tv Botticelli Inferno Deutsche Welle February 7, 2021 3:00am-3:46am CET
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to prevent bacterial growth. i. use water and sea raw materials to avoid content. producers are the ones primarily responsible for the safety of the food. but you can protect yourself and your family from diseases and by applying the 5 keys to see for to use them you also have a role to play. this is news and these are our top stories thousands of people have been protesting on the streets of yangon in myanmar nearly a week after a military coup the judge appears to have cut almost all access to the internet as demonstrations grow after the coup the demonstrators demanding the release of the
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country's elected leader and sounds in chief. in italy the former head of the european central bank has secured the support of to keep parties as he seeks to form a new government mario draghi received conditional backing from the right wing and the populist 5 star movement further talks are expected next week. in china people have paid tribute to a whistleblower doctor on the anniversary of his death when young warned about the spread of the corona virus back in december 29th teen but was reprimanded by authorities his death from covert $900.00 spot an outpouring of public anger over beijing's handling of the outbreak. this is the news from berlin follow us on twitter and instagram. and visit our website dot com.
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this week on the story. doris is hoping for exact same. odds connecting people in the u.k. . but we begin in kyrgyzstan that women are still viewed as 2nd class citizens which puts pressure on mothers to have a male successor. the name means the long awaited son is a son after 4 daughters. a son and a quiet family life that was all amr yusupov all wanted her husband left her almost 5 years ago when she was pregnant with her 5th child the ultrasound scan showed it
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was going to be another girl to everyone's surprise she ended up giving birth to a boy. but her husband was already gone in kyrgyzstan having a son to carry on the family name is still an important tradition even during her 1st pregnancy with i get him who's 11 years old now husband pressured her to get an abortion he saw these girls his own daughters as a burden to. marry them off he kept saying girls aren't people they just marry into other families anyway i need an air i need a son that's what he said and that's why we separated. along with her 5 children and her parents. lives on the outskirts of the kyrgyz capital she can't work at the moment because she's taking care of her mother who has cancer
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the family lives off benefits of around 130 euros a month having 2 cows and a few chickens helps. is grateful for the life she leads even though things can be tough her husband had an alcohol problem and used to beat her. women and men have the same legal rights in kyrgyzstan they have since the soviet era but patriarchal tradition still determines life here for many even in the capital women usually keep having children until they give birth to at least one son and girls sometimes are given 1st names like enough names that show they were on wanted. if they didn't give birth to a boy a women feel somehow inadequate even before they start their own families women see the way their parents treat their brothers and how they react to the birth of a son that makes women feel that it's absolutely necessary for them to have
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a son of their own. murder you soup of our nose that pressure all too well she accepts the 10 years with her husband as part of her fate as what god gave her but she says her family is much happier without him. i don't want my daughters to go through what i went through i want them to have a happier life. says she loves all her children equally a good education and most importantly a happy family that's what she hopes for for her son and her daughters. in germany the number of mean coronavirus cases is slowly declining but some regions are still so inundated with new dances that local trees have become completely unfamiliar to.
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there should be a moment of prayer but there's no time for that there are simply too many coffins too many bodies arriving at the crematorium in saxony. some days there are more bodies than we can actually cremate on a single day and this is a trend us for our employees also because there's no end in sight. we are standing in the morning hall of our crematorium. it usually accommodates 90 people for the funeral services. unfortunately we had to convert the hall into a storage space because we could no longer keep up with the deaths in fact if the elephant. it's a difficult situation for us. because relatives can usually say goodbye to their
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loved ones here. but at the moment that's not possible because there's no purely. no room for a funeral service not all of the coffins represent deaths from the coronavirus but many of them are marked so. these people had to end their lives without a final hug from their loved ones luke spanish cares for the bereaved he is a pastor and. family sometimes only realize how dangerous the coronavirus can be once they've lost a loved one to it. when does your liberal me and i have contact with families who have lost a relative because of covert 19 to scorn they are in a state of shock and reconsidering things this 1st phase of mourning the so-called shock phase lasts longer for them because something inexplicable something in comprehensible has been added namely this pandemic. me. the
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pandemic is far from over get a hold monster is worried about the future. that of the assuming that the number of infections remains high it follows that the number of deaths will to be done for these and the 2 and so on and that means we won't see any relief here until mid february at the earliest so the carnage follows him. it is a winter of mourning and as it is in many places in the world during the pandemic. they can escape acts initiative aimed to provide full recovery with free coffee county vaccinations and one dorm since one of them will be announced.
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a glimmer of hope in the battle against the pandemic in honduras in february the country shed jewel to receive its 1st shipment of vaccines against cove at 19 the initial shots will go to frontline workers on the elderly over $3600.00 people are known to have died after contracting the corona virus in honduras the deputy health minister says it's unfortunate there is no international law to regulate the distribution of covert vaccines like the one made by biotech pfizer. by he says the rich countries have practically monopolize the vaccine and are denying developing countries access to more vaccine doses that have access so a lot when i but i like well if you see where the hunger in health ministry says some $4000000.00 doses are needed to immunize 20 percent of the population it's unclear whether one jurors will meet the target this year. alongside the doses
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acquired through the kovacs initiative the government's also purchasing vaccines directly from manufacturers. but global supplies are limited and expense of. its time or expense of the lamb in the sea we have to beg internationally why because one jurist as a poor country has already used the money for other things. so we don't have money to buy vaccines from buy on tech pfizer but are all there are several $100.00 people will get there how far are you sort of based on current orders placed by the government the one juror in medical association estimates that far less than 20 percent of the population will be inoculated this year and many hundreds believe the government should shoulder part of the blame. we put our trust in god above all and hope for positive results despite the negative
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expectations of some patients. but we are meant to think if the government a doctor faster we would have had vaccines here long ago. and has to know that the government never. were lacking good management the problem isn't a lack of effect a vaccine despite the vaccine skeptics. simply sample every person economically and in about. the vaccines can't come soon enough new infections and debts grew sharply in january in honduras. one father in the u.k. no actually not subject to keep his disabled son engaged to look down now artists from all over the world are participating. in these works of art are the result of a joint production between international artists and no one from southern england
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and his father. no one is epileptic suffers from cerebral palsy and cannot speak you know kamau but with the help of his father the 12 year old becomes background bob. he chooses the colors and paints the backgrounds than artists complete the pictures he idea for the project came about last you do in lockdown as a way to keep you know what occupied. we went out to the carriage to be our small car or don't we just documenting your coke or not. just your friends not all going to push out just as a bit to see if this will cooperate with you. and by the end of the 1st day i think that what you are just really involved and it just grew from there. the backgrounds are sent by post and competed by artists from all over the world who
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found out about it through social media works inspired they know i have already returned from spain a stranger and columbia the boy who usually only gets letters from his doctors is delighted with all the mail is absolutely not been background always becoming a new name our infertility our reactor his school background although he really loves it he loves all of the attention. at an. submission 250 of no was works are on display the project is so popular that they father and son can hardly keep up with the number of backgrounds being produced a book has also come out and the works are set to be auctioned scene the money will go to the health centers where no one is treated and the project has brought both father and song even closer together is a major big deal but i get more i found you know we make a lot mass which we're working extra. i don't. think there's any i actually haven't
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got any choice now of the how to go i don't don't have to dream dream big all the time zones on just dream small and those kind of small things. and. all it took was a father's love and the image a nation of a group of artists to give wings to a boy from england who are. every day counts for us and for our planet. the light is on its way to bring you more concert. how do we make singing scream or how can we protect habitats what to do with all our waste.
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we can make a difference by choosing smaller solutions overstrained said in our ways to play the ideas in the limited series including. on w longmont. new. life. one of the coming to. the. oh joy get a coincidence. that example previously the earth was just a messy chemistry lab i thought mission. where the improbable but ultimately just was the creation of our solar system with our planet is a bit like winning a lot of ranks up there it's a little. money for earth. starts february 11th on t.w. .
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libya's mediterranean coast has become a death trap fit tens of thousands of refugees despite descriptions imposed by the e.u. some humanitarian organizations are still trying to rescue migrants in distress at sea. not off what is some folks say were the traffickers accomplices but we're here because people are dying and. if libya's coast guard picks them up these migrants will find themselves in one of the country's dreaded detention centers. it is pretty much left to be right. here refugees are mistreated abducted or even killed why is it the speed of
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everyone's a policeman in this country you don't know who's won for real. to escape the violence in libya many lie groups risk their lives trying to cross the mediterranean. it's 10 pm with floating next to an oil rig. around a 100 kilometers off the libyan coast on the lookout for a migrant. with filming with all night vision camera from onboard the ocean viking a rescue vessel its crew members have just responded to a mayday a distress call. they want water oh yes i heard the birthday we're waiting for. an oil rig worker has just spotted the boat and radioed the captain. that jeff
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was on fire because. earlier emergency through dealing with inflatable boats is always more stressful we don't have any information about its condition because you're sure you're going to church and. we'll be on site in half an hour let's move for but the. captain tom de loop is in charge of the rest of mission. field the rescue workers use the night from the oil rig to guide them. i. mean it's later they find dozens of terrified men on board this inflatable boat. it could capsize at any moment due to the strong swell so told issues precise orders to keep everyone safe.
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i believe. not only the most part. of what we were really on. was. unsure of that nationality the rescue was address the survivors in english. everybody was still alive. all the commotion inside the boat could cause someone to go as a brute and to. few of these people can swim i don't know now 10 or. so of those so. tony's message is received loud and clear. the men will be evacuated one by one. local police think you could come up there. certainly. was. but go see what's the worst when the light bulbs are up this is the symbol
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that this is the must get the. on board the ocean viking crew members notice that some of the migrants have inhaled guess he runs during the rescue mission. one is in one way he's from cameroon. here or back then. without the volunteer rescuers help the 74 refugees. it was a very close call. he looked really shook it deteriorate to lose your and these conditions a mission completed with everyone safe and alive on board is simply miraculous. it's simply miraculous differ from north korea how do you feel exhausted. it's all the more miraculous because the mediterranean has turned into
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a graveyard remnants of wrecks that washed up on shore best silent witness to the thousands of migrants who perished at sea. the other 55 picked up dozens of dead bodies and i've seen a few dozen people die right in front of me and we've had to resuscitate at least a dozen children or more. and his crew set off from us a only ocean viking on october the said 2019 the rescue mission was due to last a month chartered by s.o.s. maybe to me and doctors without borders the ship replace their former vessel the aquarius they were forced to abandon the aquarius in december 28th scene after it was stripped of its flocks there was so she won volunteers from france germany the u.k. the u.s. and egypt a book the ocean viking. has already completed 4 missions with s.o.s.
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maybe to honey but this merchant navy officer continues to hone his lifesaving skills not come off figure with practice the most become automatic if we don't give the training our all now then in a crisis situation it's likely we won't do the moves correctly flowers $25.00 or 1234 why. the ocean viking is 60000000 meat is known at the stern there is 6 containers to our reserved food. how many more hours than. half an hour duncan who is from the u.k. is in charge of the containers this one he hopes never to use this is a specially refrigerated container. we always go point by i don't show really we're driving paid for everything. but yeah we'll see how it will be small fires. in recent years the mediterranean has become
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a graveyard the un h.c.l. estimates that since 2014 more than 18000 people have died or disappeared trying to cross it. soldier firefighter deep sea fisherman told he had several lives before he began a career in sea rescues. missile for 3 years of service in this field i've seen more deaths more bodies and i've saved more people than in 12 years of service and other more traditional rescue services it was the school for the senate. tony and his crew have one main objective identifying possible refugee butts but i'm almost sure it's a wooden boat you know. it costs $14000.00 euros per day to from the ocean vikings rescue missions so s.o.s. my details on a and doctors without borders rely on donations from people across europe these
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donations have also allowed the rescuers to purchase equipment including semi rigid inflatable boats with powerful engines which enable tony and his crew to quickly reach vessels in distress. first they distribute proper life jackets to the youngest on board do you think there's a pretty. bright light for this is the 2nd rescue since the team left must say in less than 24 hours tony and his crew have saved $176.00 people now it's time to identify them. it's just so we know what country are you from ivory coast but from mali higher up the number hear me ok. how old are you know 22 . i'm 2625. a red wristband for adults and a yellow one for minus there were 23 unaccompanied minors on this boat. during
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the county this. is from the u.k. before she retired she worked as a midwife her patient is a 24 year old woman from ivory coast whose 6 and a half months pregnant she escaped a libyan detention center with her other 2 children. along. the young woman appears indifferent towards her baby's heartbeat this reaction no longer surprises junkie who has already participated in several humanitarian missions she has encountered this complete lack of emotion before. pushing him on may i ask are you pregnant because you were raped ask yourself feeling. no.
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no it's ok you're happy you're pregnant. not too happy it will pass. it'll pass many women will deny having being raped or having to pay for what we call survival sex or transactional sex. i'm sure it's often it's not consensual i'm sure they wouldn't choose to be pregnant when they make this crossing. but for instance the other lady we've just seen said no no husband no father to the child. no i wasn't raped. i'm not sure that i believe that. rape is a to boot topic it's rare that these women will talk about it but this mother has agreed to she and her children were also in the libyan detail. each police officer chooses someone hugely the smallest of the youngest girls they leave with them and sleep with them right next door then they bring them back. so every time i look at
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my daughter i think of those girls straight away thank god at the time 2 years ago my daughter was still very small otherwise she'd have gone through the same thing it's so lucky that we were forced to stop washing ourselves in order to stay that way when the arab walked past you smell so bad that he wouldn't touch you because if you washed his he'd want to sleep with you straight off a lot of the. stories of rape and also of torture the rescue people on both the ocean viking ruling agreement it's a daily occurrence in libya and detention centers in many ways the cameroonian here inhaled gas fumes doing the nocturnal rescue has recovered his strength he was also arrested and detained in libya for how long he doesn't know the torch and made him lose all sense of time. now he opens up about it for the 1st time.
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in may they take your hand and they put it on the ground like that they take the baton and they hit it if they hit your fingers if they break your fingers they beat us morning and night morning and night morning and night. in many ways it was arbitrary really detained in zawiya a city situated some 50 kilometers from the libyan capital tripoli most of the rescued people on the ocean biking have spent time in the detention center there. don't think i'd never advent there at around 730 or 8 pm they let us out to eat a large image i told myself it might be a good meal. it's boiled macaroni. where they heated up to $100.00 degrees celsius $100.00 degrees you get a total of 2 minutes to eat it with your hands it's called
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a heart. and then they tell you go on put your hand. you eat 2 handfuls and they say go back to your cell. you're wasting time. go or will be chewing to break your ribs is a word. emmanuelle managed to escape but to avoid being detained again there was only one solution risk his life at sea and she together with the libyan coast guard to try to arrest you what would you have done what based on the money personally i'd sooner have jumped into the sea then go back to libya you know and be. libya has been forever branded into the rescued people's minds we went to investigate the city on the other side of the horizon tripoli. since dictator muammar gadhafi was toppled in 2011 libyan militias have been
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engaged in a merciless battle for oil and other riches in april 2900 general khalifa haftar troops began an offensive against the internationally recognized government in tripoli this triggered a bitter fight for control of the capital. at our hotel we were warned of the dangerous. kids who were you know she was of me but you know you have her permission i know i know to be able to do everything we would normally do to look at. this from you. ok thank you thank you on the day of our arrival a military school was the target to venice strike. the following day the bomb. days of alleged tomatoes were carried through the streets. this civil war here affects not only the libyans the refugees are also myatt in the conflict
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we pass them at every roundabout always group together for protection. they're here to search for work. a rare safe haven is the office of carry chast situated next to this church carriage house is a catholic and geo every friday after mass it opens its doors to my goods in need like this syrian salary no one helps us no one protects us it's a very difficult situation there are kidnappings and arrests they even took my son out of school so they could beat him we don't want humanitarian aid in libya we just want to get out of this country. leon works here she's from and is a refugee herself. in the future and the situation is really critical with the war
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not ending in everything lots of people don't have anywhere to live they don't have shelter. and there are some who have nothing to eat and who need money. to flow visit. every week leon helps dozens of vulnerable individuals they come here from syria gambia or the central african republic like adelphi his wife and their children. there are little things for the kids food for the babies some sweets. agrees to talk to us as long as we're discreet he and his family are hiding in this house. with this little adults journey to europe began in 2013 he was a victim of the civil war in the central african republic. he shows us where he got shot in the arm. so i can only move my arm this far it can't
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go up here i'm just gonna. sit in the middle of the interview the day breaks down after leaving the central african republic his family made their way through chad and then to libya from here they tried to cross the mediterranean to europe. the libyan police caught us in the middle of the sea. they took us to zawiyah me my wife and my child. my wife was 7 months pregnant circle. and girlfriend his family managed to escape the detention center in zawiyah. and their little girl was born in this house. 'd on july
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23rd 2019. 'd 'd 'd 'd the family has been stuck in libya for 2 years even though a death as a u.n.h.c.r. refugee card. ready ready ready ready ready ready ready ready ready in theory this card should allow him to access u.n. aid. it's clear i'm a war victim the u.n.h.c.r. won't take any responsibility i don't even know why i keep this card it's useless. today adel frisks leaving his house to go to a un h.c.l. cinta office at the united nations high commissioner for refugees getting an appointment with someone there was his only hope of leaving libya without having to risk the mediterranean crossing. is always on his gaunt. dumont every once a policeman in this country you don't know who's one for real but who's the real policeman before sometimes they kidnap us and take us to unknown location this is
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something. he always has the g.p.s. activated on his phone and. if i end up in an unknown location i can inform a brother quicker. than what could they do you never know. if i don't come home at least to be able to see where i disappeared you know shit scully. i def is not the only one to risk everything for a meeting with the u.n. h.c.r. dozens of refugees like him awaiting that technically these documents should allow them to receive support. but the doors to the un refugee agency remain closed. was last. year they're not going to open up some of my brothers have been waiting here for 3
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days from morning till night morning till night for 3 days some even for 4 days and they haven't opened up a. couple. like the others adelphi leaves empty handed the u.n. headquarters is situated in this suburb in tripoli just behind these walls it's impossible to end to this bunco without official authorization. but we managed to secure a meeting with caroline gluck a spokeswoman for the u.n. h.c.r. in libya she says the main reason refugees is stuck here is because few western countries a willing to take them in. we continue to press to be the moral conscience to urge governments to offer more space but where operating and political environments many governments most concerned about public opinion. in
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2019 some 46000 refugees were registered in libya less than 2 and a half 1000 were able to leave the country illegally the country in conflicts it's a country that doesn't recognize that they deserve protection and safety libya is probably one of the worst countries in the world to be a refugee or asylum seeker and there is a very high chance that you will be abused tortured physically. sometimes rape. this abuse most often it because inside the countries detention centers there are dozens of official and clandestine centers throughout libya one of the most notorious detention centers is found in zawiya a port city located around 50 kilometers west of tripoli. both a deaf family and emmanuelle the cameroonian rescued by the ocean viking were detained. we are still libyan government for permission to take
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a look inside this and it wasn't granted so we're going to find another way. on january 7th 2020 a protest in support of the government was open eyes we approached this man his name is khalid and he's a member of zawiya as council of elders. ok they are people from the libyan people will never forget who was on their side and who was against them. we're talking to those who claim to defend freedom. to france. this country was a prime supporter of khalifa haftar are the war criminal who wants to stage a coup i know there have been i know they have a kind that is angry he believes the west supports his enemy general khalifa haftar who allegedly bombed zawiyah 10 days prior to this protest khalid says shells
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landed a few dozen meets his from the detention center. to prove this he promises to bring us that. when we arrive in zawiya college is that as promised but before we can enter the detention center we're told we must meet the man 1st. he has a message for us. so that you know someone is going to see this time it is it is it are over should be illegal migration is a disaster for the libyan people. libya is suffering because of it. there are thousands and thousands of migrants here and the government is covering their expenses with money that belongs to the libyan people even though they were colonized by other countries who took their wealth and forced them into poverty. and now they're dying on their way to europe you know. the man has forgotten an
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important fact. europe has allocated more than 400000000 euros to libya to help it tackled one migrant crisis. you see in libya we treat the migrants bury humanely where i meet a man that is. one of how we do our best to ensure they're treated well and humanely. instead. then comes the moment we've been waiting for the do is to zoe as detention center finally opened for us. where they looked as well as it was that idea more than 700 people are housed in
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the center. like i said the air strike happened just next door and the migrants are over here. and one that points out a man wearing don't glasses and combat fatigues he heads the campus of one of the they just want to film and talk to the prisoners in unison the food or the. we follow him and discover hundreds of detainees crouching in the courtyard there frozen in complete silence. the 1st one for the. cameras on to the camps director. says contact pizza cooling was. going to be a little too much normally i need official documentation from the ministry of the freedom to retreat to what i spoke to the mayor about it yes he called me but i
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also need to see some authorization to give senator obama that they want to talk about the bombings that took place over there what i want to know today yeah they were all scared that day because that's it. that's what they want to talk about ok they can film and talk to 2 or 3 people you admire you know the you can lead is to get them to to. over the last 3 or 4 years we've been wrongly accused of being human traffickers and even of keeping the money all these organizations do their business and they intervene in internal affairs they spread chaos throughout libya. they profit from the migration problem and from other problems to. inject illusion we don't even get 5 percent of the money from europe or from these organizations but. in an attempt to convince us that the camp is a place where human rights are respected to this church tent khaled says it's proof
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if the libyan authorities kindness towards their christian detainees. then the. list shows the positive work that we're doing here to help these people. we simply want to improve their circumstances. you have superman with him and. here comes one of our christian brothers now. are you free to practice your religion comfortably here by the holy book. and yes it's comfortable here we got the opportunity to have a church in this country and we've seized that opportunity so if you study a d.n.a. we respect all the christians here look they have complete freedom. we take advantage of a moment of distraction to enter the main building where we discover an entirely
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different reality. didn't help us with. the detainee we met in the church tent nexus and there were no gods in sight. thank you for thank you for your english. in this cell hundreds of mattresses and blankets are piled on the floor proof that the detention center is overcrowded. and testimonies to the migrants suffering can be seen on the walls. blacks are not slaves in libya. it's the same in all the other cells. all over the. country. the bathrooms around santa tree they're the only source of water for the
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hundreds of detainees. this dormitory where the prisoners are all swash together also serves as a kitchen a portable gas stove is used to prepare the meal of the day popcorn another detainee has some stale bread to glom but in one of the. few that. it's difficult to have a proper conversation with this man the people behind us seem to on nerve him the further you can be sure here it's ok if you know for the facts to church and if what you want you want to escape from here you want to go how it was when i was a kid i want to i just want to evoke it for a layer. after a few minutes all robson's is noted the director comes to find us himself he orders us not to use the videos for.
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