tv China-USA Deutsche Welle December 31, 2020 4:15am-5:01am CET
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they are men listen attentively as one boy helps them hone their punching techniques mixing in information on their rights with instructions on what to do if a policeman asks for a bribe just stay calm and call him up and that's all for now don't forget you can always visit our web site www dot com for more at any time of the day and you can also follow us on social media as well as handle on social media channels is at the news the covered special is next year on the channel i'll be back with more of the top via. the fight against the corona virus pandemic. has the rate of infection in developing what does the latest research say. information and context the coronavirus update. on t w. children to come
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to it's. one giant problem and we knew it in no mood to see a peek. inside it may lead to a change in the fuel economy. how will climate change affect us and our children. w dot com slash water. using a u.v. lamp to kill the coronavirus that's just one light bulb moment and a multitude of responses to the 19th pollution was repurposed and hand sanitizer at the beginning of the pandemic the speed of innovation amid coronavirus could be a game changer experts say it could. revolutionize global health care allowing us
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to come up with solutions that could change health care delivery. they say necessity is the mother of invention the coronavirus pandemic has thrown that into stark relief from innovations enabling us to live with the realities of the virus to devices that make at sea-tac sion possible here's the story of 2 entrepreneurs who say a diagnosis is just a breath away. rather christoph and thomas wolfe have a vision they want to return some normality to this called in 1000 times for months the been working on a breath test that can identify the novel coronavirus they're now confident it works. from a technical point of view this device can get to areas where normally only a dog can sniff things out. a device that's almost as sensitive as a dog's noles the technique is similar to a breathalyzer. this is
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a stimulus when what we have here is a sterile mouthpiece. and you take off the packaging and then what happens if you blow into the mouthpiece and you just breathe. in there start up the brothers develop highly sensitive sensor technology from aspect meters for industry and labs for a new type of diagnosis in real time in an automatic and we can see all sorts of things using breath analysis like whether a patient had coffee yesterday afternoon or not we can identify his nutritional status we can see different amino acids different fatty acids all of this from the breath breath as a direct window into the human body. the brothers believe it could recognize carbon 19 other researchers also say breath analysis could work in principle to test for the corona virus. the challenge is to is to get the. methods that you run on the equipment the way the equipment is used to chew on
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and the analytical technique optimized with verified biomarkers are reliable. once we've proven that then you have a corrupted 19 breath test ready to go conventional swap tests are reliable but often only carried out when the infection has been there for a while and the result usually takes 2 days the breath test detects metabolic changes in breathing caused by the virus while it is not yet 100 percent reliable it does give an immediate result. the researchers believe that they will be able to deploy the tests as early as next summer in places like football stadiums. passengers could also be tested at airports before check in the accuracy of the test is currently around 80 percent however the researchers are expecting efficiency to increase significantly in the meantime
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a lot of detailed work remains to be done. people are complicated and you're looking for a small signal in a snowstorm a blizzard of information. but we've found we've found the signals we think are helpful young christophe and thomas fault originally developed their test for very different types of bad gnosis one problem with a cover 1000 tests is that they have not yet been able to carry out studies on patients with the virus they are hoping for to go to the next sisters of processors access to resources to allow us to carry out a validation study on the site in a hospital or an airport test center and with that it becomes very easy to determine whether this would be a way to bring back some normality to people's. analyzers could be a way to detect cov in 1000 infections much faster than before. matthew harris joins us now he's a clinical senior lecturer and public health at the cleary all college london
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matthew so glad you can join us now you've written and the scientific journal nature about how the response occulted 19 has been distinguished by so-called frugal innovations what exactly does that mean well thank you go through litigation really is the term that we give to the kind of innovation we see in the resource constraints situations of extraordinary time pressure or situations where we don't have the kind of resources that we normally like to have when we were married develop health care innovations and the word frugal oftentimes is referred to as sort of cheap or good enough innovation but actually frugal innovation is health care of patients that's actually as effective as the kind of innovation you would normally see but just in a way that is far more affordable far more sustainable maybe if you are sort of complexity or functionality but that gets the job and undercoat it of course we've
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seen around the world some extraordinary difficult situations at national level in terms of exposing the fragilities in our health care systems but also the real increase in healthcare demands and it really has necessitated a new type of innovating in innovating a pace rapidly using resources that we just find around us so kind of improvising if you are. this is the kind of innovation that we call through innovation so it's about reacting quickly using what you have but didn't have any examples of what a frugal innovation could be. well absolutely in the early days of the covert response we saw insincerity elop in countries and really interesting examples of frugal innovations so for example where there was a lack of personal protective equipment we saw a clinician's improvised the use of simple acetate sheets the kind of such as a sheet that you'd use for overhead projectors in the old days and by simply
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putting some holes in either side of the essay sheeting threading some ribbon on either side those became very effective face vices to protect not only the clinician but also the patients in front of them and their interfacing and this was of course extremely cheap and actually very very effective since then baseball is a vote and become more sophisticated but it was a very good example of a frugal innovation at the time another good example of innovating at a pace was the construction of hospitals and on the 10 days in china that actually eventually also in the u.k. where i'm from we saw the construction or repurchasing at least of conference center has ensued into intensive care units and hospitals also in very very short amount of time as a sort of idea of repurchasing the resources you have but also very very quickly the characteristic of really innovation now that the crisis has focused minds and
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mobilize so much in terms of responses as you've told us there is also kind of dialed down side to this kind of concentration of response to the crisis. well i think the pope it obviously has recorded a deviation of resources from other health care to focus our attention on covert response and as a result some other areas have have if you like suffered in terms of research going into them and also the health care delivery the different clinical conditions i don't think there's a downside to frugal innovation and i think it's been a really revealing how we've been able to develop such effective health care responses in a short period of time. without spending on safety checks or effectiveness or clinical effectiveness for the patients that we serve so i don't see a downside to truly innovation which tends to be far more fordable the health care
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systems as long as the necessary checks and balances are in place to ensure the safety of those devices or technologies you've written that this kind of innovation could lead to a leveling and global health care equality what does that look like. what is the level in the sense that it has made us really reflect on the fragilities in the health systems even in the high income countries settings and it's made us pay much more attention to the kind of innovations that arise from the low income countries it's something we've been up to pacing for for many years and what code is doing is making us pay more attention to settings that traditionally we haven't really noticed in terms of health care innovation thank you matthew has there talking about putting human resource lowness at the center of arc over 1000 response there's a clinical senior lecturer and public health at the imperial college london thank you for your insights. and now it's time for one of your ascent and questions about the coronavirus our science correspondent derek williams is ready with an answer.
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taking into account to patients sex and age what do the statistics say about complications. one of the clearest pieces of information that's come out of the statistics is that from the age of about 40 on women in general are a lot less likely than men to have severe outcomes data from both the c.d.c. and the european center for disease prevention and control a reveal how stark the difference is this graphic for example emphasizes how much more likely men of a certain age are to end up in the hospital or the i.c.u. numbers of men are represented by the blue bar and a numbers of women by the red one in europe men between 40 and 80 make up around 3 quarters of all intensive care cases and recorded deaths after 80 the split is more
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even but that's almost certainly due to the simple fact that a lot fewer men lived at that age so statistically the chances are a lot higher that in the over eighty's a woman is going to get code 19 been a man is going to get it there's a lot of speculation about why and there doesn't seem to be a single reason that accounts for all of the discrepancy i'm several factors are likely playing roles we know though that people who have diabetes or high blood pressure or heart disease are at greater risk of severe outcomes if they contract covert 19 and aging men are more likely to have those whom were bit at ease than aging women are but another possible contributing factor involves immune response the male and female in humans. different experts say because on their 2nd x. chromosome women have another copy of many of the genes that are involved in
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fighting off disease it's been theorized that's also why women are more likely to develop certain auto immune diseases than men but in this case it could be helping them keep covert 19 or it's medical ramifications more effectively a bad that's hard to prove though. and that's all from us thank you very much for watching and stay safe. in. conflicts you don't hear a lot about saving your fees days but for more than 2 months focus area be compulsed fancy corruption and see government demonstrations by just this week from sofia to speed so such a minister and social focus like she continues are stuck in the junk it's mistreating its most vulnerable people places its human rights over geisha flicks.
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they know that the road is not a solution. their flight could be. going back to sea not an option. and are stuck in the spanish border area. alongside other young people waiting for a chance. that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts january 18th on t.w. . when is the government going to get the message and resign we're getting a lot of different messages from the protests is your government afraid of the truth the you've seen me being afraid of the we understand that there are a lot of problems you don't hear a lot about today in europe these days but for more than 2 months garia has been convulsed by anti corruption anti-government demonstrations for 7 years in a row it's on the dubious distinction of being the most corrupt country in the e.u.
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my guest this week from sofia is the need for a softer of a minister of labor and social policy why does she continue to serve in a government that's mistreating its most vulnerable people in violation of its human rights of negations i mean why has it done so little to crack down on organized crime and the politicians who benefit from. it it's all such about welcome to the conflict zone we've seen more than 2 months of anti government protests sometimes violent when is the government going to get the message and resign. we are getting a lot of different messages from the protests but we are also getting messages from those that are not on the protest actually the protests started months ago but
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they combine that if different messages some of the messages those messages that are for better judicial system or more justice and for fight against corruption is the messages that we hear and we do want to pursue in our politics whether from the opinion polls this is pretty clear 70 percent distrust the government and the personal confidence rating of the prime minister has dropped to just 20 percent the lowest rate in years so the crowds are telling you they don't want you they don't want your new draft constitution they want immediate elections so why not give them to the crowd because there are not more this except 1000 people on the streets and there are more than 1000000 people who have voted for this government and also the regular elections i just showed you what 6 months from today people don't want to
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wait for that they've seen enough corruption they've seen enough brutality on the streets now the violence has been condemned as widely excessive violence by the police including by your own president truman rather he accused your government of actually directing and triggering the violence didn't he at least on one occasion. i wouldn't agree with your strong words about violence because i can i can tell you that there are more than 80 people eastment that are actually now we must be thorough and that kept the against them there's been a lot of violence on behalf of the public and what when we are talking about that all of the president it's really very interesting that actually it's the president that is the the one that must be a king about unity and must be opening alak and on the contrary is actually fueling the violence and he's giving spirit of hatred that's that's quite an accusation to level against your president but it's not shared by the council of europe in
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particular the. commissioner for human rights doña me out of it she talked about numerous reports of police violence against journalists covering the demonstrations several were reportedly beaten up and pepper sprayed when right police clashed with demonstrators violence against journalists she said especially at the hands of state agents is contrary to state's duty to up hold press freedom and to protect the safety of journalists it's pretty sad when you have to be reminded of that isn't that it's pretty set but at the same moment you are a person that is your word for factual television and for factual journalism and i can tell you the fact i'm not actually supporting the strong statements as i told you right now they were more than 80 police people that are in hospital and been out of that he serious violence they were also yellow also on the streets from the plot the sounds there were coffins that were being dealt a number of other. access to it is that they have been we have been witnessing on
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the streets so the council of america doesn't know what he's talking about and your own president doesn't know what he's talking about and you have already though i. don't i try minister so this is not into his head and isn't it you have a dead end here. it's not that then but the objective it is just that we also see everything which is on the street not only what is what suits help recission well president rather has long accused your prime minister of corruption and links with organized crime he's called on him to resign the government government the current government he says is morally finished and it's of the utmost importance that it's formally finished as well he's right isn't it what kind of system is this where the prime minister is pictured asleep in his official residence a gun beside his bed and a draw in his bedside table stuffed full of 500 euro notes what kind of government is this what are your proofs that this this photograph that actually took what are
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the proofs of the president in this respect and is this what is to the reality of war just broadcast in picture is where the prime minister is not on one in the same picture with these. notes of hero and at the same time i think that if we were talking about democracy and if we're talking about superiority of law it's the court that must actually state whether it's true or not but we're coming to the courts in a minute but how helpful is it to the stability of bug area with the prime minister and the president at each other's throat both of them calling for the other one to resign the answer has to be that's not very good for the stability of your country is it. definitely this war between the institutions is not good for the stability but i want to again to to draw your attention to the facts and the facts are very clear 1st of all we have the country at the moment which has very low degrees of
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the g.d.p. due to the crisis it's 8.2 in comparison with other countries when it's at double figures we also care for we have the in top 5 the numbers of unemployment and i can also point to that that the race of the g.d.p. in the last 5 years is nearly double this is not possible in a country which is that we and any corruption it's not possible to see such figures if everything is so rooted then corrupt if you are trying now the conversation well i'm not the only one saying that because you know both pug area and the government you serve in have become by words for corruption internationally corruption mafia capture democratic backsliding and a politically manipulated and almost dysfunctional justice system i wonder why you continue to serve in a government which is so mired in scandal. because this is the government which doubled the teacher's salary in the country this is the government which invested
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2500000000 in only in the education system this is the government which preserved almost 300000 just place in the core if that is this is the government which double the g.d.p. in the last in the last years and also is the government that boston increases the incomes of the people and i don't know like a mismatch about you know the black and white you know your figures are extraordinary g.d.p. growth over the last 10 years has been around 50 percent in contrast to remain which joined on the same day as you the european union has registered an increase of more than 200 percent who explained that you have the lowest average salary in the you with less than $690.00 euro's a month less than bosnia montenegro which aren't even in the e.u. and the european council on foreign relations says it's a sign you've made very poor use of e.u. contingent funds why is that mismanagement and corruption or is a both. this is this is not true because the ligament still in the country when we
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started in the country in the country was 25011 our list expanded and then 11 and when we are talking about the influence of the e.u. france actually the increase of the cell is just that the investment of the eel's nancy's 8.2 percent for the period between 24020 point it is also important that the g.d.p. has increased with 7.7 percent the european finance investment it is once again because i am a minister of lebanon social policy want to measure the level of unemployment which would mean the whole thing or end now is 7.2 percent and jute of the european union france investment it is a lower i phone 6 percent minister last year the us state department said that while you laws provided penalties for corrupt officials the government did not implement that law effectively officials in all branches of government reportedly
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gauged in corrupt practices with impunity that means no consequences so the inescapable conclusion is that you allow this corruption because members of your government and criminals connected to it a profiting by it day by day that's why the state department underlined multiple reports of government corruption and they included bribery conflict of interest elaborate embezzlement schemes for kilmeny violations and influence trading this is full service corruption right across the spectrum of your government did you think the world would notice what was going on. i can tell you that in the last year is the commission for fighting against corruption and confiscating of illegal aquatic property yes that damn the bit but eliminated precautions for all out the 1000000000 lever and yes that means that more than 1000 different the checks and editions of different officials on different levels including local and national
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government there what i'm saying good government official not a single senior government official or major crime bosses been indicted on corruption charges why is that that your court case is and then not finished yet but i can also point to that part of the felt this and i mean once again reminding but the protests after i'm beat by a person who is now trying to escape justice from bulgaria because the phone not bathe. in the country for more than 700000000 you know you keep telling me about what you've done on the subject of corruption but last year the center for the study of democracy in your own capital in sofia so that at least 35 percent of public procurement contracts involve corrupt practices that's 35 percent more than a 3rd this is the kind of country that you've turned bug area into and you still think you should stay on in government transparency international regs your country as the most corrupt in the european union and has done for the last 7 years
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consecutively. why don't we call it then you know but only that in this respect then the statistic which they have they have announced that for example 58 percent of the respondents in the area say that in the everyday life they didn't met that option and that actually according to europe or with that our country with 3 percent lower production rate then in comparison to 2017 well i don't know which you're a barometer you're looking at but the one last year said that 80 percent according to it 80 percent think that there is widespread corruption 78 percent think that the only way to succeed in business is to have political connections these are statistics that would shame any developing nation around the world let alone a member of the european union exactly the same europe permit the sense that 28 percent of the respondents say that they are actually seeing that action in the every day and 58 percent say that they have not been in not actually that option in
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their in their lap and getting well i don't know if the as you using i wonder if you actually listen to the views of the people out on the streets or are you just interested in digging around in your heels and hanging on to your government salaries to listen to what actually people are saying on the streets about you yes we do not and as i don't know on the street there is no one united view and that is no one united group of people i think nation may be a common slogan plenty about him but there are different people with different motives there those the young people the people that are actually looking for better judicial system and that one more vigorous fight that absent those voices we hear and we want to respond to them you have to join us according to the u.s. state department you're not doing anything about it you're providing opportunities for full scale full spectrum corruption within the government itself. i wouldn't agree with that and i don't know that they're talking about either wells was or
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what they're talking about the rest of the what he's talking about the e.u. doesn't know what he's talking about nobody seems to understand you very well do they let very honestly of the country once again and i'm telling you that in a country where the incomes that being increased where the employment rate is lower and let the g.d.p. is being increased you cannot eat about the pandemic corruption because these figures cannot be achieved if there is such. enormous and any corruption so you say minister why is so there's so little respect in your government for the free press which is after all the bedrock of any democratic state the council of europe commission dunja many out of age noted last year the continued deterioration of media freedom in bulgaria she cited nontransparent media ownership heris mint of journalists including the use of defamation suits against them why do you allow this to go on more than 60 percent of the media coverage in the area is critical
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against the government they wouldn't say that this is this is like a freedom of press freedom house reported that when a pro-government journalist and politician and milk look of was appointed last year to head bulger in national t.v. all the critical voices were silenced so with the nova broadcasting group new owners came in investigative journalists were fired you clearly have no interest in a press that holds your politicians to account to you. i wouldn't agree with just as well because in one of the most popular shows on the get a national television distracted for example was one of the main leaders of the opposition and one of the main leaders of the protests and actually every single day that a protester on the book at a national television and people can free to express what they think about the government and what they think about the media you know get a yes but don't investigate them don't hold them to account for corruption earlier this year reporters without borders accused your government of trying to intimidate
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journalists it said they've been subjected to a series of verbal attacks and threats by very senior officials since the beginning of february they talked about the prosecutor general the speaker of the national assembly why this constant intimidation is your government afraid of the truth do you do you see me being afraid of the truth we do understand that there are a lot of problems and that we need to do a lot in the fight about that option and they sound very little about it and have done very little about it in the time that this party has been in power very little 1000 the additions 1000 provisional the 1st senior government officials you say that this is a little and how many sentences and how many sentences are many people have been sentenced now do you think that in the final major crime boss or no major government official has been said they think that in the fight in the fight against corruption we don't receive. such warrants that we see now at the moment given the
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fight against corruption is not only something that increases the rating of the government lets you you belittle and insult journalists during a press conference in sofia on february 4th your prime minister likened reporters especially female reporters to turkeys and then he grotesquely tried to mock them by making sounds imitating the way turkeys gobble is that how you respect the free press in your country. our prime minister just isn't specifics in his language and he didn't meant still be able to any of the journalists any disrespect i don't think that this is a serious accusation about that about lack of freedom of press well this year your country is ranked 100 and 11th in the world press freedom in that's the lowest ranking of any you member country and way lower than countries like kenya and angola you're not ashamed that you score so low on these key indicators for the moccasin like free press and very much
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a story for the fact that the getting continues to be with the negative coverage you know of the foreign media but i do believe that if we really object if we are going to see that light again as i mentioned to you before is not so black and white 60 percent of the average in bulgaria is negative about the government every journalist at least 3 supposed to talk about the government banned the use of social media in the countries really enormous including the us consumption of internet media and internet media is that it meant that it's all about the minister what's of particular concern is your human rights record in bulgaria and the impression that fundamentally go safeguards for citizens appeared to be missing at the end of 2017 the un committee against torture reported that the or thirty's often failed to inform arrested people of their rights in criminal proceedings that
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actively discouraged by manipulation threats and ill treatment from accessing those rights what's more in excess of 70 percent of detainees don't have access to a lawyer when those criminal trials begin and some don't even have a lawyer at any stage in those criminal proceedings to say any of that strike you as fair and what kind of state he running where you permit things like that to go on. ministry of justice in the yeti and also the other institutions that are supposed to be taught what about these problems they're working very hard on this as a minister of labor there's a minister of social policy i'm in charge for people with disabilities people with mental can be kept and also elderly people and for example in the public $1000.00 crisis. but getting a case managed to preserve the life of most of the of the people who have been now at the moment to not take yes interest in centers or people with disability with people with dementia out of 60000 people who have been in these centers only for
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example and 54 where you are not on her rational thought my question was about the lack of legal representation for people in your justice system it's a pretty shocking lack or 70 percent of detainees don't have access to a lawyer when those criminal trials begin i don't know about this biggest but i can tell this to the don't you read the report at the international report her size your coming here what's next that you're rated this bigger because that i'll ever get a lot of lawyers in the area that also is. this case is the committee against torture so the one in every 3 people detained in a police stations are subjected to abuse there which may be they say of such severity as term and to torture a main clue beating handcuffing to immovable objects and the use of truncheons i thought all this stuff was supposed to end when the communists left it doesn't seem to have ended at all you seem to perpetuate this kind of treatment and i'm
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wondering why as i still think this is that it was actually exaggerated and it's not exactly true you can also see that during selling un is lying about you now the un doesn't know what they're talking about human rights council committee against torture they don't know what they're talking about they don't talk to people they don't do research they simply make all this up to them and you do not believe that the geopolitical interests sometimes when we are talking about the area and international image about the get a bill that has no interest in making up stories about you. full stop and no interest whatsoever i'm sorry but you can always dull facts from certain cases and you can always say that this is the system but the system is not like this and i can tell you this as a person police already thought the 7 years in but yet you have ample that means 16 years old when the plumbing is spelled and i can tell you that that is the demanders improvement from 1998 until today well since you're in
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charge of social care and people with mental disabilities let me join your attention to another report which came from the un committee against torture which is particularly shocking because it involves the excessive use of medication and chemical restraints on people on inmates and the forcible administering of intrusive and irreversible psychiatric treatment and therapies such as neuroleptic drugs without any attempt to gain consent from the people who are subjected to these treatment this is going on in your mental institution and frankly it's inhuman isn't it how do you permit that this report is particularly with this report that i am aware of it or it's about it concerns free particular institutions this institutions will be closed and all the people in this institution will be displaced intell then yes then there is the close when will they be closed they will last until the end of this month we are working already on that and together
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with the philosophy of the general we started that edition of all the east editions all mentalities of the temple people in if we see that there are other it's just like this oh yeah that institutions will be well how about how you know because there is no independent monitoring another fact brought up by the committee against torture you have no independent special monitoring mechanism for mental health institutions we're working very closely with the non-governmental organisations sense from the 1st of september we have established the mage's young quality of social services i would like to paint out the beauty. the europeans only that it is due to our politics at the moment in the area there are no institutions for children with mental disabilities and we are just at in the process of the institutionalization where all the people with mental disability as well minister is pretty shocking you've been in the for 10 years and you still have these institutions which administer forcible forcibly administer intrusive and irreversible psychiatric treatment and therapies such as neuroleptic drugs another
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trick which the communist authorities used to do on people on dissidents and people who didn't agree with them this is been going on for 10 years and you tell me your only now getting round to doing something about it why why have you let this happen for so long the last 3 terms of you this prime minister and this party in power and nothing was done about it last night it's what in the midst of level of social policy was 25 years ago then we get more than 50000 children in the institutions now we have no more than a 2500 children that are being i'm not talking about children i'm talking about every has and then look how long it took us to the process of the institutionalization and to say today that we don't have any more institutions for children now is that the process for elderly people and for people with mental disabilities and i am confident that in between 5 to 7 years we're going to and this is between 5 and 7 years at the time of your country's accession you promise
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to respect and govern according to the values of the european union those included human dignity freedom democracy equality rule of law respect for human rights things that still do not pertain and are still not respected in your various institutions like prisons where people are being mistreated and like these mental institutions where you've acknowledged that the mistreatment is still continuing i wouldn't agree with you that we don't respect is that yours because i don't i don't see that this is a problem of the whole system yes that's the case in which we don't see these the last respects and in this case this we act immediately and severely. all right their needs are thank you very much for being with us.
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for. 30 minutes on d w. reading the jack koch becoming a mushroom in and. one in free us citizens bed song the big one dreaming about a life of luxury. but every good winner ends up broke how do people cope with unexpected well. jackpot the curse of the last. in 75 minutes on t.w. . they're going to unofficial estimates more than 1200000 venezuelans live in colombia legally and illegally. already at all why return to fast way of. to visit friends is that i don't think i'd ever go back there to
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live you know what i live there again i don't know so i'm not sure. witness global news that matters. made for mines. of story of prejudice and propaganda. they were called the rhineland bastards. and their mothers were germans living in the occupied dry land their fathers soldiers from the french colonies the face half of german children had a hard time and because they were a reminder of the german defeat. they grew up in a climate of national pride and racism if the european population felt that it was important to be mine and to stay by ties. exclusion and contempt culminated in forced sterilization under the nazis. this documentary examines the few traces that remain of their existence. if shane.
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starched 11th on d. w. . the big. this is the news live from bird that they knew in china open then markets brussels and beijing seal an investment deal after 7 years of talks that is the e.u. putting business before human rights also coming up did late splosion retrieve him and other air force the likely target a plane carrying the country's newly formed a unity government. that became your lawyer strikes out against police brutality in
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