tv Quarks Deutsche Welle December 1, 2020 9:30pm-10:16pm CET
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what measures are being taken? what does the latest research say? information into context. the coronavirus and data. the coalition special monday to friday on d. w. across germany, construction is already underway, temporary centers, where one by one millions will soon be vaccinated against the new corona virus. the only item running short time, the number of covered $1000.00 deaths in december is expected to surpass last month's record high. more than any moment since the pandemic began and the decisions taken in december by millions of people will have one of 2 outcomes, life, or death. i'm point off in berlin. this is the day the
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1st time since a pandemic hit in early 2020. we have hope. in other words, i just want to say there is a light at the end of the tunnel. vaccine developments have a right faster than expected, and this is tremendous news. you know, this could include, if we're lucky, if everything goes right, this could be available just to do it in a few weeks. is on the way. but it's not your doctor. you still have to be disciplined to. we have least find out the facts, the nation that is appropriate to the ready, kate, this finds also coming up on this world aids virus which the pandemic almost made the world forget. but we've seen
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in at least a change the services is that early on we says and dipping in terms of the number of people getting tested, the number of people getting put on to treatment. and that can have effects over the long term of increased gas increase new infection and to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and to our viewers all around the world. welcome, we begin the day at the beginning of our world long, dark winter. today is december 1st, and while there is much talk about the 1st kobe $1000.00 vaccinations being given in europe and the u.s. this month, it is a reality for a very tiny few. if and when a vaccine is approved and administered this month, the 1st recipients will be front line health care workers and those living in nursing homes for the vast majority december and the start of 2021 will be spent
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much like october and november 2020, living with walk down restrictions to avoid catching the virus. german chancellor angela merkel and u.s. president elect joe biden have both predicted and into this pandemic sometime next year. and they have warned that many more may die along the way. and this puts pressure on regulators on both sides of the atlantic to promising vaccines are now up for approval. one from fives are in buying on tech, and the 2nd from modern finding effective vaccines is a crucial part of tackling the coronavirus pandemic, medan. it and pfizer biotech have now both applied for emergency approval. moderna holds its vaccine, could get the green light by christmas eve. any of us thought that our advisory meeting is likely to be on december 17th. it is how people see boiled up between the 17 and christmas. you know, the product is approved. if the u.s.
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food and drug administration gives the go ahead, inoculations could start within hours of them led by the u.s. . that's the nation logistics chief general. good staff, panna seems to me down those. he's a baby on the radio. so as soon as we get approval or urge our county and these teams are going to get hold of a vaccine we have and stuff shipping it in the contrary, is going to vaccinate americans within 24 hours on the pro or the company hopes its latest trial results will lead to speedy approval in other countries too. in trials of the vaccine with more than 30000 people, only 30 participants became seriously ill. all of them had been given placebos shots. this makes the vaccine 100 percent effective against severe cases of covert . 19 reported side effects include pain at the point of injection chills and fever . these symptoms usually resolve within one or 2 days. you know, on a personal level, when we saw the 1st interim results, i think we were all really,
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really relieved and enthusiastic. i can tell you when i saw the final results last night, they came in a little bit earlier than they'd, we had planned for a lot myself to cry from the 1st or the company says it will keep monitoring to check for any further side effects or and for more going to chicago and bring in dr. robert murphy, he's executive director of the institute for global health at northwestern university's school of medicine. and murphy. it's good to have you on the program with there's a lot of excitement with these vaccines and we know that they will be approved. we're hoping they'll be approved soon. how quickly though? can people be vaccinated? well, good, there will be approved as early as the pfizer vaccine may be approved as early as december 10th. and they have stated publicly that they are ready to distribute
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immediately after that. they've located a storage facility which is very challenging for their vaccine because it has to be kept at minus $94.00 degrees fahrenheit. that's minus $7070.00 celsius, that the storage facility is conveniently located right outside of the city of chicago. so for us, it'll be ok, but movies that iran's going to be a challenge. and we know the vaccination is a great thing, but isn't the united states missing a strategy in dealing with the coded 19 pandemic? i mean, when we talk about the development of a vaccine being a source of national pride, don't we talking about what has happened in the last 12 months with, with people not even wearing a face mask? is that not a source of national shame? it's a disgrace. it's embarrassing, one of the wealthiest big countries in the world to completely mismanage
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this pandemic is it's, it's horrific. and we have the highest death rate, highest infection rate of any high income country. over 20 percent of all the world's cases, only 4 percent of the population. you know, this vaccine can't get here fast enough because we've done really such a terrible job in protecting the citizens of this country. terrible role model in the world. nobody should do the way that we are doing. on the other hand, we also created operation warp speed, which is why we're sitting here talking about the vaccines that are coming out. so that's the, that's the, the good part of this whole thing. you know, 6 or 8 months ago, if you asked me or any of the other experts in the field in whatever country, every single one of them would have said you would never have a vaccine in 2020. and we're going to have to, you know, maybe even 3. yeah, it is. it's
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a marvel of medical science that we are living through right now. how quickly will an incoming biden administration be able to take this marvel of medicine and get a scope with $1000.00 strategy in place and running, including vaccinations. what little sleep the vaccination separate? the biden? people already have their own basic shadow government. they have their own coded panel already selected. there are already making plans. i would think that those plans will be put into place on january 20th. it will start right then it's too late, but it's, it's, it's not, it is still going to help it. we're going to get on track here. you were quoted in the recent new york times article as saying that the centers for disease control
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will have to be rebuilt. what did you mean by that? and we were wondering how bad of a state is the c.d.c. . i mean, we are, we thought we were talking about one of the world's leading infectious disease organizations. it had been, it had been, it's, it is no longer. it has been basically emaciated. it's been stripped of all its power and authority taken over by politicians and incompetent leadership. starting at the beginning with the testing with the german government actually offered to sell us some p.c.r. testing that they had developed. and we turned it down all we can. we can do it and not was a huge mistake. the 1st batch that they made was, was didn't work that set them back among. and in that, you know what happens with one month in this disease. we've had $4000000.00 new
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cases in november alone here in the united states. yeah. total embarrassment. anyway, the c.d.c. has screwed up from the beginning there. unfortunately, you've got people. politicians got their hand in the policy making there in, controlling what is said. i mean, there are good people at the c.d.c., but the leadership is terrible. robert murphy with the institute for global health at northwestern university's school of medicine, dr. murphy, we appreciate your time and your insights tonight. thank you. be optimistic about things are going to be really helpful there. i will try. thank you. well then when the european medicines agency gives its approval to a 1000 vaccine of the european commission must also give the vaccine the green light, a formality. and one expects that to take place at whitening speed. the president of the european commission says 5000000000 doses have already been secured for the
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european union. at the moment being the member states are working on the vaccination plans and on the logistics for the deployment of tens of millions of doses of vaccine. because just to say that it's not the vaccine, that is important, vaccinations are enforced. and so, if everything goes well to the 1st european citizens, my 8 already the facts seem a tick before the end of december. there are some positive thinking right there for you. let's take the story down to our brussels correspondent barbara. very mean to you, barbara, or so a fundamental i and said this week, something that we have heard a lot recently. it's not the vaccines that work. it's vaccinations that make vaccines work. is the european union prepared to bring those vaccinations once a vaccine is approved the big countries are because they have had about 6 months to
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prepare for the since the early summer. there was talk about scientists making big steps and having great progress towards a vaccine. so governments could know that this was happening, and as you said earlier, the german government, for instance, has started to build the special of vaccine centers. and they also install those ultra freezers. there are medical freezing units that can keep this somewhat difficult beyond take fires of x. in that needs to be kept in the 16 cold storage. and they say then then different logistics from there to individual doctors. it all will have to be done within one way, so that one day and people of being vaccinate then on the front line is so they have been working at it. the french president has been talking about a huge national effort next spring to sort of bring the facts into the whole country is so many of the big countries are out on the way to being well prepared.
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some will call in the military, trying to get old the help they can. some of the eastern european countries where the health systems are already struggling, that they might have bigger problems and they might not be able to rustle up enough doctors and nurses and personnel to do this. but everybody who want to tell from brussels could have a job in the last months. there was no lack of goodwill and no like of money. just as you find when biotech, they 1st applied for emergency use authorization in the u.s. not here in europe by on take as a german company. is there a perception that the regulators in the u.s. or maybe sastre, than in the e.u. that the regulators can act more decisively in a crisis? me, what are you hearing there? the regulators in the u.s. can act which ever way they want. if they just take the data from the producers, from the companies and say ok, we look at your tests and we simply decide to believe you,
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it can be done within 3 days, more or less. if they decide to do what the europeans do. and they say no, we appreciate soren as above speed, then they will really look at all the rows of data. they will look at the results of the test. they will make cress across comparisons. they will sort of put their experts to sort of the check probabilities of those rows of data and so on. if this is a very difficult process. now the european regulator, the e m a n amsterdam. they have already a panel of high ranking experts on standby since may, who are now ready to sort of jump in was their scientists and their laboratories and say we're going to do the work. so they want to do it very well. and very sorry, because there is an aspect to this as well as in the united states, you find in europe, those conspiracy theorists and those vex enterovirus,
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who are all too ready to jump on. a product that might not be quite ready might not be a 100 percent state. i mean, if the regulators, if they're, if they're quick, can the same be said about politicians in the e.u. . we know there's another the e.u. summit scheduled for next week. we know that poland and hungary, they are threatening to block a passage of passage of the e.u. budget, which is worth trillions of euro's. i mean is that is that impasse going to be broken next week? you can't but hope. i mean, this whole situation is truly hell on wheels and the european union really sort of being beaten down and then sort of thrown and plunged into the stronger crisis during this year. and now having to contend was those 2 smallish member states, sort of going against the grain going against the common interests in saying we're just pursuing what we want and what we think is right. nobody had expected this to
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that extent and it is wholly missed. diplomats say that next monday is the absolutely last day where the budget could sort of be processed within the normal regulations. and if no solution is to be found to tomorrow or maybe thursday, then the summit next week will have to make a decision. the only way out then would be to really decide that the corona recovery fund will be proposed and decided upon among the 25 member states who wanted. they leave hungary, poland, and maybe slovakia i would and they have to continue the budget on the basis of 2020. but this is a messy situation, it's a situation that nobody in your needs and wanted, and the political ill will that is being generated towards hungry in poland is enormous. this bill will have to be paid one of your stays. all right, tell you what it is, barbie's all the storyboards in brussels. barbara,
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thank you. covered 19 has dominated headlines this year, but it is not the only deadly pandemic. the h.i.v. virus, which causes aids. it continues to spread some 40 years since the epidemic was 1st declared. now the latest figures show that in 201938 1000000, people were living with hiv aids, nearly 700000 people have died from the virus. hiv is now a manageable condition, much like diabetes in the last decade. the number of new infections. it's decreased along with the number of people who have died from a yet that trend is expected to reverse this year because of the coded, 19 pandemic. and lockdowns, which are causing a shortage of hiv medication, more people dying in 2020 from not one, but 2 pandemic virus. so let's have efforts to develop
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a successful each of the vaccine. have they been put on the backburner because of code that we asked hindraf street leading german epidemiologist actually about, you know, bringing attention to this hiv aids pandemic again, because indeed they have much concerns that the quote 19 pandemic ball pushed aside. i am sure it's an age to be an aids prevention. now, of course we don't know the impact yet at that age of the aids hat. but 9 of them happen in each of the 8. the estimates that when you have 6 months of lack of delivery of, and every provide a medication that you get up to a 1000000 aids that in a year or so, which would push back, i want absolutes almost a decade. so it doesn't seem to be as that, but we only know next year and then you 8 reports come out are there was indirect
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street speaking with us earlier, eastern europe is the region with the world's fastest growing h.i.v. epidemic that's according to you in a over the past decade, new infections in the region have risen by almost 30 percent. one country that is bucking that trend is ukraine, where improved testing in treatment is helping people live life to the fullest. w.'s nick connelly talked to 3 ukrainians about how h.i.v. changed their lives. that's what i've been. i've had a lot of no's in my life because of my h.i.v. status without a doubt about it. i thought hiv was something that any effect to trust the cheats and drug addicts and that if you were quite normal, nothing bad could happen. but i didn't go and i will never tell anyone about this. that was my 1st reaction to major positive test results. i've had
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a chinese since i was born. my dad died of aids when i was 7. a year later, my mum told me i had a child. as a kid, you don't get what everyone else is thinking that your life is over, that you're going to die. my mum told me i'd have to take pills and that was it. it was border going to cost my partner became seriously ill and the doctors didn't have a clue. one day, the man i was dating, decided to take off the condom without telling me a month or so. later i had tonsilitis and a rash. i just remember thinking, i know what this is, the butterfly tat enough of keeping it secret. so i decided to tell my classmates at college. yes, i'm a child be positive. i ended up telling everyone, maybe i was just lucky, but the reactions were great, and i ended up going out with the prettiest girl in our group, which was what's in the 21st century age. doesn't have to be
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a game changer. if everyone has access to testing and treatment, this disease is manageable problem with visits, even i get messages from other people with hiv, thanking me for speaking out about my status. they'll tell you that they've had hiv for 10 years, but only their mothers know what. so many people are giving up on themselves and their lives. they're convinced that they'll never have a serious relationship or a decent job. and they just end up cutting themselves off from everything. i try to show them that it's not the age of the status that's doing that to their lives. it's their fears that are the problem with it. there's no reason to give up a picture. we are presenting the biggest and darkest perspective of humanitarian aid in the area that we have ever set out. and that is
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a reflection of it as oh, that was the un coordinator for emergency relief. mark local warning that the global pandemic is taking a high humanitarian toll. at the start of this year, his agency thought 170000000 people would need assistance, food, shelter protection. when 2021 rolls around in just a few weeks, that number will be 235000000. that's a 40 percent increase driven almost entirely by the coronavirus. and that hike in human misery has a price tag $35000000000.00. that's around $30000000000.00 euros to tackle widespread hunger poverty and to support civilians caught up in conflict. and there are many conflicts this past few weeks. the world has watched another crisis unfold in northern ethiopia. for nearly a month, federal troops have been fighting, woke with forces in the region, in
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a war that's killed hundreds if not thousands of people, and forced many more to flee. and the government has declared victory over what it calls a rebellion, but it's unclear whether the fighting is truly over. well, that fighting has also displaced thousands of people into neighboring countries, such as sudan correspondent mario mira traveled to the border region. she sent us this report they were lacking after crossing the border from ethiopia to sudan. lathrop or han and her family found refuge in this home. the nearby campus already overcrowded. there they would have had to sleep outside on the ground. that the mayor was, and i thank the owner of this house so much because she doesn't know us. she doesn't know anything about us. but because we were neighbors across the border, she took us in more than 50 people. she'll never forget the moment she
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realized she and her 9 children had to flee their hometown into gray. we cried and our children cried with us when they wept in front of us. the shooting started while we were eating and we just had to leave. even the 6 families live here together that was more than 50 people in one house, among them, a tourist bar, he and her husband, when the fighting and to get out of started, they tried to bring their children to safety. and when the shooting started, i gave my children to our neighbors who had a car to take them with them. since then she hasn't heard anything from them because of our communications blackout and to get i, she can't call the neighbors or people in her village. my children are always on my
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mind. whenever i close my eyes, i see them. the owner of the house studied abraham. it's not the 1st time that she, has welcomed refugees in her home. in the 1960 s., people who fled the war and these people came to us and those all, we don't have much money, but they are our neighbors. so we have to hurt them. many residents of this already poor region have again welcome to obtain refugees in their homes. some of us shelter, only others provide food and water. however, the influx of people here has resulted in instant price hikes. residents tell us vegetables, fruit needs, and even water has become much more expensive. still, they try to help as much as they can for it's the 2nd time that she had to flee her home. she doesn't want the same for her children. i hope my children will have a better life. we're not become like us. i wish they'd go to school study, do their jobs in stay away from politics, elizabeth. fairy, don't you?
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crime fighters are back ever goes. most successful radio drama series continues this season. the stories focus on haiti, each color of prevention and sustainable chocolate production. all of a sow's are available online. and of course, you can share and discuss on africa's facebook page and other social media platforms, crime fighters to mindanao. about this issue when i arrived here, i slept with 6 people in a room. it was hard, i was fair. i even got white hairs that the men in the gym language meant no, not. this keeps me and they help us maybe 2 in truck loads of say, you want to know their story in the mud, spur fighting and reliable information for migrants. give us your
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country, eat a little, we'll make you rich people. oil will provide you with jobs claims the oil will take good care of him. less intends to take place once he 1st took hold on the west coast of come out in 2007, the streets made promises. but years later, reality looks very different. length littered beaches. good drinking water shortage play. i do feel like this is a dead end. is it beautifully a good community that this case has happened to go on? a string of black gold oil promises starts december 4th, w leg cut.
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cut this is g w a y, but from berlin tonight one driver 5 did in the german city of tree or a car plowed through a pedestrian zone at high speeds today, killing 5 people, one of them babies. police say the attack was intentional, but the end of the motives of the driver remain unclear. also coming up the other big pandemic on this world aids day. we'll take you to south africa, where 20 percent of the population live with me
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off. it's good to have you with us tragedy tonight in the german city of tree or police now confirming that 5 people have been killed after an s.u.v. plowed through a pedestrian zone, a 9 month old baby is among the dead. several other people are seriously injured. the driver, a local man is in police custody, but police have not yet been able to say what prompted him to carry out the attack . investigators are hard at work connecting africans earlier that the suspects vehicle was taken away. trailer is a city in shock that our thoughts are with the victims next of kin who have to mourn the death of a loved one. people whose lives were extinguished from one second to the next by
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such a heinous crime. among them is a baby. a truly horrific thought that parents would have to mourn the death of their child. it's just terrible. as i thought, besides the child police say 4 others were killed when the 51 year old local man drove an s.u.v. for around one kilometer through the center of tree or hitting people at random. authorities said he was stopped by police. social media footage showed the man being arrested. investigators said he had consumed a significant amount of alcohol and i'm not sure it's we have no indications that the motive is of a terrorist, political or religious nature. i know under dispute, couldn't it escaped? there are indications that there could be a psychiatric problem involved. sushant pushes, it's
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a bit deep. as is the case across germany, christmas markets have been canceled and trailer, but despite the quiet office fare, police urged people to stay away from the city center on tuesday evening. art. let's get the latest now from our reporter on the ground. louis sanders is ensure good evening to you, lois. what more do we know about the driver in this case? well, we have received many more facts about the driver, but we do know that he was a 51 year old man, a lifelong resident of tree here. now we are told by authorities that he wasn't the owner of the vehicle that the bugle might have been lent to him. it was not under his ownership or his name. and the vehicle was a little s.u.v. where he managed to gain access to this pedestrian area right in front of me and swerved and zigzag and his exact manner in the end.
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and we're looking right now at social media video that has emerged from when police were able to apprehend the, the driver and the police have been adamant about this not being treated like a terrorist attack. right? that is correct. authorities have warned against speculating of the motive they have said that they have no clear indications that this was a politically motivated act. however, when they arrested him, they said that he was significantly intoxicated. how much higher than the legal limit for operating a vehicle. now beyond that, we don't know, but we do know that some authorities have said or state interior minister has said that they are probing psychological issues involved in lewis and you've been able to talk to people there in tree. i mean, what's the mood like there tonight?
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tonight 3 is, is it's a, it's a moment of sadness for the residents, as you can see behind me in front of the, in front of one of the gates of the seawall. many calling people have started lighting candles in a way to pay to remember the victims of this tragic day. and so tomorrow morning people have already started organizing to continue to pay their respects. and it's just a sad day for, for the residents of tree, you know, and very sad day indeed d.w. sluice sanders in the western german city of tree where 5 people confirmed dead in that. but just 3 and, and sat was they all right, here are some of the other stories now that are making headlines around the world. pharmaceutical partners,
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pfizer and by on tech have submitted their coded 1000 bank seemed to the european union for approval. the european medicines agency says that it could approve the vaccine for use in europe within weeks if the data in the application is sufficient . deforestation in brazil's amazon rain forest has surged to its highest level in 12 years, according to official figures. the national research agency says destruction has risen sharply under president gyre bill sonando this year alone, an area of 7 times the size of london has been stripped, bare. a landmark paris bookstore is calling for crisis help. shakespeare and company is a magnet for tourist and parisian xah, like the shops turnover, has fallen by 80 percent since the pandemic began. but orders have flooded in since staff alerted social media to its pli. so that is good news.
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are to peru where authorities have had to impose tight restrictions on public life to curb the spread of the coronavirus. while that may have saved untold numbers of lives, it has been a disaster for businesses in many of their employees to vent their anger. thousands of peruvians took to the streets, raising fears that the protests could in turn, calls a further spike in infections. paolo mccaslin ave knows what touch it means. cupcakes, company was very popular in the capital, lima, but the business was not considered essential. when the lockdown, which is devastated, the peruvian economy began. polow move was among those who had to shut up shop. the pandemic began when we were growing, as were many other businesses in peru, it surprised us. we think that we were going to close for a while, but we had to shut for 76 days. it is affected all aspects of the
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business very deeply. the harsh measures brought in to curb. the coronavirus did not succeed in bringing the number of infections under control. but downtown lima is on recognizable, once busy and bustling streets are now nearly empty and eerily quiet. the crisis has left more than 2000000 peruvians unemployed. the victims some morrow was the health minister at the height of the crisis. he understands that drastic restrictions, although necessary, unsustainable in the long run. precariously ness of family incomes forced people to leave. the conditions on the core unseen were very difficult. no water, no internet, overcrowded homes, no banking, no money,
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state services that could enable people to stay at home or delay. it was only bearable at the beginning, but could not be sustained over time. there is hope that the worst of the pandemic is over the crisis that brought tens of thousands of people on to the streets to demonstrate some fear, the mass protests have been super spreader events that will increase case numbers in the next few weeks. meanwhile, entrepreneurs like polo man, can only hope for an improvement in the business climate. 19 is dominated headlines this year, but there is another pandemic that still affects and kills millions of people around the world. united nations figures show that 38000000 people were living with aids. the last year, almost 700000 have died from the virus,
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but prevention in treatment measures, they are showing promise. in the last decade, the number of new infections has decreased and so has the number of deaths caused by aids or factors that are related to the immune deficiency syndrome. despite the progress recent years, the hiv pandemic is far from over. in south africa, one in 5 people are hiv positive, or corresponded adrian krege sent us this report on a new drug that's raising hopes for more effective prevention. of almost 2 decades, the nonprofit organization hope has been an important point of contact for those living with hiv, like she in the cape town, township of tales. it's true. 2 years ago, luis morris worked in a textile factory, but then her life took a difficult turn. an accident left her, unable to work out the whole problems followed, and then she became infected with h. i feed her pleasure,
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me. and if need be it, my family didn't want to have anything to do with me. after my h. i.v. diagnosis. they cut off contact. and even now if my neighbors knew that i have a chevy, they would only say hi from a distance. they wouldn't invite me to their homes. it means i also keep my distance is not easy being a hiv positive, you have to somehow accept that people behave in a certain way towards you. i find it sad. dr. hughes on rainy, could, is used to hearing similar stories, at least hoffa of the community has a family member that somebody that they know that they can be positive. but it's, but it's so common here. but people don't speak about it. they people are definitely not open about it. they might speak to us about it, and then i'd speak to the service providers about it, but they will,
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they finitely not speak. they. they're not open about the status. they worried about discrimination, although stigma still a massive problem in many communities, south africa has made mess of progress in the fight against hiv aids. over the past years, most people, the vast majority of those living with hiv, know their status and are on medication. and just recently, researchers announced possibly for the good news. the preventative drug prep has been available for several years around 90000. south africans protect themselves against h every infection by taking a daily template. now a study into a similar preventative drug that needs to only be injected every 8 weeks, has found it to be even more efficient. women particularly have many challenges with taking a pill a day. issues of their habits of taking a pill, but also people experience a lot of social pressures. so women are judged as living with hiv. if they're taking pills that look like antiretrovirals,
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they may have judgments about their sexual activity. and partners may feel that they are wanting to be unfaithful, so there are many barriers to taking a pill a day. and what the injections were able to do is overcome some of those challenges by being discreet and convenient. independent researchers also see the injection as an important development, but further research is necessary to find other options to prevent hiv in women. young women are the hardest hit group in south africa. and do you really want to harden some kind of knowledge you lost? you know, so now we, jews are not there hopefully in capetown also believes the injection could be a great help, but it may not be available for a number of us. in the meantime, more argent issues remain due to the culverts. pandemic few a.j. i.v.
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patients are going to kleenex. as a result, the number of new infections in newborns is on the rice, a worrying trend. after all the hard work to stop the spread of the virus. will moon rock may be coming back to earth for the 1st time in more than 4 decades . this time aboard a chinese spacecraft, china's space probe has touched down on the moon surface on a mission to collect geological specimens so that scientists can learn more about the moon's origins. now if the journey is successful in a market giant leap for beijing's space program. oh, before we go, let's have another look at how our top story is developing. here's what we know so far about that car rampage in the german city of tree or at least 5 people have been killed. several injured the state premier confirming that a baby is among the dead. a 51 year old german local was arrested at the scene. authorities say they see no sign that the incident was politically motivated.
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