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tv   Ist die Erde einzigartig  Deutsche Welle  February 19, 2021 3:00am-3:45am CET

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so that we can. but it's not just the animals at all suffering it's the environment remain uninsured to find ways. if you want to know how weightlifter the priests and the cultures changed as an atheist is listening to our podcast on the green. this is the news and these are our top stories that is robotic science rather perseverance has landed successfully on for a 7 months 418000000 kilometer journey through space of the next 2 years the astrobiology the biology laboratory were used to drill into the surface and collect rock samples to determine where the life once existed on moms scientists hope to get the samples as early as 2031. spanish cities
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are saying a 3rd not of unrest as anger grows of the conviction of a spanish wrap up protest began on tuesday night after publishing house was sentenced to 9 months in jail for tweets and lyrics that prosecutors say glorified terrorism and slanted the monarchy demonstrators say the conviction is an attack on free speech. italy's prime minister mario draghi has won a vote of confidence in the country's lower house of parliament the final step needed for his government to exercise full powers italy is facing a health crisis caused by the coronavirus and longstanding economic wars this is day doubly news from berlin you can follow us on twitter and instagram the handle is at the news or go to website to be found at data dot com. in the middle of a pandemic information can save lives lockdowns give social media more social value
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so what is facebook up to down under this morning facebook blocked all news leaks for users in australia no viewing no sharing tonight hash tag delete facebook is trending again australia's prime minister has a reminder for big tech you may be changing the world but that doesn't mean you're running the world to go off in berlin this is the day. this is an assault on the top and nice and it is that assault on people's freedom facebook was wrong facebook sections were unnecessary that way and if you're doing business in the strata you need to comply with the was we just want the rules of the digital world to be the sign that exists in the real world and there are many
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eyes across the world that a focused on what a stranger is doing right now we started a facebook stock based on perhaps it's time to put people on a problem. also coming up with the state of texas in a deep freeze the power grid has collapsed it is so severe that some people are faced with either freezing to death or burning their possessions to stay warm. every source of power that the state of texas has has been compromised and if out of the house it's almost like minus through end of one it's recalling time. to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and to all of you around the world welcome we begin the day delmon there where no news in the news is the news on social media on thursday in a decision facebook described as regrettable the social media giant blocked all news leagues for users in australia and unexpected move in what has become
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a standoff between facebook google and the australian government and a new law will require big tech companies to pay for the news content that is posted and shared on their platforms the wall has critics who say forcing anyone to pay to link information online basically breaks the internet google has already reached agreements with some of australia's biggest publishers and news outlets but facebook it's balking and says the legislation does not reflect the reality of how business and social media work today's decision constitutes a direct challenge to the legislative authority of australia and that did not go unnoticed among lawmakers that their original mission was to bring the price to get out and to allow people to help share and express what matters to them well that seems to have been replaced by profit the people i think facebook they need to have
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and i can get all my needs and one spot so believe me there think at least to astronomy and says you will not fund content. on afp platform which comes from. an organization which employs professional journalists which has a dettori a policy which has affected can cross this is. on. i'm not putting up or they can hold. on a lot of people there right in the range. it will be able to state that. they made it or they might be able to read less is a great station. as soon as we have a very small set of its own platforms controlling access to news for example that is not just a question of compensation it's actually a question of. resilience a question of getting to from. a news. question of dependency
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well facebook and friends australia but that does not answer the question who will pay for news content and quality journalism to talk about that showdown down under i'm joined tonight by 2 media insiders from new york jeff jarvis is a journalism professor at city university of new york he's a blogger at buzz machine dot com he has also written several books including what would google do and mathew ingram writes about digital media for the columbia journalism review his piece out today is entitled google and facebook grapple with news publishers as all straight you have becomes a test case gentlemen both of you welcome to the program matthew let me start with you how did all stray you've become as you write ground 0 in the battle over who pays for news well astro you took laws that have been
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advanced in countries like france and germany and took a an extra step so they made a stronger version of those types of laws and i think that's really concentrated well you can tell it's concentrated the attention of both google and facebook and they're doing everything in their power to get australia to change the law. and we see jeff facebook and google diverging don't under google signing deals with news corp for example facebook blocking australian publishers from posting or sharing news on its platform what's your take on this all of this started some years ago as matthew said in germany with aleister threat which is the as they are a copyright was an effort to try to get money out of the platforms and has not worked very well now australia has gone farther and said basically pay up or else and google said ok we'll pay up or sick of this facebook said we'll take the
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else and they called australia's bluff in australia this is a law that came straight out of rupert murdoch with politicians in his pocket it is nothing short of blackmail and bribery of the platforms and it does break the web if you want to tax the platforms war that's a few but the entitlement of thinking that should go to news publishers why wouldn't go to health care or education or internet access well jeff i mean the critics going to come back and say shouldn't we be paying the news outlets for the content that they are providing the content that is being shared on these platforms . that's the fallacy of this legislation in any sane and normal market the publishers would be paying the platforms for the publishers are just putting up a headline or a little bit of a lead so they can send traffic people us to the publishers and that's free marketing. they've deployed forms aren't really getting any value out of news in fact
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a problem i think we're going to discover here is how valueless news is to both google and facebook facebook says only 4 percent of its traffic is news and now that's going to go down to 0 in australia i mean do you agree with that matthew i mean we i've always heard that having a set of eyes on anything on any surface area when we're talking about the web brings in advertising revenue so automatically by having a platform that has news content aren't you automatically generating more revenue than you would without the content. sure you are and i think google and facebook would both argue that publishers benefit from being seen by more people that's why they put their content on those platforms there are quite easy ways to not have your content on those platforms in google's case you can add a single line of text to a robot's text file which tells them not to call your web site so if you don't want to put your content there you don't have to and if you do put it there you're
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effectively benefiting from the reach that that gets you in the traffic that they send you and so google and facebook are arguing. we provide you a benefit yes you share your content and we use it to attract people or keep them there but you get them out of a benefit as well so why should we pay on top of well if if we look at the last 20 years advertising revenue has gone from newspapers particularly united states straight to facebook and google i think 80 percent now of the revenue that the newspapers used to have has gone to google and facebook so do they not just all the magically have a responsibility to help pay for the news content jeff i mean advertising story go ahead. i was just going to say advertising he was advertising was leaving newspapers before the internet came along t.v. took advertising away lots of other things took advertising away i don't think it
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was just google and facebook they're they're by far the sort of largest players in digital ads now but it's not as though that money was siphoned directly from newspapers to them. ok and nor did god give those publishers that revenue and so there was a new competition it's a reality of capitalism well then who's going to pay for the the local news content that i think we would all agree that democracy is functioning democracies have to have in order to have an educated and informed electorate. it's going to take time to figure that out i'm researching a book now on the gutenberg age and it took 13200 years before we got the copyright and the business model for print it took 150 years before the newspaper was invented this could be a very long stream here news it news is right now a very inefficient industry we copy each other all the time we waste resources doing the same stories if we got down to the nub of an efficient and effective
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journalism i think it's more likely to be supported yes still by advertising yes by subscription but by other mechanisms we work on this at my school commerce membership other mechanisms to help pay for news what about treating news as a public good instead of as a a commodity or a commercial good i think you could definitely do that and that might even be a good thing but you certainly wouldn't do it the way australia has i mean if you want to say that google and facebook control a large part of the web and we should tax them and use that revenue to help media then you should do that in the the problem i think a lot of people have with this law is that it's a kind of backdoor way of doing that if you if you want to tax tech companies and fund media then do that. and jeff that aren't that you have the last thought here
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before we run out of time is it the big fear right now when the world's watching else trail you know that that legislation is going to become something like a contagion and we're going to see it here in the european union and maybe even in the united states. well yesterday with the heritage minister in canada matthews holder has talked about does iraq see this legislation the e.u. has talked about it as well as i said it really springs from legislation in germany and now in the e.u. with the digital copyright act there. this is going around and around and i think it's felicia's because it's not really about copyright it's not really about content this is about the relationships that both publishers and platforms have with citizens jeff jarvis and mathew ingram to both of you gentlemen we appreciate you taking the time to talk about this this story has some long legs i'm sure we'll be talking again soon thank you thanks. it has not been this cold in texas in decades now on day 3 of
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a massive winter snap thinkers are being pointed at who is to blame for the millions of people who are left without power and heating many still don't have electricity this in a state that produces more energy than the entire country of britain texas has its own independent power grid separate from the u.s. power grid in a moment we'll talk about the temps and troubles in texas but 1st this look at how low temperatures in the lone star state have become life threatening. too cold in some brave to lone icy drives to get their loved ones to a warm shelter be spared the chair shop in houston has a generator to keep the lights on the owner is letting families stay overnight. the 1st thing. in the trailer there's no installation or anything like that says quote of their week we can't we can't afford to have them freezing not being able to feed
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freedom. hughes grow for propane canisters to power gas stoves grills to cook because millions of homes still have no electricity. but the unexpected cold snap crippled the power grid. of the every source of power that the state of texas has has been compromised whether it be renewable power such as wind or solar but also as i mentioned today. access to coal generated power access to gas generator power. at systems for hours and equipment failed energy companies used to rolling blackouts to conserve electricity. water pipes best in the blistering cold texas officials warned residents to boil tap water before drinking it claiming
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damage to water infrastructure. with low temperatures expected for a few more days many texans have no choice but to struggle lone. yeah it's hard to imagine that's happening in the united states to talk about that i'm joined tonight by marc jacobs from he's a professor of engineering with the energy program at stanford university mark it's good to have you on the program you know this isn't the 1st time we've seen cold weather in the united states it happens all the time in minnesota and wisconsin and there of the the grid doesn't collapse so why did it collapse in texas. well in texas well the 1st thing to point out is that in taxes each person uses $2.00 to $2.00 and a quarter times the electricity compared with the person in california so that it's very inefficient energy system they don't have much energy efficiency buildings or
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not whether it is very well so they have a lot of heat and cold losses and so that's the 1st thing so there's a huge demand for energy and then with this and it's very rare that you get this cold temperature in texas that happened in 2011 as well but you know everything frozen nuclear plant nuclear reactor was shut down because of the cold 50 percent of the enter the electricity is purchased from natural gas and you know the natural gas mining was shut down as well as distributions as the national generation and some wind turbines were. frozen but not all of it and maybe about 35 percent but it's you know there are other countries like denmark where they have for 50 percent of their wind sorry 50 percent electricity from wind and there's no problem at all that's because they're prepared with you know devices on the turbines to go up the ice so texas was prepared terms of the wind and in terms of just the rest of the infrastructure when you say there's been a mission and you say we're prepared to market it but it's it sounds like with i'm
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understanding you right it sounds like that the authorities the regulators in charge of the whole energy grid they just haven't been investing they haven't been spending the money because they thought that mother nature would let them get away with it. yeah i mean temperatures are generally warmer in texas that don't have these events and in fact with regard to the wind and wind has grown since 2000 let us humongous lead and you know they just were maybe doing nickel and dime in a little bit but you know or as i've mentioned they're not only other countries but many states in the u.s. that are much colder than texas they have no problem with their winter mines so that was not the problem in a lot of people are blaming the wind turbines without just a minor portion of it is mostly natural gas coal and nuclear there went down every energy source to go down. and what do you make of the republican governor in texas greg abbott. he was trying to twist the narrative here suggesting that the power
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power failure would have been even worse if the state relied more heavily on renewable energy. i mean is that even true. no it's the actual it's the opposite i mean when you actually reliant completely unreadable energy 1st of all that you have of it's not only just wind it's well it's not under windows offshore wind and texas has a huge amount of offshore wind for example that you don't get to see the freezing problems associated with the other solar it is a big state so you could have some places where the solar is not very good because there's a huge storm but other plumbers of the state you do generate solar and battery storage and other types of storage and there's but there's also as i mentioned efficiency like instead of my heating homes with gas heaters if they switch to heat pumps they use one 4th of the energy as a gas heater so there are in terms of electricity only one 4th the electricity to just don't eat as much energy to keep things going and let in fact electrify
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everything in texas and providing electricity with clean renewable energy would reduce power demand and use power demand by around 60 percent because amazing mission c. of electricity your combustion you know. that up there would be a big improvement definitely i've got about a minute left in me ask you this texas has its own grid system that separate from the u.s. grid did that did that play a role in this disaster. it does because you know other states where there like california for example when it doesn't have enough electricity it imports the felicity from other states and regions whereas texas has limited ability to do that and so that's part of keeping the grid stable with renewable energy because you know even if one place you don't have a lot of noodles somewhere else in the country you have a lot going on and so that really helps to keep the grid stables but in or connecting through the transmission system better to me growing up storage as well
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i mean having batteries you know how many individual homes with solar batteries surface or a number if you started off the batteries to keep it going for 3 or 4 years yeah so it's really an optimization problem but it's possible to solve a problem with just clean renewable energy and what you say seems to make a lot of sense a lot of common sense marc jacobs from from stanford university's energy program aren't we appreciate your time and your insights tonight thank you thank you. the u.k. is launching the world's 1st study of people volunteering to be infected with the coronavirus that's after the trial received the backing of the country's ethics panel dozens of volunteers between the ages of $18.30 will be exposed to the virus without being vaccinated beforehand and the aim here is to track how the immune system responds and to identify factors influencing how infected people transmit
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the virus the trial using less susceptible young people is not without critics regulators here in germany rejected similar tests calling them an ethical but the british project's director says the trials are essential to staying one step ahead of mutations demon part of china's most because they directly inoculate volunteer is able to establish whether the vaccines working extremely crazy eventually that will be there in which osama which is aids then they eat the current vaccines and new vaccines will be needed are for more i'm joined tonight by dr david strain from the university of exeter medical school in england dr strange it's good to have you on the program explain for our viewers how infecting people with existing forms of the coronavirus young healthy people and how will that help engine ear vaccines against future mutations. yeah good evening so the 1st
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stage of doing any sorts of vaccine program is to get a great understanding of the disease when kobe 91st presented itself a in the u.k. we also felt the studies were unethical because at that time we didn't know enough about the disease we didn't know how it spread we didn't know the way it was transmitted through the body we don't know the fire a load for example that it takes to go from exposure through to infection we now know a lot about the disease itself so we know what happens if you present with co it that we've got very good at treating that but we still don't know the requirement to go from being exposed to somebody with corona virus 3 to actually getting that disease the 1st stage of this exposure programme is to get a great understanding of that element and then it's to work with the different vaccines in order to figure out the best ways to prevent that for future variants
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of the corona virus before they actually start spreading amongst the general population we understand the people taking part in the human challenge trials they're very young at the oldest will be 30 you specialize in health care for older adults i want to play something one of your colleagues has said and then i want to find out if you agree to take a listen the immune system of a younger person is very different from the system of an older person so you will get slightly different sponsors and younger people having said that we can learn an awful lot about how the virus acts by tracking it sort of from the very beginning of infection minute by minute to see what those responses are and we can use that information to design better therapies and vaccines just staying do you agree that the results the information gleaned from younger participants will be beneficial for all age groups especially older people who we know are more at risk from the coronavirus. and i agree with everything that was in that statement and tali the
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need systems are difference we do see unison essence but we have to guess the vaccines right 1st then getting the vaccines right in the younger population who got the lowest risk of having an adverse outcome from it means those vaccines and then spread and be used in other populations this is the way the vaccines that we already have were developed the pfizer vaccine mcdonagh vaccine did knox in fact seem to know the facts all started in these young 6 health a few lation and then they moved to older populations and eventually were tested in the frail and the very vulnerable this is a good way of getting the next generation of vaccines that started. it it's fascinating the way you describe it this is a voluntary study you've said that there might be some issues with the full disclosure requirement so what's what would be the problem there so
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that's the biggest issue that we have with these types of studies we know that the to do a study to get a good ethical approval you need full disclosure as to what the risks of the studies are and we know that the population aged between 18 to 30 that are volunteering for the study has got a very low risk of going to i.c.u. or to die of dying of this disease the only clue that we don't yet know is what the risk factors off for the long cove it. let me ask you this before we run out of got about 30 seconds i spoke earlier this week with sharon peacock and she heads the ukase genome sequencing center or consortium for corona virus mutations are you working together with that consortium because it sounds like your work would complement each other. and there are many different centers within within the u.k. on the genetics and that center is 5 far and away the biggest actually that is the
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reason that we know so much about the different mutations in the u.k. we are doing almost whole for the gene it's like being of this virus anyway around the world and the 2nd closest country to us when it comes to gene i mean is south africa needs new ink 8 times fewer than we are and that slight the appearance sais that the majority of new variants are arising in the u.k. when the reality is we're the only people who are actually looking for it which is why we're finding them well you're doing very important valuable work and we certainly appreciate it dr david strain from exeter medical school thank you for your time and your insights tonight. you're welcome. well the day's almost done the conversation continues online you'll find us on twitter going w news you can follow me important off t.v. every member whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day.
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there has been nothing but sadness and anger for the past year. on. she was their son brother and uncle. emmanuel terrorist attack along with other people with a motive this is clear. the justice system and the police are still feeling to provide. some good. news on d. w. . is back in the new president's words to the war on clear
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but is biden's america too damaged to leave a mark has changed in recent years and the big question is our own allies position in sounds richard walker explores the assy is america's moment of global dominance simply coming to an end. the 60 minutes on d w. people looking for me please. there are many answers. there are many reasons. to. her
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there are many alternatives for. me at. least make up your own mind relief. for minds. are illegal. low everyone and welcome to focus on europe with make on our bill and it's nice to be here with you today we begin with a pretty difficult story out of germany here right wing terror is on the rise and just a year ago that fact was made clear in a horrific attack in the city of hama there are a right wing extremist wandered through the city and deliberately killed 9 people
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all of them from immigrant families the question is why didn't police stop the perpetrators sooner it's a question asked not just by the relatives of those who died. one of those relatives is chad teen group who lost his brother in that attack he and his family have been left to wonder how this act of violence could have happened in a country like germany which is where they immigrated to from turkey one answer from experts is that right wing extremists are organizing more and more professionally and have weapons at their disposal and that was the case in hono were a mass murderer was able to walk around on a shooting spree unhindered leaving behind a trail of tragedy just in the nights called going to have returned to the place in one hour one year ago the brother an uncle goo can go to was murdered double digits like my brother's body was over there by the power sockets. blessing blue lights people everywhere at 1st we didn't realize what had happened. checked in and mart
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hurried to the crime scene shortly after the attack on february 19th 2020 toby's our had already murdered 9 people on a foreign descent. then he killed his mother and took his own life 37 year old was one of the victims. since then life has been very different for the girl to can family his mother that depends on medication to cope with her loss. soon after who comes death his father lost his battle with cancer. his brother chetan and a son are too traumatized to work. the good convo was or bedrock. is and says we have lost our bedrock. the walls are swaying so to speak. like a moment like for the past year there has not been
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a single night that i slept through. you can no longer sleep because when you put your head down on the pillow at night when it's dark common done consumed by questions is facing the family home ok to near one who kind died soon became too much for them to bear so they moved. now shares a room with us fighter jets and. i couldn't deal with it in our old apartment i can see. completely empty that's why i need to share a room. that's. for sorrow is mixed with a growing feeling of anger so i need. past year between venting their anger expressing our anger to the day but nothing has been achieved even if there's nothing really can save it ok we've accomplished something it's let us know we're absolutely nowhere in the politest let's just look at and smile the bereaved to say
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that it's not enough they've teamed up with supporters to set up the february 1000 initiative they want the german authorities to accept responsibility for the attack why the mentally ill attacker a firearms license why was the police emergency line apparently not sufficiently staffed on the night of the crime neither has the interior ministry know how police were willing to talk to was about the attack unlike the german police trade union. for the pulitzer i did not see how the police could have prevented this if they had done something differently such i do not see them as being responsible. in hindsight it is easy to say the police should have had previous knowledge chechen culture can says he no longer feel safe in germany he's scared to walk thru hike night and worries when his son comes home late. because right wing extremist
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attacks experts say are on the rise in germany criminal ziyad he very clearly needs strong prevention against right wing extremism 6 times that means dealing with the issue early. preventively fall boyband and their misson you have to be ahead of the situation so to speak and not just in all this think of something you can do in law enforcement stuff and security work after something has happened and not the myth busters yet this reading extremist attitudes are there beforehand and they'd then motivate people to join written a zation speech. because the kindest collingham people to show solidarity i remain vigilant and help me and mine in the tech are destroyed my life it took everything from me. on this victim. of i never harmed anyone that is why this past year we have been fighting together for justice and for a proper investigation.
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after this was filmed the hano police told us that they do plan to increase police presence throughout the city so that they can detect potential acts of violence as quickly as possible it was a political earthquake in the netherlands prime minister mark rutte and his entire cabinet resigned just a few weeks ago the reason tax authorities were targeting thousands of parents parents like janet ram asar unjustly they accuse these parents of having illegally obtained child benefit payments for years well that turned out to be false but by then these families had been plunged into financial chaos they're now demonstrating in the hague what they're demanding is help and also reparations.
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has come because she's lost almost everything like so many others here. i'm very nervous it's not something you do every day but there are i expect that they will listen to us roger derek's is also doing what he can to encourage himself and the others. we want to know where we stand. so we want to do this for all of us. under. roeser direction johnette romas are joined forces to organize this demonstration they are among thousands of parents who have unjustly suffered financial hardship and shame because of the dutch finance authorities following a number of fraud cases measures were increased to crack down on people suspected of making illegal benefits claims including janet and roger a look back roger derrick's remembers the morning 11 years ago when his doorbell rang and a debt collector was standing outside as you see here we have an amount of what
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they are asking back from us 35000. and that was one of our 1st letters we got. and we thought her oh what is this i don't know if you have 30000 on your back ago i didn't. so yeah there was a guy standing on my door with a letter and he said you know can you pay derek couldn't pay and tried to prove his innocence the authorities accused his family of defrauding them of 60000 euros in child benefits and took harsh action. they claim 40 percent of your salary every month they can take away your car when you're driving on the highway at a certain point the rest no way out you start doubting each other fill in the tax papers good average day to struggle with the money so. the intensity of the of
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the pressure. of everything at certain point that this not. to control anymore being prosecuted in stigmatized as the fraudster also destroyed john nash rama star's life she too was to pay back thousands of euros in child benefits as a single mother she often had to survive on just 25 euros a week what i was doing was i didn't eat 1st because my son he needs to eat so i didn't eat and when i started to eat i couldn't digest my food because my body was rejecting everything. 2 years ago 2019 when i took my son from me i also know you can't take care of me and i was like yeah but there is a reason it's the tax office losing your child because of the government 'd this should have been with anybody after a long period of depression she is now allowed to see her son for just 2 and
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a half days a month but she's regained the strength to take action in november 2019 a group of parents went to the tax office and they said they demanded their follows i saw that the images of the people in the news and i was like hey dude that's my story. spandrel became public shortly afterwards the dutch authorities responded to an inquiry saying due to a combination of strict legislation and severe anti-fraud activities by the dutch tax authorities thousands of parents ended up in financial problems this never should have happened the government apologized and promised to compensate each of those affected with 30000 euros but many parents have yet to see the money now they have had enough and demands for answers are growing among other questions why were families of migrant backgrounds principle targets in january the pressure on the government reached such heights that prime minister mark little resigned he now remains in office as caretaker pm and try to explain why the compensation payments
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are taking so long. that they have in many cases debts. to the electricity company etc and if we give them the money to assure that the money immediately. gets. only the money yes. but also to make sure that they can make a new start. rutan voted some of the families to his official residence the meeting lasted 6 hours. his star was one of the last to leave. they really listen to us and they understand things much better now so i think it was good that we were here. son had the chance to vent his own pain and frustration and jeanette can look forward to future meetings she says now she wants to look ahead and find
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happiness again. they're between the ages of 15 and 27 they're successful and they were even invited to the women of the world festival in london last year that's pretty cool even cooler though the fact that their style of music rap music is just it's not something female musicians are supposed to do where they're from. they're roma from serbia and in their very traditional society where men are often brutally suppressed but these singers are now helping to give women a voice my. there's. no man there's no they were not deep enough for her. she gave. her. some months at the can relate to.
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the members of the girl band pretty low are young proud and determined to take their futures into their own hands to sing and drop the vote at the kitchen equal rights and forced marriages in the world if not behind me at all among missing it's well known that roman lead very traditional lives below that and on it that women aren't supposed to work or go to school because they marry stay at home cleaning raise the children why no job no education that are the illiad off the organization qual are. but zipcode once more she's 19 and a law student she and her sisters are inseparable hardly any wonder they haven't had it easy their father lives in germany with his new family and their mother abandoned the girls so they grew up with their grandparents to give them the
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freedom to make their own life choices. and. it is true that it is still a menace of art my grandparents mean everything to me i love them so much and i'm glad we live with em both. and. going. on with the. new menu and the recipient will describe him. to me pretty loud began in 2014 and served as a social project aimed at giving young girl moment the same rights and freedoms as remote men enjoy the women sing in 3 different languages romani serbian and english their biggest success so far was their appearance at the women of the world festival in london it's. become a. joy. to have confidence and look beyond their family for their role models they find
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them on the internet social media are also changing room a society europe's largest ethnic minority even so nothing is more important to us if god than family almost every day she takes her nieces and nephews out for a last day to our growing up without a mother a quarter they're walking through was poor but sift says she likes it here the communities tightly knit the people help one another. on. the scene as the morning light. goes. their quarter the mojado plays a big role in this video it's easy for young people to lose their way here as a roma on the edge of society they are to big disadvantage drug use is rampant.

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