tv Der Schatz im Wustensand Deutsche Welle April 5, 2021 4:15pm-5:00pm CEST
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security officials the king's half brother bin hussein had been under investigation for some time the country's foreign minister said the former crown prince will he will including a former advisor to king abdullah and another member of the royal family were arrested the military initially denied arresting hum's up and hussein and said it had issued him a warning for his actions but in a video statement sent to media on saturday prince homes are claimed he had been placed under house arrest for associating with critics of the royal family. it's my movement has restricted its. strip to its people. to try distract from the fundamental.
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though he no longer holds an official title that remains a popular figure in the country. live you know it's just not right for prince hamza to be linked to these people these are people who jordanian see as questionable who are really frowned upon. and what. we do not want to see anything no matter how small happened in this country this country is known and stable and secure and i ask god to have this country remain stable and secure. and many see the stability in king abdul of the 2nd he has enjoyed widespread popularity during his reign jordan is widely seen as an island of carbon a troubled region strategically located between israel syria saudi arabia and iraq the u.s. u.k. and several arab nations of all expressed their full support for the reigning
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monarch. well. as a political analyst and columnist he joins us from the jordanian capital amman welcome to g.w. i understand their parents hamza has released a new message today i want sabean say. well actually it's not new it's yesterday but today it was broadcasted widely today he's he was explaining what happened to him again and in a way to fusing the way the sheaf of the joint forces talk to him and ask him not to move or to limit his movements so basically. we cannot rely on this video this is refusal because it might be just a reaction. regarding the way. he liked the prince they didn't like the idea that he was ordered by the sheeple of the army not to move i think this is also something very delicate usually such delicate
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problems or since the problems within the family should be stored within the family so basically i think now is the hashemite family and this is what was said yesterday that this is a problem a problem that will be stalled and tackled within the family it's certainly so is that how it is being seen as bickering within the family who we have we have a senior member of the family being accused of plotting a coup and being put under house arrest do people really expect this to be resolved internally as it were. first yes this is this is a very big surprise in jordan or we never witnessed such thing in gordon this is very new for the jordanian culture and the goal of the indian society was taken by surprise from this news and i guess yes norm everybody expects this to happen that at the end the family will sort its problems from within and i think it needs a lot of wisdom now there is no need for further escalation. i think
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this is for the best for everybody jordanians the kingdom and the family it's of so this family feud if i can put it that way do people think that was actually a coup attempt or is this just as fighting well i have to be honest like off me as an analysis i cannot find elements of any coup. in the whole scene when we talk about who is a big word and there's no elements we never see any strange movements from within the system or institution or up out of this or even people tribes that they were accused to be mobilised so basically i cannot see any coup yesterday the minister said that we are in any. movement which means there was no real signs of any who so everybody here believes that it's just this collation from within and the
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possibility of any coup from the beginning it was executed. good talking to you thanks so much for joining us alice abella. wonders from around the world now emergency crews in florida are trying to prevent a reservoir from bursting and spilling millions of gallons of toxic water officials of water by catastrophic flood if a leak at the reservoir is not dealt with more than 300 nearby homes have been evacuated. protesters gathered outside beaucaire user ruling party headquarters as partial results showed these are one sunday's parliamentary elections opposition populist party is also finished strongly prime minister boyko a body soft is likely to struggle to form a government on the results are expected on thursday. under his government is clamping down on independent reporting of the corona virus pandemic according to an internal memo from the one state run media companies now allowed to film and take
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photos a hospital said dr surgeries prime minister viktor orban is facing international criticism for those restrictions. by the pandemic of sport a huge sports huge changes to people's lives in personally and professionally covered 19 can be suffers with lingering symptoms like fatigue and shortness of breath the w.'s the london correspondent bill good mass caught up with an operatic voice coach who's turned her talents to helping people suffering from long cove it brings easily. blowing bubbles to help with. susie doing basic training. she has developed special greeting exercises. and for some of them is a bit too hard work at the moment but what it does is it just allows your voice a little bit of a chance to unpressed. she says it's thanks to susie that she feels well again and is able to take a new hobbies just
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a year ago she was suffering from a lung infection and needed oxygen 3 months on i remember feeling fill fatigued breathless. i mean literally from my bed to the bathroom i would just get breathless. shiba never dreamed that of all people sing us from the english national opera would be the want to help a brief arm stand to show the heights in weekly zoom sessions participants learn to relax and improve that posture and most of all to prevent just hope that from men we think a lot about breathing down because if you're breathing you're taking in lots of that and actually tend not to be expanding the so just giving people tools to slow things down and give them an amendment is really out.
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being part of a group is hugely important. i could have never imagined coming out of that dark mess all by myself so it's mean a huge support system for me it's like my family now we had i guess you can say a common purpose to get better and what the more beautiful way to think. out and heal them at the same time music and meds that have come together and this unique project and it's been so successful that it's now being rolled out in covert clinics across the u.k. . shiba dreams of singing on a real opera state together with others like that and that dream could come true
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thing as soon as school week restrictions allow the international opera up plans to states if there is a special prize. for the patients. through thick and through singing. in sports sundays big game sold only on the ballin host tatter and the burning dobby went on with looking for a win that would keep them in the hunt for european qualification and keep their city rivals mired in relegation trouble but hetta hot other ideas. heter were forced into a change for the darby. positive covert 1000 test meant alexander was pressed into service in goal. but not spurred on by their funds fireworks outside the grounds started with a bang. reacted well to push. second minute header. but
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there was nothing the stand in keeper could do moments later. a rocket from under they made it one nil to after 10 minutes. my it looked like it would take an easter miracle for her to get back into the match and one julia arrived when the referee deemed this challenge and material game dizzy worthy of a penalty. dodie look at bucky was stepped up and sent to the wrong way 11 after 35 minutes and that's the way it finished after a 2nd half in which no one could quite get it right in front of goal. the spoils shared in the darby to the point and has done neither side much good. so here's a look at the current standings by a munich of move 7 points clear of 2nd place fallsburg and frankfurt are at 3rd and 4th and balinese 7th in the 2nd half the table you can see had near the bottom of
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14th that's just 2 points above the relegation zone. so watching that b.w. coming up next a news asian we look at. american how it's worsened unemployment amongst women in india but i ask if there's any safety that for the. flash flooding guy kills dozens and used in indonesia with a rescue one company by washed away roads and bridges. let me follow i'm indonesian activist working to protect his country's coastline one soccer player i talked. to john we'll have those stories and more ended just a moment i'll be back at the top of the out in the meantime of course as always the d w which will give you that news and updates around the clock have a good. luck.
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if he's quite as simple as it seems. to understand the world better we need to take a closer look at. the experience knowledge to. 60. dollars in mexico many pushing most loves us right now in the uk right now climate change living off the stored. face is much less a way from just one week. how much oil can really do. we still have time to act i'm going. to
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success. that subscribe for more news like this. more than a 1000 years ago europe witnesses a huge construction boom. christianity for the established itself. both religious and secular leaders or eager to display their power. trip speaking. and create the tallest biggest most beautiful structure. stone masons builders and markets compete with each other. this is called a massive churches are created. contest because the goods stores are closed on t.w. .
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you're watching news asia coming up to. india's gender income gap crisis has only gotten worse during the pandemic how have women coped has there been much of a government social safety net and just how much has the past year set them back. plus flash floods in eastern indonesia killed dozens while you merge and see crews find roads and bridges blocked or damaged from the tropical cyclone. and we followed one environmentalist on a mission to protect his island's coast from rising ocean waters one sampling at a time. i'm melissa chan thank you for joining us in india at new data shows that unemployment hit women the hardest during the pandemic according to the study
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conducted by the center for monitoring indian economy only 9 percent of women of working age are employed that's a massive gender gap that will only get worse as the country faces yet another spike in covert cases. takes a closer look. it through has been out of work for more than a year. the 55 year old domestic worker used to cook at several homes in an upmarket neighborhood but the pandemic prestone her life upside down. the law ground was really bad for those who are using it on me so i don't rationalize that were donated to us i as i said it's my employers told us not because they were worried we might bring the wider us into the hoops we couldn't do much after that any. one of many women who lost their livelihoods overnight when the government imports a lot don't last too. according to multiple studies and surveys conducted recently
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women work with especially those who work in the informal or the on overnight fictive have taken a much harder hit by the common 1000 logged on that was implemented compared to men a large number of these women have either lost out on work entirely or have seen a shop fall in their incomes. dry is a social worker who helps women working informally she says that while men can travel to find work family responsibilities mean women have to stay closer to home . in the unorganized women lost. world as domestic help into construction legal treatment in the cases of co-write us are still rising it does not look like they will get their work. on women's participation in the workforce was already declining but the sudden shutdown caused by call that 19 was a severe blow to india's economy shrank by nearly a quarter in the 1st few months of the pandemic. economists trust says the impact
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of the downturn has been distribution it who suffered it's the women they are the more vulnerable in the labor force they have a border educated comparatively dared to delude comparatively because i don't think the government has done enough with india actually provide for drugs both those who who who have jobs they're working less hours so if they're working less hours without or almost inevitable that the men are going to have whatever work there is going to be and not women this is an extra financial burden for on top of caring for the sick husband and daughter her own health is deteriorating further limiting her options. and it's going to be difficult to get work. but i have a family to look after i have been trying to get to work. doing some. silva feels she cannot even go back to her village as there's nothing there for her now life
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has become a daily struggle for survival joining us is patty lake a chatter gee in delhi she's a journalist and columnist working on health and social issues. has impacted women around the world we just saw the story of one woman who worked in the informal sector and i wonder do these workers in india have a social safety net and do even white collar workers have a good social safety net their height of the. great to be here with you on your show you know that's that's unfortunate flat vast majority of workers in india almost 90 percent are actually part of what we call the informal economy and . of course there's degrees are pretty carroty of vulnerability the vast majority creating that women don't really have any they don't have formal job contracts as a salary you know it's not
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a salary at the end of the month so that's that's where the problem comes in i've been over the last year actually literally walking 2 lanes and bylines of delhi visiting many of these slums and talking to women and men but a lot of women who are children fall into the cracks who are at risk and the key reason is that even when they have work there is no real written contract again very little bargaining power so you know if you're talking about social protection in practice in practice very very little now in some countries the pandemic has set one in back decades they say to the 19 eighties and i wonder is that the case for india is that what you think. yes i don't think we have the study as yet you know and how much but i read recently a study was a pew research that forget about the poorest of the poor even the middle class
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that's people like me and you know a lot of people i know even though we would actually be sitting back and men. you know to be able to i mean forget about getting you jobs and bonuses and things like that a lot of us including that in class women have dipped into their savings right so you can imagine people living in slums and you know who don't have you know a regular pay what's happening there all that debt is the face of the pandemic at the moment you know even the economic recovery we are right now in the green shoots of you know recovery. just because the places open doesn't mean everybody's getting up their full wage you know i know many people like places for instance beauty parlors where they get in just a fraction sometimes one 3rd or what they used to get before sometimes not even that it's a one 3rd or a percentage of the business they generate so you know it it can be deceptive just
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because you see buzzin market places doesn't mean everybody has you know enough money to make both ends meet yes i think we're definitely going to be set back i can't tell you exactly how much because i don't think we have a study as yet but if the middle class is having that such a tough time the super rich but not i can imagine what the us majority of indians are going to and women of course have been in many many raise not just economic could. have chatted to thank you so much for joining us. flash floods and landslides have hit islands in southeast indonesia as well as east timor this weekend with rescuers struggling to reach places due to damaged bridges and roads as of monday evening in asia more than 90 people have been killed another 40 or so missing with officials warning the death toll is expected to climb.
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a human chain to escape the raging waters rain storms have triggered landslides and overflowing dams leaving small communities inundated. rescue workers use whatever resources are available to bring survivors to safety. but it is the water has risen up to my head and it's still not stopping we need help right away. your village is cut off yes the waters reach the 2nd floor the military police and disaster agencies are helping coordinate the emergency response indonesia's president has offered his condolences for the dead and called for vigilance. but as i urge everyone to follow the directions of local authorities regarding the danger of floods and landslides due to extreme rainfall but did it. in neighboring east timor government offices were beset by the storms effects. asked
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for the moment we are cleaning the mud because of the flood that happened in the vicinity of the presidential palace the. rescue efforts in both countries have been slowed by damaged bridges and roads and a lack of heavy equipment the remoteness of some affected areas is also complicating operations to fully assess the damage. staying in indonesia here's a longer term water challenge for the country it's coastlines face erosion something conservationists have struggled with for decades they say one way to reverse course is to plant mangrove forests is particularly important for low lying areas threatened by the climate emergency and the ocean flooding of arable soil. every east of jakarta may be located on the world's most densely populated island job but this agricultural region is tranquil most of it is below sea level making its rice fields especially vulnerable to surging waves and rising tides local
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promise said the problem is getting worse and that straightening their livelihoods . they should be a dam made of stone. so it can effectively blow up the way because the sea as a riding out a land. but there's a simple way to protect people's land from the rising seas today environmentalist so much informative some sudanese showing the villages children what they can do to fight the effects of climate change. it looks like playing in the mud but it has a purpose these young environmentalist supplanting mangrove separately to protect the serious future. mangroves can act as a barrier to the strong winds from the ocean as it increases in size so wise will not destroy the land and they could be
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a lot of damage to the land which is caused by those being why it's. about 10 or less the. same pseudonym its many villages think his message is crazy and he septa is a nuisance that crops some people even remove them once he's done. so to change people's minds these fairy tales to reach out to locals dressing up as an endangered javanese rhino and delivering his conservationist message to some of these fans. when i decided to make this travelling fairytale i hope the children i met could become heroes for their environment and here i was to save my indignation read animals in the forests and preserving mangroves i now contrary. i think there are sensitive admits even his family questions his devotion to the mangroves some times. that he's activism has
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a point 0. mangroves could be the key to maintaining religious way of life and that culture too. that's it for today there's more indeed at the dot com for its last. we'll leave you with pictures of female military police cadets in india they're training for 61 weeks and are due to graduate next month the 1st women in that division of the armed forces there thank you for watching we'll see you tomorrow and good bye. to.
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the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. has the rate of infection been developing what does the latest research say. information and context the coronavirus update. on t.w. . and you you may know years there's real news in how last year's german chancellor will bring your uncle a man called as you've never heard her before surprise yourself with your disposable who is medical really what moves. on somebody who talks to people who follows her along the way admirers and critics alike how is the world's most powerful woman shaping her legacy joining us from eccles law stops a. problem
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in society we have at the moment every one of the great of making a. what may happen if we don't do. the pen demick has changed life as we know it. but what comes next. will our fast paced lives pick up again. do we continue to innovate regardless of the cost. live lives profit driven. and globally connected. or has this pandemic sparked irreparable change.
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how will we live in the future after the pandemic. hello and welcome to detail his covert 900. 11 and this week we're peeking ahead imagine life after the cove in 1000 pandemic our guest today is richard sennett he's a british american sociologist and one of the world's most important theorists of urban studies or the architecture and social life of cities said it is currently a member of the council of urban initiatives for united nations habitat and since the beginning of the outbreak he's written about his concerns for city life amid growing pandemic restrictions. professor senate welcome to the show you've described the city as a settlement in which strangers are likely to meet one another there hasn't been a whole lot of that lately given the pandemic as vaccines come online and more people are vaccinated are you optimistic that the city will come back.
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indeed i think it has to come back because. in the long term we need. places where people can interact face to face we need economically we need dense cities for the sake of climate change and really ration is not an option for people to live long term socially distance lives professor we talk about cities of course we talk about the architecture of a city as one thing and we also talk about social interactions or look 1st at the architecture what could this mean for how cities are planned in terms of i think of open spaces for example elevators that are probably being avoided now more than ever when you see well i think long term this argues just as climate change for much more flexible ways of building cities.
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to not make spaces which can only be used in one way it might be the age of the skyscraper is over. or they were going to have to rethink public transport but it say about both the issue is is how to think about adaptable spaces not to transform these spaces in a place to share stricken by sheer. in which see. in which the extremes of social isolation. to which the talent is. are going to lead to permanently socially isolated spaces question of experiment. spacing people out in public transportation. figuring different ways to use elevators and so on it's trivial the horrible thing would be to freeze the
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environment we talk about the social interactions that make up a city as well you mention as well that face to face interaction do you think a pandemic has always made us more aware of our our social connections the social capital that we have in their life. you knew a man and a life spent on. what kind of kind of human experience that would be. you know this is the nurse it's what it when i'm saying you know the danger in this is that you know actualize the extreme. zoom or even working from home in isolation full time as a norm can't do that it's a very soon me very. evocative. where we are today of what happened in new york 20 years ago you have to was hit by 911 almost immediately well the planet because in new york were rewritten as though every
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week another airplane would fly to new york skyscraper didn't happen but a decade the city was paralyzed and building these fortress like structures that's what we have to boyd. that that kind of paralysis and yet at the same time there is a real danger as we know from the virus so how do we find the right way of measuring the importance of our social lives with the real devastation that the virus can cause well. this is just my. pretty little opinion but there it's a we really have a problem with are various was going to radically transform our lives look that way you're going there no vaccines there are very few. drugs that could could treat
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people who are sick now or in a very different place. and i hope you in germany soon will be in their places as well. where people who are vaccinated have a big weapon to use against. militants was your coming onstream military even if you fall sick you're not doomed to die and so we're we need to change your consciousness. you know we have to take on board that this narrative has changed what we think of when we use the term the virus is not a death sentence against very. redolent of the aids crisis in new york and eighty's when the beginning of it people thought this
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was our mega done. gradually you know it became a chronic disease but many of the current practices that people were recommending in the 1980 s. to deal with aids. were the notion that anybody who was touched by it was going to die and that became very very counterproductive over the long term it's sort of odd that i'm saying this to you know a very old 100 people supposed to be mustered risk from this virus but it just seems to me that i think being paralyzed with fear is a horrible way to live and now that we don't need. to be paralyzed with fear we've got to move on mentally and. and think about ways to. to live with it. rather than feel overwhelmed by.
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in britain i don't know how those in germany but in britain you sell newspapers or social media. byard flaming the sense of fear the very very afraid it's overwhelming. that's good for generalism but it's not good for human beings. so i really see this is a moment where you got to say is going to be over for you i think it's i hope it will be all over. it could i say one more thing about this for you. because threaded to. race in europe is that. during the last year of the crisis could lead to the breakup of the european union it would be a terrible long term. where nations think that you know the because the
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union largely failed failed you that it should be abandoned for really essential things go back to the nation state. there would be a terrible way to as it were naturalized the state of emergency present future free of. it you know so i just think it's very important to to look forward rather than learning lessons from about how can you use this crisis is. that there for now richard thank you so much for joining us ok thank you. and now it's time for your questions over to our science correspondent there. what impact has the pandemic had on the public perception of science this is the perfect question to start off this week's look at visions of the post coded world
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because one of the things the pandemic has done is radically change the way that many of you out there in the public view science and scientists some have turned into really famous figures who are no really well known not just in their home countries but all over the world germany also of course gained a few new science of leverage these in 2020 the most prominent of the viral a just in chief christiane dalston millions of germans tune in for his regular pandemic podcasts he's even been turned into a traditional christmas ornament so one wake up at 19 has certainly changed public perception of science is by dragging researchers and science experts out of the
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shadows they mostly worked and up until now and arresting them and their fields on to center stage i mean i'm sure there are lots of kids here in germany now saying i want to grow up to be the next gen dalston and if you ask me that's a great thing. derek williams there and around the world christians are celebrating easter one of the most important festivals on the christian calendar we'll leave you now with a look at how the faithful celebrated during the global pandemic thanks for watching stay safe and we'll see you soon again. odd.
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emissions prison into. young people all over the world are committed to climate protection. so much effect will that. because change doesn't happen on its own. to make up your own mind. w. food for minds. the same or your 5 keys to seek for food. keep clean to prevent company ships. go. for a draw and cook foods to avoid cross contamination. cook served to kill microorganisms.
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keep food safe temperature of the cold to prevent bacteria book. use safe water and safe raw materials to avoid content. producers are the ones primarily responsible for the safety of the food. but you can protect yourself and your family from diseases in the home by plying the 5 keys to see for food use them you also have a role to play. this
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