tv FrauTV Deutsche Welle April 21, 2021 4:45am-5:16am CEST
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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's 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 run just on there was no work for him there either but he heard about new training opportunities in the nearby city of. a local organization was offering
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short courses so he took a tailoring class. for the lock down i was in sooraj doing stone cutting work with granite i'd been there since 2012 the lockdown was suddenly everything just closed the 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 protests if we left the house while. garris ca 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 course for $1000.00 repeats that's around 11 year olds accommodation and food are included the academy also trains up barbers and office courses on basic electrical work to learn. how to carry out simple repairs to mobile phones
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o'collins 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 and. 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 one comments like here at this construction site they're paid a minimum wage and can complete their training within 12 months. 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 and plan to stay the work and the pay are better here i don't work such long hours
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and i can help out at home to go to bed at. teacher ram is happy all the life in the village is hot his home can only be reached by foot he lives here with his wife . so. cities are ok but noisy and polluted i prefer to live in the village it's best. she can or i'm daresay of the month of training is coming to an end he's looking for tailors in his area that might give him work he hopes to stay with his wife and children rather than going back to sarette or another big city. and. 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. a
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visit to one local tailor shop yields promising results the owner asks him if he can sew a dress and can or embarrassed see it is ready to prove that he can the owner tells him to come back after his training and help the work for him. can or i'm doris 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 these big caps around the threat that habitat is
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being turned into farmland in colombia but help as it happens from an unlikely source the caps format enemies. it's. a privately run nature reserve on the plains of eastern colombia is home to many rare 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 cloud or a nature reserve on part of this land because the habitats of wild animals are
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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. he would. be. the most any of these here they have found their jaguars are being hunted we don't know who's doing it people like brad tend to keep to themselves but we keep hearing rumors. here on the plains jackie was kill about $100.00 carbs unfolds per year most ranchers have no interest in protecting the predatory cats the greatest threat to their livestock. we have built traps with fig tree trunks to kill jaguars like this. we
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anchored them in the ground and put planks like we use ones on the fence over them but. if a jaguar comes by with falls in it's 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 are 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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started monitoring the jaguar population in in 2014 with the help of a 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 a gun has been observing the movements of a certain 4 year old female he's named 13 he's looking for her tracks and other traces. jackie was need large hunting grounds and tend to move along well
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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 were not. enough and that's the moment
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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 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 it is same way. this but that is especially the younger watching us you and it's a little they're more aware of the issues. like. 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 hard hit by the gun.
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about a sharing economy instead. of. a change in thinking is changing the economy to create something new. for the economics magazine made in germany. 90 minutes w. 1986. it's their story their very own personal drama. the people who survived the catastrophe remember. and they share private footage showed us that has never been seen before . back to churn noble stores april 28th on t.w. . in mexico many pushed over lunch us right now in the uk right now climate change
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is d w news live from berlin a us jury convicts derek servant of murder and manslaughter the thought police officer is found guilty of killing george floyd the u.s. president held a verdict a step forward to the finals against systemic racism i'll get an update from minneapolis. and i in a moment welcome to the program the minneapolis jury has found former police
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officer. derek show been guilty of murder and manslaughter in the death of george floyd he killed floyd a black man when he was filmed pressing his knee on floyd's neck for several minutes last year the mud is fox global outrage and protests against racism and police brutality shaven will be sentenced at a later date he could face up to 40 years in prison well here's the moments the judge read out the verdict in court we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count one unintentional 2nd degree murder while committing a felony by the defendant guilty verdict count 2 we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count 2 3rd degree murder perpetrating an eminently dangerous act find the defendant guilty verdict count 3 we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count 3 2nd degree manslaughter culpable negligence creating an unreasonable risk by the defendant guilty. well the guilty verdict came at the end of a tense 3 week trial people waiting outside the courtroom say they're relieved to
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see justice. was. relief just just really there was so much just anxiety and so much just pressure for what i felt like could be a powder keg type situation and hopefully that is just relieved and now i'm just happy for my city. overwhelmed and grateful and relieved so i'm i feel grounded i can feel my feet on the concrete and i'm super grateful that this is the verdict and that we can now move to the next case with joy and hope and optimism and strength. and us president joe biden called the vote it's a rare success on delivering basic a constable it's a full black victims of police brutality he also said that more needs to be done to
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confront racism in the unforced lands no one should be above the law and today's verdict sends that message but it's not enough. we can't stop here in order to live a real change reform we kid and we must do more to reduce the likelihood that a tragedy like this will never happen occur again to assure the black and brown people or anyone so they don't fear the interactions of law enforcement that they don't have to wake up knowing that they can lose their very life in the course of just living their life. they don't have to worry about whether their sons or daughters will come home after a grocery store run or just walking down the street or driving their car playing in the park or just sleeping at home and this takes acknowledging and confronting head on systemic racism. and the racial disparities exist in police she and
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her criminal justice system or brought. the lies to minneapolis to new correspondences on simon's who's out the area known as george floyd's quest to find one of people telling her. well it is an endless stream of people coming here and that is the pinnacle this is the way you want to be i guess when you are in minneapolis at this time of the hour because of course here it is and i step out here for a 2nd here is where we where this all have on the air go and it's i think fair to say is these people here are feeling this way what happened here a year ago and ever since and today changed their world and changed their world in america not just here in minneapolis so for all those people here quite
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a historic day and quite a joyous and jubilant affair because they really feel and think that justice was served for the murder of george floyd's. back to the courts that you had to come to this conclusion quite stressed me guilty on all counts was this expected. ya know that couldn't be expected we talked to law of love a lot of people here in minneapolis specifically african-american black people who are here out of the community and other parts of the city who said that this is not a done deal of course officially and for camera they're all saying like we are really hopeful that justice will be served and nothing would be accepted below a straight count of guilty in all 3 counts but. of course there were really sure and they actually expected that this is not go on the way it actually did because
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it is again there. for decades and decades of criminal injustice for inequality in the criminal justice system or in the justice system per se and face of police work till the end inequality in that regard to so that's why this is such a big deal for them here this is why it's really historic and such a big big big deal in the united states let you say you know the u.s. was the center of global protests against racism and police brutality which you say this is the day of vindication for the civil rights activists that. i wouldn't maybe call it a day of vindication i think what people are keenly aware of is they are of course happy that justice was served that's what they feel however they're also right off the bat right away say that this is just the beginning and if you follow their
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rationale it has to be just the beginning this is the start of a. kind of the start of a movement they say which they will bring forward and move forward again just a few miles from here last week a young man black man 20 year old down to right was shot allegedly accidentally by a police officer with 26 year of service who thought. she pulled her taser but she pulled her gun and shot this man so this is they out there all keenly aware of this there will be a trial for this person too and they will make their cos they will start this and not let go of of what they really want to do change the system systemic racism police brutality injustices in the qualities all this will be addressed this is just the start. just curious to find what you think the members of the police force
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might be thinking as the new system. but. i actually think that a lot of the majority of police here in minneapolis but probably around the country is keenly aware of that mr sullivan probably deserved this verdict i have talked throughout the last year to a lot of law enforcement officers. to a lot of police agencies sheriffs. superintendents what have you and i have yet to speak to an officer or too long for us to do says like you mr shelley didn't do anything wrong you know to the contrary they were keenly aware and let me tell you this i know this is sometimes not very popular to say but i think that even in law enforcement in the united states something clicked you cannot and i know this sounds a little weird because i just told you about the other incident from last week but
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i think it's something clicked there too they know they can't go on like this anymore that's why politicians and agencies law enforcement agency leaders are trying to really change the law change procedures trying to change that apartments they have to hide the stuff on simon's one for us in minneapolis thank you. let's take a look at other stories making headlines around the world at least 5 people have been injured in a suicide bombing in afghanistan's capital and interior ministry spokesman says civilians and security personnel were among the wounded no one has yet claimed responsibility for the attack. ukraine's leader has challenge russian president vladimir putin to meet him in ukraine's waterborne east to discuss ending the conflict there that means the lenski has to western countries to also support kiev and its standoff with russia us here. they eased medical regulator has backed the
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johnson and johnson covert 19 vaccine despite a possible link to blood clots last week the company stopped its rollout over concerns of rare but potentially deadly plants the a.m.a. says the benefits outweigh the risks but that a warning should be added to vaccines labels. the european medical agency has given johnson and johnson's one shot called the 9 tame back same the green light despite finding a possible link to rare blood clots the benefits of the virus continue to outweigh the risks and we now have detailed information in the labeling that alerts to these risks we have detailed information for about their professional in case in case there are any issues the e.u. paused its rollout of the johnson and johnson vaccine last week before any shots were administered following reports of blood clot cases in the u.s.
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of the 7000000 people vaccinated with jane j. in the u.s. 8 developed the rare blood clots including one who later died on tuesday the e.m.a.'s of the cases were similar to those seen in their review of astra zeneca. the reported cases of mostly in women under 60 years and within the 1st 3 weeks after the vaccine is at this moment it's not possible to identify clear risk factors for the occurrence of these very rare events such as gender or age the most plausible hypothesis as we have seen with the astra zeneca vaccine is an immune response that leads to a condition similar to a typical have growing and used. the a.m.a. says the blood clot should now be listed as a very rare side effect of johnson and johnson's fax saying the company immediately announced it would revise its label as requested and resume back same shipments to
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the e.u. norway and iceland the u.s. is expected to announce its decision on the single shot that same by friday. a brand new european super league that was dramatically announced on sunday appears to be crumbling all 6 english clubs have abandoned plans to join the breakaway link it now leaves only a handful of spanish and italian clubs in the project that one official has said what save the sport. chelsea fans hearing that their club had backed out of the super league. the many would agree with the we saved football chant the stunning backlash to the super league had worked to reverse an attempted radical shift in the european power structure. inside the stadium players for brighton chelsea's opponents on tuesday
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night showed what they thought of chelsea's earlier super league ambitions. u.k. prime minister boris johnson celebrated the withdrawals posting on twitter that the decision to pull out is absolutely the right one yet it is hoped that the other founding members of the super league would follow. the law. and they did egged on by fans old and young tied to the tradition of the beautiful game all 6 of the powerful english clubs had pulled out of the super league 48 hours after it had been announced. the death knell may have come monday evening in spain when rael madrid chairman also the chairman of the super league florentino perez said this 1 ya don't think any of it what we want to do is say football so that it can live peacefully for at least the next 20 years without stress and without having to say 200000000 euros have been lost the situation is very dramatic as with them i think
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we are the future of this guy and his young audience you know the kind of people my dad and people that come before me done a great job to get in position eights paris's absolute dinosaur things they can speak on my boat super league clubs learning a lesson that it's never a good look to have fans coaches and players rooting against club bosses and owners . has remind of our top story from a minneapolis place opposite derek chauvinists found guilty of murder and manslaughter in the death of george floyd chauvinism expected to be sentenced in 8 weeks. that's a new art to date up next is our show called eco africa council find much more news analysis or video on our website that's the dot com and we have a homage thank you very much indeed for watching we'll see you soon i care about.
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