tv Maybrit Illner Deutsche Welle November 14, 2020 6:00am-7:01am CET
6:00 am
black coal oil, thomas, it starts december 4th. this is the news live from the u.s. president. donald trump has made his 1st statement in public in more than a week. he delivered an update on the program to develop a vaccine, still refusing to concede the presidential election to joe biden. only time will tell who takes office in january. most of the fighting in ethiopia as
6:01 am
to the situation could be spiraling out of control, is a growing conflict of a date is a coup, not a coup. the people continue to protest after congress summarily the corruption busting president who is not affiliated to any of the parties, calling it an athame held welcome us president donald trump has made his 1st statement in public since last week's presidential election. he did not concede to joe biden on, becoming u.s. president elect. instead, he gave an update on u.s. efforts to develop a vaccine against 19. the closest to admitting defeat in the election was when he
6:02 am
said time will till which administration will be in the white house in january, thanks also to the us t.v. networks. projected biden had won the state of georgia and north carolina has gone to trump. that would give bob 360 votes in the electoral college and trump 200 and there's you to washington correspondent out of the cell. it was following trump's press conference. we asked him what we should make of trump's 1st public statements indicts. and it was the 1st speech, in fact, since election night. so a very highly anticipated event where he again refused to concede. he said, i guess time will tell who will take office in january. so still trying to create that impression that he might be there for another 4 years. he took no questions then, but what he took is all the praise for this new coronavirus vaccine, where he obviously ignored also that
6:03 am
a german companies behind that bio and tech who developed the vaccine together with the u.s. pharmaceutical maker. pfizer then went on in his typical style of talking about the great job he did with them. and demi, in handling the pandemic, talked about the stock market, the job numbers, unemployment. so nothing surprising you really seemed like the campaign is not over yet. that's how washington correspondent of a cell that was staying in the united states in the corona. virus continues to spread relentlessly, that more than 177000, new cases were reported on friday, a line that breaking the tie, the break cord for the 4th straight day. the city of new york has imposed restrictions on boston restaurants in a new push to limit the spread. in fact, all establishment slosson it's to sell alcohol and then ordered to close the doors at 10 pm. well, they doubly correspondent bastian heartache spoke to some new york was to ask them what they think about the new restrictions york city,
6:04 am
with the worldwide epicenter of the pandemic back in april. more than 24000. people here have died of the virus so far, and the horrific images of the cooling trucks lined up outside the city's hospitals that were overwhelmed by the number of bodies are still on many people's minds. for months, the city's been able to control the number of new infections, but now it's on the rise again. and that's why many new yorkers agree with the new restrictions that the city is putting in place. i think it's necessary. these sort of been a pretty good people saying we've been protecting ourselves and nothing's happened and be beside it to relax. so i think it's really necessary for this restriction to be, but it placed maybe somebody to shut down because really what it was actually delayed it for you the paper of the wrong. i'll be afraid of a complete lockdown curfew to hold her. if i need to put a mask on, if i need to follow the rules, if i need to stay home,
6:05 am
that's what i have to do. we live in a community. i share this planet with other people, and that's the part that i have to do in each and every one of us needs to play their own part in this. i mean the son nerver is like even being our here. you just want me show you my own circle, play yourself in a bubble, because you don't want to be too close to some iow. you don't know what is sick or has called a virus. so it's just, you never know when you talk a little, even my going to restaurants. you still never know. some people show no center. as new yorkers are bracing themselves for a potential 2nd wave, the new restrictions might just be a 1st step. new york's mayor bill de blasio has already told citizens to prepare for possible school closures as early as this coming monday. time to look at some of the other stories making headlines around the world. most stock markets in the u.s. and europe event of the trading week on a high new york, but the dow jones and the s. and p. indexes performed strongly. analysts explained the highs on optimism that i can run
6:06 am
a virus faxing could soon become available. thousands of protesters have rallied in the armenian capital, get up on for a 4th day, they demanding prime minister nicole resign over a controversial peace agreement with us. a budge on a deal with the city troops and ethnic on many and forced as follows. 6 weeks of fighting over the disputed on klav of going on spanish police have arrested $21.00 people in connection to the trafficking of protected wildlife species. police also recovered hundreds of reptiles that had been illegally imported into europe. the trade in smuggled animals in europe is estimated to be worth billions of euros. well, the u.n. says the conflict in ethiopia is at risk of spiraling out of control. it's a struggle between the central government and regional,
6:07 am
or he's in the northern teac rive region. civilians who have fled the fighting. they say that were bombed by government forces. that's despite claims from the ethiopian government that it's on the striking military targets. regional leaders have warned of a long struggle ahead and an increasing number of people displaced by the conflict . they've come up with just what they can carry ethiopians from the region made their way to safety across the border into sadar. and then most of them, if it wasn't for sadar, many would be dead. where do we go? if we go to eritrea, they will slaughter us. if we go to other parts of ethiopia, they will slaughter us. some had to make the heartbreaking choice of leaving loved ones behind my mother, i left her in
6:08 am
a church. she is an elderly woman. my brother is blind, we left him there as well. there was no food or water that everyone ran away. and on the way we found murdered people with weapons. and that's why we ran. what were we to do? we want to save ourselves thousands of exhausted refugees have fled to siddharth, after fighting broke out between the ethiopian military and their to grab people's liberation front, a militant group in the region. the conflict erupted in early november when the government sent troops into the region. after an alleged attack by local forces on a federal army base integrators capital, the ethiopian prime minister says his army is close to victory. highly, this mischievous force is surrounded on all sides. that it is a force in its final throes of death. your children are suffering death,
6:09 am
injuries on the front line ups. all of them want to the united nations is concerned that war crimes have been committed in the fighting between the,, government and t.p. l.f., and many voices in the region are calling for a deescalation. what information is coming from the isolated region indicates that the situation is deteriorating to now where demonstrators have clashed with police in the capital lima in another night of protests, people angry at the wipers, congress removed, sitting president martin vince carter on monday without due process after unsubstantiated claims of corruption, it's got a who is not affiliated to in a political party, had been spearheading an anti graft campaign. many in peru are calling his ousting and a legal political coup. violence on the streets of lima. peaceful protests are repressed by the forces of law and order. for days now,
6:10 am
demonstrators have been protesting the dismissal by congress, president martinelli scatter. the protests take place at night in lima. but daytime, in the peruvian capital, is generally peaceful. but the people's displeasure at the actions of congress is still palpable. and i feel that the president should have finished his term. the next election is just around the corner. this was a coup. as many people say, this is a coup that homs, all peruvians. we all disagree with it because it was a coup. he who is affected by this, the people, the people are harmed by all of this. i feel outraged, outraged at everything that is happening. it's not only on the streets that people are calling it a political coup. some experts agree that given the circumstances, discounters removal could be considered illegal. the way it is happened,
6:11 am
it is clearly an abuse of the constitution. and i figure it's being used in a way that was not foreseen by the constitution. and if you had the interest involved from corrupt people, to those who want to change the law, obviously shifting towards an illegal situation, then it could be called a coup. it hasn't been done in a constitutional way out in force, people who have no place in a process of this kind but with kindness dismissal is not the only thing that's at stake on the streets of peru, transparency, transparency. it's one of the country's most important n.g.o.s. it monitors the state of democracy and citizens' rights and its president believes the current protests are about more than the current political crisis, but are not getting peruvians want their democratic institutions, their free rights and their right to representation, to be defended. and i think it's important to say that human rights must be fully
6:12 am
respected when citizens exercise their right to protest. some say this wave of demonstrations will soon pass, but others will, in the unrest could intensify as people protest of political elite that have enrich themselves with state money. for decades. all the pandemic has changed the course of and the look of many events this year with video conferences replacing large in person gatherings. and that's the way it is for the fashion industry and their runway shows. as you're about to say, that's not the only change to brazil's main fashion way this year. for the fashions that in brazil, it's the event of the year sao paulo fashion week models, designers and buyers flock to the country's most populous city of baghdad. this year though, it has a different look. the pandemic has forced designers to hold virtual fashion shows.
6:13 am
many found other creative ways, like these videos, to showcase their collections. but something else is different. diversity, a new quota means that people of color must make up at least 50 percent of models on the runway, but treats you diaz and for the lobby slow are models from brazil. they have been fighting for this change for years. this incredible something. the quota is important, it makes the runway more diverse. the majority of people in our country are people of color. yet most fashion shows would only have one such model. i'm just asking for a fair chance. that's all. i am willing to work hard at it savvy, a fair chance until now it wasn't possible, says fernanda,
6:14 am
despite being belittled and discriminated against, she has become a successful model. she even landed the cover of a british fashion magazine. now she wants quotas for photographers and stylists who are also under represented there for now, and a change needs to happen on a deeper level. will she wouldn't he? so white people are wealthy. if a black person goes into a bank and they're looked at as a bank robber, right? that's because most of the people in the favelas are people of color changes in the air in brazil with inclusive of the now front and center, at least in a fashion feeling. you're watching. the news coming up next is an episode of stories including
6:15 am
a feature on coded sniff adults in the family or mother before you go that get all the lights, news, and information around the clock on that website. as to be found at the d. w dot com. there's more news headlines coming up at the top of the hour with my colleague arianna, getting stuck now, but i have to be held for many here in berlin. possible beethoven is for me to play. is for newt. is for hello glenn. beethoven is for beethoven,
quote
6:16 am
it is for the beethoven is for cars, is for play. beethoven 202250th anniversary here on this week on world storms. raging joe biden causes a boom for a noodle, bar berlin, bidding farewell to take an airport. but we start in finland at the capital's airport in helsinki. dogs are helping to detect coronavirus and infected people.
6:17 am
the dogs could accurately snip out the virus as early as 5 days before. symptoms appear. for a treat, preferably calf. this now to can be programmed to find it just about anything more old bed bugs, cancer. now it could change the course of corona virus detection, need to see rescued from being euthanized as a puppy in spain. he's returned that favor for years sniffing out deadly disease for the wise new smell detection association and then learned as coded 19 began to spread. q.c. was asked as an experiment to try to detect it. it took about 7 minutes to figure out that this is what they want it to look for. so that totally blew our minds. you know dog be able to change training sense in 7 minutes. you know, it's the team quickly learned canines can detect
6:18 am
a coded $1000.00 infection even 5 days before symptoms appear, with almost 100 percent accuracy. helsinki airport is hosting a pilot project through december that will include cross referencing canine results with those for medical devices. if you talk to the skin, so here it just takes a simple swab from a restore neck here and there it is. terrible, yes. and for a couple of seconds, a dog can tell immediately if a person has contract it coronavirus. so i received a negative, as all of the voluntary tests are proving popular, but no positive signal yet from the finnish government about scaling up. the program is deputy mayor of vaughan, the site of the airport. i thought he did it in 2 minutes. took me 2 minutes out and get this budget covers the free tests offered to all arriving passengers. he
6:19 am
allocated 330000 euros total to the 4 month dog study. to says the data from this study should help bring in federal funds for expansion of canine testing as well. as legal adjustments to upgrade the virus sniffing dogs authority to that of their counterparts working in customs because i write about idol which i like that they can assist and they can smell the kopi both on a human bjorkman is thinking far beyond airports. we could train dogs with the same samples with the same train areas to open up you know, the concert halls or, or being fair is or go to big working places. hospitals or elderly homes, football matches whatever. both your command and bobby line and warn if dylan doesn't harness the potential of the dog program it's well for they'll unleash it
6:20 am
elsewhere. we can will because because she loves that. she says, health authorities from all over the world want to learn what these noses know. our next trip is to kenya in 1998, more than $220.00, people were killed and thousands more injured in attacks on the u.s. embassies in nairobi and dar es salaam in tanzania to this day. many victims are still waiting in vain for financial restitution. esther remembers that day like it just happened on the 7th of august, and 998 at 10. 30 in the morning. she heard the 1st blast when i knew that the whole building was coming in doubt. and that is why i think the previous week we ought to be because of my kitchen. but the 2nd blast is when i was thrown out. and people tell me that i was collected on the pavement. i looked like i had died. so they thought i was good though severely injured. she
6:21 am
survived and that they almost imitating his lee bombs exploded at u.s. embassies in nairobi, kenya and dar es salaam, tanzania. the blasts killed 224 people, and injured about 5000. esther was working at the bank right next to the embassy. she was retired on medical grounds and only 42 years old. nevertheless, she still wanted to work, but was rejected because of medical reasons. i was not the noble woman that would be the woman who used to be all my family. and if it were not the to be raised, i feel so sad that i'm not able to you know, to walk on my property from then on the former supervisor dependent on financial support from her family regularly. she meets up with other survivors of the attack . michael lost his mother when he was only 2 years old. douglas lost his eyesight.
6:22 am
they've also struggled financially. then they heard of the new deal brokered by the u.s. and the sudanese government sudan has agreed to pay a $335000000.00 of compensation to the victims of the attacks in return, the u.s. removes the country from its list of state sponsors of terrorism. so dan was listed because it holds that al qaeda leader, osama bin laden as a guest of the government. but with the deal, only former u.s. and local embassy employees are to receive compensation. that's only one percent of the people who were killed or injured, says dr. listed yellow, we've become garman, african americans, but we feel we are just human beings like america treated just as much as the americans. it's now 22 years later, still in pain and needs medication to be able to sleep. if she would receive
6:23 am
compensation, she says she would be able to pay the looming school fees so that her sons can finally graduate. i brought 3 that discriminated, hated because i don't feel the difference between an american esther's biggest help now is that the new us president elect joe biden will reconsider the compensation plan and include all survive us for days. now a small middle restaurant in china's capital city, beijing has been inundated with customers. the reason us president elect joe biden, he visited the diner in 2011 as u.s. vice president and won the hearts of many chinese patrons with his noodle diplomacy . this noodle joint in downtown beijing has been popular for years with local residents and tourists. but recently,
6:24 am
a new group of visitors has shown up national and international media. all came here yesterday by accident. but today i fear our status quo money. johnny as the count here, that's not a starbucks surprise. funny actually. the reason is america's new president elect in 2011, joe biden, america's then vice president had lunch and we felt very honored to say he had his lunch and talk to our chinese customers. i felt he was, a very decent and easy going person in a slave. mrs. e., i was father opened this traditional beijing restaurant in 1996. mr. biden's visit the restaurant has become well known beyond the city. this is ya does not want to talk politics, but her preferences are clear enough to break down because biden came joris terrans. many people in china got to know us. i thought, well,
6:25 am
maybe i'm looking out. they know he came to our place to try traditional beijing dishes and they wanted to try them out themselves only. that's why we feel very positive about him. he might even say we are supported. change the restaurants serves traditional beijing dishes noodles, pork buns and livest to it's a simple neighborhood joint. the chinese public quickly noted the modest choice at the time biden paid just 12 u.s. dollars for a lunch of 5 people. this really shows how nice the food is here. it means chinese cuisine has already made it to the world. the u.s. and china may now be pitted against each other as rivals on the world stage. but when it comes to noodle diplomacy, he says, yeah, this restaurant is coming out a winner. our final trip brings us to germany. it
6:26 am
was here where berlin take an airport finally closed last week. it's the end of an era. and the closure is a special moment that evokes many memories for 2 architects who are now old man. might hard for an air con and 14 mark have come to say goodbye to their airport. berlin table before it closes down for good. they wanted to take a walk down memory lane here. this is where the wooden puzzle piece floorboards were. they were very beautiful, but an acoustic disaster because of the wire luggage carts. suitcases with wheels came later back then those carts were allowed. so we scrapped the original floorboards and replaced them with they designed every single detail in this terminal from the building's shape to the interior styling and even the indoor and outdoor signs. take all airport wasn't just a run of the mill project for these famous german architects. it was their 1st big commission after getting their college degrees. in 1966,
6:27 am
their design won the competition for the new airport in the divided city of berlin . at that point in time, teagle was just an airfield. it was originally a takeoff and landing runway used for air lift planes, bringing goods to the landlocked city of west berlin after the 2nd world war. then it was repurposed in 1974, the new airport opened overtures 1000 people came to the event. their entrance ticket was a pair of hexagon shaped glasses like these table became the prototype of the short distance airport. optimizing the space between arrival and departure gates, it was popular with berliners and tourists. the airport was the point of arrival for prominent guests. it was the stage where emotional moments took place like the return of the german soccer world champions in 2014. but the airport to came out of touch with modern needs, it was old fashioned and too small for
6:28 am
a booming capital city. after german reunification it was necessary to build a new airport and close down tanker. if this is up, shoot, now it's time to say goodbye. was not without a touch of melancholy because this building documents a time our job was all about serving people's needs. a time when customer was king would mean that on their final walk through table, the architects had to get used to the empty walkways. due to the coronavirus pandemic, there has been little air traffic turn the airports last months. but the 2 men get consolation from one decision that terminal a will remain standing as a monument to the designers and the people of berlin. last
6:29 am
6:30 am
to w.'s crime fighters are back with me now for those most successful radio drama series continues from the only desserts are available online courses. you can share and disco song, w, africa's facebook and other social media platforms. crime fighter 2 mean no. hello and welcome. 1 to a new edition of the 77 percent. my name is liz show and i'm thrilled to have your company this is what's coming up on this week's show needs a bartender tracey who moved from the netherlands to ghana to follow her dreams
6:31 am
were diving to solve africa's city of their band and explore its fantastic because life and i'll chat with ilwad elman from somalia, a peace activist who's dedicated to improving the lives of millions in her home country. in 991, a civil war broke out in somalia and it's estimated that half a 1000000 people have been killed since then. a large part of the somali population has been living in poverty and fear for decades. militants have taken control of several areas, especially in southern somalia, killing and extorting money from the rural population. ilwad elman has made it her mission to help victims of the war in her home country. and she is using the power of nature and sports to bring much needed healing using the ocean. and yoga to heal from trauma is new to many in somalia. but it's just one way ilwad
6:32 am
elman helps, former child soldiers and rape survivors overcome their trauma. she calls it your god, issue, a combination of yoga and mogadishu. the therapy aims to break down walls of silence and heal, sweating it out and then asking people to draw comparisons between challenging, challenging experiences like you know, pushing your body to limits and testing yourself. and when's the last time you experience something like that? and it resonated and we also saw there's a body of research that's available on these approaches. and we want to see if that also fits in a context. you know, what didn't expect global attention for her work when she returned to her home country 10 years ago. she and her family were exiles in canada for many years. she was 19, didn't speak the local language and wasn't directly exposed to every day life in a war torn country. but her mother was already determined to go back out human
6:33 am
rights activist, a fierce custodian of my father's legacy. raised my sisters and i as a single mother herself, and decided to come back to somalia at the height of the conflict and was from her. i saw that you know, you can be anything and anything you want to anything and everything you want to be a woman. that's not a message to women and girls often here in somalia. so under her leadership, i also was empowered, encouraged, and sometimes even challenged to, to do and be more following in our mother's footsteps threw herself into organizing money looking after my child soldiers and now also women and young girls who have suffered abuse. we started the 1st rape crisis center as a result of the rampant human rights abuse. there are happy girls. we provide services for children and youth that are being co-opted by armed groups and organizations. and another human rights directly is the freedom to life and safety
6:34 am
and determination as well too. but a job like this isn't for the faint hearted her father was killed in 1906 then almost a year ago, her older sister was murdered. the painful experience led to question everything, but she ultimately decided to stay. we share the same risks of the beneficiaries that were supposed to or were trying to support. and you know, i think being somalia really does grounding the reality that conflicts often protract because people are waiting for things to get better. and that's why i think we have been in war for 30 years. no one is, you know, pardon the pun, but pull the trigger starting the work. and that's exactly what it, what did the 29 year old reported on the situation in our home country to the united nations security council? she knows exactly how to use social media to draw attention. we are hyper connected . everyone is online, but young people are also the narrative. and that's something i'm very proud to also be a part of, but by creating opportunity space and resources for young people to actually tell
6:35 am
their own story. now more and more stories are being heard. it's important to show a different image of somalia, not just chaos and destruction. for the past decade old man's work focused on emergency aid, but now there's much more to it. i work has been transitioning a lot from surely service delivery where we respond to violations, to abuse, to trauma and has grown into space. now we're preventing these issues from happening, whether it's through our social change, whether it's through empowering and educating communities to end the cycle of harmful traditional be says whether it's through working with government to put in place legislation and wants to fundamentally change somali society. and she believes she can do it with some obvious use by her side.
6:36 am
and that this remarkable woman is right here with me in the studio in what a man, welcome for the 77 percent. thank you very much for having me. so you're here in germany because you just received the german africa prize in berlin. congratulation . thank you very much for 300 feel when you heard the news very excited. it's a big honor, a big privilege, as well to be recognised amongst 700000000 young people that are in there under the age of 30, in africa to be able to represent. and the issues that we work on to be a recipient of the ward handed over by the minister of foreign affairs who was all quite special. you do, yoga you offer ocean therapy, you offer a book ational training to young people there. you also work with victims of the war with the rape survivors also with form of child soldiers. so all these different initiatives, the, what is the big vision driving them?
6:37 am
all the big vision really is to create a peaceful coexistence. and we believe that in order to support and facilitate the transition of conflict in somalia, a concert that has for attractive for my whole life, 30 years, we need to look at peace building from a triple nexus approach, humanitarian aid building, but also development. we want to teach people how to be at peace within, and that's what we focus on mental health. and looking at alternative techniques to be able to facilitate that process, whether it's yoga, football, surfing, but then also looking at the underlying grievances of conflict. and we know that young people, because of poverty, are unemployment, are often recruited into armed groups because of that. so we try to both create enabling and progressive environment for young people to not just survive in somalia but to thrive. and the whole issue of peace is something that one would see runs within your family. your father was a very famous peace activist. your mother was also very active as
6:38 am
a social worker and a social activist as well. tell me how this has shaped you and the work that you do . my parents are both, are done to rights activists in somalia and my father to this day is considered a small father of peace. he had a very famous slogan called drop the gun, pick up the pen and was almost larger than life. he had said locks were pastel colored shorts and really just was very simplistic solutions to old issues. so he had a football team in the tissue before he unfortunately was killed which brought together young people that were being co-opted by the wards. and that were opposing factions on both sides. and before people knew, they started playing it to trevor. they started trading together into marrying. and something as simple as football was a solution that he gave birth to. he was so effective in his work that unfortunately he was killed for the work that he was doing. and that also led my mother to flee somalia with my sisters. and i so that mr. and i could have an
6:39 am
opportunity for refuge and safety like millions of others that had to leave some only because of the war. we went through the traditional refugee route and then got asylum in canada. in 2010, i decided to return back to somalia, but my parents' activism and the torch of activism, if you will, was one that naturally was passed down to me and to my sisters as well. it wasn't a journey that was prescribed, honest, but even throughout our upbringing, in canada, we always knew that we had a bigger purpose back home. and i'm sure that a lot of people are happy that you have really followed that dream of your father, that you are carrying it on and doing all the work that you are doing in somalia because you're really impacting the lives of many people, especially women. and not just the women, but also the lives of many children, as you will see in one of your most recent projects, you can take a look there. this place is called
6:40 am
and brazil and somalia hopes and dreams. and that's for hoping to inspire, giving babies that haven't abandoned the streets, an opportunity for future space where they can be nurtured, where they can have the care and support that they need and an opportunity to grow children that we have had referrals from hospitals of women that have abandoned their babies after giving birth in hospitals. and we also give shelter to women that have, i want to partner with the hope that they will not undergo and save abortions, but rather have that that child can have a future such cute babies that we saw there. so tell me how does the work of caring for these little ones? how does it relate to the peace work that you do in somalia?
6:41 am
i mean it's 100 percent connected. these are children. the youngest baby that we have is less than 3 months old. and we constantly receive new children and all the children you saw in that clip are ones that are banded in the street in somalia, the conversation of sexual reproductive health rights is not one that's even begun . and women are often able to hide. and what's in pregnancies on children conceived either through sex out of wedlock, or through rape as well to through big clothing that we were culturally and religiously. but then just throw the baby away in the middle of the street. and we receive all the children i saw in this orphanage, through referrals from community members, through partnerships that we have with health care workers and police. and it's a very terrible issue, but this is connected to our peace work because these children that are this young are also being born into war. and what we are providing at the most basic is a shelter for them and others who care for them. and so do, and that's all the babies need right now, but we also need to prepare them vironment in which they're supposed to evolve and
6:42 am
grow. so that the next generation, or even in their childhood, they won't have to continuously live in armed conflict. and do you not only care for, for the youngest in the society, but also you work together with you have and you see that you believe that you can change social norms if you work together with the young people in somalia, what potential do you see in the young people of somalia? absolutely. i mean our population 78 percent is under the age of 30, that 44 percent is under the age of 15. and they have only ever known war 30 years of conflict to so it's simple math. we know that if we want to create a paradigm shift of a positive trajectory in somalia, we need to invest in the majority and majority young people. so we work with those are the most vulnerable society, survivors of sexual gender based violence. children and young people that have joined armed groups and are now we building reclaim their lives. but also working with the overwhelming majority of young people that have not been victims of
6:43 am
conflict, but are in these conditions have never left and trying to be part of the change. so i believe in cultivating leadership and providing skills, opportunities for creative platforms and cultivating leadership. as well to say young people can actually be part of the transition of leadership in the country. thank you so much. thank you for showing us that we young people actually need to be the change that we want to see in our societies and all the best for the work that you continue doing in somalia. thank you so much for being here and you very much. and now we move on to another woman who was also decided to relocate back to the continent. and she's the kind of person that you want as a friend because it's always happy hour where she is. an industry working on the born in germany grew up in probably growing up in holland. you do an african makes you feel like an african life. right? that's right. that's the,
6:44 am
that's right there. on the other point that comes from your background, which you are not to an african you know what i'm biased, i think it's been membranes in them and what they actually think if you come out of the police beat back from coming here to see what damage is done, i'm going to come back here tonight along with someone from you. so maybe i partner and he tried ponies. were my trees that come to atlanta come and see what you can do in your business. opportunities out there because he was born in london, but he was already living here for a few years. so he thought about there was more opportunities out here for me than didn't come in poland doing this in 1000 private road. so i actually picked up my bag and, and came to ghana and both exposed me and it was not returned back to me. and
6:45 am
it's often the people that live here who know where to bring things for themselves . and i look at how did you start a business here? how it went well to a friend of mine, went to nigeria and when 20 men interest research on something. and we're not trying to make one fact, i went to this event and those and even the time to buy meat in drinks and it was so cool. i know you don't do good things for so i think this is something you should look into it. so i did only said, and i found a school in a price for it to win back money into what is called with deep pockets like props. and traction went very well and i was the problem is i never had a look in the games. i don't think of outreach to women in ghana, the frequency i want to be, i'm sort of the bank. everybody wants to be a doctor. everybody wants to be a lawyer. everybody wants to sort out from a mother of 2 who aren't caught up in holland once. it's a good job in holland different for god to come into the strings light outside,
6:46 am
i think is the best morning to get that desk because i'm going to get you can actually make a living out of it. i'm livin for me as i'm taking money and i don't think yet how to make me be a doctor as me to more than anybody. i whatever, i'll make it is more than enough for an average in ghana, in the next 4 or 5 to 10 years. i really want to hold my own bar, like a place whereby, you know, you can come in for things even you can come in for a drink before you go out to mind my stool down the aisle there in europe, i want to move back to africa and it's, yes, we are comfortable, you get things, i mean, everything is in order and it's not hectic here. but this woman, which is out here for us, we can make a comment. so we can make donna the place that people want to come and meet like you has already done. it's already there, the prime time tree now. yeah, i'm just making sounds here. and if you need the perfect card to take you to one of those fancy cocktail parties,
6:47 am
then i found your guy. his passion is the churn old rusty cars. and to me, i catchers the garage where he pins. those old rides is located in nigeria's mega city. lagos, and that's where our reporter met him. let's go for a ride. this is no ordinary afternoon. cruise in lagos, a from dozy. it's on this way to see a b.m.w. specialty 10 grueling ranks to fire the classics. it's all about vintage and therefore vision is just what we do once. what don't we do this with? think of the next project on this is a vote for john b. 2965 more days. $1500.00 also. so this is going walked on. we're trying to push this 1982, b.m.w. has seen better days, but
6:48 am
a model is highly sought after and he wants to restore it to its finest. cars are not easy because in families who own these cars, you don't even have to. so i sent you house on who drew foss, because i mean, you want to find anybody to ration times changed engines rust. yes, i read a post and electrics, to my own creative ability and push the mickey totally different from what i've been in existence or what they knew what a person can do. because if you don't stand out in what you do, there's no trend for you from helping out in this fight especially asked a boy. she dates this made over 20 vintage cars and change over 50 young people.
6:49 am
most of the guys who come to learn his profession are from public. i'm gonna then very few nigerians who are dedicated to glenn's job. so we've turned over 50 boys from the so blues company when we fetishize farms, jams himself for $7000.00 us dollars. he also runs his vintage vehicles to the entertainment industry to make more money than a cow republish, is costing me a $1000500.00 thereabout. then after about, i get we do shoots for simca. mckinney, a prop for the videos which some good money cover, not from the video aspect of it, but i don't doubt it's my passion. so i think i derive joins the needs were republished as mine, because on i bought for the brand. so after 3 months,
6:50 am
i found speech to find anybody for it to strike, step on it. i have to admit that vintage cars on not really my thing, but i wouldn't say no to surfing. i love being in the water and i'm sure that with some practice, i'll become as good as these guys right here. they are from durban, south africa, and they are taking us on a tour. they have beloved city. as it turns out to durban is a paradise for surfers. my name is i, my name is alvin. and we're about to show you around our beautiful city, especially our favorite place, the beach front known as the golden mile. a perfect swell and a year round. warm ocean make africa's surfing capital alvan and touchy and like to catch an early morning wait before shooting off to work.
6:51 am
the 2 lifeguards call the 8 kilometers of beach and promenade their office. but today is their day off and the 2 friends can show was around the serious surfers. there is no way around the golden mile. this is basically like the breeding ground. when you make your name in the surfing industry, this is where you stamp it out with the big boys in the want to. and this is where you seen and known with its beaches, theme parks and i clubs. the promenade feels more like a big playground. not only for surface, the skate park at the bay of plenty attracts young people from all over the city. and it spoke to the south africa's skating nobility.
6:52 am
our 2 lifeguards are no strangers here into a sport that screams see them flying, and people then going to name different cultures because it is easily accessible, free for everyone and safe. the promenade is arguably one of south africa's most inclusive public spaces. being able to skate and liberty is also helping to boost the confidence of young talents. it gives you a sense of freedom makes me feel like i can do anything i can do in keep up with my mind. it's just believing in myself. skating makes hungry, and so we are off to the city to check out durban street cuisine. calvin takes us to his neighborhood way. promise us the best bunny challenge, top on a half
6:53 am
a loaf of bread filled with hot curry. this hugely popular dish originates from 19th century indian immigrants a city in durban. we have a big thing to say does hold these amazing foods. these amazing countries may see beyond these so my phone would make sense of some local experience will be different cultures gambling. while out of and when to swim school, when he was a kid, got smacked. if his parents found him anywhere near the ocean, his parents who could not swim with terrified, he would drown. still today, many children never learn how to swim, let alone serve. to change that alvin and collier found, it's a song zulu for together to teach children to swim and ride the waves like pros. alvin believes the ocean can teach them important life skills. it gives them that
6:54 am
stoke, it gives them that feeling that there is something true to life and it's a sport, you know, you got to love what you do. and that's, are you trying to teach the kids that with more than 50 kids, taking part in alvin hope to raise the next generation of job and fro surface not without merit. some of their protegees already competed in professional sport on once, keeping up this city's fame. and that brings us to the end of today's show. as always, i'd like to know your thoughts on the stories that we had on the program. send us an e-mail up to 77 at. com. or you can also get in touch with us on social media. and i leave you with music from the town kids that we already have them on the show . last time. they can kids who are going viral on social media for imitating famous
6:55 am
6:57 am
6:58 am
6:59 am
world heritage sites. p.w. world heritage 316. get kidnapped now from the ghetto to parliament. golda knows bobby why. despite coming from a close family, the pop star wants to become president. challenges we've got this elite audience to be a credible story of bobby one. 1 starts december 10th on g.w. . the missionary and the trade minister, the diplomat, who always gets straight to the point good to institute's outgoing director, klaus mon. we look at his final year in office and his career name on the last cultural diplomat starts nov
7:00 am
16th on d, w. this is d.w. news live from berlin, more civilians to flee the fighting in ethiopia as refugee numbers grow. these are when warren is of the situation, could be spiraling out of control. the fears are growing of a prolonged conflict over the tikrit region. we'll get the latest from iraq also coming up. u.s. president, donald trump makes his 1st public remarks in more than
7:01 am
42 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=2132010938)