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tv   ZDF Bauhaus  Deutsche Welle  April 19, 2021 2:00am-3:01am CEST

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the great books of the 20th century. present day hoaxes this is. and who's behind. this kind of behavior is unacceptable and will not be allowed manufacturing ignorance starts make good on d w. this is d.w. news and these are our top stories the race to succeed on the americal as germany's chancellor is heating up as her conservative alliance struggles to agree on a candidate for september's general election the standoff is between various premier mako sudha and the head of seaview in blush it a recent poll shows more supposed support for zuda among voters.
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a wildfire on south africa's table mountain has forced students from the university of cape 10 to evacuate one firefighter has been injured the bushfire began on the slopes of the mountain and spread to surrounding areas helicopter crews dropped water to try to quell the blaze as winds rough and spread the for the flames. the united states has warned russia there will be consequences if jailed opposition leader alexei navalny dies in prison of all these doctors say after almost 3 weeks on hunger strike his life is hanging by a threat of al nice says he doesn't have access to independent medical care. this is deja news from berlin you can find more headlines on our website that's t w dot com and also on our social media channels.
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toxic surfing is not really a sport for the phrase heart of the curve in norway the athletes have to raise temperatures that are only just about freezing. not for me thank you very much. and with that welcome to a new edition of euro max from our nice and warm studio let's see what else we have for you today. these miners deep in west command for them to get in now and keep on living and. the 100 and you will go down from paris still telling you you. know our 1st report isn't about skiing as you might think it's about surfing in snowy weather and freezing
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temperatures these days surfing fans are heading to north and norway in search of the ultimate kick surfing north of the arctic circle you don't believe me then watch this. driving snow and icy wind and water temperatures of 4 degrees celsius. perfect weather for surfing. at least for surfing fans here in the for tonight and. the norwegian archipelago is known as the northernmost surfers paradise more and more people are heading to the arctic circle to ride the waves. one of them is norwegian a lot higher than. in 20000 he moved here just for the waves. it's a bit hard korean or even surfing wrong the world of the war but it is not more drawers
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but. we appreciate the way this war every way means war because of the harder to catch you know if we is a bit more the war to be harder everything's a bit tougher. 6 millimeters a mere preen is all that separates the surface of their skin from the icy waters ready in recent years was suits have been developed for the night. serry freedom of movement and since the surfers have been heading for the icy arctic waters. less people and less good servers means more ways for everyone. the waves are said to offer ideal surf and conditions. just off the coast the sea plunges to depths of $500.00 metres. the water coming in from greenland to form waves several metres high.
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these days some 5000 surfers a year venture here not that many compared to other surfing spots. most of them have for the base of. the family around 300 kilometers north of the arctic circle is known as the birthplace of arctic surfing. and that is thanks to former seaman tor from saying some 50 years ago in a friend watching surfers in australia back in norway they wanted to try it for themselves they looked at a beach boys album cover and built a surfboard of their own. farm with lots of patience staying power and styrofoam they toughened selves how to surf. a little. closer to the chute but the chute should be. no veuve you need look at least 11 bees. we made peace without wetsuits surfing here was only for the toughest
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of the tough. you know but they're much a new war to the water and you are. wrong to mean it's and you have to go short again it was not so easy. the young surfers and stuff have it easier today. wearing modern what suits they can stay in the water and ride the waves for as long as they like. for at least as long as their strength holds out. low water to high tide but it's great fun time to get out of the city. i'd call this part. in the wind. to me not getting into a. nice. arctic
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surfing in the futon or riding the waves takes on a whole different kind of cool. and. that's how i learned in my handicraft class but i haven't done any knitting since then so it looks like i need to get some practice maybe mid wear designer steven wes can give me some tips we visited him in the dutch city. that year old american steven west is on a mission to make knitting and knitwear more and more popular. this pretty colored patents captivate young people i mean to cuba and. i do all the designs and patterns myself so i like write all the patterns and i know and conceptualize all the designs so i put
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a lot of passion and i really really love everything i make i love working with tons of colors because that's what inspires you the most west lives in amsterdam he has around 225000 followers on instagram. and online tutorials he demonstrates how to knit his colorful geometric patterns. in chunks play an important part in his videos that's something i want to do a lot more of as make things really fun video tutorials so that a lot of different types of people will feel invited to meeting and it doesn't have to being something always so technical but it can also be something really playful and fashionable west who is also a trained dancer and choreographer starts out with sketches then he and his team work out the finished product quest is achieved cult status among fans the world over he regularly publishes books of eating patterns with guidelines even found in
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his own wooden slate will and his co own a little shop in amsterdam. i don't like to play by the rules i don't like to by the rules i never learned how to take a design class or any of that so i made up everything just by playing. among stephen west's fans stettin year old constantine seabeck from berlin he lent him it from his grandmother and get his ideas and inspiration online from. the social media network specializes in hand crafts and has some 9. in registered accounts the world over its rival 1st sneer was just fascinated with what you can do with knitting actually i thought knitting was something for grannies but that's not true and 39 year old pianist fabien philo from berlin has also discovered the joys of knitting he wrote his own music school but it's also still found time to knit a good 100 items including sweaters scoffs caps songs and blankets.
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knitting is pure joy. i love to know that because i can just sit on the sofa in the evening after a long working day light the fire and enjoy this moment of peace movement war. well coming months i can focus on one thing forget about everything else and unwind. but the trend isn't limited to handmade items the latest men's fashion collections feature knitwear in all the writings colorful patterned oversized simple this season knitting is not to be ignoring each. session can confirm that he's run a woman shop in berlin for many years and not only that he regularly organizes knitting excursions and knitting events even knitting cruises but now as the pandemic rages on his events are only held online for example his weekly online
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meet meeting. unfunctional just at 1st i put on life facebook shows that i can only communicate with the customers one way. and then i realized there's room and other platforms. but on the zoom and i found that i could really interact and speak to the participants. and i can ask them things and they can answer so i can show them things and we can work them out and just have fun and chat while we're at it you know back to amsterdam and stephen west his shop is already a fixture in the heart of the city and he lacks no shortage of ideas for future creations. that could be like a t.v. show where it's like maybe a western it's talk show but with a lot of dance breaks so we can learn new techniques there could be some tutorials on the t.v. show i could interview all my friends i think that would be crazy i don't know if the world is ready for a. new team is a successful trend that's now finding
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a lot of interest among men. the lady we are about to meet is 106 years old and is still a talented pianist collette mays began to play at the tender age of 5 and hasn't stopped since nobody really knows if she is the oldest piano player in the world and to her it doesn't really matter because she still feels quite young at heart we paid her a visit at her home in paris. 6 call it maes loves to play the piano she's 106 years old and still plays for at least 4 hours every day she cannot imagine life without her beloved instrument.
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through playing the piano has a physical quality says yes touching it caressing it it makes a difference whether your hammering the key. or softly pressing with your fingertips like. colette was born into a french upper middle class family in 1914. she started learning the piano at the age of 5. even as a child music helped her escape her strict upbringing and enter her own carefree world. there because. my mother was a very stern i hold hard times men who didn't really like children unlike my grandmother but i was always scared of getting smacked a mistake sight supposedly made although i never knew what i had done wrong though playing the piano always offered me some comfort. when she was
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15 attended the paris school of music and later worked as a piano teacher. she's been playing the piano for over a century now but she didn't publish her 1st album until she reached the age of 84 . her son father reese mays supports his mother. and father of c. . my mother went through a lot of tough times in her life like many others. as the old but once she sat down at the piano she lost herself in the world of music. it gave her positive energy strength and motivation to yes this into. the age of one o 6 call it still feels pretty agile. and peculiarly old. to declare. a swastika i think it's
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a question of mindset that my mother had many good qualities but mentally speaking she was always old. staying young isn't a question of age yet and that neither your young or your not overlap or that. despite her age colette mays is still highly active. she says being passionate is key. for a fast looked at that knife is all about staying passionate and curious but you can't let that slip away by blasting. an attitude that seems to be working wonders for her health. ringback ringback plan measure. duty fortunately she doesn't have any major health issues.
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apart from her eyesight and hearing deteriorating. she doesn't eat much but she eats very regularly close to sort of kill and there are 3 things she can't do without you know this it is live for the cheese like often people. use you and she also enjoys a glass of wine if you have them she keeps herself busy to. its new album will be ready by the end of april again featuring works by. favorite composer. and then she can look forward to celebrating her 107th birthday on june 16th. i would say that lady is really record breaking and you can find many more record breaking stories in our europe to the max reports on our you tube channel. your head from its extreme site in europe to the max your max reporting hendrik
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belling takes you to one of a kind places in your at. the highest pain of the biggest stadium. the iciest hotel. breathtaking. stunning. record breaking. it was amazing it was like the weirdest thing i've ever done. what chicks dream quipping moments now on i you tube channel. that we have a brand new book to accompany our europe sort of max reports featuring the $111.00 extreme places in europe that you shouldn't miss if you like to copy them and viewers just go to our website for all didn't details when i go hiking i get hungry very quickly so i usually take them and which is with me bread butter cheese that's it's well some people are
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a bit more ambitious than i am they like to cook at recourse neil out in the wilds dead you would normally only find in a very fancy restaurant i would be much too lazy to go to all that effort but mark them or showed us how it's. it's still adding morning when marcus semma heads up into the mountains this time for a new adventure in the alps the very an extreme athlete loves lonely trails. but once he's reached the mountain top he's not content with a simple snack he treats unself to some homemade news lee with fresh blueberries. his number even in the mountains is a real pleasure especially when you have fresh ingredients and it's like fresh farmers. are all made mostly where you know exactly what's in it you need energy for mountaineering that's why i think you should prepare as much of your own food
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as possible marcus m. as a trained cook who used to work in munich's high class restaurants he always like to take time off for traveling around the world one day he decided to combine his 2 major passions in life cooking and adventure and now he publishes books on who may outdoor cuisine and today against this amazing backdrop he's preparing freshwater civic chase a stop followed by venice insulting baka with forrest mushroom risotto he's brought everything he needs with him. inside me how can i but i can pack the char it was freshly caught this is the only keep for one day so hot here's my saddle that isn't . frozen earlier you know how it'll keep for about one day when my then it'll be fully defrosted i'm told marcus fine dining on a mountaintop is an affordable luxury he starts by fill it in the chop then
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marinating it in lemon and finally adding a mango onion ginger chili coriander and peanuts to professor v. chip cruz national dish. then marcus needs to boil water for the main course. you have your. the interim only gusts now available up here. would be better as it contains us air. that would need less gas to melt liter of water. he's only got a limited amount of cooking gas with him so he's got to use it wisely. he can't predict how long the drive force mushroom and rice will need to boil as that depends on the altitude. the higher a climb the lower the air pressure highest that means my broth boils at a far lower temperature in an extreme case say 8000 meters of water boils at just 60 degrees celsius so i mean the problem there is some food doesn't cut properly
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today he says now to do 1700 meters so preparing the result isn't an issue cooking time for the venison wrapped in safe can have also depend on the outer tube there with enough patience mountaineers could prepare meat even in the himalayas and the south and baka looks almost as good as in a 5 star restaurant with their movements by looking at the mountains isn't always as easy as it looked today. but it certainly fun trying new things by combining the things you've previously learned in life. time for to set marcus gets busy grinding coffee to make a tiramisu without having tricity to whisk eggs he simply dips espresso biscuits in musk a pony. this ring for high always trying to find the essential recipes. that way anyone can recreate them outdoors. and me.
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after this rich 3 course many it's time to burn off some calories and as the sun begins to set marcus erect his one man tent he treats himself to some ginger tea while watching the sunset. this in the. yes we're in a star studded restaurant tonight with a 1000000 stars hotel it's going to be a beautiful starry night no luxury hotel could offer that. that's the real luxury but preparing your own delicious food outside and building your own restaurant patio bustin con. cool chef marcus center really knows how to enjoy life so many flavors in the great outdoors. don't is a very hot material we all know that but spend the shots of man where castro can make it appear quite soft elastic and flexible we took a look over the skull shoulder while he was hard at work in his workshop.
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soft as butter. pierced like skin. and folded like cloth. these are sculptures by spanish artist jose manuel castro. cars all his works and stone. my relationship to stones isn't really physical. it's magical. because i feel the stones in a very special way. as if they obeyed me. and we had a kind of relationship like a friendship. there. was a man well castro trained as a stone mason and sculptor in the 1980 s. at the a school or become terrorists and go to northwestern spain it is known as one of
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the country's best schools for stone masonry. like a leash and culture has a profound relationship with stone. there's the ranging from the megalithic monuments to cathedrals. they're all the work i do with stone is based on this close relationship you me and. i see it as something living. the sculptor draws inspiration from the coalition countryside and whether being coastline. here went on water the forces of nature work the stone and create bizarre shapes. jose manuel castro's workshop is in the village of villa d'souza so near the atlantic coast. here he chisels grinds and sands out the smooth flowing surfaces of his stone sculptures with power tools. as well as painstakingly
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by hand. he gives the stone a finishing patina with ferric chloride at high temperatures. we've moved well i've always been good at drawing and i made models for a long time. they argue the techniques are a help. but you also need a good imagination. but few of his neighbors know what he does for a living and some of his sculptures have been exhibited around the world like this work in granite titled union a parrot for conspicuous union. workers combined with wood. as well as his courts. or spike sculptures. castro often works with more kenya
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a black stone commonly found in the region. that everybody going to visit its main quality is that you can give the stone an incredible shine . like a mirror if there is maybe the look you have that's because it is so hard. to meet they. need a kind of a whole movie so when you polish the stone you don't even rub off the top layer of fine particles but in the ring that ash here that up here that are part of the or if i mean we freenet. he's often drawn to the rugged coast. this is where he comes to wind down after a long hard days of work. and i don't scold because i find it relaxing because i feel the urge to do this but it's exhausting physically taxing and
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requires a lot of dedication so yes whenever i completed demanding project you know i always feel satisfied. jose manuel castro an artist who simply cannot withstand the magical attraction of stones. and that's all we have time for today but don't forget to follow us on social media or more like i report until we meet again. in berlin thanks for watching see you again soon.
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this system is so fragile and it's finally being upset by the pandemic. of migrant workers not only do they use their leashes to support their families. they are also supporting the local economies of their home country. new ideas to help ensure that their families are combining for it in the future and gloomy was a. mixed up v.w.
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. over a 1000 years ago but construction frenzy sweeps across europe rulers show off their power and director magnificent sacred buildings. more airy splendid and colorful than ever before. the contest of the cathedrals part to the gothic period. in 45 minutes on d w. e mountain because it is increasing every year and many i'm gonna working on the be a fairly holiday destinations and drowning in custom my mind and the cars. come. in from here in europe to dispose of 1000000
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tons of plastic waste. used to another layer of faster all the environment is interest cyclable. to make up your own mind. w. made for mines. welcome to global street thousands. work money the means to survive we find out what's changed during the pandemic the challenges faced by migrant workers in india returning to rural areas. in germany romanian workers are fighting for their rights in the meat industry. and the lack of jobs in kenya is leaving people who struggle
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at the best of times increasingly desperate. there's no doubt the kovac 19 pandemic has hit the poorest hardest this year alone the number of people worldwide living in extreme poverty looks set to climb to 150000000 off of them children in formal jobs in particular have seen sweeping cuts including in kenya where steady work is hard to come by many kenyans rely on income sent over from their relatives working abroad. it is deeply unhappy the 3 year old is missing his mom. for more than a year now his only contact with her husband via video chat. that's because she's taken a job as a domestic worker and a nanny in saudi arabia. both kylie and his 8 year old
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brother up to have stayed back in kenya under the care of their grandmother they live in complera a huge slum on the edge of nairobi. and he says like many kenyans his mother stuffer runs a sega felt she had no other choice than to seek work abroad. with. the money that my daughter was making here in kenya just wasn't enough she decided to go to saudi arabia for the sake of the family. we depend on her for everything she went in january 2020 and says she won't be back until january 2022. 2022. at 1st stuffer runs us and all her income to kenya up to $230.00 us dollars a month it's not only her mother and children who depend on the money so do his
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siblings and 5 year old nephew. i use the money to pay school fees for the children i buy their school uniforms and food for everyone. she doesn't send any money we just have to make do because we have no other form of income to cover the rent and buy food so we just purser. with a pandemic income from kenyans working abroad has become even more vital millions of people in kenya have lost their jobs as a result of lockdowns and the collapse of the tourism industry. for those who are already poor it's especially tough. stefan's a sister used to work in a hotel now she does odd jobs where she can the virus has also made things tougher for difference in saudi arabia.
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sometimes. a mistake maybe someone starts sometimes at sitting and they see my mother. and that is a manager to me she did my name maybe she was many. thanks . i think. because of lockdowns and curfews in saudi arabia differential hasn't sent much money home since 2 nonstandard the family are struggling measures introduced to stop the spread of the virus have impacted economies around the world remittances sent home by migrant workers have gone down in many countries but economist jane she qualities says the opposite is true for kenya. a lot of us expected to have
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a meeting since we got out because most of the. stronger economies were feeling the strongest negative impact because of government but what's surprising is that much of their admittance is wound up. by almost 10.7 percent. received more money from outside than ever before i think that you know pretty 1000000000. $3000000000.00 u.s. dollars in 2020 that's nearly half the value of kenya's annual exports many kenyans working abroad are in highly qualified jobs with a good salary and they keen to see progress in their home country so they not only send money to their families they're also actively investing in the kenyan economy . remittances is a hope for kenya possibility to start orienting its economy crowds production
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and by the addition because we notice that remittances are not just about food. that's for opinions have opted to start investing in back in the country the money is flowing into many different sectors ranging from tourism to agriculture it's giving a much needed boost to the kenyan economy that could improve the lives of many people certainly the a cigar family is desperately hoping for change. in the meantime little will continue to miss his mother and no doubt shed many more tears before they're finally reunited. it's
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a worldwide phenomenon people leaving their homes and families to work abroad as domestic servants in care work or construction or as agricultural work has 164000000 international migrant workers headed to wealthy and nations for work in 2019 that's according to estimates by the un among them were highly qualified and medical staff according to the world bank in $2900.00 migrant labor has sent $554000000000.00 u.s. dollars home to their families most of this was earned in the u.s. the united arab emirates and saudi arabia they sent it back to their families in india china and mexico. but it's not just families who rely on this ng come the entire economies of some countries depend on it too. they can help pay for housing food and education remittances from family members abroad make up a significant part of household income in many countries on average migrants send around
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15 percent of their monthly wages back home and many of them use money transfer services the connectivity that has allowed the global markets by. this is forwardable their production of clothes for a bagel you can. increase your. own bank accounts. storing your money in a particular patient and make it more. western union was one of the 1st international money transfer services it is now been sending around money for 150 years until recently it relied on a large staff and infrastructure like physical locations costs for international transfers could reach around 20 percent of the money being sent but these services . have increasingly gone digital today to transfer money you only need internet
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access that and increased competition have cut costs as a mo a digital service was founded in 2012. it now operates in over $190.00 countries. we aim to be 70 to 80 percent cheaper than the high street offering and generally our charges are coming in at anything for all for very for a very high traffic car or someone who has very well developed trials could be as low as point $35.00 and said the average costs for international transfers are around 6.5 percent worldwide according to the world bank by 2030 the un through its sustainable development goals wants to reduce remittance charges to less than 3 percent in order to help reduce global inequality and poverty once you give somebody the power in their hands to very quickly and very cheap they instantly
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send money to people that that behavior change and generally that change in a way that supports inclusion and supports. households run by women in particular to invest remittances from abroad primarily in the education of the next generation according to unesco report from 2019 but the coronavirus pandemic has resulted in lower income for migrant workers and thus lower remittance flows and in 2021 the flow of money could decrease even more that would have far reaching consequences and. it looks of the country the formal education secondary are not too costly but their story yes continuation of education can be a challenge if it insists does not come through and so then do so will the huge development implications. country or country unhealthful has
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a reliance on. migrants and their families are hoping for a quick end to the pandemic that wave the next generation will have better chances . typically migrant workers are employed in hard graft jobs gemini's meat industry for example relies on foreign labor from eastern europe every day these workers dismember thousands of carcasses in appalling conditions it's work most local people don't want to do now though the workers are fighting back. these people responded to ads in romania and came to germany to work in the meat processing industry they left their homes in search of a better life but that's not what they found. the worst thing was the hours. i had to get up for work at 1 in the morning. and i'd
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have to work until 5 or 6 in the evening. change. they treat you like a slave every day you're moving tons of money to get back pain and all you learn by the end of the month is $800.00 euros that's enough to make you weep. just plain simple the 2 men gave notice after 3 months in the meat factory and began working at a different company called mohsen in cute little in north rhine-westphalia they hope that conditions there would be better from the 1st of april temporary workers may no longer be hired in germany meat industry until now foreign workers were employed by subcontractors and worked for low wages but now employers and unions cannot come to a way to agreement workers representatives are ramping up pressure and calling for strikes workers are kept up to date on the negotiations thanks to news bulletins in romanian polish and russian many of them don't speak german but had signed
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contracts written in german nonetheless when they realized what they'd let themselves in full it was too late like conditions and wages are terrible people come here with the wrong expectations they get here and discover that germany isn't paradise on earth gives us. a 3 year old gobbler to live a school wasn't expecting that but he expected to be paid a fair wage he spent 4 months working on a construction site in germany he earned $300.00 euros a month not enough to get by. i have to work that's why i came here. i need to support my family in romania but i want my son to be able to go to university but it's hard going to. desperation drove him and tens of thousands of others from eastern europe to seek work in germany they often do jobs that germans don't want to do. a 15 minute drive from the demonstration
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the small town of home too many remain ians who work in the nearby meat and sausage factory. these men tell us that they've been waiting for more than 2 months to be paid they haven't been able to send money home to their families in romania. we've eaten for 10 days in his pasture with sugar he's been asking for our wages were getting no work. they just lie to us. meanwhile back at martin including us law with the protests are taking place some workers are starting their shifts in the factory leaving some rumanians who've been in germany for 2 years. before i came here i worked in spain for more than 8 years my husband stayed in romania with the children. when our son finished came with me to germany and then my husband followed too.
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so so now they want to stay together here in germany the unions are organizing further strikes and planning to keep up the pressure on management until a wage agreement is reached. when the pandemic struck last year millions of migrant laborers in india lost their jobs the government put the country into lockdown and sent them home. in rural india where most come from there is little work but for a few they return home has offered the possibility of a new beginning. the pandemic cost him his job in the big city it was then another 4 months before can or am garcia could return to his family in rural rent just on there was no work for him there either but he heard. about new training opportunities in the name by city of. a local organization was offering
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short courses so he took a tailoring class. for the lockdown i was in sooraj doing stone cutting work with granite i'd been there since 2012 the lockdown was suddenly everything just closed prime minister modi said stay where you are and we'll take care of you but nothing happened we weren't even allowed to be on the street the police would beat us with their protections if we left the house while the logic of the. garris see it discovered that working with stone made him sick he developed a lung disease called silicosis another reason to train as a tailor instead. at the step academy of he's doing a month long cool spell $1000.00 repeats that's around 11 year olds accommodation and food are included the academy also trains up barbers and office courses on
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basic electrical work to learn how to carry out simple repairs to mobile phones or cards the trainees return to their villages off to the program. sanjay to terror the director of the school says the return of migrant workers is good news for the rural economy. around 1000 young people have passed through our program it's all because of the pandemic many go on to find work or open their own shops. jobs are being created because employers and business people have also returned to the villages. the organization also partners with companies that train homecomings like here at this construction site that paid a minimum wage and can complete that training within 12 months. 3rd. i was doing kitchen working for 5000 rupees a month i worked the whole time even at night. i came home just before the lockdown
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and plan to stay the work in the pay of better here i don't work such long hours and i can help out at home to go to bed at. 10 to ram is happy although life in the village is hot his home can only be reached by foot he lives here with his wife. cities are ok but noisy and polluted i prefer to live in the village it's better he . can or i'm garrus see of the month of training is coming to an end he's looking to take lives in his area that might give him work he hopes to stay with his wife and children rather than going back to surat or another big city. if i go far away again i won't be able to look after my children so i'm looking for work near my village. visit to
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one local tailor shop yields promising results the owner asks him if he can sew i dress and can are embarrassed see it is ready to prove that he can the owner tells him to come back after his training and i hope it works for him. kanner i'm doris see i can hardly wait to share this new ray of hope with his wife and 6 children a year off to knock down many migrant workers have lost faith in the indian government they have hardly received any support and the touted jobs in the big cities no longer exist. in the end the pandemic could actually help revive rural areas. and now we cross the pacific to south america in our global ideas series this week we follow the tracks of jack us based big caps around the threat that habitat is
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being turned into farmland in colombia but help is at hand from an unlikely source the cat's format and it means. it's. a privately run nature reserve on the plains of eastern columbia is home to many red species of wild animal. the vast grasslands are also home to extensive cattle ranches. here but our guns family has lived in the region for generations they own 17000 hectares of land that's almost 3 times the size of manhattan. he's created the private law old order nature reserve on part of this land because
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the habitats of wild animals are shrinking fast as forests are cleared away to create pastures. and that's not the only problem jackie was face here populations across the region are at risk of being wiped out. may. be. the most any of the i will note these here they have found their jaguars are being hunted we don't know who's doing it people like rad tend to keep to themselves but we keep hearing rumors. here on the plains jackie was kill about 100 carbs unfolds here most raja's have no interest in protecting the predatory cats the greatest threat to their livestock.
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we have built traps with fig tree trunks to kill jaguars like this. we anchored them in the ground and put planks like we use ones in the fence over them but what. if a jaguar comes by and it falls in its crushed by the heavy word. but ranchers are being asked to rethink their approach and to learn how to co-exist with the big cats. jag us are protected and may not be killed. but our guns nature reserve is affiliated with the jag you were corrido initiative run by the panther and. the corridor or stretches from argentina to northern mexico. but a gun collects data on the behavior of the cats for panthera. they've installed more than $100.00 video camera traps across the reserve.
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on terra started monitoring the jaguar population in in 2014 with the help of camera traps we set up in various parts of the preserve this way we can identify sponsor jaguars roam which corridors they use we have so far identified 2 major corridors in areas where they have a better forest habitat the one runs from east to west and the other from north to south. the video recordings help them estimate the jag your population and the animals state of health. if they're doing well it indicates that the ecosystem is in good shape too. but i've got has been observing the movements of a certain 4 year old female he's named 13 he's looking for her tracks and other
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traces. jackie was need large hunting grounds and tend to move along well established routes. the savannah a mixed forest grassland ecosystem is being destroyed not just to create pastures but also fields for crops. nature reserves like now aurora are a last refuge for wildlife welcome was based on what we've learned so far is that jaguars have indeed settled in the forests and savannas of lara. a lot of us if there's a number. because the ecosystem is in good shape here name was. in the way those good some of the jaguars are permanent residents while others just pass through. here they can enjoy a peaceful environment with plenty to eat and no natural enemies you need more you
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were not. enough and that's the moment a monster. more than 50 jackie was live here now. as well as lots of other species it's a huge beyond those of our nature conservation work that comes from the heart. we want to live together with the big cats. you're going to have on the fileno some of my neighbors other ranchers are strong like you think the same way. that is especially the younger watching us you know and it's a little they're more aware of the issues. in. humans and their livestock have found a way to co-exist with the jackie was what's more the beautiful cats are becoming a tourist attraction and that means a further source of income for what he bought
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a gun. that's all from us at global 3000 this week don't forget to write to us where at 3000 at d.f.w. dot com and check out our facebook page. as ceasing. to move.
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take to. the bank. this is g.w. news live from berlin turmoil in european football 12 of the continent's top football clubs announced they're forming their own new super league your wife i says it will consider all available measures to stop them also on the program. germany's conservative struggle to choose the man to replace i'm going to machall i am to lead them into the next election to regional leaders are vying for the job i'm sick neither shows any signs of backing down. plus.

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