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tv   ZDF Bauhaus  Deutsche Welle  April 5, 2021 2:00am-3:01am CEST

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and you can go to james. this is home message churches it's towers here's the corner it's like skyscrapers or 3. contests of the cathedral. here through 12 d.w. . this is g.w. news and these are our top stories jordan's government says it has uncovered a plot to destabilize the kingdom involving the former crown prince minister's maintain homes have been hussein and others worked with foreign powers to undermine security in the country as many as 20 high level officials have been arrested denies being part of a conspiracy accusing the kingdom's rulers of nepotism and corruption.
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the u.s. state of florida is facing a potential catastrophic flood officials fear a leaking a waste water reservoir could collapse unleashing a 20 foot wall of polluted water crews are racing to drain the water before the walls give way hundreds of residents on the state's west coast have been ordered to leave their homes the state's governor has declared a state of emergency. pope francis has delivered his traditional easter blessing in rome as christians around the world celebrated easter for a 2nd year under coronavirus restrictions the pope stressed the importance of vaccines and urged rich countries to ensure supplies are fairly distributed to their poor and neighbors and this is due to the news coming to you from berlin you can follow us on twitter and facebook or you can go to our web site that's w dot com.
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there is definitely no way i could do that but it isn't a trick either way it just needs the right technique and plenty of muscle power if only i had known more on that later in the show but 1st a very warm welcome to this special edition of your max where we focus on the topic of help let's see what else we have lined up for you today. why see we can taste amazingly like truffles and. how sweet a shock to somebody else vanished it helps people relax with history the animation . scientific studies showed that looking at plants can
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help people cope with major challenges in their lives it's because the plants make us feel more relaxed and optimistic the surroundings in which we live and work also impact our sense of wellbeing this is the philosophy behind the architecture at the $24.00 maggie's centers in britain we went to visit the latest one to find out more. this is maggie's center in leeds england it's a place where cancer patients or their relatives can receive practical or emotional support during treatment it was built on the hospital campus but stands out in stark contrast to the other buildings around it the architecture and interior design with its soft curves are meant to be inviting to both patients and other visitors. when people come here to this big beautiful space they feel rarely say away from the clinical area for the hospital in fact one lady
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sots was how it feels like a wall for keeping us there. in the interior of the center contains natural materials soft lighting and numerous spaces designed to encourage social interaction. the wood used this is the before worsted spruce. the walls are made out of porous materials such as limestone which help ventilate the building naturally. as you come into the center obviously it's this big and we know that cancer has been shrouded in secrecy but they skip the impression that we can be open about that now and we can talk about cancer and we can talk about the thing that's happening to people as they come into the center but then we have much smaller spaces that have no corners so they envelop you if you go into them so we've got reams they're almost give you
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a hawk as you go into them. celia knight's husband was recently diagnosed with leukemia maggie's centers helped her cope during his treatment. i have to bring my husband to the hospital he doesn't drive so. the center has been incredibly helpful to me as a culpable place to wait while he's having his treatment. maggy center in leeds was completed in 2020 by british architect thomas heatherwick he based the design and oversized garden planters with the goal of in hand seeing the greenery around the building he says architecture plays an important role in our well being. this is really interesting for us because i think an issue of our time is how buildings affect us emotionally and many buildings has failed us in the last century or so emotionally they've made bad places and you couldn't get
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a more extreme need for something that connects with people's emotions and feelings then the cancer care center. famous architects have taken part in designing the center such as. frank geary with the center and done to scotland norman foster and rem koolhaas with this center in glasgow scotland executive director dan laura linney has been a part of the center since the very beginning 25 years ago. the 1st maggie center came about 3 a woman called maggie. maggie herself had a diagnosis of breast cancer and she made. aspects of care that were being provided within our n.h.s. system here in the u.k. for the 1st center opened after maggie had made and when we were asked to work on other centers other hospital. her friends who happened to be frank gehry richard
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rogers norman foster then offered to. help and who wanted to take part in providing a maggie center and different hospital. american architect daniel levy scant is working on the next maggie center in london making it the 25th in the u.k. it's been a really helpful place for me to come and i've found that it's been more helpful to get support. from my friends and family because i can't save them as i would like to and covert time so this has been a really wonderful neutral space and very supportive for me. maggie center in leeds is just one example of how architecture can help in the healing process. anyone who is a fan of sushi knows you can see wheat but the apple kinds are nothing like the slimy stuff you sometimes get between your toes when swimming in the sea well is
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that really true seaweed is incredibly good for you and it also tastes great but not just of salt and sea water it can even remind you of truffles we met up with 2 women who harvest a number of tasty seaweed the riot is in the icy waters north of the arctic circle in norway. seaweed is known as the super food from the scene. on jenny to erickson and tamara singer harvest seaweed in water that is just 4 degrees celsius in temperature about 300 kilometers north of the arctic circle unseemly does not just healthy this. push its troubles the route and even though it looks a. little brown the bushy face like truffle is amazing book.
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how to build off of that is that really yummy traveling taste. good. there are thousands and thousands of edible seaweed. and truffle sea wheat fresh tuft albi grows especially well along the norwegian coast like here in the lufa tonight hands. underneath turn tomorrow around the small business loft in seaweed they want to make seaweed widely popular again. while it has been largely forgotten in europe it's quite common in the asia pacific region. my mom. and so i've grown up eating the same weight all my life so it was really exciting when we would i may have to know a way to say the potato there was here there is just sorry much the wait growing along the coastline they gave the culture the house and then to wage
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a tradition many people here live off what the sea provides the region is famous for its stock fish old windrider college which even the vikings ate as well listen weeds. on the move this rough and clean sea moves the better the sea weed can develop healthy new chips. they process the harvest in the small fishing village or from the m g. erickson often helped her father fish so she knows this coastal region very well. the perfect place to grow. the water it being the current is the 4th strongest in the world. after the sea we just harvested its 1st test to dry they process 9 different types. 24 hours later to see we ready for consumption costing up to $500.00 euros per kilogram it can be served as
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a vegetable dishes salad or trying to and used to salt seasoning in their kitchen lab they create new seaweed recipes along with local chefs. french chef my tank uses truffle seaweed to add a special touch to noodles with stock fish. garnish of cauliflower cream with chips. does everything you can do because you can that this your. crits. feels can cook meat in says with gloves you from this was not new world open to. chefs and delicatessens across the globe from angele to erick's and then tomorrow. they practice careful and sustainable harvesting allowing the seaweed to grow back again. and they see it as the future of the future particularly as it is so healthy well it really is a super furry it's so full of vitamins and minerals it's our fire all its
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antibacterial it's got more nutrients pure grey have been any other plant on this planet and it's just grown to. lead to erickson and tamara's and so the water almost every day to supply the world with this healthy super food from. the coronavirus lucked out and the fact that most people spend a lot more time working from home mean that a lot of us are looking for new ways to stay fit but what do you do if you can't go to the gym well there is an alternative you can work out using your own body weight and without needing an indoor gym or fancy equipment our very own keep fit and to zeerust you also feel good tried it out for herself.
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i wouldn't say that i'm not a but when i look at these girls and guys respect what you see here is called calisthenics and to find out what that is exactly let's ask a professional. going to something in the next is a form of progress of strength training that uses your own body weight aggressive in the sense that we don't just pay attention to how many repetitions or sets we do or how much weight we lift when we work with weights instead we see how far our bodies are prepared to go to learn new skills so calisthenics is very specific and it's very much based on gymnastics poorman i'm going to. 40 year old dennis he tell us is a form of competitive gymnastics in 2013 he laid the foundation for growth in its 1st calisthenics community but st workouts involving calisthenics performs in public spaces has been practiced in the u.s.
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russia and eastern view up for you piers it's a pretty sometimes feel like i discovered calisthenics as a child because i come from russia and the soviet era there were no finnish studios and i mean none there was only al doory quitman similar to this with gold bars climbing bars and so forth and there are generations of people just went outside and worked out. ancient greek memorials used these exercises to toughen up their bodies and the term calisthenics is made out of the greek roots. meaning beautiful strength. it is definitely nice to look at but not for the tough part it's time for me to flex my muscles so didn't say what exercises are right for a beginner like me and what i have to watch out for. don't do any sports there warming up and we always start with basic exercises this includes pushups and rows . lower bars making appalling movement. of course there are exercises to activate
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your legs as well. there are basically 5 of these cracks or sizes and will go through them today. after a warm up around it's time to get started with the really big part if you are the exercises remind me of the times i spent at the playground over 20 years ago it may look fun but it's really tough. but the invigorating sensation is worth it. anyone who wants to give these moments ago both young and old can do it here are the great thing is that it's freely accessible and you have various options with this equipment to try out the many different things and started your love. the most impressive exercise is the human flesh the out i'm a feat of strength in this scene it's definitely not for beginners. as a boy who played with the human flag the 1st thing is that your wrists you always
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need to be positioned one over the other. so that when you raise yourself into the flag you don't start turning. point number 2 is stretching your arms you have to completely extend your lower present were you pull with your upper arm. and with these contrasts to move myself you use the strength of your arms to pivot your body into the correct position. and what's the aim that's my home you do it to show off of course. many people dream of floating above the ground like this no wonder then x. is becoming increasingly popular worldwide and millions of people the now swear by it. and we say in germany you know for the healing properties what's the best well sworn to. 100 years ago and was often referred to as the walk to doctor make them lots of
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famous people including the pope all look to him for help if you want to find out what it is like to take a connive cure then back to varun his whole often in bavaria is the ideal place to head for your amass report ahead like mailing check in there to try out the connect experience for himself. i'm still fast asleep when it's time for my 1st night treatment of the day a pill filled with hate is placed under my neck. how can this be healthy to be woken up at 5 o'clock in the morning. but i get to rest for another hour the southern german town of back of a source is slowly coming to life. this is where priest the best and cannot develop his famous water therapies in the 19th century.
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rise and shine it's about them connects philosophies based on 5 basic principles exercise nutrition herbs inner balance and the healing power of water so let's see how that works. morning before breakfast it's time for my 1st session of the day cannot therapist catch as the image that is heavy to demonstrate the effects of various water treatments. first up my upper body. followed by my face and arms. is about some can i've developed over 100 different hydrotherapy methods designed to trigger the nerves in different parts of the body just simulate feeling. i'm surprised how simple yet effective the session seems to me just like the look of
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yes this is very simple that's the foundation of type theory it's simple but effective. and very pleasant the cold water certainly has a vitalizing effect. through it's absolutely freezing. the idea is always to stimulate the patient's blood flow. stimulated blood flow promotes healing in the body when you are basically telling your body to focus on and address certain problem areas that's the stimulating effect of the water on your body. after and of course healthy breakfast i set out to learn more about sebastian. can i have served as a confessor at this convent from 855 during a visit to the not museum to a guy car inventing tells me he cured himself from sugar closes through the healing
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properties of water he later began treating others to through lectures and books snipes holistic natural therapies eventually grew world famous. i encounter the 5 pillars of this concept throughout the town like here in the herb garden of the spar park the healing power of plants. don't maintain a certain order as we would call it today it was like a religion to him the mind body and soul should be in harmony he said that only after addressing patient souls did his treatments properly physical ailments of life. time for some exercise i had down the forest park there are some 250 kilometers of hiking paths around. there are plenty of opportunities for classic. wading through a freezing cold stream. finally i get to
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relax and focus on me in a calm. i was a bit skeptical in the beginning i have to admit that's the point of walking around in the water a little bit but i have to admit all the elements of the cannot health program work perfectly together and even up to one day i feel totally relaxed. i'm not surprised that henrik really needed that health cure because he is always taken things to the extreme in our europe to the max series he has more. to europe from its extreme site in europe to the max you are max reporting hendrik belling takes you to one of a kind places in your at. the highest volcano the biggest stadium. the iciest hotel. breathtaking. stunning.
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record breaking. it was amazing it was like the weirdest thing i've ever done. what she extreme creeping moments now on i you tube channel. and we have a brand new book to accompany our europe to the max reports featuring the $111.00 extreme places in europe that you shouldn't miss if you would like a copy of and to our viewers straw just go to our website for all the details do you sometimes feel stressed after you spend hours at the computer i've just got an antidote for you and it's not a poll no my remedy is to look at some relaxing animations the ones that swedish designer vanished and posts online guaranteed to help you on vine so
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lean back and enjoy. geometric shapes move and roll as elements combine effortlessly in endless movements. friction and the law of gravity seem to be suspended here. these creations are the brainchild of swedish motion graphics artist andress vanished 8 uses a special computer program to give his fascination for shapes free range. good things would 3 d. software is nowadays is that the make it very easy to mimic. facing behaviors like like a camera you can capture lights in a way that almost look photo realistic. you get. the animations are only a few seconds long they seem endless the trick is to edit them together into
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immediate succession. the swedish artist has already programmed over 150 such digital works of art drawing on 20 years of experience as a graphic designer and 3 d. artist. when i have an idea you should make some basic elements in my 3 to software like. like cube or fear just to get a sense of the the the volume of the objects i have in mind. even sketches out his idea over the course of days sometimes weeks. i try to base my work on. simple objects and simple shapes and try to keep my minimalistic as possible and to focus on the movements and on the and the feeling of the movements and the pattern motion patterns using his cinema 4 d. software it takes hundreds of amish data less than
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a day to program his digital creations it is important to him to share his are on line and receive feedback about what users like and dislike. the funniest thing about this is a lot of people think that i'm actually building physical models of physical sculptures and everything i create is digital. everything i do is done in my 3 decipher but i still get him is pretty much every day from people who wants to buy them and the things that are actually building this he posted his 1st animation on instagram in 2016. over the years he's amassed over 650000 followers. fundraise funner states works are hugely popular. i didn't expect it at all i was pretty surprised. when i start to do this it was pretty crazy like one day i received 50000 followers in one day only
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and there are many people say his animations have a soothing effect and reduce stress levels. loops or you can claim to help treat some psychological illnesses. german psychiatrist and stress researcher he explains why. when people it's common for us to immerse ourselves in rhythms like the ones we've seen this complex animation. complex and it is satisfying for us to see something function smoothly as we can see demonstrated here in all its complexity by the one that is sue thing. which is exactly what andras runner state is out to do. he's glad of his perfectly smooth animations bring some calm to the social media world. you really have to find your own style and find something that. that the audience have interest
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in. i've been i've been stronger working towards my satisfying animations used to trigger these kinds of feelings with the 3 d. artist has created something new in the digital world. 3 dimensional not to get a mention but at the same time bomb for our song. ringback and that is all we have time for but don't forget to follow us on social media and so we meet again face and.
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we're all in this together it was the slogan on social media back when the come on a pandemic started. around the world has since then become clear the fools are suffering the. economic inequality. the to reinforce. on
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decoupling the. treasury in the desert to. the margins of natural gas fields in the. am to crude oil and sources of turkmenistan smile but our knowledge is now discovering even more in the cotton desert traces of the sun got an empire on what was a narrow center of power turkmenistan's ancient heritage. in 45 minutes on d. w. . with him how to being gone it goes on as well i and know if i had known to the boat i would be that small i never would have gone on a trip i would not support myself and my parents in law daniel but it's
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a dream of the to give us leave the world. level in front of the other one it would be the one i had serious problems on a personal level and i was unable to live their lives i'm going to. want to know their story and for my great stir fighting employable information for margaret's. welcomes a global 3000. this week we focus on one of our world's biggest problems inequality societies where the gap is huge between rich and poor where many people are being left behind and that is the full the pandemic. we go to indonesia which due to the. corona virus lockdown is currently in the midst of
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a baby boom it's making life tough for many mothers. and in the face of this rising inequality we ask what can be done about it and discover that we can learn a lot from europe life. in many societies today there's a sharp divide between rich and poor between those who have and those who don't and despite living in the same country these different groups often feel little connection to each other. this gap. is. sad really for the call in to support. the numbers say it for themselves the world's richest 10 percent own 83 percent of global wealth. and the wealthiest one percent bones an amazing 44 percent of global
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assets. nor is there much hope on the horizon. in many countries the global pandemic has widened the gap between rich and poor around hoff of the world's 3300000000 workers have either already lost their jobs or are at risk of doing so. for him like thinkers it goes without saying that all people are morally equal but that appears naive or even cynical in light of the vast and enduring inequalities between rich and poor in countries around the world when the coronavirus pandemic erupted it was often claimed that it's all social classes equally hard some politicians and celebrities even went so far as to claim it would help promote equality in society a bathrobe clip from madonna is just one example.
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but is that true. no certainly not i can't think of a single country where is any support for that start a conflict i want. that would mean the richest lose and the poorest and least affected what we see is the exact opposite. of public health researcher richard wilkinson studies the social and health effects of income inequality. press and what has been happening during and because of the pandemic corresponds to a central thesis of a book he coauthored in. the spirit level published in 2009. life is much shorter and lower social class and in britain if you take
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the richest and poorest 10 percent. you find 10 year difference in life expectancy. and i sometimes say this the biggest social injustice in modern societies. are human rights abuse in countries with high levels of social inequality there are. rates of covered 19 infections and deaths are also high the gini index is a measure of income inequality south africa and brazil are both very high up in the rankings meaning they have some of the highest rates of inequality according to this measure the united states has one of the highest rates among developed nations the virus has hit especially hard. ellen works in berlin for oxfam an ngo that focuses on alleviating poverty worldwide. the pandemic has hit in the world that was already characterized by massive
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inequalities driven by the climate crisis and poor working conditions. of. our analysis shows that the pandemic is merely making preexisting inequalities even more extreme and hits the poorest the hardest often learned. what makes countries marked by extreme inequality so vulnerable more vulnerable than even some of the least developed countries it seems one contributory factor is the interaction between rich and poor the 1st person to die of covert 19 in rio de janeiro was a 63 year old domestic worker. she courted from her employer a very wealthy woman who had been infected with the virus in europe and passed it on. there are many such stories domestic workers that contract the virus and introduce it to their families and neighborhoods where it can cause devastation
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. living at very close causes drives infection among people who have no way to protect themselves. there is still interaction between rich and poor households which also spits the virus the difference is that the rich seek medical treatment while the poor often don't or can't. statistics show that the poor have been disproportionately hit by the pandemic both regard to their health and their opportunity to earn a living according to the gini index south africa is the world's most unequal country millions of day laborers found no work at all for weeks on end during the lockdown many others also lost their jobs. hungry and angry people took to the streets to protest. we're looking at years of calling our way back to where we were and we were already in quite
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a bad situation with regard to the labor market. and. so it's just very very scary for for the strip for the for the less skilled south africa. the world bank estimates that covert 19 could push as many as 150000000 people around the globe into extreme poverty and there's no evidence that the disease is an equalizer not even in developed nations. in the wealthy indicted state more and more people are so desperate that they're lining up for food donations. covered 1000 is being likened to a next ray revealing fractures in the franchise skeleton of a societies we have builds while we are all floating on the same sea it is clear that somebody in super yachts with others are clinging to the feeling the breeze. what can be done to reduce inequality in some scholars say governments around the
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world need to introduce a minimum wage implement affordable health care for all on raise tax rates for the wealthy in china and tech companies which are doing great business in the pandemic and affirm the importance of the welfare state. good i see one good thing possibly resulting from the crisis that the state and its actions will be less discredited. what is the both is a state supposed to do right now 3 don't want big grand projects ever got nothing to do with empowering people so what the pandemic has made very clear is that if people have basic rights in prayers to quality you know and quality education and the ability to actually do their best as individuals that's also the key. to empowering your slippers or marry your coke with a job or. even if governments and societies commit to reducing inequality it could
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take decades to achieve significant progress some inequality scholars say even now individuals can make a difference less self-seeking more solidarity and empathy with others the pandemic may have brought out the best in many people. i think as well as reducing the differences in the show we do things about. trust among those a more equal that is more cohesive more public spirited more concerned with. home in a different way. the current pandemic will not be the last crisis the world faces but what seems clear is that more equitable societies are also more resilient in many ways and those better prepared to face the future.
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and this resilience is far more than just a theory finland for example boasts one of the narrowest gaps between rich and poor in the world and so far it's managed to navigate the pandemic fairly on scathed in fact now while the e.u. country has such low infection rates. the finance government headed by prime minister's son a marine places great emphasis on welfare policies. in south america to one country has proved exemplary cheering the coronavirus crisis in iraq why we headed that to find out more. this year has been a stressful time for the. family in montevideo guillermo was born 2 weeks after the start of the lockdown in itself a joyful occasion but they couldn't share it with anyone or get any help because
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christina and her husband martine along with the children had to go into quarantine that was a suspected case of covert 19 and their circle of friends if they were there in the boat also it was terrible for us because the grandmothers couldn't come no one follows all our brothers no one could come and the baby it was really tough only gradually were they allowed to visit us at home. the following months were full of uncertainty as you're a great went into lockdown on a christina works there's a psychologist and noticed the strain on her patients. it was a constant climate of fear but there was a threat that you had to protect yourself from. something that was eating away. at all when i saw all my patients were worried. and. most of them were younger
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people where you might have thought they would just go with the fly. but now they struggle just the sight of you while. now 7 months later the world looks very different the borders between europe way and its neighbors are still closed but the small country is so far doing well with less than $100.00 deaths and only a few 1000 cases overall although infections have now risen sharply again schools and universities closed for a few weeks in the spring it was the same for shops. but now the streets are busy again many people voluntarily wear masks in public there's still a need for caution but there's also an obvious sense of relief that things are not worse than they are the mood is also one beat at the past year research institute when the pandemic started in march they were able to respond immediately with nationwide testing the testing kits came from these laboratories they say the
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approach taken by the government helped. a i think one of the big advantages in poor guy compared to other countries was that both the president and just coronavirus team work that supported our scientists right from the start of so that the scientists were then able to make decisions in good time. and i also think that aura why is one of the few countries worldwide with an integrated health system where everyone has the same rights when it comes to medical treatment we're going to. marry them. for decades europe way has invested in its welfare state and that appears to be paying off now in the crisis the country is home to around $3500000.00 people poverty is definitely an issue in some areas and impossible to overlook in the capital still the mayor of montevideo is proud of the city and says here too everybody has access to health care. why
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why has transformed its public health service over the past 15 years now in this emergency it's exactly this system that's playing a huge role. in this video has the best health service of any city in the whole of latin america. if you know. you're going is former president jose mohican is one of those credited with reducing the gap between rich and poor during his 5 years in office he's simply known as paper here. he was president until 2015 and invested heavily in health education and social welfare now 85 years old he agreed to give us an interview in his garage but it's elements of a certain level of prosperity allowed us to develop a social democracy. for a moment that has shaped the entire country. not only structurally
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and materially but also in terms of our way of life. we are now a country known for its tolerance where people are very civilised in their dealings with each other but also when there are differences of opinion or economic crises. it would only go personally i think it's one of the best places to be in the whole of latin america part of the or maybe go to the in. back to the dell brought my own family they've been enjoying meeting regularly with relatives and friends again so what do they think is the secret of your equates relative success in this crisis so far apart from the good political decisions they think the country just got lucky to a certain extent. perhaps it's a different mutation of the virus that we have had that means the cases aren't as bad as in europe and. perhaps it's the climate yet in the saying. what
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a lie they say i have no way there must be some other reason. a few months ago they never thought their lives would improve again so quickly but none of them will forget the anxious playing around here most birth any time soon. unfortunately most countries not like europe why when it comes to fighting the pandemic the current crisis has made life much harder for many people particularly women not downs have led to a sharp rise in domestic violence and aside from this women are the ones typically taking on all the extra child care and home schooling responsibilities. statistically speaking women also have a far greater chance of losing their jobs or falling into extreme poverty in indonesia many women have other things to worry about too. even
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newborn babies where if a shield in the maternity ward of this hospital in jakarta the covert pandemic is affecting everybody in indonesia. are you has just given birth to her 3rd child her joy is tempered by concern she's a homemaker and her husband a driver. he used to work full time but now only has 2 days' work a week. yeah i'm very worried. my baby needs milk every day and other things as well. but our income is much lower now we have to somehow scrape by. when you have to be filmed enough. d.v. ra you had chosen to have another child before the pandemic hit but hundreds of thousands of women in indonesia got pregnant during the pandemic without planning to this is bandung 150 kilometers east of the capital you see is pregnant
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but she didn't choose to have another child during the lockdown she ran out of contraceptive pills the local chemist was closed and condoms are not widely used in indonesia then her husband lost his job and now money is in short supply. during the lockdown the public health clinics didn't want to see women who i knew needed contraceptives. yeah i could have come to see a midwife privately but that would have been much too expensive. and even now that i'm pregnant i can't afford to see a midwife to get a check up. the. daughter siti and son dava both still go to school money is tight even without a 3rd child you are see has applied to join the public health insurance scheme but she doesn't yet know if she's been accepted it doesn't cost anything if you're poor
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. but hamilton would i hope will get health care for free. we don't really have any alternative. well it makes me dizzy to think about the future like. something i saw early i hope it works out. for you. that. employees of the national population and family planning board go around making announcements of your loudspeaker you can have sex you can get married but don't get pregnant men restrain yourselves or use contraception the authorities are worried about the surge in the number of births young thing that allow you there are various methods of contraception an injection of pill condoms yeah yeah i mean 3 on t.v. is a midwife who works for the family planning board she tells women about their options
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she's one of 24000 counsellors across the country even before the pandemic 70 percent of pregnancies in indonesia were not by choice but because of a lack of access to contraception the coronavirus has made things worse cept 3 on t.n. her colleagues have only recently gotten back to work. and. that's what happens during the lockdown men and women spend more time together the more the men were at home off work and the women didn't dead to go out many didn't use contraception and that has meant lots of unwanted pregnancies but that's absent it's estimated that the lock down will mean as many as half a 1000000 more babies than usual. the authorities want to curb the boom so septra and her colleagues go door to door advising women and providing contraceptives often double the usual amounts. how to review mahela gave birth to her 1st
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child a couple of months ago now she's decided to use contraceptive pills i'm not even decided when i read about my normal the midwives remind her to take them at the same time every day without fail. a few houses further they visit uni she has one child and until now she has gotten contraceptive injections but they only work for 2 or 3 months so now she's decided to go for a hormone implant instead it works for 3 years the state will cover the cost. if women from very poor families get pregnant accidentally the children often suffer from developmental deficits because the pregnant mother and later the children don't have enough to eat. you horsey rarely leaves the house the number of new covert 1000 infections remain scarily high and she wants to keep her unborn baby as safe as possible.
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yeah i get more and more read every day. what does the future hold for us. how can we even survive on these conditions. and i'm a god and separate the in. the government was aiming to have the number of children with development deficits due to poverty within 4 years. the pandemic baby boom will make it harder to for fill that ambitious goal. and now we head to kenya to make this week's. i am. a little cheap.
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my name is faith i'm 79 ers were living much in that village merope in january. and. by that. i love going to school simply because. i believe. me when i wants to make my life you betcha make me sexy as you put.
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when i'm free to elaborate listening to music i love dancing and i love great interest pledges late in treating my feelings. well. the big global programs. i think of. are of most places and if you really are fair it's when this form of children now most recruited not to be able to go to school they're not to get the basic means they want and become not to dress well they cannot be too well so it's so sad and i've been we have the global warming. when it's guns there's a drought and this drought there's no food when there's no flu and people are most likely to stab and even leading to
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a day of. my hope for the cure chat. i would like to be done with my high school stanleys and then i join one of the big universities in kenya or even on the road and question my carry on. and the. basics are super i. mean. allegedly i'm a good cook practitioner and then. you say no the whole be all my same area. what's makes me happy it's just everything i know me simply because i'm grateful for what i have in a way in happy from because of myself happy because of my appearance i just as a very i am so that's why i'm happy i'm happy all these. and
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that's all from us that global 3000 this time you know how much we love hearing from you though so do drop us a line to be able street. 1000 at d. w. dot com we're back next week see you that take cat. the big.
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treasure in the desert the boom our interest in natural gas fields in the north yams crude oil the sources of turkmenistan smile but archaeologists how does the government even more than the cost desert traces of saddam and us what the world center of cars shirtless stands ancient heritage us in
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15 minutes w. . india. a marriage be sustainable. dream wedding our own translator. organizes. peace jane if you're not. without too many sacrifices and it leaves everyone with a cool conscience. in 60 minutes on d w. where all. the kids are good beyond. take on the world eat out. all the gaps nearly all of the stories that
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matter to you. to move on please join me again. we are yours actually on fire explosives. most of times are good for the. warming doesn't do very. gentle the most well but yet. the industry is controlling your thoughts the great books of the 20th century. present day hoaxes. upgrading the world. churning ignorance starts may 3rd.
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this is g.w. news a live from berlin and high profile figures are arrested in jordan government officials insist the former crown prince is part of a plot to destabilize the kingdom he says he's being punished for speaking out against corruption also coming up on the show the u.s. state of florida is facing a potential ecological disaster officials fear a leaking reservoir could set off a huge wave of toxic waste water the governor declared an emergency and hundreds
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are ordered to leave their homes.

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