tv Kulturzeit Deutsche Welle November 26, 2020 7:30pm-8:00pm CET
7:30 pm
generation is not over out and they will not succeed in dividing us around, not succeed in taking the people off the streets because we're tired of just dictatorship. taking the stand, global leaders that matters, made from arms. this is state of the news africa on the program today. ethiopia's military says it's begun. the final phase of an offensive in the northern tip grad region, visited a un camp housing refugees who fled to neighboring sudan. they say they are living in desperate conditions. i can't breast feed him and here they don't have milk powder and the food the baby needs. we've been in this county for 3 days. we don't have any shelter. and election day is drawing closer in the central african
7:31 pm
republic. but a crucial message hasn't reached people in the rural areas. i'm christine one day it's good to have your company. if you o.p.'s prime minister, has ordered the army to move in on the to gripe region capital making it. the instruction comes off to his 72 hour ultimatum for to grab leaders to surrender, and it now thousands have fled into neighboring sudan where conditions are desperate. the u.n. is warning. it is running low on essential supplies for the people who have been displaced by the conflict. correspondent mario loyola reports from the camp, which is a chicken all that is away from the region off to cry. cool backhand. once housed refugees who fled if you're pierced them and in the 1980 s.
7:32 pm
. now some 9000 people have saved themselves once again. but this time it's because of war. in this hospital, people wait for hours before receiving treatment. like i've got here, she had a baby and her father escaped the war and they took ryan town of matter. but i think i'll move a frog now be about real. i was afraid because the bombs kept falling for 3 days. we just left without money without clothes and it took 10 days to come here. now we're here in sudan. we've been in this camp for 3 days. we don't have any shelter. her father has terminal cancer, since they got out, he hasn't received his medication. people here at deaths, but they tell us water, food and shelter scares. some of them have to sleep on the ground,
7:33 pm
struggling to get enough food and medical aid. the new refugees crossing the border to sudan, worry aid groups. their representative told us we are able to respond to a growing influx. people need very thing from water, food, and shelter. so at the moment we are catering for over 9000 people and the whole me report that's not enough. and it's children who are suffering the most. it's estimated that hard of the best fiji's are children. many of them need medical treatment like 5 months old. he's been coughing and has had diarrhea since days. i can't breast feed him and here they don't have milk powder and the food the baby needs outside the hospital we need whose house was bombed in who made up the side of reportedly some of the heaviest fighting between its european forces and the to grain. army,
7:34 pm
he got shot in the leg. and i mean they are deliberately, i am alone. my mom and my dad were killed by the bombing. these clothes are my only ones. i will have them for days. nobody helps me. i don't have enough water or food here. nobody takes care of any link. if more refugees arrive olim fears that the situation could get even worse. and i'm now joined by bubba by laci is the spokes person off the you in refugee agency. paul, come to date, have been years africa, have people at the camp. that is a u.n. camp, told our reporter that there is not enough food and shells have bet that people are having to sleep on the floor. we heard from a nursing mother who said that there is no formula. it just appears baba that the u.n. aid say ours report response to this crisis is somewhat lacking. my
7:35 pm
colleagues in sudan says the photos when the refugees started to arrive. it was a trickle fast on 9th of november and then viewed, received, 7000, the next day. so the sheer numbers of refugees arriving in sudan's, remove corners, or stretch the humanitarian response. to reach move people the flow know has been like 3000 people per day. it has been an effort in terms of logistics and distances. trying to move. people are very from the border and just for them and provide them the necessary they need. and that still continues, but it is a huge challenge. ok. the other thing is that the people that you're referring to, these are the people that have actually left to cry and now find themselves and
7:36 pm
sadat. have you been able to reach people who for some reason cannot leave to cry? so the number of refugees that have arrived since the start of conflict inside sudan has crossed 43000. yesterday, nearly a 1000 arrive, you're really worried for civilians inside figure a region. there's no access is an information blackout and particularly worried about civilians. but also let's not forget, there are nearly a 100000 in a tree in refugees in 4 g. camps. and even before this conflict started, there was word 100000 internally displaced people into pins. and the other, the other aspect to this is that many families have been separated by this conflict . can you tell us more about that? indeed, we keep hearing heartbreaking stories of family separations mothers looking for
7:37 pm
their children, daughters and sons. wives and husbands have been separated. many have left going in different direction, and that's the reason many of the refugee families that have arrived and they have members separated. they want to stay close to the border point one in the hope that they may seen their loved ones soon. so for us as unity are, we have been trying to move people of you from the border. so far we have been able to move at least 10000, but the number of refugees that have arrived is 42000. that's speaks for the here in refugee agency. thank you. thank you. the central african republic is preparing to hold presidential and local elections, but many would be voters vying to get to have their say, even though
7:38 pm
a peace deal was signed last year. the country is still tense from fighting and broke out between christian and muslim communities. in 2014, the conflict forced a quarter of a 1000000 people out of the country and despite attempts they will not be allowed to take part in the december election. they are the only ones people in rural areas also largely take part. as it is a small village in power, south of neighboring chad, leaves into the small isolated village near the border. like everyone else in her village. all the grandmother is look, refused to take part in the upcoming elections. in order to reduce the you have to show the authorities a national identification card, a passport, or a birth certificate. in places like visibility, where people do not have identification documents, the national elections, or allows chiefs to christof, i asked to the residence of the citizens. the people in this village are completely
7:39 pm
cut off from the information was fact. so we're just here to vote. what does that mean? here is my voter identification. i've lived here since i was born. i don't know what a voter's card or an id card instead, i'm too old for new things. all i know about this agriculture. but if voting is a good thing, i'd like to vote before i die. but we'll have to wait a little bit longer because the election is we're not done. villages along the borders because of the presence of m groups as the central african republic, a country transitioning to democracy. it is not able to fully organize elections. it is difficult to organize elections in a country that is just coming out of a crisis. the international community helped us and thanks to their help, we are moving toward these elections, even though our country is going through a difficult time period. you visited the city of bank
7:40 pm
7:41 pm
7:42 pm
south africa. these are great, my beliefs believed to be remembered and to make so may seem more and maybe it's a great mostly and so cold. there we go. it does seem to pull their way towards jubilee the number of goals winning the world cup. there are his achievements if i, if i could remember when this goal reduced and you was asked by a show media who said, why, you should all be devoted to him under difficult to see the need apply. them said, no, i live in the home to her not to the court to africa. i would like for people to just see and learn from these journeys and to he's got many, maybe be inspired by how he changed many people's lives. and that is a for now be sure to check out our of the stories m b, w dot com, forward slash africa. we're also on facebook and on twitter today, we'll leave you with more pictures of the late mother, diana tonics type of act. and
7:43 pm
7:44 pm
behind the music? for the ages, british beethoven's 9th symphony for the world starts to simmer nights on d, w. the teenagers who change the conversation around climate change, gratitude bird and other young activists star in a new documentary by german photographer. jim lakita. welcome to arts and culture with a look at the climate justice documentary now and also coming up what's for dinner? kids around the world pose for portraits with the meals they eat. the differences are astounding. and the french designer who's giving london more than just
7:45 pm
a splash of paint the 1st, remember climate change that issue, we were all talking about before? 1000 happened. well, the problem hasn't gone away. it's just out of the spotlight. a new film aims to change that. the documentary now follows young climate activists fighting for the planet's future. the film was meant to be playing now, but because of the pandemic, it's currently set for release in january. they're young and they're angry. they want change. now we i think
7:46 pm
their passion made a huge impression on german photographer, jim known for his black and white celebrity portraits. now he's focusing his lens on today's youth. for a year he followed young climate activists in the fridays for future movement, including later tonight, this film is called now i think this was the last chance to make this film and he does not. i don't think we have much time left for films that explain the way out of this climate catastrophe. time is running out. it was young people who changed his perspective, practical, taking the older generations to task, smart, eloquent, strategic, like german fridays for future organizer. the reason why bella, who features in the film is a david against cody a thing. yeah. we just think of resources that are unique and this is for us, it's young voices. it's young minds of young people who have a right to have
7:47 pm
a future. no one can take us away from them. is the strongest argument i have. it will only affect my generation peripherally, but you can't just shout it out if you know that you're living on a planet, maybe a few more decades. and the whole future will be determined by the solo. it's insane from bush to son for the go on likely also in lists, director of inventors and singer patti smith has crossed generational voices cheering on young activists efforts. the film now documents german protesters occupying a coal mine, demonstrators from the civil disobedience movement extinction rebellion and the youth climate lawsuit against the united states government. this is about our lives . this is about our future. we're seeing the executive branch of the federal government for cause climate change my leaving our constitutional rights. different
7:48 pm
movements with the same goal, get in the world's leaders to act. now. that heated doesn't hide his admiration. he's an elusive, be sure if they're all very polished in their delivery. well, hurst, and in the case of friday's for future, exceptionally polite phrase for future name to free agent. and his team were in new york when collated addressed world leaders at the united nations general assembly after sailing across the atlantic. it was only future generations are upon you. and if you choose to fail us, i say we will never forgive you. the documentary strength lies in the hope of the young people. it features 3 parts for show that is not only destruction, people on the frontlines follow that. will it happen and it will, we do it? no idea. it's a gripping question. it's as we're starting to see some signs that it's possible
7:49 pm
we're getting close does does, is that we've moved on this concept this time. no future without food photography, greg segal portrays children from around the world, surrounded by what they eat. some have more. others less, some eat real food, others largely junk food. see those pictures tell us a lot about their cultures. about disparities in wealth and health, and about the state of humanity. because in the 10 years old for me, it's sausage is melon eggs. my son, 11 years old from dakar. hard white bread filled with peas and noodles. 7 years old from hamburg, fish sticks and french fries. greg siegel sees children's nutrition as a topic that's too often overlooked food is the, is sort of the, i think of it as the kind of the social glue. you know,
7:50 pm
it's the thing that binds us together and it concerns me that so little attention has been given to such an important thing. siegel shows how globalization influences what children eat, the poor. they are the less junk food. they consume. pizza from a major chain in mumbai, costs $13.03 times what i'm child's father earns in a single day photo shoot in brazil with color conny, a 9 year old girl from the indigenous yellow p.t. trial. she lives in the national park, which is in the amazonian basin. she traveled by boat and by bus and by car to get to the studio, the food that she's eating is very simple. her daily bread, it's because saba and it's she uses it to wrap around fish that she catches in the river. and she said to me, you know, whenever you're hungry,
7:51 pm
you just go to the river with your net. greg siegel lives in al to diena, northeast of los angeles. he works for international publications. when he was a child, his mother remarried and they moved around a lot. in his teenage years, photography became a way for him to gain a certain clarity that's was good. in another series, he photographed people lying on the garbage. he produced in a week when i was a kid. even then i was kind of curious about garbage. we have a neighbor where i was growing up in new jersey and this neighbor seemed to produce a mountain of garbage every week. you know, and they were just at the curb, there would be this pile of garbage bags. and i remember as a kid wondering, you know, where the hell is all this garbage going? the average american produces 13 kilograms of garbage per week. that's more than
7:52 pm
$4000000000.00. she rose of new waste each week in the u.s. alone. while i was shooting that i was respecting of the photographs as a kind of instant archaeology sort of, you know, so that we can see right away what the, the peoples, not only what they're there surrounded by, but also kind of what their values are. segal has also photographed grown men reenacting the american civil war. the battlefields of the past are now fast food, joints, or parking lots. his photos show as an irrational illness, a longing for a past the people themselves never experienced. it's interesting because with a lot of these reactors, they play both sides, they play the north and they play the south. but generally, they prefer playing south greg siegel approaches his photo series, with an almost scientific precision, his pictures, showing incisive,
7:53 pm
loving troops. this time colors can play a huge role in how we feel, since a lot of people started spending more time at home this year. paint companies have seen sales go way up. now mostly they've been selling more soothing paint colors, but london based designer coming has taken the opposite approach to mission, to turn london into a more cheerful place through geometric and colorful patterns. by bringing out a big things to designers, most famous work of art is in late a working class district in new london meant to break up the main streets. monotonous look at a splash of color to its facades. the work was a commission organized by local residents who raised more than 40000 euros through
7:54 pm
crowd fund. nicknamed the isle of hurricane. the piece covers building just one of london's largest public art. i was in the verse and you can see the old bus in one of the really in the make them smile. that was a really nice, straight away this really proud of being like big scale. i'll work these days. i think other women as well. sometimes it's not always going to like, easy to get through. the french born designer is based in hip east london. she initially wanted to become a textile designer, a professional, fast moving trends were drawing in a realistic style is important. but camille, well i think only in powder today, she really designs textiles. instead, she prefers to give the facades of houses a fresh look. she fights urban dreariness worldwide with patterns and colors. for
7:55 pm
instance, here at an office building in brooklyn, new york, or at a gas station in the u.s. state of arkansas. the path of house shoes designed for lego is currently touring the world. while as work is inspired by the american pop artist, keith haring, as well as the memphis design movement, she grew up in the south of france, where her parents owned several designer items and that started founded in 1980. the milan based memphis group was made up of post-modernist designers. they used a playful and colorful style as a reaction to functionalism, which dominated at the time when i'm in his collection nostalgia style of design. because i grew up in the eighty's. i just the facts. i don't know if i love and yes, really vibrant and his sense of humor, i think,
7:56 pm
invest myself. that's what i get from it myself. so something our current project in london's financial district shows how she manages to remain true to her style while continuing to experiment. she's transformed a bridge in a top art style with stripes and clients to create optical effects sets for the future. she says her big dream is more collaboration with architects. so it might be just a matter of time before the office heads more color to london's financial district . that's almost it for this edition of arts and culture or leave you now there with a look at british georgian singer, katie melua, her 1st in 2 years. it's called simply album number 8. there's a song, a love like that. beyond
7:58 pm
to the point of strong opinions, clear positions, international perspectives. donald trump stays in the white house now appears to be number one. as joe biden begins, sprigs and taste government team, we'd ask if i'm where in america can i get to be a global leader to join us on such a point shortly? to the point, but it isn't like the democrats on w. has lived for 4 more girls to get over. now live. i'm sure that it was arianna with insupportable. what's a big, what's able to give
7:59 pm
us your country. the money will make you rich, people will provide you with jobs, play the oil. we'll take good care of myself, at least at the claimants for took hold on the west coast to come out in 2007. that's true. but years later, reality looks very different. mr. beach is good drinking water shortage. such is a case of what happened to john. a string of promises starts december 4th leg
8:00 pm
35 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=181750469)