tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle April 20, 2021 7:03pm-7:31pm CEST
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yes and i actually does know this is not true because i mean they're saying that it's unlikely that he was on the call but he was fine team and probably he might have been actually killed by his own faeces so that's kind of so far from mission made the in the coming hours or days will know more about this outcome says and around his death but so far that's what the people who. speak unity. these are very very fluid situation still fred why he was seen on the battlefield. yet exactly that's the question i mean we know from the past the. president is the who i mean nasty i think all of these titled meet area top of the meter operates my show last year as as as if. he was still seen as a strong military man and he has been i mean it was said that he used to go in the
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battlefield to find the day. before but not at this particular time when he was waiting for the day or future results to be announced and then he goes into the battlefield to fight that's what doesn't make sense at this particular time so does that mean that people think that there have been foul play. yeah exactly a few days ago while i was there in china i was talking to some people and they welcomed this. president idriss deby will not finish is 6 times he's probably going to be killed and even when these. rebels. attacked child coming from north to once they will consist of these people are going to
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succeed there will come to jump in on us t.v. i mean for people who have been seeing him for 30 years as a top and strong military past and believing that he can just just say that in a very easy with that is something which is what people don't understand and what makes people think that's probably the there is some sort of here who could be taking over a now in charge who will take power do we think. he's his son general is this 2nd in command i mean after his father his very strong strong jenaveve there is to see over the years a lot this is the guy the meter has announced that he's going to lead the transitional council and what kind of problems in conclusions could arise from
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a potentially deteriorating situation in china and in the region. well but that chant has so many problems they have poverty they have inside the power of completely tone they did the column she undergoes of this a region. so this is the death of president idriss deby might actually make the situation worse but then he said don't come to the opposition they open season on civil society organization rose up a few days ago a few weeks ago saying that we don't want him to the time for some so all these other powers that are going to stunt and i mean they have got a voice now when there is this pope is some sort of power vacuum now it's like you're going to be what i swear we're going probably to see more people fighting for do power groups also rising to make sure that they get what they wanted but
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also their position on trying to get to what they wanted to remove prince the east to be but of course there's also some of confidantes own form of confidence of president these did also want power. to diffuse west africa correspondent fred thank you for your reporting. they use medical regulator has given a green light to the johnson and johnson cove in 1000 vaccine despite a possible link to rare blood clots well last week the company halted its european rollout after u.s. officials recommended putting the vaccine on hold after detecting 6 very rare blood clot cases among nearly 7000000 people who have been vaccinated the a.m.a. says that the benefits outweigh the risks but a warning should be added to the vaccine labels on this story now our correspondent in brussels as much as what exactly does the e m a decision now mean for the use vaccination campaign. clearly the green light now
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is good news for the european union which initially had a sluggish rollout and has been waiting for those 55000000 doses of johnson and johnson vaccine desperately if you want now johnson and johnson after these cases occurred announce that they proactively will delay the rollout and have asked member states of the european union to hold back the doses they've already received and those can now effectively been given to people so it will accelerate the rollout particularly seeing that there's a single dose vaccine so actually it counts for $110.00 doses of astra zeneca or by intake pfizer in comparison so with this decision will this reassure everyone. you see this is really a problem if you have transparency if you are trying to be very careful and that is what the european union does has done even in their approval face so they wanted to be transparent they wanted to be careful the side effect of that is that it is not
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particularly reassuring people if you make transparent that one in a 1000000 cases can have rare side effects possibly but on the other hand it should be reassuring people should fight vaccine has it and see seeing that the european medicines agency is really careful following every trace if there may be a side effect and that is what of also what they today said what they will continue to do in the future but the matter is still of course that another european vaccine has been beset by challenges how big of a setback is this for a vaccine is developed in europe. exactly so this it's a similar problem that astra zeneca is facing and that is why in case of astra zeneca member states have decided to increase the age level from which the vaccine can be administered you can expect that the same happens to the johnson and johnson vaccine now because particularly young women were affected so now i'm expecting
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that the age level is going to 50 or 60 years of both for the johnson and johnson vaccine as well as the european medicines agency made today clear although both are vector of vaccines with the donor virus as a means to deliver the d.n.a. of the corona virus so it's the same technology but there it's yet too early to say if it's if this is the reason why both the astra zeneca and the johnson and johnson are facing these rare side effects. are you a correspondent a gay or might just think you very much. want to say now about some of the other stories making headlines around the world. firefighters in south africa have largely contained a blaze on the slopes of cape town's iconic table mountain it started early sunday and ripped to words the university campus and residential areas forcing many to evacuate their homes
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a library containing rare books and manuscripts from badly affected. holding flowers in me in maher hundreds have marched in the southern city of die away in protest against february's military coup it was just one of a number of rallies across the country to show support for the national unity government announced last week by protest leaders today the honcho said it was outlawing this shadow government. germany's chancellor angela merkel has said she is very concerned about the health of jailed russian opposition leader alexina hallie and calls for him to receive adequate medical treatment her statement follows reports that mr vali was on the brink of death after 3 weeks on hunger strike. after a bruising power struggle germany's governing or conservatives have agreed on a candidate to succeed chance uncle america in the country's elections this fall i
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mean lash has received the backing of both parties and the center right bloc after a week long battle with his bavarian rival marcos or. he came out victorious from the conservative power struggle now i mean lush and wants to focus on battling other parties he appears say what counts from now on is which party has the best ideas to serve our country's future for me it does base who can pull together the best team to deal with the challenges we're facing or disappear and that's why our party union this cd you and see is you need to head into this election campaign as a team you see you will not win this without this see is you and vice versa. a team that from now on will be led by him that machall ally carnival king and committed to a strong europe the 60 year old has been state premier of north wind of
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a scaly germany's most populous state for 4 years and was elected c.d.u. party leader in january. born in the western city of close to the dutch and belgian borders russia does a former member of the european parliament and fluent in french for the most part his politics are moderate and have really reflect macas positions. the long and bruising power struggle within the conservative alliance only came to an end when his very and rival pulled out of the race. i mean that should i called i mean lushington congratulated him also offered him our full support in what i believe will be the extremely difficult election campaign ahead of us we will support him without any sense of resentment and with all of our strength i speak for myself as well as for my party the c.s.u. . the support of german voters however is something i mean lash it will have to
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work hard for in recent polls the majority do not believe he has what it takes to lead europe's biggest economy. as if he's not my type and i don't see him as the decisive leader that i am hoping for and that we might need. his just the other way around he's not determined enough. money the conservatives on really handling it well now they finally have a candidate but they don't even have a program what kind of procedures that it's like getting a driver's license but there's no car anymore. 5 months ahead of germany's federal elections i mean lashon now faces an uphill battle to defend the chancellery against the greens and succeed america. you're watching you don't read you still to come. a band islamised group in pakistan forces the government to consider expelling the french ambassador to the country is it appeasement or
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democracy. that and a whole lot more coming up on day of you news asia with a bearish of bad r g your washington every year is live from berlin and i'll buy a lot of rock rap officer thank you so much for your company will be back at the top we are. the fight against the corona virus pandemic. has the rate of infection been developing what does the latest research say. information and contacts the coronavirus update 19. on t w. every day counts for us and for our planet. who might use these homes way to bring you
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more conservation. to make single screen. how can we protect our interests. we can move to france. good morning to you as the environmental series of little sleep on. the coronavirus knows no borders similarly there's one group of people that manages to target more migrants. they're at a higher risk of acquiring and dying from covert 19. the dantes patchy and the reasons are diverse. today we cut through the prejudices and racism to see what's. behind the trend. i've been fizzling welcome to the show in
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a moment we'll talk to a public health scientist about the dangers for migrants but aside from what the state can do is also a lot we can achieve at a community level as our reporters found out. as a so-called neighborhood mother mona ramadan helps recent immigrant women and their families start a new life in germany for many a difficult transition made even harder by the coronavirus pandemic. was people i really want out and on top of that you have the overcrowded housing conditions at the emergency shelter where i help out each family lives in one room together they just need some space and the beginning of the pandemic you couldn't even leave the house playgrounds be closed that was a disaster. overcrowded housing conditions can lead to a higher risk of getting infected with the coronavirus today mona ramadan mean it's hard to say u.d. was lived in the emergency shelter since her arrival from syria. with the help of
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the neighborhood mothers she recently found an apartment for her family. of course there were also many families that were infected although we then help them to find out where they can go. because dia is a single mother she doesn't have a job yet once she has improved her german she wants to start an apprenticeship neighborhood mother ramadan is helping her. to plan. but. a recent german study has shown that unemployed people have an 84 percent higher risk of being hospitalized for cope at 19 but similar data for immigrants is lacking. skipped. i think it. will studies for example from the u.k. and the u.s. that show that there is a relation between migration and the risk of infection as well as severe cases.
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that has little to do with the fact that they are migrants but with the kind of high risk jobs migrants just reportedly end up doing. got even get. jobs such as delivering packages or cutting hair which put workers often immigrants at risk of infection but data connecting health and socio economic status is limited in germany and does this extremist this then that's extremely important because this way we can identify groups of people that have a higher risk and if we also understand why that's the case we can specifically do something to reduce these risks in finding out we hadn't while more in-depth data could improve germany's support structure for migrants for now neighborhood mothers like mona are the best lifeline they have. public health scientists and physician rosé jaan joins us from the german city of mannheim so should governments be focusing more on migrants in the fight against it. the short
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answer to that would be yes absolutely. migrants are at a higher risk of acquiring and also dying from combat 19 there are over represented among quit $1000.00 cases as lot that's even though it has to be but have to keep in mind that the data situation is not great so there are issues with regard to date of my disability and comparability of that as well but overall we can definitely say that migrants are overrepresented in my number 1000 k. rose i heard that as well for people who work in hospitals saying that cove wards full of people with migration backgrounds i'm a migrant. should also already be toggling me. i think i would like to make 2 points with regard to that question 1st of all the
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a.b. parts about covert 19 wards being over there proportionately. so patients with the migration background we don't know. what doctors are experiencing and saying that can lead there is some some that's valid to be right with regards to actual scientific valid and comparable data. yes migrants are more likely to get coverage. but with that i still have to tell you they should actually the picture is as middle income to stand there are some studies that have shown that migrants are most likely to be admitted to hospital for coke over 19 but there are also studies that show the opposite so with regards to that the evidence is in that and consistent nonetheless the fact that across studies. we do find that migrants are overrepresented among culture that t.k. sense for example and we didn't they make up 32 percent. 19 cases but only
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90 percent of the overall population so there's data that points to that. so yes what about hyper choice. i mean add a systematic a structural level we definitely need to improve data mainly because he would need to be able to more specifically say who ringback is at a higher risk because migrants are very large group and there are sometimes groups that have been identified as being particularly at a particularly high risk point can tell us some. yeah of course. one group for example undocumented migrants that they have a hard time accessing health care and there's also migrant labor migrants because they're likely to work in precarious jobs health care workers also for example seasonal agricultural workers and there has has been
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a major outbreak for example here in a factory that was processing meat because labor conditions as well as for a sample being housed in like the labor compounds all that kind of create the risk of. being infected with code 90 and of course the sounds you can use and refugees are also living in deception centers where infection the risk of infection can be high there's overcrowding there may be an issue with accessing health care. so it's important to look at those differences and then find strategies that target those groups that are particularly high risk by making sure they couldn't make nation efforts for example by making sure that there is appropriate health information available. for those are just examples but there's a lot that can be done i guess targeting the right micro group isn't always the easiest but i've been a refugee cap. how do you go about that it's easy identifying the people but there
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are huge amounts of people living in really crappy quarters and we've looked at that in the recent bevy of media reports and germany to also quantify how high is the risk with outsiders and we've found it to be a 13 percent misc of the buyer spreading out instruction of the 1st case and we found that in 75 percent of those outbreaks a collective pointing out the whole body was implemented but this specific measure has actually increased significantly increased the risk of transmission of the virus but in the facility so instead we recommend to. have more space available to households reduce the number of individuals living in it so that we make sure that sanitary facilities are not shared and make sure that health information is available appropriate help is mission and then which is available and include reception centers and vaccination effort. thanks very much for being on the show
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today you by about come thank you very much for having me. after further reading the reviews that we referred to their size kovi to among migrants and forcibly displaced populations and clinical outcomes and risk factors the coated $1000.00 among migrant populations in high income countries time for derek williams and of you a question about you variance and you back seats. do new variants mean we'll have to create new vaccines and how long could that process take. in the news you hear over and over again that we are at a critical juncture in the pandemic and the global vaccine campaign is often portrayed as a race against new sars coby 2 variants that could potentially prove resistance to our current battery of vaccines variants that are more contagious or more deadly
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are frightening of course but as long as vaccines continue to protect us against them the race remains a question of logistics it's all about getting as many people immunized as fast as possible but another big looming concern that could change that is corona virus variants that might develop what are called immune escape mutations that would allow them to evade even an immune system primed by vaccines to fight off an infection fortunately this is a situation that health authorities are familiar with since for example they have to update flu vaccines regularly because influenza viruses mutate quickly a lot faster than coronaviruses do so so experts designing the vaccines approved for emergency use were aware of the danger and many modern vaccines are
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are relatively easy to update especially the messenger r.n.a. vaccines. trials with booster shot versions of them that target specific worrisome sorest koichi variants are already going on and approvals are certain to be fast tracked if if red flags start popping out like like if significant numbers of people who were fully vaccinated against covert 19 suddenly began showing up in hospitals with severe cases long term the experts say future covert shots might actually combine multiple vaccines that protect against a range of variance just like today's flu shots often do. the idea of sniffing out is really catching on especially at airports meet diamond and german shepherd in training to take the virus and sophie a labrador retriever in this exercise trying to find the one item of belongs to an
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germany touch. why not misspelling. the stuff it's simple online on your mobile and free. t.w. zingy learning course. german made me see. this is due to the news a shock coming up today by anti france protests in pakistan. the government makes a deal with the brand the islamist group and is now letting all of them decide whether to expel france's ambassador to the country. top diplomats in germany whether his government is caving in to the demands of religious extremists.
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