social this and you know putting all the measures to prevent coronavirus infections so this really limits how they can care for women who are coming in to give bob or who are coming in just for their care before they give or even after and of course the shortages in medical supplies has affected contraception and even condom manufacturing companies are warning of shortages so of course this will greatly affect how people can prevent pregnancies and you also see in other places like italy and poland governments are
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taking care taking advantage of the pandemic to completely cut off access to abortion. health care side of things what about the educational side of things the link between education and teen pregnancy for example. years saw before the pandemic many countries especially in africa are world we'd be struggling with teen pregnancies and if i can give an example of kenya. a few months ago 2 months ago all. counties in kenya released data or pregnant teenagers and we saw this in the cows and tens of thousands of girls who are now pregnant and why the government should have some concern and you know i acknowledge that this has happened we did not see any efforts to ensure that these girls will be considered when schools are reopening and even now when their discussions about how schools
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will be opened then all special considerations being outlined how these girls will who are back to school and what happens today to keisha saul a lot of the year this year has already been lost due to the from there me but there are children who are you know locked up sometimes with their views or people having sex because they did not you know have information or you know. other reasons but now we need to address the fact that the children need to go back to school and what's the government doing to make sure that they're not left behind whenever schools reopened or just tell me how how can education help our girls are raped by a family member in lockdown. so all children have a right to education right and lockdown did force some of these
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children to be locked down with children with people who are abusing them and if you're if a girl if a child is receiving comprehensive sexual education then they're very clear on about their bodies about what's acceptable about what consent means and about where to get help so some of these tips it's part of education some of this test can help tiled seek help reports and talk freely about what's going on with them but even so we need to secure the education after the pandemic and if possible as a stigma around abortion as i guess one of the biggest problems facing us and many young women. there's a lot of stigma around abortion but you see this is coming about from laws and policies that prevent abortion but that's not actually stop abortion it just
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makes it more difficult to access them for the people who are seeking abortions are not getting them from qualified health care for the health care providers and so when they do procure their bush on its policies and people do see others suffering . bleeding so much or even losing their lives so this just but between take money but it is to see if abortion is actually health care that can be provided to people who are going to give us and you know limits the kind of sigma and misinformation that comes with it or to go into why when i see a press officer at human rights watch if africa thank you thank you. and let me hand you over to derek williams who's been busy researching answers to your questions on the coronavirus. what if no vaccine is
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successful what would be the powerful what the speed at which vaccines are being developed for covert 19 is breathtaking and there are over $150.00 of them in trials of some sort with with dozens of them in testing in humans and though that might seem like overkill it's not that's because under normal circumstances where development takes many years less than 10 percent of vaccine candidates for other diseases and up receiving approval so blocks of the ones aimed at 19 but are not going to work out almost certainly the majority but what happens if none of them do it's a scary scenario and it's one that most experts don't consider likely but i suppose it's certainly a possibility so let's look for a 2nd and what that would mean if a vaccine remains elusive we'll have to continue to try to fight the virus by helping and healing the people who become infected with treatments like newly
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developed or repurposed drugs that improve outcomes there are still just a couple of compounds being used widely intubate 19 treatment and they only help seriously ill patients so if it takes longer than we think to develop a vaccine we're going to need more therapy and then a big goal would be to nail down early stage treatments that prevent the disease from progressing to deadly later stages some of the most promising potential alternatives in this direction are around a dozen repurposed antivirals but also an immune system protein called interferon beta as well as artificially produced antibodies called mad for monoclonal antibodies researchers are race. thing to test those compounds and others and it's likely that at least some of them will pan out so so even if a vaccine doesn't we should still be able to save many more lives in the future
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with more effective treatments for people who catch the disease. was there i'm. a few along i'll see you next thought of i.
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thought it was jen's much ozone carla ticks and for democracy. belarus will not back down in the face of police violence cropping up people for a terrorist regime. they continue to demonstrate and to mom before socratic presidents step down. my kids women buses look. at some kids on the road. and 30 minutes on t w. you. know
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many push. us right now in the uk right now climate change different hoffa story. faces life less leeway from just one week. how much worse can really get. we still have time to act i'm going to. slug says. it subscribe to the morning news like this. in the us of climate change. is a massive. let's listen to. what ideas do they have the further future. deep blue dot com for candidates to the multimedia. click search.
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why are people forced to hide in trucks. there are many reasons. there are many answers. and there are many stories. to. make up your own mind. w. made for my. and. this
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is it every news live from berlin briggs it crunch time again with another deadline missed the e.u. tells britain i'll see you in court suing it for breaching the drawl agreement. commission has decided to send a letter of common notice to the u.k. government this is the 1st step in an infringement procedure all this after birth.

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