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tv   World Stories  Deutsche Welle  November 29, 2020 8:15am-8:31am CET

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merry christmas, merry christmas obama said in the camera to your watching t.v. news updates. witness witnesses, remember the nuremberg trials and our program this week in reports from its face or its force give us your country. people will make you rich. people oil will provide you with jobs. the oil will take good care of, you may see just a big oil fever took hold on the west coast going up in 2007. investors made big promises, but years later, reality looks very different letters pages,
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but drinking water shortage going to happen. just gonna stream of black gold oil promises starts december 4th leg play this week on world stories. haroun violence against women is going unpunished. and the nuremberg trials remembered but 1st to azerbaijan. for weeks fighting over the nagorno-karabakh region, caused massive casualties and people were fleeing the conflict. now, following a controversial peace deal, some are starting to return to their homes every
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day. we don't know what we will do and where we will. we just came here because we have no other option. 50000 people could soon be dealing with up to $25000.00 refugees from nearby regions which are no longer under armenian control. so the people
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that people have come from the region and we have to explain to them this isn't big enough to provide for us. we have to live in villages in other areas, even for those who didn't leave their war. preparing for the return of his children and grandchildren during the fighting. the windows of his plastic sheets will have to do instead. the 65 year old says he and his neighbors lived in the basement for around 3 weeks . of the 1990 s. . it was really
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scary. we have to start over now. we don't have anything. we don't have work either. but we're going to do our best to live well, even with destruction everywhere. most people say leaving no option has just gotten smaller. and more than half the women in peru say they've been the victim of sexual violence. but the perpetrators seldom face consequences for their actions. legal proceedings are far too often abandoned, due to lack of evidence for former and teacher was 20 years old. she was raped by a theatre instructor using the excuse of helping her to explore art. he made her
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remove her clothing and then assaulted her. he did the same with 16 other students for 3 years. the group has been fighting to have the man prosecuted. despite the allegations, the peruvian justice system concluded there was not enough evidence to get a letter saying that your case of sexual abuse was closed due to lack of evidence. it makes you listen again in this and believe what you were told the 1st time. you made the accusation that you're lying, that you're doing it to get attention and that your life is not worth it in the way in peru. gender violence affects all social classes. equally. viruses experience inspired these 2 books. she's a television presenter and also a victim of gender violence. her attacker was her former partner,
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her case is still waiting to be resolved. this. impunity is like a cancer that needs and kills you. because it doesn't allow things to change. it's not enough to punish only violence the ends in death. we have to focus on that slap that we have to focus on psychological aggression. because if we are only going to react when women are dead, it's too late. in peru, 66 percent of women have reported being victims of violence are not to contraire us is pushing the parliament to address the issue. today, a member of congress, she was brutally attacked by her ex-boyfriend. now she from no, it's an agenda to end the violence inflicted by the state itself. institutional violence if you see that going to situational
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violence is violence perpetrated by state agents through the justice system. for example, police officers, prosecutors judges, and medical examiners. there are many cases of people who report violent. it's meant that at the time of reporting there, re victimized blamed and then subject it to more violence. and we're seeing that there have been cases in which the police have accused a victim. and this victim has ended up being victimized again and again. and i mean, to beat him at the payment of the $60000.00 accusations of abuse against women reported in peru this year. less than one percent lead to convictions in this palace of justice instead of offering impartiality on laos, impunity. the war crimes trials against high ranking representatives of the nazi regime began 75 years ago in nuremberg. for the
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very 1st time, a country's leadership was called to account and court. contemporary witnesses, remember in 1904 peter garde osh was 14 years old when he, his mother and his sister, were deported to the auschwitz concentration camp. one year later, at the nuremberg trial, he recognised some of the men who sent them to the gas chamber. it was pure luck that he survived for good. i followed the trial and felt a great satisfaction that at least the main families were brought to justice by the allies and that they finally received their just punishment. nicholas frank also experienced an unexpected into his care for childhood. his father hunts frank was hitler's deputy in occupied poland. hans was one of the main war criminals dubbed the butcher of poland. nicholas was only 6 then. he was teased
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at school. at school, some kids made up rhymes minister, minister gas canister, because i was the son of a heist minister, but that wasn't so bad. other one said to me again, nicki nickie. that was my nickname. your daddy will be hanged soon. so i just answered yes. up until the very end, the main war criminals denied the systematic extermination of jews. they tried to deny everything and said they knew nothing. but during the trial they were shown films of the concentration camps with the mountains of corpses. and afterwards, even during himself was dazed. none of the accused at the nurnberg trial to credit for their actions. they pushed the responsibility up the chain of command. they said they only have bad orders. they
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blamed everything on hitler or himmler who were both dead by then. nicholas franks, father was sentenced to death. he isn't 11 more death sentences were carried out on october 16th, 1946 at the movies. back then, they showed not how they were hung, but how they lay in their coffins with the white and black stripes noose around their necks. and i thought they all deserved to wear that next time. nicholas fong always carries a photo of his hanged father with him. and whenever he feels just a touch of pity for his dad, he thinks of auschwitz. and then he affirms the verdict of the nuremberg trial was just the presidential election and they do west has been decided democrat, joe biden is president elect,
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but the election highlighted america's deep divisions. this is particularly evident in the highly competitive swing state of georgia in the heart of one of the most divided counties in georgia, lysa town milage with half of its population is white and 48 percent to south africa, an american in an antique shop in downtown you find many items that reflect the time when milledgeville was george us, a state capitol that was during the civil war when the confederacy, including georgia, fought to keep slavery some elements of that time, still seem relevant to shop owner larry hughson, who seems to be stuck in the past there is never, never going to be equality in race. he has a grim take on the current political situation now,
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and i don't think the republicans and the democrats are going to maybe own level play and fail. floyd griffin has been doing his bit to level georgia as political playing field for decades. he was the 1st democrat to have been elected from this area to the georgia senate and also served as milage rules. mayor. the bottom line is ratios in here, and in america, the present majority of white community are going to be in a minority here pretty soon. and they fear that the black and brown people are going to take the divisions here in milledgeville, broadly reflect those of the whole of the usa bringing together people who feel as differently as floyd, griffin, and, and on on larry, used to do is a major challenge but they need to work together on the many problems in the
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country and in the town. stephen hall was or has some ideas. he is the director of the local library and helps organize the initiative on the table. brings people together to discuss local issues in a constructive way. the approach is low drama and encourages everyone to get involved. i think we're looking at a future of what is our value? what are our ideas of how we should behave toward each other? and what is the common purpose that we have? i think we've lost a little track about, and i'd love to see that come together in the future. or that americans have to start listening to one another and stop shouting over each other.
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these monitoring on the meat man and tenor jonas culture even in coronavirus times, is not easy to meet diana was each day on the most conscious street. they're fighting against a sexual assault in the congo international, dr. dissolution nobel peace prize winner didn't need to play again traveling through a country, ravaged by sexual violence to support women in crazy helping rape survivors in the d. r. c. 45 minutes. w.
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