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tv   Glaubenssachen  Deutsche Welle  January 3, 2021 6:03pm-6:30pm CET

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to prepare its health brit's vaccine rollout it plants inoculate around 300000000 people on a priority list this year but with a population of 1300000000 the country has its work cut out. all restrictions and lock downs have also had a huge impact on young people in particular how have they been dealing with it and how has it changed their lives to reporters at talk to for young people living here in berlin. if i think of to. think of. most of the grant money going to get there is you don't know how this is called. so bad for. you. i have. learned quite a. bit of my friendship my. presentation.
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off and just wanted to make sure you think. there is an effect and that nothing. misdirect in these especially. can then comes. a lot of my work travel with teaching and performing so since khurana happened it cancelled almost all of. those of. the boys. committed on those. bus you see as i was to get. the point of where i
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was really. i think it was just in the last straw of my bank account. i really didn't have any means to pay for the next rent or to have money for my you know for my groceries and at some point i really just worked my boy. and i was just here by myself playing music and i was dancing and i was letting go i was letting all of my emotions out. or you can file i would bush got on does bush then use does mention if label on those who follow mentioned are. owned. by jews or.
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it can be a good thing because all of us must use a mentions act. called border live in physics and. learn from. by listening to reception. and how to from a room of info to someone. misreads for that kind of lived. and joining me now is on higher ed it read cannot clinical psychologist in the u.k. who has worked with children and young people for more than 2 decades going to welcome during this pandemic what are the major issues that have come up time and again when young people come to you for help. well what does come up time and time again whatever the age of the child or the teenager is that lack of social contact that we are all missing being with our friends and particularly when we think by teenagers being with friends and be accepted by a peer group is essential for your development so it all missing that what i'm
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seeing in my sessions is an increase in social anxiety so instead of being able to be with people in the face to face contact from them instead people are sitting at home in the mobile phones and they're worrying that they said something wrong or upset somebody and that people don't like them because they're not messaging them so a lot to social anxiety getting up but also what i've noticed is this sort of sense of resilience going out but also being challenge to say children are realizing how much they can actually deal with when it comes to disappointment and change and and certainty but what they're missing out what is that kind of development of opportunities where they can test themselves out try things out and realize that they're going to be a case if example exams tests and all could social situation doing something you dread and then the relief of having done it is that's all being flattened down so this there's a lot of difficulties i think children young people are experiencing as a result of this and i think what we've got to remember is that children are
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incredibly resilient actually developing a lot of wonderful skills at the same time but it's good to hear but do we know what sort of long term effects things like social anxiety could have on children's futures. that's what we don't know because we haven't ever been in a situation like this and it's being closely monitored in research by groups around the world which is brilliant but certainly when we think about individuals experiences what we do know is that children and young people can go through some really really difficult times and yet come out stronger more grateful more resilient so all we can imagine is that this is going to be the case around the world that actually these young people whose lives they've got on hold for a little while they change gear things aren't quite going the way that they thought they would that the actually developing incredible skills that will really see them through the rest of their lives and once we get through the next 6 months that hopefully life will return to normal in a society changed but we didn't know if normality that young people today have to
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show exactly what their potential is and what they can do and as we do go into these difficult times ahead what would you tell parents about how to help their children deal with all of this. is really really tricky because you've got parents are incredibly anxious and worried and unsure and stressed and busy and of course all of these feel things filter down to their children so i would say is that as a parent it's important to try to make better because we can't we can't promise our children that it's organ better next week or even 2 weeks 2 months time what and i don't understand thank you very much for coming on the show i'm afraid we'll have to leave it there thank you so much for joining us. returned absent the other stories making news around the world thousands have turned out in baghdad iraq for a mass rally marking one year since a top iranian commander was killed there general hossam saw a money and an iraqi our light were killed by a u.s. drone strike on january 3rd at 2020 escalating tensions between washington and its
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supporters in the middle east. at least 18 people have died after a roof caved in at a crematorium in northern india officials say dozens of mourners attending a funeral had taken shelter from heavy rain under the structure when it collapsed the cause was not clear but local authorities have promised to investigate. police in norway say the death toll has risen it to 6 people following a landslide in northeast of all slow rescuers are still searching for 4 others a still missing since wednesday when the ground under the villages suddenly gave way the landslide is the worst in a modern norwegian history. and after one of the most a bitterly fought elections in modern u.s. history and you session of congress is a formally convening you're looking at live pictures from washington d.c. there you have it the 1st time that new members of the u.s. house and senate will officially take their seats the democratic party's dancey
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palosi is expected to remain in charge of the house of representatives and for now republican mitch mcconnell still controls the senate but that could all change if democrats win 2 special elections in a georgia on the things really the rights you saw you have new members being sworn in there in those pictures let's go now for more to washington d.c. and our correspondent carolina buia good to see you what is on the agenda for the new congress today. happy new year claire well a new congress convenes now here in washington d.c. on this 117th congress of the united states the official swearing in of lawmakers is taking place a congress is also coming together for the 1st time and so they will 1st have to go through all the organization off the congress and they will be adopting i minister t. for solutions they should also a consent to a date on which bills and resolutions may begin to be introduced and they of course
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are going also to vote their new speaker the democrat nancy pelosi as you said she seeks reelection again but it will all depend on how many democrats are able to assist with a joint session because they all have to vote in person in washington on the floor today and this is different than the last bill so that could be a vote by proxy so that means they were allowed to vote from wherever they were allowing someone else to cast their ballot in person but this was due to the pandemic now they need a new ruling for that and because of this the gathering has to be in person so the vote as well and it will all depend on how many democrats are going to be in washington today in order to vote pelosi we also know that democrats have lost some seats in the house but they still control it and the senate is now really clear it that's right colleen i understand in addition to those procedural changes it's also
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an unusual situation because it still remains unclear whether democrats or republicans will control the senate what's the story there. that's a very interesting story because there are just a run of it is in 2 days on the 5th of january and we're going to see 2 democrats and to republicans running for 2 seats in the senate and if the democrats if they do win olthuis seats they would control the senate why because they would have half of the seats there and this would give the vice president that means kamala harris a democrat the last word on the votes there we know that a lot of people have already cast their mail in ballots similar to the presidential election and we also know that kamala harris is there today in georgia and donald trump is expected probably tomorrow in atlanta and so what does the outcome of georgia runoff mean for president elect joe biden's agenda and his ability to get his policies passed through congress this is of
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course very important claire because this will decide if president biden can pass bills and 3 forms or if he is going to be a so-called elaine being blocked constantly in the upper temper by the republican senators and he would be one of the 1st presidents in many here to become a president without the majority in this hour per chembur so this will definitely be a very important election the one in georgia in 2 days apparently and we also have a situation where there are about a dozen republican lawmakers saying they're going to object to the formal certification of the presidential election that's an effort to overturn a biden's victory and briefly if you could how big of a threat is that really to the biden administration. these are trial senators there they are being lead by ted cruz from texas at but they probably are not going to have a real big impact on electing unseeing joe biden as
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a president are not this is much more an election to see a test to see who is supporting donald trump and who isn't and this is a quite a question that say is really behind that carolina chinmoy in washington d.c. thank you so much. and as you news update at this hour i'm claire richardson in berlin community thanks for watching. parachute drama competition while marketing numbers atmosphere by at time intuition love hate money millionaires fans from circumstance and friends. on you tube join us. then you may know yes yes we can hear you in her last years german song so we'll bring you uncle a man called and you've never heard her before surprised to so with what is
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possible who is medical really what moves. who talk to people who follows her along the way but myron's and critics alike how is the world's most powerful woman shaping her legacy joining us from eccles law stops. this week on the world stories. dangerous abortions in kenya. a stork layover in the jordan valley. but we begin in germany even corona infections that only. until mild symptoms can cause lifelong consequences a young woman tells her story. pretty good and is battling the long term
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effects of coated 19 when she became sick in march she had few symptoms but it's now devastated her life pretty confident i think. i only became really ill months later in june. but at the time i thought that everything would eventually be fine but things didn't improve i was extremely ill for many many weeks which turned into months and i never got better. is what a nice. pic he is one of 40 coded survivors here suffering from long term effects of the illness germany's baltic sea coast their symptoms are being treated at a rehabilitation center. after the virus piggie felt burnt out she suffered from dizzy spells chronic pain. in some cases i also had cognitive difficulties that my head wasn't functioning
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properly i couldn't hear and poor vision and couldn't follow conversations well. often covert patients like peggy say their concerns aren't being taken seriously by the doctors. it's very difficult for some doctors to understand when they look at me i look healthy physically i'm reasonably strong at least i appear to be and then you get dismissed very quickly they say her mind is not ok. i'm not afraid but i still wonder if i will ever be the same again. as a coded survivor peggy has officially recovered from the illness but she says it feels like corona virus has stolen her healthy body and left there with
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a sick one in its place. the world is just falling apart because of the pandemic right now at the moment life is dramatically different for everyone. i think i'll be a different person than i was before. that's ok. peggy grant has 3 more weeks of rehab ahead of her all she wants to do is get back to a normal life again. according to experts more than 1000000 people mostly beakers are being held in detention camps in motion jiang region in china despite this faux bargain in the only major car manufacturer that has a factory there. a room key the capital of china's western shin jang province home to we goes and other news limine already this is one of the most heavily policed
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regions in the world china's repressive policies against ethnic minorities have been called a genocide by some a room key is also home to german carmaker folks flagons most controversial investment v.w. is the only international car maker to have a plant in the region. we made the decision to build this factory more than 10 years ago it was a decision made solely for economic reasons there was no political motivation the fact there is no in a politically and socially sensitive environment worries us. china has covered the region with a massive system of prisons internment centers and reeducation camps australia's e.s.p. i instituted has documented 380 facilities across the region hundreds or thousands possibly millions have disappeared in these facilities. and a recent visit i was constantly followed around and stopped from throwing some of
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the facilities are official prisons some are unmarked and some are cynically designated as vocational training centers. some are country occurs at born in china has spent several months in one of the so-called vocational schools and 20. what they had to learn there had little to do with professional skills he says. we make it in this camp we had to sing the chinese anthem and other communist songs. they taught us that china was the strongest country in the world and we had to study materials about the 19th communist party congress. that's in there it was. china is portraying the master tensions as a means to provide opportunities on the job market but there is growing evidence of forced labor inside the camps or after release and former detainees have been forced to sign up with employment agencies v.w. says there's no indication of forced labor in its operations shipped lot if you act
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here but we hire all our employees directly they send their resume and we have a job interview and then they hate charge apartment and the operating department make a decision based on the resume and the impression they gave what has happened to them before is something that is hard for us to know this stuff that's yes it's through extreme shriya and after 40 w. says it will stick to its investment but the control this is likely to remain economically w.'s investment never paid off instead of planned 50000 vehicles a year it's open is below 20000. in kenya terminating pregnancies is only permitted under specific circumstances every day women die as a result of illegal abortions and aid organization is trying to improve the situation. we call her mercy but that's not her real name
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she was 16 when she fell pregnant she was scared because she knew her mother would not allow her to keep the baby her mother forced her to have an abortion now for fear of repercussions mercy hides her face. i went to a local medicine man i stayed there for 3 days he gave me herbal medicine and i took it. that way. on the 2nd day i started seeing blood and i was very afraid. there are people who were bored and they seemed fine. i thought i would die. the she was lucky many girls and women don't survive such ordeals it's estimated that in kenya 7 women die each day from unsafe abortions like the one mercy had marginalized and poor women are especially vulnerable such as those here in the math or islam abortions are illegal in kenya there are only a few strict exceptions women cannot simply go to the nearest hospital for help
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instead they come to this man he's well known for carrying out abortions along with other procedures even though he has no medical training he's respected in his community as a christian medicine man for people who can't afford hospital treatment mercy says she came to him to she paid the equivalent of 8 year olds for the abortion we ask the man directly he denies performing abortions but still wants to hide his identity. bringing you know if you do it in the government finds you you'll be jailed and i refuse that. nevertheless he knows exactly how an abortion is done i'm not. given an injection drug and they're sent home so the pregnancy can terminate there many of these women die if there are lucky they do die if they're lucky the pregnancy terminate safely it's usually bad however if. they resign i mean
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by that's why in most cases the women need professional help after the abortion international aid organization marries stopes office around the clock help for women who can't afford hospitalization yet but with so much experience this and therefore will finally put in that we talk to the counseling part we also offer emergency treatment which includes. we give you a to about 6 pain killers and even sometimes you have to security theater if the injuries that have happened to the will of course mercy would have preferred to have seen a real doctor 3 years later she's still suffering from the traumatic experience i mean is this image i would save someone wanted to get an abortion they should go to a hospital. because those men would just give you some kind of medicine and then tell you when the pregnancy has been terminated they only want your money in the end you're the one who has to suffer in
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a battle. despite the stigma she faces from her community she thinks every woman should have the right to a safe abortion. the white stork which is native to germany flies each year from europe to south africa and back. many of them avoid the route over the mediterranean and take a pit stop in the jordan valley. time for break for flocks of white storks in the jordan valley and the occupied west bank at dawn on you thought of just yasi leshem is up early to observe the birds at this huge garbage dump twice a year distorts navigate their way thousands of kilometers from europe to southern africa and back israel and the palestinian territories are like a bottleneck they're one of the main micro tare routes for millions of birds.
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because they avoid to fly over the mediterranean so we are like a highway of course or treasure between 3 called good and so we are lucky to have in fact 600000 stalks y.c. year over year all that almost all the world population of whites talks about how that $50000.00. 60000. so we are lucky to be in the best high rate of the job and still. rather than taking the shorter route over the many to reigne and like smaller birds stalks fly over land to catch up board streams of warm pockets to write a thermos to conserve energy. the landfill is like a pit stop for the storks to just stay for the night to rest to feed and gather strength before setting off on the next leg. if you go last 10 years they will to look for. that you are places where you catch
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a thief but for garbage that of course they have plastic bags and stuff like that which is of course very generous but the goal will be easy for although bird migration happens twice every year it still amazes he was studies to birds for decades unlike most humans to storks don't need g.p.s. to arrive at their destination it's time for this truck to take off every day they fly between 302500 kilometers next stop the egyptian sinai before they continue their exhausting journey towards their winter home in southern africa.
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