tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle October 5, 2020 2:00am-3:01am CEST
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and. scares me the most about his status seem to ronnie's is that someday we won't even see the roots. but what will become of those who stayed behind and simply my husband went to peru because of the crisis. if he hadn't gone there we would have died of hunger. sent down and. just starts october 16th d.w. . this is news and these are our top stories u.s. president donald trump has briefly hospital in a motorcade to wipe to supporters gathered outside before returning. his medical team said he was improving and suggested he could be discharged as early as monday trumps dr berfield the president is on a course of steroids and is experiencing ups and downs particularly when.
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police in belarus have used water cannon to break up a rally demanding the release of political prisoners tens of thousands of protesters have again marched through the capital minsk authorities are refusing to allow foreign journalists to cover mounting opposition to the regime of hardline leader alexander lukashenko. police in germany have confirmed that a 26 year old jewish student was seriously injured in an attack outside the main synagogue in the northern city of hamburg a man dressed in military style clothing struck the victim repeatedly in the head with a shovel place of rest of the alleged attacker this is the news from berlin you can follow us on twitter and instagram at news or visit our website at state dot com.
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30 years ago these images went around the world on october 3rd $990.00 germany was united barely one year after the fall of the berlin wall the signing of the unification treaty in 1990 saw the end of east germany now all germans share one kolya mince and one currency and today only remnants of the burley wall remain. and with that of war welcome to this special edition of your all next we'll be taking you on a 2 of the german capital including places where the german german divide has left
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its mark here at the pot some up lots this is where the border used to run and for a long time it was a barren space there are no signs of it here today in today's program we will meet a window of germany unity define love without borders and taken a step look back at the berlin techno scene but 1st we meet an artist who hurts to shape the image of birdland after the unity jim. jim and the young created a 15 meter stretch of the east side gallery the longest remaining section of the berlin wall. we met him by his artwork at the famous open air gallery. thank you the i know it's. complex song i think german unity was a complex and difficult process and i think it's still not completed.
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even though i wasn't so sure about it at the time it's good that it happened it was necessary. and looking back i must say that i'm happy to have witnessed the entire process. as artists had the opportunity to do a lot of the east and the west and to get to know what i understand both sides and maybe reflect that in my work somehow. in 99118 artists from 21 countries brightened up a 1300 metre long section of the wall that faced east berlin. painted thanks to years ago and what became known as the east side gallery. in kind i was with none of us had any way of knowing that it would become what it is today namely one of the main tourist attractions in berlin or in germany.
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and a kind of memorial a place of pilgrimage for people from all over the world who want to remember the wall. this is what his section of the wall looks like today in 2013 he secretly painted over his old work and course discussion of a new and his health was wanted to make a statement about the negative aspects of the new berlin shop. i painted everything i had witnessed in berlin in 2013. investors all the digital but he means walking around with law takes on their laptops in the world queuing in front of clubs they won't get into. the us just grew up in west germany and in the 1990 s. was active in the lens art scene he painted murals on the walls of techno clubs and helped provoke a sea of happenings then he was commissioned to work for a watch manufacturer and an airline. his larger than life murals can now be found around the globe. avignon what is.
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also a musician and a d.j. . under the name new and team he released his videos and regularly performs in clubs throughout germany. but 1st and foremost he's a painter and one of germany's most successful pop art artists his artist name is a tribute to the french city where he began his career with street art his colorful interpretations of abuses in the world has become his trademark his current exhibition in berlin is entitled tomorrow never knows. songs to morrow never no says one of my favorite beatle songs and describes a sense of life some certainties. so it's always been this way but especially now we can't predict where the world is heading. due to the whole corona thing but also
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politically aligned. on the one hand there's a sense of anticipation but also an unsettling feeling of insecurity it's. in june of this year other your put this feeling into images on the 40 meter high level of the building in northern berlin. laid down by unwanted ballast is a balloon heading into the i mean i really can't imagine what the future holds for the world for germany or for berlin. yet he remains an optimist because he saw how a wall that people once died trying to cross became a work of art. i have a hard time imagining what it would be like if germany were still divided. but i think it'll take one or 2 more generations before this process is completed. the process of process jim having your will continue to monitor this process close. and
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no doubt discover many more motifs for his work. even if it might look like it the building behind me is not an old palace on a going renovation the homeward form is a completely new building it is the reconstruction of the old ball and city palace building it was a lengthy process and it's still not finished and now work is also on the way outside the building on the monuments to freedom and this follows a lot of political debate on the project and we met up with one of its creators. the planned monument to freedom and unity was designed by sebastiaan let's. the concept is a 50 meter moving bowl that visitors can access if another people move to one side together to gently tips that way. the monument is meant to commemorate the peaceful revolution in the former east germany. didn't do this is just you
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mention the idea is for people who gather on this monument to get a feeling for what happened in 1990. 9 for them to communicate move in one direction together. and use their weight to alter the position of the ball and create their own living image of. the bin because it's a toy. the monument will be located near to such landmarks as the brandenburg gate the t.v. tower. and berlin cathedral. they attract tourists from all around the world to what used to be east berlin. the reconstructed berlin palace will be an added attraction there if the work goes according to plan the monument to freedom and unity will stand in front of it by late 2021. distinct my verdict on this monument honors 1st all of the brave east german
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citizens who dared to take to the streets in 1909 and 90 and fight for democracy and freedom it told we must not forget east germany was a totalitarian regime to come from and now a monument will honor them here in the heart of berlin is it's. the site of the future monument is itself historically significant the original berlin palace and the national kaiser bill have a monument once stood here in 1950 the east german leadership had both of them demolished. the old palace was replaced by the so-called palace of the republic the seat of the east german parliament would just be. on the side that 970 . $989.00 the peaceful revolution led to the end of east germany and the reunification process. later the east german parliament building was demolished. in its place will be the new berlin palace and the monument. emotional song to the
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author and i have to say the place we're at now is steeped in history of the palace of the republic stood here to the east germany foreign ministry and the state council building stood there so of course this place was very important for east germany as well. and 2013 members of the stuttgart architectural firm miller and part completed a life size model. but political disagreements kept delaying the start of the actual construction of a symbolic groundbreaking finally took place and made 2020. the foundation integrates the surviving base of the national kaiser built a monument there by combining the past and present. a modest of the more looking at this model you see the steps here and the big platform which takes up almost the entire space that one surrounded the equestrian monument that stood here in the center. and what's really interesting is that now it's the viewers will be standing at the center so we're at one time kaiser vilhelm stood it's now the
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visitors will be standing because of them stand that's to prison for. 10 if everyone plays their part the monument to freedom and unity will embody what its title suggests. citizens in motion. the wall that used to divide east and west once stood here right beside the river you can still find remains of the old wall now known as east side gallery of course today it is no longer divides the city but attracts tourists from all over the world and even 30 years after german unity many germans refer to things east and west although they have so much in common and that is the theme of this heartfelt project by 2 local artists. 30 years after reunification 30 people couples friends and business partners all from
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the former east and west germany are taking part in an art project. i don't want to go i know that more without reunification we definitely want to but it would have been very unlikely that we are saying that. the project is one of many to mark the anniversary of reunification get to mark fat and meet our impact start recording the heartbeats of 15 couples who wouldn't be together had reunification never happened. it was important for us to find the common ground in all the different couples and for us it was the heartbeat the essence the core of human beings the mention the power of your dick wrong the couples coming today are all people who are affected by the fall of the wall or unification. one is always from the east and the other from the west who would not have met otherwise you could often. pause to answer leno's show star coworkers shmita
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uses a digital stethoscope to record their heartbeats. but far 1st a graph of the couple's also part of the art project every pair has a story of their own no matter when they were born. a year ago when they all fell i wasn't even born so i didn't experience it directly. but of course you hear a few stories about it from your grandparents and your parents. but i don't make a big deal of it was. mostly fighter and bettina headspace was still teenagers back in the 1990 s. the friends got to know each other over 20 years ago in berlin. the artists also document the couple's hopes and dreams for the future. it's meant i wish we could
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come closer to one another. starting now come together worldwide. when i was 1st i come from west berlin and it's been on and i come from christian to you and i know we're completely honest with each other and not at all superficial it's got all you always hear about the know it all westerners who are always explaining things. and his boss you would never like that you always said look you can do things this way and in such a way i could totally accept it. i was wasn't even doing it constantly but you never adopted a superior manner. of life to meet it it's a sound collage from the heartbeat recordings and as is music. when the participants heartbeats come together it produces a very special kind of rhythm. is fun this is the exciting thing is this wave follows
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a very similar pattern for the couples after they've been hit for a while their heart beats not even lockstep so they waste a very similar. this is a hostile he used to be in east germany take it to. heights met their while dancing the tango and fell in love when i'm from the west and moved to rostock many years ago without reunification we never would have made it more than we can be like and since then we've been dancing together and are happy everything works so well here and 30 years from now and we can all still be there. all say germans from the former east and west have grown much closer since reunification and from authority of germans we agree. here beside me you can see a way you know in berlin where he was born and became famous here the pedestrian
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traffic light might infect the east german 150 years ago the 1st east german traffic light man where instilled in west berlin and the old ones removed they were among the few things from the former east germany to live on in our everyday lives and nowadays you can see that on pedestrian trussing throughout the city. is a little chubby. as opposed knows and always wears a hat the traffic light from the former east germany. nor does the company mention that. he's a bit of a cute childlike figure and he's also a grown man with a hat who acts very responsibly when crossing the street that's why it works for us day and night. i think it's the combination that makes him so popular the standing man is also something balanced and calm about it and a clear design which clears another traffic light up. 30 years after reunification the on to mention the celebrated as an east german success story.
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the traffic light men were 1st introduced in east berlin in 1900. traffic psychologist carl piccolo wanted to design a pedestrian signal that caught people's attention. difficult to appeal to children and older people when using abstract pictograms. so i simply tried to translate their clarity into personified symbols. lifelike and likable in his 1st designs the figure even had fingers on a mouse and karl big losses wife helped when it came to the head. of the op the mention became recognizable symbols which in the 1980 s. were used to teach children about road safety on east german t.v. . and a friend who can help. after reunification in 1900. step by step the west german pictograms gradually began to replace the east german
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hub of ancient. designer. had just moved to the newly rina 5 berlin and witnessed the i'm to mention being replaced. after reunification i spent a lot of time walking around the former east berlin i was actually standing here at this intersection when they were changing the lights over there. and i thought i'd ask the workers there if i could have the old glass lens these. i figured i'd be able to make something with them gradually i had the idea of turning them into lights. because i may have saved the op of mention from extinction because lights caught people's attention in the former east people mourn the loss of their man. along with inventor called pick law because some successfully fought to keep the. 1971 from mention were recognized in the road traffic regulations. 20051 of the 1st east german traffic like many west berlin was installed in the famous quarters double or. 30 years after german reunification
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a little better more than just traffic signal such as design there's something special about them they don't look standardized they look as if there's something particular to the capital it's 50 that they're very friendly and project a nice image of our city you don't have them in other cities. and it creates a nice atmosphere things we noticed him i'm afraid it brings bill culture and history to a place i shouldn't forget his gold tradition. the green walking man and the red standing band are now world famous and popular souvenirs for tourists. and internets and among our international customers is the japanese who like the op and mention most they love that all figures among us the up and mention are a bit like that and they're crazy about that in japan the east german op ed mentioned are quite well known. traffic light meant as a brand ambassadors inspired other cities 2 years ago and has some installed an
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elvis pedestrian like the american singer was one station tears a soldier. and karl marx's life now shines brightness birthplace. some european cities now have traffic lights women. and same sex trafficked like couples. sometimes a sure there's a subtle way of spreading a message before no one really knew what traffic light men looked like it was just that they were green or red and resemble the man you want to us. no one paid any attention to the design of it now because the east german opera mention have become so famous the awareness for traffic like madness changed worldwide on. most international pedestrian circles still feature simplistic pictograms. but maybe other countries will eventually follow these mentally. the sound of new the united berlin was hot and electric in the air also saw the birth of techno
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the clubs emerged overnight in disused industrial holds and a bend and spaces such as the bungalow where i'm standing now on the former border between east and west berlin today it is the museum of art collectors cabinet. but shortly after you need to see the former air raid shelter was the center of the techno scene d.j. and alien from west berlin used to play here and experience firsthand how the city became a huge magnet for techno fans. allen alien is a techno icons star d.j. and head of a record label born in west berlin german reunification was a defining moment in her life. for me reunification was like an explosion. i got to experience what i'd always longed full take on the wall was gone and i could communicate and live with the people on the
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other side. with your live crowd. truly really and has performed all over from new york to hong kong for close to 3 decades she's been a berlin techno ambassador. as a teenager she was into hip hop but in the early ninety's she discovered text no. i like techno because it reminded me of berlin of how the wall fell and i walked around hearing the noise of the streets for me the sound of the city was taken. after the wall fell rivers took over empty buildings near the former border in clubs like trends or young people from the east and west celebrated techno as the new sound of freedom tribes who were open in 1000 $901.00 and launched the careers of deejays like paul fein dyke from the former east germany. ellen alien soon began spinning records here too and other top clubs being a d.j. wasn't enough so she hosted a radio show in berlin and founded
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a music label i was really right down trying to delegate the work i have my graphic artist and my booking agency i have someone helping take care of my label i delegate stuff to friends and people i can rely on. today berlin is a cosmopolitan city but while it was divided even found the atmosphere oppressive that changed when the wall fell in 1989 and germany reunified a year later. fast we had to hit him with not have impressed me very much emotionally was finding out how different east and west berlin is where. you know and also to live through the phase where we became one. and. for years clubs like they are kind and watergate have cemented berlin's reputation as. techno capital but when the coronavirus pandemic struck last march the party was suddenly over. it was
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a nightmare for d.j.'s like alien who make their living travelling around the world and bringing people together to dance this summer she spent a lot of time traveling on berlin's waterways trying to process the new normal. thoughts like this it was awful it was absolutely horrible because i was ready to go on to a full tour. so it was a big shock i must admit that i cried a lot. of good bye and. but instead of sinking into depression she took action in june she released her 9th studio album an hour and began streaming live d.j. sets like here from berlin t.v. tower. lens techno scene isn't giving up either it's returning to its improvise roots after german reunification and like then finding empty buildings the club reveres
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it almost has opened on the grounds of a former brewery covers wear masks and socially distance cameras are not permitted . to look 5000 festival opening up a club in the corona era in 2020 is very brave of da that the only here. it gives us a huge energy. and gives us something to show off to the world in berlin a club is opening up in 2020. 5 homes like this either. and of course ellen alien is performing here as well. but you don't have to go to a club to experience something new and exciting in berlin the streets of beirut ings of the city common life during the valley lights festival famous len box like
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the brand new book the gates are based in colorful lights and this was a year mix program dedicated to german unity and with these fantastic pictures from berlin it is time for me to say goodbye and if you want to see mall then visit our social media channels or check out our website there you will also fight all the details on our current views draw until we meet again goodbye stay safe and thanks for watching.
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3 those are. next on d w. a country at peace and yet on the front lines germany during the cold war. on for decades this is way down last faced off against each other. how did ordinary germans experience the conflict. germany and the cold war. 45 minutes on d w. 3 up today don't miss our highlights d.w. program online d.w. dot com highlights. from this new song no story about
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a stubborn rice farmer from thailand. his problem tests. his crew go no chemicals. and his plan was. the students are not good because they don't stand a chance. train and successful. tucker carry me starts october 15th on d w. welcome to global st albans. this week we go to lebanon and find out how beirut's on scene is coping after the devastating poll last. in germany a u.s. military airfield has left
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a toxic legacy what are locals doing about it. but 1st we learn how the coronavirus pandemic is forcing urbanites to say farewell to their beloved city. the freedom of self-determination and the opportunity to get ahead for centuries cities have promised a lot of that even today many people are drawn to urban areas for exactly those reasons over half of the global population now lives in cities that's more than 4000000000 people and few places have offered greater hopes of success and happiness the new york city now that the pandemic is laying the dreams of many lives to waste. in a few days' time celine copland will have left new york she came from paris seemingly a lifetime ago saying goodbye to the city is hard to. say if.
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face to face i'll be back i just work now i have have to go by their vehicle. i'm moving searching here just like kids have emotional. she came for love then stayed to build a new life in the city of limitless possibilities setting up a successful cup. relations company. it's a great town here energy was. here and she was amazing you could need to pick or from every different background in any day you could. tell downtown need to you know a lot is gallery to a bank to whatever you know the across france it is a shot of culture it was really really great now she's packing her life into bags
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and boxes and heading back to paris business has dried up but the bills for granted how pair haven't stopped coming. what's more the city that enticed her seems to have vanished and if you have no rest or had no say no blood wave no open no gallery opening make. it go by did see and enjoy good nature you know what i mean like what's why do you have to meet folks in a box apartment. and do some calls all the. time square we're missing trista moldova and i'm steve tewkesbury for 2 decades they performed some of broadway's biggest production limits on the kinky boots and phantom of the opera now they're looking for something new. i'm trying to look into industries that are actually hiring right now and perhaps the medical fields you know amazon maybe you can guess of trying to think of anything that's hiring as
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well. trading the bright lights for hospitals arms logistics. broadway's theaters will be closed to love least the end of january and possibly longer. some productions have been entirely counseled. new york's world famous entertainment boulevard and seems like a surreal film sas. desertion and. a 3rd of bars and restaurants have gone and his business. nobody's coming back so that's scary it's very scary to think of a lot of these buildings you know just for having nobody in them and you start going down that rabbit hole of the somebody in the buildings is going to be nobody there's no terrorist there's no fears that are open and you just need to start to get concerned and anxious about it we all have moved to the city which we love so much to pursue our dreams and to pursue on the entertainment industry but you know
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what if we can't we can't afford brands and there is no industry there's really no no reason to stay here. for a 100000 people have left the big apple since march office occupancy has dropped to about 10 percent most large corporations house which the home office. the real estate market is on the brink of a crash the market for luxury apartments has collapsed by 67 percent. the millions of tourists students and commuters who used to float into the city every day have vanished leading to months of financial losses new york's tourism industry was worth 70000000000 dollars last year money that's sorely missed especially by those who've chosen just to get out of. business on the slip right now is $75.00 votes and is. before. 'd 'd very busy
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we may never see it on the outside like this i mean how 8000 customers a month before the coronavirus struck now it's a ranch 200 you had to fire his for stuff and get his son into help now they only make enough to cover the $7000.00 a month rand next door a clearance sale is under way sierra robinson is the last employee standing i am getting. a very small amount comparatively to what i would normally. be able to. not just survive but to live to not be afraid of where my next meal is coming from to make matters worse the contract on her apartment is now expiring she and her partner contre forward to rent a new place in the absolute worst case i would have to leave me. which is the last thing i wanted to do i worked really hard to be here thousands of
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businesses ruined dreams shattered hundreds of thousands jobless many contre pay their rent anymore there's a moratorium on affections but it's only temporary even fisons terrified of ending up on the streets 200000 eviction suits were filed here even before the coronavirus arrived the city already hans 100000 homeless. new york faces potential catastrophe plenty of fiction draws to a close at the end of the year that's according to allen davidson a legal aid society attorney who represents tenants at the moment we have an eviction moratorium but when that eviction moratorium layoffs. hundreds of thousands in town and sort of risk losing their homes becoming homeless it would be here in unprecedented disaster for the city the city has withstood many shocks
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but celine copland says this one feels completely different there's just too much coming together at once. it's going to take a bit longer you have a trifecta effect you have a similar thing the. standish flu which was a big problem in the great depression of 1929. and. it's like. how do you survive a trifecta i mean i'm sorry it's just. once again new york faces enormous challenges. and once again it may be time to reinvent itself. thanks. to many lebanese the beirut ports explosion 2 months ago was the ultimate proof that their government and political class were failing and had been doing so for decades. lebanon is made up of various religious groups and sects
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the maronites several christian groups the druze sunni and shiite muslims between 19751990 these groups were embroiled in a bloody civil war afterwards the warring parties divided the country up between them. since the mid 1980 s. the shiite militant group hezbollah has also gradually extended its ally in lebanon today it's considered a state within a state but in their struggle to maintain influence lebanon's regional leaders repeatedly block reforms despite angry public protests. there's something very special that the park there's a very special energy everything facet career everything transits through here.
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it's the heart of the city for me it's like. the energy of the movement people work in. the moment i say standing on the roof of her gallery must have. the name means harvell in arabic. into old grudges she made her dream come true space for contemporary art. the explosion on august 4th destroyed the dream 11 tuesday the gallery was closed and the man a us alien wasn't there. to which she owns her life. so it's physical damage that set up the dam it's going to be repairable but that's not the issue whether it's someone who has a restaurant but it whether someone library or to anyone they want to break it they want to break this idea these dreams that you have they're trying to smash it every time and then you have to. to waited for them to really get them to really come and
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i wonder how long can one really say. you know be resilient at this point and do and do and we do. since august 4th anger in beirut has grown every day in the quarters behind the harbor no consciousness landscape. recent years have seen the emerge on the scene with international appeal many saw it as a hope for a renaissance of the old cosmopolitan and liberal now that hope is in ruins. the magnificent museum was also badly damaged it was only reopened in 2015 after a long renovation as a place of art for everyone entry is free. the last visitors had just left the building while the rector say not only dot was still in her office more oculus like she wasn't injured. i think what i've been going through recently i was like i was shocked by
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a sniper in 78 i was 8 years old i was at the beach since then and i was in so that kind of kid it's our generation the war generation who did not want to forget who want to talk invest and who through these structures artistic initiatives we have been witnessing the nonresponse ability of the government and of course a civil society that is more and more like acting as if it's replacing the state which we have already been doing for the past. 13 years. although the civil war ended in 1980 it continues to resume and across town it dominates the heart of payment for victory. then came assassinations bombings the economic crash in a state where the government is absent we don't have a government but a mafia that preys on the state says writer in the us. citizen of the.
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political system that goes created off of the war which i call. the system of food and simple. business the good and the going on but. these fields all of these heads of the different ringback shows will sniff it in 6. the only way for them to go for it most was that if it both were soon it will leave . the explosion was an accident but it wasn't the instances you think. sport the truth that the british tried to cover world peace with. its nazi funny things going straight up it's an insult. to a good life used to work. in a hopeless situation you know when you got off to the spirit with the book to just put it to spit then you fear that close you are beyond dispute.
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then you can call this hope if you. can that you could cause this if it were nation to survive. the so something easy a movie with the help is coming from all over the world. but just rebuilding from the old foundation that's not enough this time to say no i'm going down. to there you know i'm 50 i'm not a kid and he was so today i really need to. think about my puter. i'm committed to the museum i'm committed but i don't know how long i don't know how long i'm committed to defend i'm committed to my country depending on how it is going to evolve i mean we are ready we are ready to govern this country. at the end of the 1980 s.
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there were almost 800000 foreign soldiers stationed in both parts of germany mainly british french and us troops in west germany soviet soldiers in east germany following the end of the cold war and german reunification the occupying powers which through most of their troops. they left behind trash and contaminated soils and drinking moves have. come in late only u.s. troops are still stationed in large numbers in germany back in spangdahlem by residents are fighting back. into schneider feels like he's damaged facing an omnipotent god poisoning his environment since 953 american fighter jets have been taken off the line right. by god. i think the whistles. moving away from the area is not an option this family's been living here for centuries. the radar that's why
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for. those we haven't checked regularly. by the ground and the water rivers and. there it's a very different picture from the water is close enough are not. contaminated with carcinogenic chemicals known as perf war and makes it compounds or p.f.c. . they originated this nearby air base on our pollution waterways in the area. the local authorities have warned locals about the problem. as a precaution we would still advise against using the river water for irrigation purposes. scientific surveys have helped to shed some light onto the matter they detected toxic chemicals a depth of up to 80 meters in the land surrounding the air base and in concentrations that the e.u. considers critical. going to schneider himself used to work for the american forces
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and saw soldiers performing firefighting drills for airplane crashes. on board and there was a hole in there and there's also what they poured fuel life and all slain in so that and then set it alight in the. oil and finished on it was burning fiercely with last. year's unfolding something wishing agents which we now have in our groundwater. and. that foam contained fluoro surfactants a chemical that is all well and water of talent and resistance to heat it's an effective means of fighting jet fuel fires but it's practically non-biodegradable after decades of using the agent the americans banned as in 2011 albeit too late to protect the areas water. yes i do you know mr fairchild doesn't really know much about it was a service without an agressor under the illusion it's dropped from the air but i
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got out that it was less than $5000.00 away used to be a pattern as there is now in the c.s. record a log. assessment that nobody seems willing to take responsibility for. at the air base a request for an interview were ignored. on the german side to people to talk to at the federal real estate agency. but they refused to talk on camera. instead sending us a statement that assigned responsibility to the american military. we had better look after approaching the regional environmental protection authority who did talk to us. previously how to invest in measuring by how do we know this what honda's levels of heroes are found in this was in fear that an already said all sources are going to end airborne compounds we're off base and there are certain variables with get any attempt will mean one of every little bit
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bigger chunks of it a movement if they're going now into the. among those details is the fact that there are still places in and around the air base where perf you are an agent compounds are seeping into the groundwater kingdom up cost millions of euros assuming anyone is willing to foot the bill which is the political issue. in the decision on your cleanup the loss is on you and that's something to be solved because in your mission in the american government on some of. those negotiations could take years and in the meantime the status quo remains. that. is a professor i wonder if los angeles. and bob baer of. the most important either standish they feel just as diverted and because. of his growing opposition to the american air base going to schneider's not fighting on his own. saying i
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thought against the americans used to be completely idiotic on the gunmen obama kind of misreading which i hear injuring our prosperity. that's changed a bit of the truth. and that residents and environmental activists became more optimistic in the summer when president trump announced plans to withdraw all the fighter jets from spawn dhanam day at least would have no problem with the americans leaving town all together. and now it's time for global i.d.'s and this leak off a p.c. is can. see is the guy we visited and head. if on the in the gun that his mind had was under threat due to increasing need hobbyists but there was a solution and we tend to see how things have developed. saplings in full bloom. some of the pods are old ready nearly right. orlando's one who is expecting
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a rich cocoa harvest this year. we're. going to miss the car runs very fast. like what we used to. who would take the old coco seeds for years to bear fruit but with only 2 years. that's really fast for us and. i means we can all enjoy 3 things that we need to make money earlier. that. it wasn't always like this 2 years ago the trees were hit by a disease called swollen shoot virus which left harvests ruined and here's how orlando described the situation back then. why and what if this is a part that put out your word but didn't because of the disease. it's no good for harvest it spoiled.
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radical action was needed for a bundle of money by some experts and so history it wasn't an easy decision. to walk around america never seems to me i wasn't sure about what they told me but i thought about it and cut down on the hop acres out on the 14th. i want to have it's been 2 years now and i'm very happy. to see you know what a menagerie. but 6 trees weren't his only problem he also had to look on while part of his land was cleared to make way for a path. so. all of this is part of the farm which i'm tame cocoa and making here just like in the other way but the timber contractors are clearing up and i didn't get me i was going. to deal with the problem of illegal felling locals across the district are being trained to work as far as monitors. but they use an app to report their findings
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and it only takes a couple of taps and of course i'm not deaf i think and saying that if it's in a go box identify then we make a report on it then we take action to get i would for the commission to address the problem. farmers in the be a district know how important their trees are for the climate and keep the soil healthy. trees leads to drier conditions that in turn leaves the trees more vulnerable to past like these ants. is dealing with an infestation but he has a trick. to begin to see. no end to the end and so they die and so. simple and effective.
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but just as things were starting to look up for him and his family the coronavirus struck reason theories about how the disease will impact his business. it's becoming a problem. the worry does. feel like if i say it it hasn't i'd be lying. on a small amounts. but i'm still your car you have no choice but to live out worry about it really suffering. when a day. or what it's not. farmers like or a lot of dough often have trouble accessing loans because their holdings are too small to use this collateral now look will see things initiative has been established to help out in just farmers in weathering the pandemic. orlando was among those who attended a training session on financial manager i mean no doubt after my pro they knew when
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to get their problems it takes about 3 years or more before the farm start footing . it was to link up the fund i sensed and to see how. what if i managed to happen before starting. orlando's hoping to use the loan to expand and develop his plantation. he wants to be ready for what happens after the pandemic. be improved prospects said even prompted his son adama fusee to consider quitting his job as a teacher to give farming a go himself. a lot of. money. to the family and. a song for don that's one from dave come one come from your. new
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15 minutes on t.w. . co india. it's a pavement not done. not all the. history of indigo was the problem of exploitation indigo has since become a symbol of sustainability and success bangs to a project at the edge of the himalayas. in 60 minutes on t.w. . in the eye of climate change. africa's minister. what's in store for.
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us to have for the future. conflict in major cities the multimedia insight. into. the fight against the corona virus pandemic a. weirdo science stand. what the new findings have researchers and. information and background into. the corona update co the 19 special. monday to friday don t w. media and information literacy the 7th online session of the global media forum covert 19 has changed the way we can. this brings new opportunities but also risks. one solution media and information literacy. is this enough to approach the challenges in our media
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landscape join our discussion start 1230 t.c. . this is the deadly news live from thursday donald trump makes a brief appearance out of hospital u.s. president leaves the medical center where he's fighting coasted 19 to greet supporters gathered outside his doctors say he's on steroids and could be discharged as of early as monday also coming up. the world of fashion loses one of its most famous designer japan's cancer to cut it as
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