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tv   ZDF Bauhaus  Deutsche Welle  March 28, 2021 7:00am-8:01am CEST

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this is news live from berlin dozens of anti-government activists are arrested. opponents of the regime hope to reignite the mass protests that gripped the nation last year correspondent nick connelly was among those detained also on the show. me and more as deadly as days since the coup scores of pro-democracy demonstrators are killed in the nationwide confrontations as the army stages of a show of force. plus anger on the streets of istanbul thousands of women rally
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against the turkish government's decision to pull out of a domestic violence treaty. and tackle climate change before it's lights out for all of us that's the message from cities all around the world as they plunge themselves into darkness. tilton thanks for joining us police have detained more than 100 activists in a number of leading journalists following renewed anti-government protests among 5 reporters arrested on saturday was our own correspondent nick colony a colony or other who's been covering the protests against president alexander lukashenko it was the 2nd time this week that police have taken him into custody to crackdown comes as the opposition tries to bring more people out onto the streets hoping to kickstart mass demonstrations like those seen after lucas claimed victory
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in a disputed election in august. when the connally was released on saturday afternoon after several hours in detention we had a chance to talk to him and ask him how he was doing. i'm fine i ended up losing 5 hours of my day compared to his i'm in a very privileged position having my media company behind me having the german embassy on my side journalists here in belarus are routinely sent to jail for long terms to journalists of belts at an exile channel that works in poland are in jail for 2 years for essentially doing a stream a live stream of approaches back in the autumn another journalist has been sent to jail for 6 months for revealing that a protester who lost his life was not drunk as the authorities have claimed so that is reality here in the in 2021 of those big purses last year which so were kind of a festive atmosphere at times people out with their kids their pets really rude
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seemingly relaxed and willing to kind of make their presence felt a very different atmosphere a very different reality here now as you mentioned that the opposition is trying to rekindle let's hear from last year after the cold months as spring comes trying to kind of bring people back out onto the streets but we have seen an unparalleled crackdown handlers since then people being sent to jail for having flags opposition flags on their balconies or even organizing chats where neighbors talk to each other out politics all of that is something that can get you in jail and i was just out wearing my blue journalist vest was trying to going to delay things trying to take a few shots and within about 2 or 3 minutes of me starting to film i found myself in the back of a bus being taken to a police station without any explanation of what it is they claimed i had done. that was connelly reporting for us from minsk well across me and opponents of the ruling who are mourning the deaths of at least 100 anti-government protesters on
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saturday it was the bloodiest days since protests in the country began last month well over $400.00 protesters have died since military the pose the country's civilian government and detained in pfleger. in february. those who came out to protest knew they were risking their lives the army said as much before saturday's protests against me and mass military coup across the nation soldiers opened fire killing dozens of protesters many shot in the head this footage shows security forces beating an unarmed man unconscious it's been one of the deadliest days since protests began a show of force says the military halted parade in the capital not be a door thousands of soldiers flanked by rockets and tanks join to lead a mint on he hung condemned the protests as terrorism and again promised there will be democratic elections. as soon as the state of emergency is over there will be
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free and fair elections duties will be returned to the state. but no date has yet been set protests have not let up since the military coup began at the beginning of february demonstrate is a demanding the release of imprisoned civilian leader unsung suchi. hundreds a dead thousands imprisoned me this side is backing down in this brutal power struggle. dave is a journalist following the situation from kuala lumpur he sent us this assessment. there's no question about it that this is an army at war with its own people in the m.r.i. i mean there are reports credible reports of more than 90 people killed today so we could be looking at the death toll potentially of more than 4 'd 100 total since the military coup was staged on february 1st so many of these people shot in the
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head i mean the warning came on state media about the possibility of demonstrators being shot in the head today will they been doing that for weeks protesters have been getting shot in the head so many armed civilians dead at the hands of the country's security forces this is part of the military plan to just terrorize the civilian population just like me m.r. who doesn't past have done well this noon to is doing the same thing not only with the number of people that they're killing on the streets in their homes but they're just terrorizing them with nighttime raids i mean i've spoken to people in the amur this week who tell me they are terrified every time they hear a knock on the door and sometimes it's not a knock on the door sometimes it's a door being kicked down and security forces rate you see people who are in custody of the security forces wounded people without weapons clearly in custody no way to fight back and yet they get beaten by the security forces sometimes people get taken away by the security forces and they turn up dead the next day it is just terrorizing the civilian population the generals of me i am are out for the reason
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and to protect the fortune that they've amassed over decades through this country's natural resources to the businesses they control so many of the people in the population live in poverty these generals are millionaires and they're trying to protect their regime. you know let's take a look at some other stories making headlines around the world. authorities in indonesia say a suspected suicide bomber has detonated outside a catholic church in the city of. injuring several people the suspected attack comes on the 1st day of catholic holy week which culminates in eastern sunday or easter sunday rather the priest at the church said 10 people were hurt some of them seriously. french energy giant total it has suspended its gas operations in northern mozambique after an attack near one of its facilities security sources say several people died when militant islam is seized the town of palma hundreds have fled after days of fighting. thousands have rallied in cities across the united
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states to demand an end to hate crimes against asian americans a surgeon and i even racism and violence has stoked fear and outrage in the community earlier this month 6 asian american women were killed in a shooting rampage in atlanta georgia. $5000.00 have danced the night away in barcelona a concert by the spanish band of lesbian was part of a study looking at ways to safely hold large events. musical. wear face masks and test negative for covert on the day of the event. thousands of women have margin is to protest against the turkish government's was droll from an international treaty on abuse the convention was chipped in by turkey 10 years ago now with cars withdrawal turkish women saying that their safety is being jeopardized they want to move reversed. we are not afraid of
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you and we will not comply shot the women at this demonstration in istanbul. protesting against what they see is the government acting against women. but you know i think the number of women being murdered is growing we've hit absolutely rock bottom they should be talking about how best to finally implement the istanbul convention but instead they just dropped it it's unbelievable you know. despite a dramatic increase in femicide in recent years turkey has pulled out of the convention the international treaty is intended to protect women and sexual minorities from abuse. president better one withdrew in a surprise decree that he shrugged off accusations from legal experts and opposition groups that i need the turkish parliament can make that decision. our decision is final just like back when we entered into the agreement we're not leaving it no one else should get involved. in this and. analysts believe
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the outer one is playing to ultra conservative elements and kristof issue reasoning the convention supposedly normalizes homosexuality undermining turkish values opponent say out of one does not speak for the rest of the country they want the government to rejoin the treaty. demesne feel unsafe when they walk home alone at night no we have to be afraid we're saying no to the system. women's groups say that pulling out of the treaty sends a completely wrong signal to violent offenders. the operators of egypt's suez canal say technical or human error could have caused a huge container ship run aground engineers are still working to refloat the ever given the vessel has been blocking one of the world's busiest shipping lanes since tuesday. how did the ever given one of the biggest container ships ever built end up blocking one of the world's busiest shipping lanes and how long will it stay
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there the chairman of the suez canal authority is facing more questions than he can answer but he says more than just strong winds caused the accident. an accident this big has several mistakes several causes a part of it could be a technical mistake which is under investigation and there could also be human error which is also under investigation and there could be a lot of mistakes but we can't say what they are now the only factors we can be sure of now are the wind and the sand story. those are not the only factors like i said but the rest will become clear in the investigation. of the. well experts investigate further the ship still has to be freed 20000 tons of sand have been removed from the area around the bow and 9000 tons of ballast water had been pumped out in order to lighten the vessel the operation has so far been unsuccessful but 2 more tugs are on their way if they can't move it the next step
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will be to unload cargo. if the issue of lightning to load is of course plan 3 or the 3rd scenario which we hope not to reach. but if we need to we will have ships with cranes empty container ships with cranes that can remove the containers one by one off the ship and put them in the other vessel until we empty the whole load. and i remember the president of. the german insurance group says the blockage is costing the global economy tween $6.00 and $10000000000.00 a week a 10th of the world's merchant shipping uses the canal. just ports now and in formula one. red bull max ferris stop and has one pole position and the qualifying reigns for this season's opening grand prix in bahrain the dutchman was an
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impressive 4 tenths of a 2nd ahead of 7 time world champion lewis hamilton of mercedes his teammate finished driver valtteri bottas will start in 3rd. and finally landmarks in cities across the world have gone dark as part of earth hour an end you'll call for action on climate change organized by the world wildlife fund the theme this year was the link between harmful human activity and the outbreak of new diseases like over 19. hong kong's colorful skyline is one of the city's home market tractions but on saturday people turned out to see these fairy lights turn off. some $4000.00 companies took part in the switch off to raise awareness of climate change. and why they global warming is very serious and it affects everyone on earth as we are all part of the earth is doing such a simple thing can help our planet well i think it's great. that so much about him
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i. can singapore the futuristic waterfront gardens by the bay also flip the switch . the rolling blackouts for earth hour continued a few times on further west as moscow's red square went dark. even the city of lights didn't get a pass at 830 on the dot paris iconic eiffel tower switched off its lights. in spain the lights madrid's town hall were also dimmed. and in greece the lights went out at the parthenon. in berlin perth our events were held at the brandenburg gate located right in the political heart of the country at least also. small it was a lights out environment protection on we want germans and especially those in government to know that climate protection will be key in the coming election. a clear message to global leaders that time is running out. all.
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your watching to w. news live from berlin don't forget you can also. check out the news app and our web site that's me dot com and of course you can follow us on instagram and twitter at . american children thanks for watching. today don't miss our highlights. program online d.w. dot com highlights. closely. carefully. those simply being. too big to.
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discover who. subscribe to documentary to. earn 2000000 euros a week. 10 different kick off times. more than 50 players at once. how could it come this far. well it began exactly 30 years ago. do you remember 1991.
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people dressed like this as if this today has the best. at that time. they also earned $2000000.00 but in the year. read about rich culture of what just rolled on the same day at same time but almost never shown like on t.v. . and players were not global threats kids in asia and africa didn't wear jerseys of materials all of me making money. you could only get to foreigners in your school so no french connection and. no galactic cause i'm not rich. that's no tiki taka. was the last year. in 992004 as we know today what plenty to do is kind of. well there are 3 major changes that unbelievably happens and the same here.
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so now we are in the summer of $92.00. and did this today. denmark didn't qualify for the euro's but somehow won them anyway and there was nothing that happened at the u.s. 92 in sweden the german businessman klaus hempel met the english composer tony britain and asked him to write a classical song maybe something inspired by hamburg britain wasn't very creative he took a song they already used for travelling in the smarts my dad was i. made the lyrics a little more. i took it back to callous hempel he was asked by you to create a premium international competition that would trick more money than the old european cup good evening welcome to the european tour like this concept was to
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bundle the t.v. and sponsorship rights for all european participants and one hand. in vigil countries could now. longer decide which sponsors to put on the edge of the pitch or at what time games kick off they have to swallow its european adventure and bill thought of names like. champions cup champions tour in the end champions league what. he chose prime time for kick off switch was as a continental compromise $845.00 c e t the t.v. stations and the advertising industry love to sue the money flooded in. order to get into. t.v. money rose from 85000000 swiss francs in 92 to 1000000000 in 2000 to. 9 its about 2500000000 euros. and for introducing group stages instead of just knock off games top clubs had far more guaranteed matches
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but that was different before for example in $987.00 italian champions now to be and maradona had to face reanimate drip immediately in the 1st knockout stage last meaning they had just 2 european matches in the whole season getting up with rearm adrift in 89 when they went out against the invincibles of ac milan in the 2nd stage. and now all of the top teams play at least 6 matches plus they have a high chance of reaching the knockout stage because the pot system splits the top teams and puts weaker sides in each group on the pitch as the best clubs from across europe go head to head so the result of a deal was an explosion of international t.v. money a widening gap between the rich and poor and the shift of focus from national to continental competition. so still 99 to 2 if the introduction of the champions league wasn't enough there was another major
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change here in football that. it began in england in 1991 the so-called big. at that time manchester united arsenal liverpool tottenham and everton where sick of playing in the 1st division why. it was really quite a grim situation you had sort of a collision of problems one was food in his room which had seen english clubs banned from your you had unsafe stadiums and most importantly forgotten making money in those days today the world's most popular football league english football hasn't always looked like a sleek marketing machine. just 30 years ago the english league lagged behind in terms of sponsorship t.v. money and european success. all the international stars went to spain or italy no one went to england and even british stars when they brought mark hughes and gary lineker to barcelona ian rush to you vandals things cats were not attractive for
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sponsors and it was basically no t.v. money from the f.a. man united got the same t.v. money as a 4th division team 1902 changed all of that because of a group of insightful young executives who looked at america and saw something they really like. well are what i'm great gumbo he's very fragile and we welcome you in the n.f.l. they actually realize we're not. in business with the entertainment business and so fans are also customers. so club after club followed the idea of the big 5 and finally found a community based on the model of speak english business enterprises and autonomous league with the right to market itself. the name of this premier league from. an australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdock's guy won the rights to broadcast premier league
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games lie from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. monday only on sky sports. you need to imagine the city of queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production was completely different. you know crystal palace the cheerleaders. previously a football game on t.v. . you know the broadcast 5 minutes before god only after signing done now on sky they were dealing with 5 hours of programming on super sunday and they think a lot of what we see on television tactics boards and halls of queers and suits the skirts and goings and. that's all really from so pay t.v.
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took over in 1902 other countries follow that example in the ninety's the consequences fitness clubs have far more money their matches were shown in thailand and brazil every crevice their stadiums and above all they bought players. the new era began with the arrival of eric cantona in 92. arsenal signed dennis bergkamp in 95 from inter milan for 11000000 euro which was incredible at that time in 96 chelsea. from syria up the tight turn by the beginning of the new millennium manchester united spent their t.v. money on stars like for mr roy ventura and sebastien bit on. the premier league had become the richest and most attractive thing making the world the role model for most of the others in 1901 no one would have thought that they like to. be at the start of the champions league the start of the premier league then the
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breakthrough of pay t.v. in 1902 but there's one more thing that this at least as important as those 3 other major developments on february. 7992 the treaty of mastery to our site the foundation of today's european union all of that effect football well the treaty of maastricht allows every e.u. citizen to live and work where they want across the e.u. construction workers craftsmen and merchants migrated by the thousands. of footballers read a little different at 1st clubs could reject the players' wish to move by demanding high transfer fees even when the contract had ended the belgian player john mark felt this situation did not comply with freedom of movement and judges thought so too this letter to the famous bosman ruling of $995.00. the consequences players could transfer for free after the end of their contract class projects for 5 years or more today and salaries much more often. the other effect was the high speed
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internationalization of football league of the league got rid of the limits on foreign players in 1998 arsenal had 9 frenchmen in their sworn. blast energy or ian an argentinian a sweet a portuguese and austrian. bent to dutchman. and a french coach of course. today around 60 percent of players in all the top leagues are foreign. we are used to seeing manchester city win the title just to english men in the starting 11 and. it's also been a while since you've is top stars where tells us. all the cost of the events of $992.00. today we live in an era that began to grow as things that has certainly not let your change of direction going to go the idea of friends as customers and. on one hand you have the club's beginning to think of
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ways to give. produce content. and producing. but the other side of the news you're always trying. and i think you can read anywhere in any country you might need recent. games if they're playing in your domestic we. that becomes a little bit much matches are already aired in $200.00 countries not many more than that on the planet. and the premier league we already have 10 different times per match day. untangled get numb in kenya where spanish club searched for the portuguese player's name on the back. porch pension so that they can pay this funny march today. why not this for someone else tomorrow.
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amazon is now conquering by football rights let's see what other take giants have in store. $99.00 to expand our sports fear is a before $92.00 and that seems almost like it's in black and white so as to. use really the beginning of football as opposed to the staff. need a refresher. trip to. the ball in this league all the games all the goals the emotion highlights here on t w c j c. i. fantastic football stories. every week on kickoff highlights.
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i'm not the mountains of georgia garbage everywhere. so you know i'll. clean now. already the environmental activist and her fellow campaigners travel around the purchase teleco educating and advising the plant cleaning up they are taking it back to the top of trash. on. its costume is a world service iron. like life itself. must be near and has a robot is known for highly unusual creation. season dimanche not only and how mondo russia. in 16 table literature invites us to see people in particular.
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i like to see myself as the kids. growing up her. objective is to share a work of. books on youtube. she island is burning and has been for 30 years originally a small a good in the waste crisis on the mound became so pressing that the government repurposed it as a landfill now the island keeps growing with reclaimed land made of rubbish discarded junk and mounds of plastic the trash island contradicts the maldives image stunning beaches pristine water a dream holiday destination. shaheen all is
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a well known environmental activist on the mall these. she's fighting the garbage problem these girls decide the start of the end of the sea i think we need to also load up and i embrace don't believe that. you know maybe i will not be able to save a little of the that a little more lives so let alone out there to save it but i'm not there at least. we hope. shaheen and her colleagues work for parlay for the oceans a globally active and geo. adi
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the women are heading north. that is the moment leaves consists of over 1000 small islands of which 200 are inhabited travel and transport are not easy here on the island the night big big thing they look at the ground and let me get in the 3rd row get everything can't be they're not there anything else they're not looking . to make the day that down there so if it is. not a day that may go on this kind of day they are not going to now bordering on that because they know nothing and if they look. they are the way. they come and they play it safe. on common do island the headmaster greets them he introduces himself as. people on the maldives prefer being on a 1st name basis. shaheen
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a is here to help residents on the island learn to manage their waste. the anti plastic activist receives a warm welcome and bouquets of plastic flowers. there is much to do. the 1st stop is the school. the maldives is an islamic country but girls and boys go to school together sheena begins her presentation it's a new topic for the children oh. no for a lot. of you all of you have in your. last one kind of. oh. oh oh. oh. yes when you have. well no need the just what or is it oh no don't love them all this is you know i'm not worth of these. over the.
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last stills of each i need to lay in the notebooks are going to the see we have. so many things in these children called my no no didn't date his dark age now the soviets are going into the sea just so we see you they. know their. teachers across the mall deeds the organization partly believes that the way towards progress is through children and hard to reach villages. don't only do it for the kids we do this for the kids and we'll certainly keep the students for the kids the m.p.c. the excitement if they're shown the feelings there's a thing and the dream or the hero then does this because there's a plastic the fairly small because you don't you just get the kid sitting up the whole game and see if the answer is everyone knows each other here. come on do is a small island is smile and the other residents learned what that really means in
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2004 when it tsunami hit. the 2nd it was bigger than the full school. somehow which is nice inside and how would. i live that's when you take over and. accept defeat your ideas of sport so. how's that. most of which is not effected by. 360 meters long in 240 meters wide people have been living here for hundreds of years. there are over 1000 residents on the island. without a wall come on do what i've been swallowed by the ocean years ago. it's just one metre above sea level and the ocean is rising. c'mon do isn't for the men often spend weeks at sea fishing for tuna while the
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women typically work at home he smiled grew up here studied in india worked in mali and came back a few years ago. when the school days over he goes fishing with his 2 year old son we learn how. to see really friendly. neighbors and good schools of study right. not to want to. go to one of them. so we don't have any issues we are really happy . but there are ecological issues notably the garbage problem. the islanders dump all their trash into the sea and the waste train also ends up in the water a smile says this is the way it's always been done but he doesn't seem too
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comfortable with that. but dumped plastic doesn't simply disappear it stays intact and in the best case floats back to shore. the fish aren't biting today if you do catch one you can see what else happens with the plastic refuse we don't have any fleece or any need that we can treat you so people throw plastic. so the sea from the. fish is. eaten and we see them in. to what we see them into the fishes so it's very often see so it's a very big program for us not. going to the next morning shaheen and her team head off to a neighboring island. to students will follow
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later. no one lives here. i mean you. want to do a clean up. and explain to the children that when you throw it it just doesn't go away if the vocals have a calf or plastic bags it floats back or it gets eaten by an animal but then so that they can link to the foreground to do that i think and really take them smoking because we want them to understand what illegally i think is coming from from our different angle and telling them that we are losing so much of biodiversity is a big deal for making them understand. it's a big day for the students. the island is just
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a few 100 metres away but few have been here before. there is plastic everywhere swept up by the time it's garbage from come on do but also from farther away. and i'm up 1st really start with the clean up you know nor that there is no solution for right now we're not going to grandma's explains the different kinds of plastic and which ones are recyclable. yet over the board of corn day in order to guard it it's so every month for the month there any wood i meant. the indian ocean spits out all types of garbage plastic drinking cans and polystyrene foam basically last forever. if it doesn't get washed away by the blood this garbage stays here. it doesn't take
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long before the students understand what harley is trying to explain. the have to care look i'm going to go on throw 1st came to this. boy. is it that sometimes you have to tell your parents as well not to through anything some thanks. after just one hour of the bags are full. only pet bottles are collected i didn't want to get rid of each sack weighs about 40 kilos. harley organizes a competition among the schools to try to give the children a sense of achievement. yes but it is a drop i mean so many drops make a big ocean fill in all the hope that there are more drops like this happening
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everywhere so there's more drops dropping here. but a lot is like we are challenges that we can only cycle certain material and we are actually the very set it saddens me to say that. only the material we can recycle but we can call it the other making a deal as well but what is happening is lifted and we send it to an island until it gets burnt. no money needed because it's safe from the ocean it's on the beaches it's not a nice site. hopefully we can clean up the beach of everything that is washed up. the bags are carried away by the mayor and the police come onto. the little boat has to make 3 trips to transport what was gathered in just one hour it's a big job. after
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cleaning up a bit on land it's time for a swim. most of the girls have never used goggles or snorkels before and only a few of them can swim many are frightened at the sea. explains what the girls will see under the water coral but only a few have their typical vibrant colors left so every war is about an animal yeah and that animal is what is building this coral ever at the core of the lives it has cobbler. a dead girl does not have caught that. shaheen and hola take those with the least experience by the hand. it's an
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entirely new world to many this is their 1st visit. i mean i think the bleaching has killed everything that is 0 you see here is the border patrols that are life cycle of the branching for all settlers the branching photos you see our own needles needle baby was. the underwater world surrounding the maldives is beautiful ffion compare. but the farther you swim out from shore the more apparent the problems here become. the corals are all white which means they're dead. this isn't due to pollution but climate change.
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the complex weather pattern el nino has always brought warm water to the region but it's becoming more and more intense with larger masses of warmer water and the coral are dying off. back in the capital mollett. 200000 people live here more than a 3rd of the maldives population. is the most densely populated island in the world . everything needed on the other islands goes through these ports. the most important commodity is drinking water. hardly any ground water exists on the islands so thousands of plastic bottles are brought in every day most end up in the sea.
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yellowfin tuna is delivered at the fish market it's a specialty in the maldives. fishmonger hussain follies between 3 and 500 every day . level to one of the over to this here is a good fish. often we'll find plastic inside the animals. who are usually it's bottle caps last year with the group but it will be a civil war. this is shiftiness office. to parlay is when 2 conflicting parties open dialogue to resolve their differences the maldives is one of the 1st countries where parly has signed an agreement with the ministry of environment shayna coordinates the collaboration. all of these dogs you
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see why it's there we have an interceptor. on an island and all that really goes. to dice and there are some results that will get us. so the reality is it is almost hard i'm going to tell you i was totally that is it a good. $1500000.00 tourists come every year. almost 90 percent of the country's tax revenues are made in hotels. but even on the most exclusive beach it's each day begins with collecting plastic. operations manager only for a roof the combo hotel makes his rounds early in the morning to ensure the washed up refuse has been cleared when used to do this when the cops get the experts in. all and they should all be. so he has this whole case michel that he would be you
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know be there those things not be useful bromides to that place so we try obits just. to be nice he thought compromising much of that pump wonders. in the center of the hotel island there is a new building. soon drinking water for the guests will be bottled here and glass bottles. the water comes from the hotel's own seawater desalination plant. this protects the environment and should also reduce costs. for now even look east peace to bring waters from from salt lake forest is a big operation you know to move those into this top 50 needs and again. you know putting all these dots to put it no 2 together to see now it's a big thing so but no i think you do lose all these extra walls that it would be
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like not mostly on the list of. waste disposal is difficult and expensive. when garbage is 1st stored at low temperatures so that it doesn't begin to stink this eats up a lot of electricity which on the monday comes mainly from diesel generators most of the garbage gets sorted. in this hotel alone there are up to 2000 plus tick bottles a day. of the reason why the cell filled glass bottles haven't replaced plastic ones long ago is simple the hotel owners also own the mineral water trade on the maldives now the hotel has entered into a partnership with parlay to recycle one 3rd of its plastic waste. you see the move the labels the move to pick. up make if you can look. like these full body for these people all these things in jumbo big stick you c.d.'s and send you
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to what the public so some of the space you know you see full polly the shade in again because that will reduce the value but this is going to be taking cindy a good deal of which she. parlay for the oceans collects the plastic bottles in a warehouse in mali. the bottles collected by the students have come on to and those from the hotel will be crushed here and then exported to faraway taiwan there they'll be shredded and recycled the process is laborious and expensive it's paid for by donations from industry sponsors. so i try to find solutions and i try to find people to collaborate and. ask we're trying to find partners the whole globe thing about the future either. nation. the government is not
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the plastic in the system it's the whole aspect to give it what. it would cost the white or the and then if you must intercept then redesign and also take the next thing and i think you know i would think that it's not. so far hardly has removed 1400 tons of plastic from the mall deeps. but every day $400.00 more tonnes of rubbish are dumped on the garbage island. the smoke is clearly visible from far away. yet for years hardly anyone took note until a new government took over in 2018 since then the authorities have been on a mission to find a sustainable solution to the garbage sea monster shekhina also advises the ministry of environment. so we are setting up a list but i said to you that this is so we have got
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a huge go for it david is funny and i think by 2024 yeah but to say that they're going to do. and if that works i think we will have a essential place where we can get a lot of base 'd that miley has one 3rd of the population and older is old with most of it comes to be the case. these types of plans do not always run smoothly here as can be seen some 200 kilometers away. on the island of bon dieu the world bank built a $10000000.00 waste incinerator labelled as development aid. the plant was only in use for a few months. it's currently not operating supposedly due to maintenance work the garbage meanwhile is piling up and transport to and from the plant have yet to be properly organized. shana and her colleagues meet martin jones place the british
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engineer is a managing director at the world bank. showing shana where the garbage ships will more in the future. jones lives on the island and knows shaheen oh well. she hain is involved in virtually every environmental project in the maldives. but she has her doubts about whether such a huge facility is useful for the small islands. no one seems generation or stall to get itself generates because we need a school amounts of fuel to get it going once we've got it to the temperatures that it may then it's just that moment is itself 2 months of age you won't see it 10 fires forget yet so the amount of field we use is very minimal or a cd i think i would have bought it and he had a bunch of i want to go to. but until the burning process is running smoothly
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martin jones will stay on fondue. just buy the garbage. at least it's already been sorted. what the garbage manager worries about the most is polystyrene foam fresh produce delivered to hotels mostly comes packaged in this lightweight material to keep them cool the plastic bottles are recycled by parly the private environmental organization gets them from the public waste department and that transports the waste to the other end of asia for processing when you've been built on the other hand yourself in the bad weather too. so no one could. come close been assisting last last little so there are places to us yes 123 bad spiegel so we need to send another 133 beds for this.
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sometime should he now feels as if she were the garbage manager. having the bottles that say she is how we dispose it is the issue and how we handle the spasticity should it should and that it's in the ocean now most of the. highlands we have had burning and i know from lucky a collective saving from the burn as well as when you burn it it rains all the chemicals are going into our groundwater and it's in the coconuts and in the in all the fruits and vegetables that we grow it from moslems so it's. really a problem we need to find another material that's much better. partly team has to move on but shaheen a promise is mark to come back in a few weeks to take care of the bottles. back in mala shayna prepares for next trip to raise awareness. once
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again should be focusing on getting school children interested in minimizing garbage along with plastic snorkels she brings happiness. canada has just promised to finance a garbage disposal center on the island with a friendly headmaster. these are the moments she fights for peace and her own son and his children they remind her of her purpose i don't want him to miss although he's case like i have always. you know i don't be reading to my grandkids you know look the whales leave you know and he's always welcome grandma's level we did you know it's going to be a beautiful story but. i mean we need to be real it's a reality it's not just a. and he's such a sad realities and. that's what keeps me going hey this.
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each costume is a whiles of inspiron. like life itself. the nearest has a robot is known for i'm usually the creation. she's in demand not only in how my mind oh russia. 30. dollars. it's time for
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a change of perspective. and of its is. playful. and way up high. tension at 2021. good carona be the start of something completely new it's time to rethink and redesign mark 21. in 90 minutes on d. w. . the lowly. work people have to say nurse to us. that's why we listen to stories reporter every weekend on d w. the
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faces daily news live from berlin dozens of anti-government activists arrested in baton rouge opponents of the regime to reignite mass protests that gripped the nation last year didn't have any correspondent nick connelly was among those detained will speak to him about the ordeal coming up 10 miles deadliest day since february coote schools of pro-democracy demonstrators are killed in nationwide confrontations as the army stages a show of force. plus anger on a street in istanbul.

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