tv 37 Grad Deutsche Welle March 29, 2021 8:30pm-9:01pm CEST
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all in the fight over sexual morality. literature invites us to see people in particular that i like to see is the. mike. brooks on you tube. this is deja news africa on the program today the assault on women and ethiopia's conflicts numerous victims and witnesses all reporting that mass rape is being carried out by every train and ethiopian soldiers into grad school here some of the accounts. and be anxious ways in mozambique will survive the attack by jihadists militants in helmand the so-called islamic state has now claimed responsibility for
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the violence that's it doesn't date. hello i'm christine will go it's good to have your company there is mounting evidence to suggest that male soldiers are using rape as a weapon of war in the conflicts in ethiopia is to cry reachin the un says 500 cases have been reported so far but that the actual number of women attacked could be much higher and the violence is still going on now if you hope it has acknowledged that soldiers are raping women into groene and the few medical centers into crile straining to cope with the numbers of victims and the severity of the injuries while some of us may find this next report distressing. one of the few facilities into gray catering to the mass of women raped in the
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regions war. sexual violence is an increasingly common account as more and more stories emerge from a conflict that the world was shielded from. the staff at this hospital have never seen anything like this before and they're struggling i don't know how many hours later you know. there's a mother here who was impregnated when 3 eritrean soldiers and 2 ethiopian soldiers raped her now she can't move her legs. again i think i was. even now she cannot control her bladder and she's pregnant she cannot control her
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bladder it's hard to listen to the stories for these victims it's even more harrowing reliving their nightmares their battle stigma to come here for help. she told us not to hide so we've come for treatment i've been bleeding for a month and a husband stopped one horror story after another. and that just started to take away my child i begged him and told him to do whatever he wanted with me but leave my child alone after i cried he raped me then left and they ripped my grandmother and they beat her and dragged her by her feet. most of the severely injured victims are also now pregnant and there are not enough beds for them. cruelty on a massive scale bearing wounds that may never heal. and we've invited have
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a need to sign them and onto the program in 2019 she helped set up the 1st service into into gripe for women who have survived the sexual violence there she's going to be based in adelaide australia but isn't regular contact with it's a grand welcome to date every news africa funny to tell us what you have been hearing about the raped women into being subjected to and who you're hearing it from. well the situation isn't and actually very challenging i believe that the sexual violence is being used as weapon in this war and i'm in regular contact with people that work on the ground including. one star search center that was filed establishing in 2019 so the poor sod i'm hearing turning it into these centers on women that have been the simply
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abused physically. because of sexual violence by their nature being and it actually and so it gets we're talking about gray and i imagine that all the way where remand has been raped in front of their family in that there's also infinitely forcing family members to rape daughters sisters and women being held hostage for weeks and several days been raped by 15 to tourny soldiers in their different camps and women losing their fathers brothers our husbands trust then when the soldiers on the side of less comes in and not saying that you are where they have been found it's time and dinner just go in and ticking out all of them outside and within the room 'd. and the house at that moment it's funny except other observers
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have said as you're suggesting that the rape taking place into a cry appears to be systematic who do you believe is responsible for this. well the responsible for this violence are being stolen yes including the. regional forces and the entrance soldiers the survivors who manages to escape and survive and swaped on say that they obey for entrance on just a little insular girls in the region forces. and this service center for survivors of sexual violence that you found and how is it supporting some of the women who have been raped in this conflict so those survivors that manages to get themselves killed there are one stop center which is mostly only from around the cities and sound manages to walk for days to get to the one stop center specially
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if they are superbly physically if there is any severe physical damage so well they will come to their one stop service center and get some medical assistant and emotional support and also it's also read from at work where these women are referred to a safe house where they can stay there for out 3 months being logical and mental support but also refer to the idea hospital if they need surgery or under their more complicated medical support. finito what help to the women up to brad need most at this time. well i would say they would need who are in actually preventing me from this so it is great the and. these crimes because there is no matter how much support that soup after the violence but the bones are still growing and is to increase in and i
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believe until the soldiers that are in our. lives and know who their rates we continue and when we say you know how is it going to stop probably not going to stop but what our women need at the mall and in straight away office the soldiers to be held accountable and to actually start and justice to be so it's all right that's funny tests on them and talking to us there from adelaide australia thank you anita. the so-called islamic state has claimed responsibility for an attack on the norman was m.p. can town of palma that's if dozens of people dead now the situation in palmer remains volatile and off to the violence that began last wednesday when militants infiltrated the town of karbala delgado province a day later they launched a killing spree shooting and beheading people now palmer is home to mozambique's
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gas production plants this is the closest attack to the site yet and families have been trying to find out news about their loved ones in the nearby port of pemba thousands began arriving there on monday off to fleeing the violence for many of their relatives it is an anxious wait. you never read i'm looking for a young man i need your help with communication to locate my son. all part of no contact with my family since wednesday my wife my sons my mother brothers. we don't have information what i really wish for is to have my cousin back but i don't have information for my phone and for more on the story in mozambique them now joined by jasmine often mentioned as a security analyst for the u.s. based agency conflicts location and event states a project africa is to focus region welcome to day to every news africa jasmine what are your sources telling you about how things are unfolding in palma this
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point in a good afternoon to your u.s. and you sorry. at this point in time your viewers must be careful to accept media reports as fact the east county operations state glaze of by the government security forces each house to house operations which means it will take a lot of time to clean the area and we must keep in mind that the insurgents said participated in the most weeding military uniforms and have illegal with this event is per head the tac so. bottle and they will be a frequent clashes in the next few days jasmine how has the situation deteriorated to this point you've said that this attack could have been avoided. it could have
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been avoided. in the. mornings were issued 3 days prior the attack not only to the mozambique and government but to foreign indices in mobile too and. the civil roving not only one said he said lead no one has taken action nothing was done to improve the security at boma in this bomb are and what we've seen the last 4 to 5 days completely unnecessary they were made does it make this is rationed so much worse is that private companies had to step in and to help and evacuate beetle the insurgency liberal sophistication livre of coronation arms have reached a stage and have crossed the threshold numerous times but what we are seeing now is
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an insurgency sending a message the is no q 10 this is not going to be a short that will tell us about the involvement of other countries in this insurgency specifically they deny that states. at the united states currently there is always the united side prisons and will be from the military in mozambique but with the recent you is day to ration or visit nation or a so-called islamic state in mozambique we are seeing the better a snail prison evolved into months training program 2 months form of make it difference even manger up myself but we are sick for at international political game in goggle garder america is not going to stand back and the training program for me is just that says it opening the door for further militarization of kabul
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god you are right that is has been a man talking to us there thank you so much for your insights on this. and that does it for our program at david be sure to check out al of the stories on d.m.p. dot com for its cash africa we're also on facebook and we're on twitter we're always interested to know here i mean yes africa what you think about the stories that we cover and the stories that we should be covering i'll see you next time at one of the. more than a 1000 years ago europe witnesses a huge construction of. christianity firmly established itself. both religious and secular leaders or even to display their power. to trace the game's.
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concrete the tallest biggest and most beautiful structures. stone masons builders architects compete with each other. this is home massive churches are created. a. contest of the physical. stores. on t.w. . from techno to hip hop to soul germany's jazz big bands does it all. and their new albums out now we'll have a listen here on arts and culture then later on the show
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a painter works through his war experiences on the canvas. and one photographer's personal quest. the document germany's jewish communities. welcomes arts and culture getting high on jazz as a very rough translation of the name jazz house the jazz began to also calls itself one of the busiest bands in europe before covered 19 they were playing about 120 concerts a year now the group launched its new album with a live stream concert from the museum in munich. i know. my. 2 dozen musicians all with a negative coronavirus test but a positive attitude after all as difficult as dealing with the pandemic is
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organizing a big band is also a huge challenge. for a month traveling to china with a big band of $25.00 people as opposed to a trio is probably always a kind of catastrophic situation so i have the feeling i didn't need to give the topic of the pandemic too much attention because it's already taking up everyone's attention everywhere. but it is because of the pandemic that this concert took place without an audience. and this is what a normal jazz cost big band concert looks like sweaty dancing bodies pressed up against others something that's hard to imagine now. but since the coronavirus has been on
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a world tour the band has stayed at home and live streamed concerts without an audience viewers can pay what they want to watch them. oh my gosh you know if you tried out various ticketing schemes based on voluntary contributions and we quickly learned that we can depend on our fans we made more or less the same amount that we do for a normal live concert going to. the 10 tracks on the new album have a more international flavor than earlier releases. you know. that's due to their contact with the global audience in the days before the coronavirus. you notice things like how did people at a jazz festival in shanghai react to us what pieces do people in nairobi respond to
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how does someone in london respond i think seeing these reactions in a constantly changing setting leads to an internationalist station in the music and our influences. but all the tracks have one thing in common they make you want to get up in groups luckily dancing with yourself is still allowed. or one place where people hopefully won't have to dance alone as soon as london's iconic royal albert hall now marking its 150th anniversary and walked out queen victoria dedicated the concert hall to her late husband prince albert back in 87 he
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won the royal albert put out a video message narrated by mick jagger saying they look forward to being able to open again soon. speaking of returns artist cedric vellacott me is back home and the armenian capital year of on after last year's brief war with neighboring azerbaijan the armed conflict may be over for now but armenia is national experiences and valid carney's on brushes. with death. painting. last autumn armenian artist cedric fairly cognitive volunteered on the front line of the new gorno care about war and violent conflict between his country and neighboring azerbaijan in his new painting he associates the biblical figure of judith a jewish widow who saved her hometown from a syrian soldiers with armenia is trying to come to terms with his country's defeat
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. beautifully sometimes it happens that you paint take a painting and spoil it deliberately you understand that you will continue to work and finish a painting after all it's a similar process to dealing with a war you just have to go through it. which. very cuddly is painting style mixes armenian traditions and national colors with soviet era aesthetics and images of superheroes and iconic movie characters. as a volunteer soldier barely cartney ended up in the so-called hell's gorge near the city of shusha the clashes there were especially brutal.
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for. us we were attacked with rockets and cluster bombs were used terrible. if we hadn't been able to shelter in this cave many of us would have died because we were bombed very aggressively and when i look at this photo i can't believe it's me sometimes i want to return there for some reasons i don't know how to explain it maybe it's a feeling that something has not been completed. the beauty of the landscape there was amazing. the war ended on november 10th when a cease fire agreement was signed valley company returned home in early december he's glad to be alive but he feels apathetic and uncertain he says he changed after the war and that all armenians have changed. the conservator of the service that day when the war ended we learned that everything was over. on the one hand you
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understand how events developed an offensive was being prepared on our front and i don't know how it would have ended. on the other hand there was an understanding that what had been there before us all that was no longer there we could not defend it we could not save it i also think about the deaths of young men all this is so hard. for the soldiers. now art helps the year of an artist to cope with difficult memories. on the reserve i draw i analyze i try to understand who we are what we are which from upon what we are for why the small country between these empires is needed why we exist here what should we give to people to the world. cedric valley cognate says a rethinking process is needed for
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a country to survive the bitterness of defeat in war he tries to do that through his paintings. it's all about resilience and that's certainly true for germany's jewish communities 76 years after the holocaust jews are a small but growing minority in germany israeli born photographer rafael have they since been documenting jewish life here for decades is on a personal mission to show germans and the world what the nazi regime tried to erase. north. apartments in frankfurt through this ritual a boy is rendered accountable for his actions by jewish law. rafael hellish often photographs occasions like this his images show how jews live and go about their daily lives his aim is to appeal for greater tolerance.
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is the only show it's amazing because there's so much interest many people come up to me after seeing the photos and say we didn't know how beautiful jewish life could be and i'm glad it's a great privilege to be able to show it to them the people the society. rafael hellish will never forget one particular bar mitzvah the boy's grandparents had survived the holocaust seen in the photos with their grandson are there tattoos that identify them as one time inmates of the auschwitz concentration camp the photographer shows pictures like these to school classes and explains the meaning of the tattoos. these cannot who did this why did they do and where were they what happened was that what is auschwitz this is one of the important tasks i've been performing in germany over. the years your along. a
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concrete block house left over from world war 2 now rises where frankfurt's biggest synagogue once stood before the nazis burned it down in 1938 today exhibitions are held there such as one with raphael hadley's photos of jewish life the photographer shows his pictures to his daughter orley. to go from the i'd like to show the jewish life from this place that was nothing but ashes jewish tradition goes on in germany today if not the tomb. the search for his own family's fate also makes up part of the exhibition the murder of his grandparents by the nazis it's hard for him to talk about but necessary the rising numbers of anti-semitic attacks leave no doubt about that. they know you because of the renewed hatred of jews in germany today it's important to me personally to show this and not remain silent or look away any longer.
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here rafael hellish visits his father's grave he had survived the concentration camp another stone commemorates rafael's half brother who was murdered by the nazis when he was only 2 months old his father was never able to talk about it. at 1st i was angry about it but later i found out everything that had happened to him i can only say what a wonderful person he was in his own way he protected his family and i really respect that of course there's. a hellish dedicates his work to fighting not only anti-semitism but every form of racism and exclusion he says he'll keep at it for as long as he can. germany's marking 1700 years of jewish life in the country will be meeting more jewish artists in germany in the days and months to come. well that's almost it for this arts and culture a leave you now with a century old house in san jose california that's getting
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sex as a culture. am i allowed to love. what the sex means to me. and who else does it in fact besides me. in the fight over some small around the for. 13 spot. told. him it's only push pull ups on certain altamont right now climb a tree to make up a story. this is much less than way from just one week.
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coming for some really good. we still have time to actually i'm going. success. to subscribe. to. kill the the moon. and in the end it's a me you're not allowed to stay here anymore we will send you back. are you familiar with this. with the smugglers with bias and. what's your story ready ready. i'm with numbers of women especially of victims of violence in. part and send us your story you are trying in all ways to understand this new culture. not a visitor not a guest you want to become
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a citizen. in for migrants your platform for reliable information. this is g.w. news live from berlin tonight a former police officer goes on trial for the murder of a black man as america's racial reckoning goes to court. shape it is in a courtroom but america dog trial emotions and security are both hoyos the trial over the killing of george floyd gets under way a former police officer. has pled not guilty also coming up tonight $9000000000.00
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