tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle January 11, 2021 1:00am-2:01am CET
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racism. if the european population felt that it was important to be white and to stay right by supply. exclusion and contempt culminated in forced sterilization under the nazis. this documentary examines the few traces that remain of their existence we call them the children. storage january 11th on d w. but the news and news are our top stories indonesian a search teams have located the flight data recorders of a passenger plane that crashed into the java sea on saturday 62 people were on board investigators hope the data will clarify why the jet came down just minutes after takeoff from jakarta. a. populist candidate cited to power off as one
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kurdistan's presidential election of by in large majority reportedly received more than 80 percent of the vote to power of has been the interim president since the collapse of the previous government following violent protests last october has promised an end to corruption in the central asian country which is a close ally of russia. several 1000 people rallied against her on a virus restrictions in the czech capital prague saying the closure of restaurants hotels and other businesses has weighed on the economy and triggered a rise in unemployment and poverty the demonstrators called on the government to lift the restrictions the czech republic has seen high infection and death rates in the most recent search of coke at 19. this is due to the news from berlin follow us on twitter and instagram at g.w. news or visit our website news dot com.
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for. more. news welcome to a walk in the dark find out what these 2 were trying rivers are looking for in the forest later on in the show. hi everyone and welcome to this special edition of your acts as we explore the mysteries of the night i'm your host mainly here's a look at what's coming up. this german artist it manages to see the unseen . and a look at an old submarine bunker in france which has a magical charm of its own. but 1st nightingales aren't the only creatures inspired by the night for their songs
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many musicians are also the most creative when other people are tucked away in their beds and that includes danish artist alan s. oba for her latest album myopia she withdrew tourist judio alone except for instruments and composed during the night for 2 years well the results are melancholic pop songs but since the coronavirus pandemic put a stop to her world tour we met up with the singer and songwriter in berlin to hear why she prefers to create her music in the still of the night. when night falls in berlin and his whole world starts getting creative. and. the danish musician wrote most of her new album veiled here at night she walked the
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empty streets of her adopted hometown berlin in search of inspiration. think alike and i because. i am no way turned. into opposite so. it's also a time when you're alone with your own thoughts he can't run away from. sort of the moment of truth and i. 'd as ople composers her songs by herself in her private studio.
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can get this feeling that you are left all alone and everybody's forgotten about here so in a way it can feel completely left i don't annoy and i think i like that. for making music. she often starts with an improvised melody. 'd and i wrote that and i thought oh my god that like a story like somebody. just telling a story like this to. construct their story around a melody and then there are holes. in the system and jumping with it i'm going to. give you what i mean.
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the artist has released 4 studio albums since 2010 she hasn't burned up any charge but she's gained a worldwide following with her delicate often melancholy songs they've been streamed millions of times. a week she often writes her lyrics using a special technique putting them up on a corkboard world. and found this technique you know start with the songs sometimes the line just one line can take forever. and then this would make. and send them to feel like work within the song. she complements such classical instruments as the cello in piano with digital effects in her compositions sometimes her pitched voice is barely recognizable.
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and she spends months publishing in honing her sounds you know when you 1st. hear the song and somehow. just that close to that and maybe over at something else and. then i'm happy. for live appearances she arranges her nocturnal solo sessions as concert pieces to be performed with several accompany mr pierce the rehearsals for a tour that was interrupted by the corona virus epidemic we have been playing for the people. and they develop also on your ideas and you have like and that some will move in and supply. and feels like it's not a community center a something real tangible. or recorded day or night
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in a school transports listeners into a world of your only dreaming sounds. the artist and our next report has put paper rushes aside in favor of light as his medium instead the work of have yet reality is based on geometrical light projections on various landscapes and then he uses photography to capture the images which resemble something out of this world if it sounds complicated that's because it is but we met up with rare in madrid to hear more about his artistic process. 3 dimensional sculpture
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holographic these terms described as light installations by have yeti had a geometric shapes of the spanish artist's trademark he projects them onto landscapes with astonishing results it's not a moment or so i'm always seeking these almost magical moments in my works is the interview you know i'm trying to find out whether there is a harmonious relationship between geometry and nature morning. you know something a harmony that would move us emotionally and which goes beyond our normal perception of nature. in riyadh as career began in 2008 with a large solo photography exhibition in the rain as sophia in madrid since then he's carried out like projections in numerous public spaces and festivals.
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is installations are more than simple entertainment for him. one sometimes i feel the sort of reverberation which goes beyond our daily perception and beyond how we normally experience nature seymour's throughout the us then there's not a lot those moments are precious and very fulfilling for me is an expert in financial done i'd even go so far as to say i live for these kinds of experiences. bebo body said the ball experiences. elemental tranquil and any magic that's how the artist experiences unspoiled nature he tries to make the sensation visible in his projections and takes large scale photos of the results. at 1st glance the viewer sees these 2 crosses at 2 deaths. but they are actually
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part of a cube the corners of which i've removed. but there's a shadow of that cube in the viewer's mind. and in a similar way there's an enterprise between the projected form and nature feel. after finding a landscape d.n.r. starts designing his geometric forms in his madrid studio they follow strict mathematical rules he wouldn't think of using image editing software to superimpose them on a landscape photo he works on site. your seemed a good one the old boy remember me the right geometry compliments the place. you can't do that on a computer but when i finished a geometric form it will look like there's a key to another dimension you can't get that effect on screen and you have to be in the place and experiment with the shape on site. is pretty mental physical and.
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d.n.a. usually works with standard projectors which he arranges and adjusts in his studio to test out his projections on walls. this gives him a 1st impression. but if i don't watch of course us i'll prepare everything as thoroughly as i can but then when the distances are much further everything might change. sometimes the image on site will look completely different than what. tonight conditions in the mountains outside madrid are ideal thanks to a full moon. has a natural light source for his long exposures together with his artistic process the resulting photo acquires a magical quality. so we turn our attention now to another artist who like the musician on us although uses
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the night as her inspiration german painter board heads out into nature after dark to as she puts it see the unseen well even in the dead of night she still manages to bring nothingness to life in the landscape around her we went along with her to witness the results. through the night and endorsed. equipped only with a gas lamp a compass and a paints and brushes she seeks out isolated spots where she can paint the night sky . while most people lie snug in their beds she gets to work sometimes 3 or 4 nights a week the circumstances allow. the slightly off their fall on my list but i often ask myself why do i paint the night. but it's simply a realm of experience that daytime can't offer all the things i see in daylight or
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just so much distraction. up there and enough at night to see more surfaces than textures i see more nothing than anything. it's the. feeling that mists it's a seer and so i have the freedom to interpret it any way i want and i wanted to teach the subject she's painting this particular night it is the vast complex of the law in a works their lives with all its refineries and chemical plants. why not just join is just so extremely illuminated. it's lit up like a festival and the best benoist on. not many places are truly dark at night since the introduction of electric lighting cities an industrial areas are as bright as day even in the dead of night or. this light pollution or light smog the strips are
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sleep and the saurians many nighttime creatures. walk on me violent i feel ambivalent about light smog because from an artistic perspective i find it interesting and attractive. but from the standpoint of reason of course i know it's a disaster. the buildings of a former cotton mill in leipzig provide space for artists like the internationally acclaimed painter neeraj. silk a borg also has her studio here. she generally doesn't show up until the afternoon she sleeps through most mornings and often will make it to bed before 4 am the next day. the works that take shape overnight in the field get their finishing touches here. these are all found out when thank when i start out i think this is crazy what am i doing this is absurd.
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but when i'm on site i forget about all the effort and i become part of the night. before and. i'm absolutely fascinated by how the night swallows everything up looked on and suddenly makes the 10 people become intangible. when soca 1st started painting the night 10 years ago she was trying to find out how to perceive the surroundings. later she better own lightning books and paper the night sky in various places from portugal in the south of europe to denmark in the north. and with dark ties in with a long tradition in the arts. so bored can't even imagine painting anything but the night she'd like to put the northern lights over iceland on canvas. and the luminous and seeds off in the knees or the darkest nights of africa or the bright star is skies over the other comet desert in south
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america. the paper the many faces of darkness more than one lifetime she says. if you would like to see long. versions of our euro max reports including travel videos and adventure sports then be sure to check out our you tube channel there is a closer look at what you find there. want to learn more about european lifestyle and culture. when you come to the. euro might. take the plunge and want to try. and please work crazy join to break destroy. your romantic. subscribe so you don't miss it. what happens to cars when they are no longer fit for the road well they usually make their way to the junkyard 1st scrap metal
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others though might be abandoned in faraway places while 2 german photographers have made it their mission to track down these old unwonted vehicles and document their final resting place and they will travel far off the beaten path long after nightfall in their search for them. me sneaking through the undergrowth at night looking for rusty cars. flown and tend to a box the older and more derelicts the car the better. like this ford town a 17 am from the 1960 s. abandoned in the middle of a forest. doesn't show up in this and it's quite emotional the cars have personalities a voice a face and eyes and that's why i feel closer to them than to other objects somehow . and they're a bit like skeletons like you find in archaeology the remains of
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a car. this is me that's right and at some points what this was like a 2nd skin for someone. cars in their final resting place the 2 photographers have even published a book with 110 photos of forgotten car racks. they found them in abandoned garages barns and backyards amongst other places. and territory got to know each other while studying photo design in the late eighty's. they are always hunting for a new motifs for their lost cars projects together. does photo stories around the world sometimes staging fast cult cars. to flown takes photos for companies and experiments with artistic concepts. the last cars is
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a joint project which sometimes requires long trips. they keep the exact locations to themselves. we need to keep the locations a secret because otherwise the vultures will be circling the wrecks of the popular rare car the danger of it being taken apart clearly is very real bodies dripping. true. looking for car wrecks is often detective work onsite. like here in the i phone south of cologne a move overseas a tip from a friends that an old for town us disposed of sometime in the seventy's is supposedly located somewhere close. there was no waste disposal here who would waste wasn't picked up in the steam up there is this village's dump site a few people used to dump their waste there if you keep going down this road there used to be a really big dump site there they dumped everything there isn't cars bicycles
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anything. is missing today this would entail a hefty fine us with the if you put it. in the twilight hours the 2 photographers enter the forest. and move and need the darkness for their photos. only then can they completely control the lighting using torches and remote controlled flashes. going to give you that there's a certain dramatic atmosphere about the situation which you want to support and at some point you realize that it's really beautiful to eliminate the interior of cars because they seem to come alive. to your door bart takes 4 shots using time exposures. the camera automatically lays them on top of one another. known shines lights from different directions this analog technique is
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called light painting. it was as though if i have to make sure to create shadows worst eliminating all of this in order for it to get properly outlined. fashionably called. the process takes about 2 hours. the next day in théodore studio and. alone the finishing touches are made to the photo. just a little brightening is necessary. other of facts were done on site. by the done all of this can be worked on and we can create a reflective contemplate of mood. from less thoughts a little bit apocalyptic this. rusty rock rediscovered and brought to life one last time before it's sent back to oblivion. and finally we head over to western france to dive down into
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a former submarine depot back in 1041 german occupying forces began building a gigantic structure in the port city of bordeaux and almost one and a half 1000000 tons of concrete were used to create it well it remained disused and an eyesore for many years and it was a bitter reminder of the war for the residents of the city but now this massive complex has been given a new function and is the setting for an amazing light show known as the best sand a loom yeah we take a closer look. night . and co-create they come together spectacularly in bordeaux's best sound then yeah well basins of night. the opening exhibition pays tributes to artists good stuff clint and. this it is to the multimedia show
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can immerse themselves in the next. guy i see visually this is my 2nd time at the exhibition it's magical just magical. dimensions only not really immerse yourself in the zombie eyes you're in the dark surrounded by the lights with fabulous contrasts of color and also classical music it's just very very beautiful. it's a rehabilitation of this place but the magical effect. of the concrete giant evokes negative associations for many of those residents built by the germans during the occupation in world war 2 it provided space for 50 nudge submarines. now the structures being completely reinvented 12000 square meters of projection surface is complemented by reflections of the will to give the interior a near fairy tale lightweight thomas fare the conversion cost over $14000000.00
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euros. the profit is only the 1st time i saw this building i was just overwhelmed by its gigantic dimension and by its unique atmosphere mysterious almost frightening but at the same time poetic that inspired us to do something with it right away it's the challenge lay in confronting this gargantuan almost hostile place with the aim of staging really impressive exhibitions your nose and your. 600000 cubic metres of concrete 20 to the stretch. it covers some 10 square kilometer is of water. installing sophisticated audiovisual technology here was no simple task. and if you do so there are over $100.00 video projectors all of them are concealed from view and that was pretty complicated and they're heavy and had to be installed in the basins at different heights. now nights and music dominated venue that once stood for
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who and destruction a structure with a don't history has been given a bright future throughout. the match researched the submarine pens for over 10 years. after world war 2 with the bunker was forgotten it was a kind of poisonous gift to the harbor and the city and had virtually no function at all it just took some time until the turn of the century before the people of bordeaux could reconcile themselves with this former submarine base. today it's a very distinctive feature of the city. it's a feast for the senses and a concrete example of how it can give even tainted locations new perspectives.
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and a feast for the senses indeed and with that we round off the show but before we go don't forget to check out our website and follow us on social media for the latest from the world of culture and lifestyle from me and the rest of the crew here in next as always thanks for tuning in will see you can see. first.
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royal tale has many flaws in it and. global 3000. next on t.w. . a story of prejudice and propaganda. they were called the rhineland bastards. their mothers were germans living in the occupied drying land their father's soldiers from the french colonies. they grew up in a little. bit of racism. children issue. in 45 minutes on d w. it's about billions. to cover our war. it's about the foundation of a border the new silk road. china wants to expand its influence
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with this trade network also. china is promising news partners rich. but if there's a show of the morning whoever exception one is from the new superpower it will become dependent on a chinese gateway to europe. starts feb 19th on d w. welcome to global 3000. this week when the women in kenya determined to escape the consciences of gender based violence. we find out how the internet can
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often new opportunities for those living in remote villages. but 1st we go to china the city of one hon is working toward some semblance of normality post knocked down. almost a year since the coronavirus pandemic broke out many countries are now running vaccination programs the biggest vaccine developers expect to be able to produce more than $5000000000.00 says in 2021 with 2 doses necessary purpose. and that would mean around asserted the global population could be immunized this year nonetheless it will take a while the full old the almost $8000000000.00 people on the planet of vaccinated yet time is pressing $2000000.00 people have already done it 19 and infection rates continue to rise many countries remain under lockdown economies have ground to a halt leaving many people struggling to make ends meet but china's who handles the
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pandemic began things are different at least officially. to. this chinese hip hop artist raps about love happiness and life struggles even if not about a more immediate issue here in the coronavirus. the only reminders of the pandemic in this concert venue are the mosques and the way audience members keep a little distance from each other. we haven't been able to go to live concerts like this for a long time due to the pandemic. i'm thrilled. she's doing what many people around the world wish they could do again going out to enjoy themselves and not worrying about the coronavirus. everyone was afraid during the pandemic now it's getting better. it's been
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about one year since the virus is believed to have made the jump to humans on seafood marcus. the government tried to play down the extent of the outbreak. we went to in search of facts what we found was a city in a state of emergency. still major skepticism over the official numbers for corona virus cases and deaths 2 days after we shot our footage the city was closed off completely leaving 11000000 people under law. among them young so. he became a blogger during the pandemic posting videos of daily life for this family back then we interviewed him in his apartment via smartphone. my son has already forgotten that there are playgrounds outside. his 1st video picked up 30000000 views here young song is being disinfected by his wife as he enters their partner and. back then the world's focus was still on china the virus seemed far away.
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we got 130000 more followers in a single night. we visit young song at his home a year after the corona virus outbreak he and his wife are still very wary of the virus the family voluntarily stay 2 months longer in quarantine and they do it again due to a lack of faith in their government. the greatest concern now is how to survive financially. the pandemic has had major economic consequences for everyone that's why i have a province has decided to make leisure parks and tourist attractions free of charge hopefully that will help boost consumer spending. is healthy. they now fear a 2nd wave which would make their financial situation critical even so they're
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proud of their country and of themselves for getting through the lockdown. sure it was frustrating i just wanted to go out. and then i no longer have an income but still had to make our monthly mortgage payments. so we can eat less spend less and buy less but i have to pay back the lower. their apartment is now also home to what remains of his wife's tea shop which did not survive like many other small businesses it does not appear anywhere in official statistics. young song runs a driving school for digger operators he made drastic losses during the 1st 6 months. he needs the latest machines for his school but now does not have the funds. i borrowed money to buy 2 new vehicles i haven't had any new trainees since february and i haven't earned anything it's been far too
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long since i have any new trainings. just. who hand today has many faces for china it's a city of heroes who survived the virus and the lockdown that's also the story being told to visitors at an exhibition and mohan. and of course she jumping is the greatest hero of them all to rooms of the exhibition or dedication to the president with imagery that emphasizes his role as a caring head of state to lead china's successful fight against the coronavirus. doctors nurses and the military are shown standing shoulder to shoulder for many chinese a visit to the exhibition is a patriotic duty. which the people of great and the chinese nation is great china has done a good job. is also a city of losers the many small shop owners and traders who went out of business
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who are struggling to survive and who are not part of this new heroic tale. who has also the city of the many people who contract the virus and those who died of it. some locals are quietly anonymously critical of the economic fallout. we meet a man who feels abandoned he helped as a volunteer without pay now he doesn't know how he'll make ends meet he's one of many ordinary working people who are afraid to speak openly. we're angry that the government didn't react sooner we're angry because they always do this they say it's not so bad then they suppress it because everyone is afraid of making a false move and losing their job everyone wants to fill their rice bowl. we see today is resurgent on the surface but there are cracks in the facade that state propaganda is trying hard to paste over the fear of oppression was for some
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greater than the fear of a new pandemic wave something again missing from the official story. china was able to contain the virus because the government imposed radical lockdowns and also because people pull together. violence towards women has risen sharply during the pandemic widespread curfews have provided fertile ground for abuse trapped indoors women around able to escape their own partners' cramped living conditions fewest social contacts and limited access to support would increase the risk of physical and psychological abuse in families the u.n. estimates that in 2019 so even before the pandemic around 243000000 women and girls worldwide had been subjected to violence in kenya one woman is providing
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something to some in. which i go is a poor district of nairobi and a well known red like district we won't show any of the sex workers for their protection gender based violence is rife and not just for sex workers. florence kayo also suffered abuse and now works to help girls in need it is not easy to stay in the in the in this we needs when you are a. it has a lot of talent is especially young girls so lucky because i i got a good support dr luke and that is what i'm still giving that to and that doubts. it's estimated that one in 7 women in kenya has suffered gender based violence if you find help. florence kay assess half the my he circles safe house to address the problem the original location was this apartment building but it wasn't safe when we brought in
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a gal yes from their community and then the family of the picture tell you about it's just so they came at night to destroy their windows of their house and that's what actually what that what made me to to move. now money should go safe house is in a safe a part of nairobi 26 girls and young women live here 7 of them with children of their own they receive medical care counseling and legal help and most importantly they are in a supportive community mary is 15 she used to live with her grandmother and then her aunt who eventually told mary to leave one evening she met a man on the street. he took me home with him. his wife was very nice to me so i stayed then he started to do bad things to me and i thought he was a good man but he wasn't. mary is now pregnant at the statehouse she's found friends who understand what she's been through they have similar stories here
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they live more or less normal lives like one big family. we're doing well we're safe here florence is like a mother to us. in the way florence kaye is devoted to helping the girls create new lives for themselves grace is 13 she was raped several times now she's getting help and educational opportunities at the safe house she wants to become an engineer. then i can help people especially poor people who don't have access to electricity so. they rely on donations for rent school fees and food florence k.-a says society as a whole needs to address the underlying issues. things have been normalized so even if it's sexual violence people don't think it's something that comes affect someone in future so and so because the law also is
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a bit reluctant when it comes to. to to to sexual cry. during pandemic lock downs and with schools closed cases of gender based violence have soared so florence taylor has rented a 2nd building to shelter girls forced into sex work she is dismayed at the sheer scale of the problems. my just going to my home but there are times that i feel that i'm not secure our anymore when i when i walk because i have confronted so many people on issues of sexual violence among us to girls and women. but florence kayo will not be deterred she continues to offer love and support to girls a need and to fight for an end to gender based violence. oh my god. now it's time for global ideas this week we had to the
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forest covered and in mountains tempering the forests are home to a wide variety of species including the rare spectacle of bad so one area has been turned into a pious fear them a new national park the local farmers were initially upper hand civil about the decision fearing for their livelihoods global ideas visited the area a few years ago during our recent return we showed local people the film we made back then and asked how have things changed in the meantime. it's the start of another working day for rangers in the mano national park. armando zuniga has decided to wear a cap today it's damp cool and cloudy here in the mountains of peru.
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he lives in a village at the edge of the park and used to be a farmer but he's proud of what he and his fellow rangers have achieved over the past few years. and the idea that was couple but up all that he had. almost all the rangers in the park have learned how to put out forest fires. we've been trained as firefighters. it was a fire here recently and i helped to get it under control. and it's important for us to be well trained in fighting them. but that's. about it armando zuniga lives in patton market with his wife funny and their 3 children when still a farmer he was unhappy about the national parks because nobody was allowed to plant crops there while the locals faced a shortage of arable land but a lot has changed since then when my adamant that.
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farming is to provide a living for a lot of people here and i my wife and i grew corn. that was our main source of income and corn and potatoes by us but since 2014 with the help of the frankfurt zoological society and we in the village of learnt to grow new and different crops. and we're stuck on the on the wall with the with not feisal it's berries have proved a great success they're not new to the area but people used to grow them just for their own consumption with the help from frankfurt their cultivation has become more professional and new markets have opened up. michel i didn't. like it on the i'm so pleased about the money i'm making with feisal. it's improved my family's financial situation.
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but i think i think the club is abundant and the plants produce fruit very often. so it will be time to do the harvest and sell the berries again. my mom band-aid that you may not be in the. farming practices are not the only things that have changed leaving is a traditional craft here practiced by women. if 2 it's been modernized. they've set up a co-operative now use electric sewing machines and have developed a range of marketable products funny crudes the wife of armando said you got this part of the group. she says the women are happy to have left their old lives behind that is that. i wouldn't want
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to go back to the fields again. it's so tiring and it takes so much effort to work the land. now i work in so sitting down this is easy when happy we don't have any worries well a few perhaps but not about money yet textiles are a better source of income. fanny cruz takes her children to school in the village every morning. the covert 19 pandemic has left its mark on these remote communities and prompted major changes. at the school is now able to use internet thanks to pandemic relief measures funded by germany's international climate initiative ringback. ringback. when i started this coming. bread out across the school compound maintaining it just in from each other and their teachers.
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well as a. bit about was incumbent coming limited experience to the up in the many schools in peru have no internet access and until a few months ago the students and teachers here had to spend half an hour climbing a steep hill to get any coverage. in the school principal julio haven says it was an ordeal for all concerned. i.d.'s to go via that hit on the body and on rainy days the students couldn't do any work when the sun was very bright they couldn't read anything and the climb is dangerous and one boy had a nasty full and i want slipped and dropped my phone it was covered in bruises you know another time i wanted to download teaching materials from the web and it started to brain my laptop got wet and broke i had to spend a fortune to have it repaired at. the bottom of. the newly installed internet access is set to change more than just schooling.
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jose his resume he got his turn to be keeping. and he's now hoping to expand his customer base thanks to the project run by the frankfurt to a logical society he's been able to find a new profession while helping to protect the environment. farming is no longer an option for me be keeping is definitely more profitable of course you have to take good care of the b.s. so they can generate an income for us. he appreciates that the own spoiled nature of manu national park is good for his ds and his livelihood the people of touch on market are developing new ways to make a living well assuming responsibility for the environment armando's are eager for one has big plans. say you know that. my aim is not just to be a ranger but also
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a leader of my community when it comes to environmental protection but. in my work in the park as well but i mean. i want to help to protect and preserve nature here well there's a you know. at this hour yes and in preserving the park he's also protecting the new livelihoods of people in the surrounding villages. they show how they live sound fashion or often makeup tips social media is awash with influences thousands of them the internet has created new jobs and career opportunities on the market is. the biggest social media platforms of visited by more than 9500000000 uses every month that's more people than live on the planet instagram alone has a 1000000000 registered users and is alleged to have made 20000000000 dollars in advertising sales in 2019 unless the top social media stars have more than
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$200000000.00 followers. in the small village of guba cheesy in southern turkey one young man's internet korea is hotting up. 17 year old. lives to cook his little sister melanie is capturing his every move on video. today they fired up the clay oven known as the tone dear. it's making cut ethnic a traditional flat bread. it's a famous dish here and i'm talking i've prepared the dough now we just need to add the toppings this flatbread is much like llama june now it needs baking i hope it will taste good. has around a 1000000 followers on instagram he's been uploading cooking videos since last spring the turkish t.v. shows viewers how to whip up
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a few ingredients and in the coronavirus era he's clearly struck a chord. tone became a social media star almost overnight but yes it's. just. his village of google is away from most social media influencers located at the southernmost tip of turkey most of the residents earn a living working the fields or doing odd jobs behind this one on the opposite hill to syria. to. tell how i grew up in these parts as the 11th of 12 children. i've been interested in cooking since i was a child the older i got the more i liked it and the more i got involved in it a few of those around me were against it in my family as well. we've never been
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well off financially and they didn't want me using up so many ingredients. his family's poverty is one of the reasons to her left school at age 10 another is that he suffers from anxiety which makes it hard for him to travel in cars or buses so he spends most of his time at home with his mother mariam helping her with the cooking and baking that's often made him the subject of cruel comments. i'm sure loved the neighbors would often say why just how do you that they never approved. but i told them why shouldn't he. because whenever i cook he always came running in and watched me so enthusiastically. and now he's better than i am. i've almost forgotten how to cook because he always does it now. russia once met likes rolling targets to work he says he's got used to comments like cooking is for
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women but they still annoy him. now that he's an internet star though he has more self-confidence. the 2 have worked out what goes down well on instagram cooking outdoors in the countryside or the neighbour's garden sits apart from the crowd of foodie bloggers. into television like brothers most of my followers live in cities so they like to see the nature in my videos i also think they appreciate my down to earth manner. to what has become so famous that he's earning a bit of money on instagram from ad revenue his local community has also taken notice and fixed up an old house for his family. the main thing for tom is the new kitchen. jacket celluloid music is can i hope
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that now my followers will stop making jokes about how old and small our kitchen is i had to hear that a lot so they'd say your kitchen is dirty hopefully that won't happen anymore i'm so happy i don't know what to say although you don't need a senate bill and almost. if it weren't for my little brother tommy we'd be going hungry right now. and you're laughing but you're serious right you a little bit and get giftedness absolutely in this area there's no work there are no opportunities that useful as a. tanos his internet success won't last forever so he's planning his next move. was. on the high island be my dream is to become a real chef i want to have a restaurant or a snack bar where i can serve my dishes to people in person hopefully i can make
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this stream come true to me he's enough. to handle him as has already been offered an apprenticeship now he just needs to overcome his fears and move to the city to chase is dreams and show he's no flash in the pan. that's all from us that global 3000 this time we hope you've enjoyed the show to send us your feedback right lobel 3000 at d w dot com and don't forget to visit our facebook pages d w global ideas and women see you next week take cash.
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chains. and 15 minutes on g.w. . india. god india is leading by example. his goal is to be the 1st climate neutral town in the country. thanks to an ambitious climate program carbon emissions will be almost all. completely eliminated. equal. to 60 minutes on g.w. . of oil. fake hair and real story. where i come from a lot of women like me you have fake hair sometimes the hair style takes up to 2
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frankfurt airport city managed by from a bought. this is the other news the live from far away indonesian teams were cover what is thought to be the end of a passenger plane a plunge into the job at sea with dozens of people on board that tons of just hours after they located the flight data reporters also coming up on the shout a populist when scariest and presidential election of by a landslide just months after violent protests knowledge of the country's previous
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