tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle October 28, 2020 7:30am-8:01am CET
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for the manufacturing industry. 3000. next d.w. . passion drama competition rival marketing numbers atmosphere our fight at intuition love money. fans friends fattest fans and fans all. on you tube join us. hello and welcome to global 3000 now take a deep breath because today we head to nairobi where air pollution is a big problem kenya is gearing up to switch to electric mobility. revolution
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on not quite as cuba tries to modernize women are still fighting for gender equality. and all that glitters is not gold sometimes it's mica in india child miners collect a mineral widely used in cosmetics. cellphones and electronic devices all contain cobalt and gold medals that are often extracted in some of the world's poorest regions and conflict zones and or hazardous conditions. $1000000.00 children between the ages of $5.17 are forced to work in these mineral mines according to the organization stop child labor on average they earn less than $2.00 a day mining raw materials for a sector that sees revenues totaling $700000000000.00 a year the global mineral industry is booming but the poor and vulnerable are paying the price.
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come out every and her 5 year old son roger turned the earth in search of mica the glittering mineral plays a vital role in this region's economy for many people mining the raw material is the only way to survive. children working for hours in the blistering sun in the indian state of jharkhand it's nothing out of the ordinary to a better at that let alone my children are so young but there's no other way of making a living here there's no farming or nothing that i can't afford to send them to school they have to help me they manage to 2 and have kilos a day we work until 5 in the evening. they used to be more than 700 official mica mines in northern india but in 1900 new law came into force banning deforestation that made it almost impossible to access new sources of the mineral oil companies left but the mines remained today some 50000 adults and children
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working or illegally almost all the workers are dilutes who occupy the lowest rung in the indian caste system many are members of indigenous tribes who are socially marginalised because there's little in the way of industry in the area people are reliant on the mines a kilogram of mica can bring up to the equivalent of 20 euro cents but often they receive just half of that. middleman clean the mineral in large filter drums the platelets are then cut into varying sizes and this is how it enters the market . the word mica describes a group of naturally occurring silica materials that are rigid yet at the same time elastic. for. many industries use the mineral in huge quantities among them the cosmetics sector.
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a few years ago anna maria yeager and her husband founded their company lethal cosmetics the lakers stressed that all the ingredients the firm uses are v can add ethically sourced in other words they guarantee no animal testing was involved in production and no child labor one of the key role materials lethal cosmetics uses is mica some of it comes from india. we have 3 different types of mica. but this is a for example of a sparkling version which also has a medic affected. and what is great about this studded space parking you but it's completely natural so it's free for any plastics. behaviors can't imagine making their cosmetics without mica. that's why they decided to hand pick their supplier in india they chose
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a distributor who was able to provide assurances that his mica only comes from mines that don't use child labor. although in the sector it's often difficult to determine where the material originated the key to that is having to pipe chains that are as short as possible because if you're buying from a distributor who is buying from another distributor it becomes very interesting area where things come from with our suppliers it's one supplier that's often the manufacturer of that offshore works directly with the mines that also does the audits of the mines and has been about the audit as well and that is where it gained that confidence mike it is used in a wide range of applications the biggest buyer in 2015 in terms of market value was the elektra onyx industry followed by companies that added the minolta paints and lacquers micro also finds widespread use in the construction industry and of course it plays an important role in the cosmetics sector.
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every day commentary and her son toil away to help satisfy the global hunger for micah they never have any problem selling what they've collected to one of many traders if they receive 150 rupees a little under 2 euros and it's a good day she says that's enough to buy some vegetables some rice but for that everyone has to pitch in including both her daughters aged $7.00 and $9.00. and that's a new i'm always afraid when i'm working that i'll be bitten by insects or snakes or that i'll fall into a pit oh it's called fire and i'd really like to go to school. but we need money we don't even have our own house so i have to collect like. an ambiguous law has been in place in india since 2016 no child under the age of 14 is allowed to work
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but the government itself concedes that around 12000000 children and young people are doing just that aid organizations estimate there are around 44000000 child laborers in india. it's thought that around 22000 children are working in a legal minds in the states of jharkhand and bihar. many of them have never known a life without work through because of their size they're often made to crawl into freshly dug unsecured pits and shafts. i'm always afraid when i'm looking for mica not long ago over there 2 or 3 children of my age were buried in marble shafts and they died i want to go to school i don't want this.
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for companies that work with my care products it's a perpetual balancing act between marketing and morals business and conscience but lethal cosmetics in berlin the jaegers are trying to tackle the issue head on wherever possible they want to know exactly where their role materials are coming from they also don't try to conceal from their customers that they use mica is the entire regions of india that are financially dependent on mica and so if you replace it with something for example something synthetic you're basically taking away their livelihood so i think it's absolutely within our responsibility of course is the author within the responsibility of everybody in the chain to make sure that it's produced as sort of ethically as a. because medics industry is very secretive when it comes to micah 2017 saw the launch of the responsible micah initiative an alliance of companies obtaining my care from india they all say they have a clear goal to end child labor in the minds by 2022 but an interview on
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a subject to camera well all are requests including those sent to begin to street names like merrick the current group and a call porcher were turned down. if you ask the miners of jharkhand how to solve the problem they say genuine change can only come if mining is once again officially allowed because that's the only way to offer workers clear safety standards and a fair wage then their children wouldn't have to work some politicians have been demanding the reintroduction of official mining for a long time i did buy them a good or good but middle child labor can only be abolished if the government legalized the mines and it companies assume responsibility companies could then join forces to create cooperatives for the children we need a sufficient number of public schools free education free meals and basic amenities
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to enable them to lead a better life. but nothing is changing the government tolerates the system turning a blind eye on a sector that makes a lot of money from micah and the children forced to work with it this young man a child labor himself just a few years ago is in despair yeah i did the not the most you can see that all the labor is here are giving their sweat and blood they're breaking their bones what kind of life is this not get their ged like is the government can't just look the other way don't we deserve better than this. the big north to know paul this week's global teen lives in the capital kathmandu. the chief 6
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6. my name is asked why and they're 17 years ago then i live here in their pocket and. my father and in general saw there are 10 minutes walk from here and my mother is the house and if. i want to be a dentist i want to generalize order to have a kid in there who has a pet i want to help. i love reading books and besides i write i think i then i read a lot of difference or do when then the favorite thing is reading books. 6 6 6
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to. read internet tells me that. the biggest problem and i think it is we see kids starving and then we race food in here that does not make sense does it. i have a lot better life than my grandparents and they didn't have access to all the fascinating things we have like electricity it was not generalized back then but it is now.
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change might be underway in nepal but 14000 kilometers away in the caribbean progress in cuba is happening at a slower pace in many ways the country is still culturally and socially isolated the legacy of the cuban revolution when communist revolutionary fidel castro took power in 1959 he nationalized industries and seized the u.s. owned property worth $1000000000.00 in 1960 the u.s. retaliated with a trade embargo that remains in place today. many cubans are unhappy with a low standard of living and restrictions on travel and up to leave if they can socialism has given women education employment and in theory equal rights but they still contend with patriarchal attitude shaped by the revolution cuban society
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remains staunchly sexist a place where it's far from easy for a woman to assert her individuality. i know liam is made of stern stuff she runs a tattoo parlor one of just a few in cuba a country that still deeply shoving mr. this is the one i started out customers would come in and then leave again when they saw i was a woman. almost all of the equipment she. uses was brought into cuba from overseas by friends due to its lack of availability there. on a studio is in a legal limbo. private businesses require the approval of the communist authorities . zenit tattoo doesn't have an official license but it's tolerated.
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defending a way of life giving it much there was to create a space where people can meet exchange i did feel good and come back to being vegas that is not just about tattoos. on a belongs to a generation of get up and go young women who want to see their country change not necessarily by becoming more western in the consumer sense but by granting people more freedom to explore their individuality and their passions and interests. all people need is something to eat on a roof over their head and then we talk about social constraints and taxes and what people can buy. the only thing no one talks about even though it's what should be talked about is love. xeni tattoo is an exciting place
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and has been profiled in god books and online magazine run by women it specializes in fashion in the arts and popular culture making it one of a kind. enough to get us and we need to show what young people are up say because they have less scope than previous generations they have less scope to show what they're doing even though they're currently writing cuban history. to many outsiders have and it has a ragged but romantic image a place of fading glory where time has stood still. but it also has pockets of progress where young cubans are striving into the future with confidence and a sense of purpose and they want the world to know cuba now has access to the internet and while that may be sluggish and expensive it's. having a huge impact. on us and we know what's
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happening in the world it's torn down barriers created a bridge across the ocean that surrounds us there's an explosion of creativity it's like a jolt of electricity. yeah yeah get arrow has also been profiled in garbus. she's a surfer. another male dominated domain here in cuba. yet as you may hear this you make amulets guys told me to surf somewhere else so i wouldn't steal the way. i see myself as a strong woman i can be very determined when i set out to do something i don't stop until i've succeeded and i get no love no but oh there's not much of a serve scene in cuba yeah guy has been detained and questioned by police all too often. they thought i was going to get to my surfboard and head to the u.s.
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. when she's not out mastering the waves ya run surfing classes for children from poor backgrounds. and especially enjoys working with girls. the 36 year old doesn't make any money with her mentoring. and as yet to get any state support but for her that's not the point when. you are able to get over. i do it because i enjoy it. i do it because it's what i love and i want to share it with others i don't need to be paid you know missy down there may not have got me. meanwhile on in the am has got some bad news the lease on her beloved studio is not going to be renewed. but i don't know won't let herself be miserable for a long on words and a ports. 6 open
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a new studio a new baby somewhere else. the winds of change are blowing in havana. thanks to the many young women challenging the patriarchy and living their own individual cuban way. this week in our series global ideas we venture out on to the chaotic streets of nairobi 60 percent of the global population now lives in cities and nairobi has 4500000 inhabitants twice as many as 20 years ago traffic has badly affected the city's air quality and carbon emissions continue to rise from year to year our reporter thomas howes i've met some of the entrepreneurs' pioneering a switch to electric mobility. it's still
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early when leroy miner heads into the public to stricken districts of nairobi to deliver fresh projects. it's pouring with rain which is unusual at this time of year. but climate change is affecting kenya's normal weather patterns. he wore it gets around on a solar powered car go eat bike. but return. it to you a good 50 people who don't and you color. a sunny day. but sometimes can pick you up you are going to go. give you a mixer in when you're signing. the bike to reach a speed of 40 kilometers an hour even when it's carrying a heavy load the solar panel on the reef protects leroy from the brain and the battery keeps charging even in this kind of. leave only works for
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a local company called kwanza to cooler. it supplies pre-prepared staple food to street food vendors in mostly impoverished neighborhoods using sustainable sources for new of all energy. we want to be sustainable that's the board and drive but also we want to be. sustainable so that we are able to produce products that are affordable for our customers who are mainly poor in order to do that we find it more efficient to use green energy the bikes that we use we don't pay any fuel for them and they are able to carry more cargo compared to him or to buy the electric cargo bike was developed by the start ups a cycles its general manager is confident that affordable solar powered electric vehicles have a future in africa sustainable mobility is wonderful because it's one that's good for them by. especially in kenya and in africa where our population will grow must
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be over the next 20 to 30 years so the environmental case is a very strong case that we always have to make. the number of vehicles driving on gasoline or diesel is on the rise in african cities worsening pollution and increasing carbon emissions. the united nations environment program is therefore promoting electrum a billet in africa and also in asia. it's working on the introduction of electric 2 when 3 wheel is. in kenya the biggest emission when it comes to climate change is to drive. and the biggest polluter when it comes to help is the transport sector and within the transport sector all dirty motorcycles are one of the biggest polluters so we want to replace them completely with 0 emissions elected motorcycles like this one. in kenya some 80 percent of the electricity in the
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country derives from renewables such as solar and wind power and energy ideal conditions for emo billeted. and yet there are just $300.00 electric my pads on the busy streets of the kenyan capital the main obstacle to emerge in kenya is inadequate infrastructure and for called drivers the battery range is too limited plus there are hardly any charging stations. for electric cars to be mainstream people say we need to do is we need foster but for fastest to be established we need electric cars so there must be there must be that group of people that's willing to defrost risk. kenyan company nights energy cells imported electric cars and also install solar charger stations the battery range of 100 kilometers is enough to get around nairobi longer journeys in rural areas would be another matter . there is demand for electric vehicles in conservation areas for
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example and wildlife such as for i was north of nairobi. this land cruiser used to be gastric but it's been retrofitted with a super quiet electric engine a major advantage here in the savannah. what i like about it is the silence when you're driving. closed to the world i mean with no one. here so they don't have to stop you kind of person are new rules. and. you can stop. the underworld your war without starting on like a vehicle which means that you have you know. that. the safari jeep was converted by swedish company. the company has set up shop in
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kenya with 40 employees and installs electric engines and cause a mind to bikes and soon buses to. electric my ability has benefits not only for the environment but also for the economy here in kenya according to a.p. best kind found philip. from. going forward we will go more and more towards towards manufacturing of a deeper and deeper level which means that we can make kenya into the actual central hub for electric vehicles of this region and we can move away from importing these vehicles and having the vehicles manufactured here make sure that we can have an easier way of accepting the vehicles that means that we can have a bigger spread of this because that means that mean faster can have a sustainable transport system. for the time being at least electric vehicles remain something of
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a nice marketing tell you. a lot of ground will have to be covered before they go mainstream. and quality in nairobi improves. that's it for this week thanks for joining us got something to say about the show get in touch just send an e-mail to political 3000 at e.w. dot com. laura visit our facebook page w woman see you next time. you
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