tv Hart aber fair Deutsche Welle April 21, 2021 7:00am-8:00am CEST
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this is d w news live from berlin the u.s. jury convicts derek shows and of murder and manslaughter in the form of police officer is found guilty for killing george floyd the u.s. president kills a verdict as a step forward in the fight against systemic racism to get an update from minneapolis also coming up. europe's medical watchdog gives the go ahead for the johnson and johnson corona virus vaccine despite links to read cases of cut cloths they say the benefits outweigh the risks. and it is a game over for
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a proposed european super league 6 top football clubs walk away from the controversial project less than 72 hours off to agreeing to join. i'm here to mohammed while come to the program a minneapolis jury has found former police officer derek show been guilty of murder and manslaughter in the death of george floyd the murderous thoughts of global outrage and protest against racism and police brutality show even will be sentenced at a later date he could face up to 40 years in prison. we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count one unintentional 2nd degree murder while committing a felony find the defendant guilty guilty guilty verdict to the words so many had been hoping and waiting for their guilty on all counts derek chauvin now
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a convicted murderer at the end of a tense 3 week trial. justice for george floyd what began as a rallying cry has become reality. thanks just crowds who had gathered at george floyd square the site where he was murdered were overcome by emotion. overwhelmed and grateful and relieved so i'm i feel grounded i can feel my feet on the concrete i'm super grateful that this is the verdict and that we can now move to the next case. george floyd slow death has now been seen by millions even while attempting to arrest him last may show been pinned to handcuff floyd to the ground kneeling on his neck for 9 minutes 29 seconds. i can't breathe for some of his final words. floyd's killing on least one of the biggest waves
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of protests in u.s. history against the stanek racism and police brutality. president joe biden hailed the decision as an important step toward police reform it was a murder in full light of day and to rip the blinders off for the whole world to see the systemic racism vice president just referred to there are systemic raises is there any on our nation's soul but it's not enough we can't stop here. in order to live or real change reform we kid and we must do more to reduce the likelihood a tragedy like this will ever happen kurgan. show been handcuffed and led away will be sentenced 8 weeks from now he could be facing decades in prison. order for life to minneapolis and c. to d. w. correspondence upon simon's his out the area known as george floyd estefan what are
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people telling you. well it is an endless stream of people coming here and it 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 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 if these people here off 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 in minneapolis so for all those people here quite 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
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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. a count of guilty in all 3 counts but. of course there were and really sure and they actually expected that this is not going the way it actually did because it is again their experience for decades and decades of criminal injustice for inequality in the criminal justice system or in the justice system per se and facing police for till the end inequality in that regard to so that's
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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 no the u.s. was the center of global courage tests against racism and police brutality which you say this is a 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 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
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a few miles from here last week a young man like 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're 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. system police brutality injustices inequalities all this will be addressed this is just the start. just curious to find what you think the members of the police force might be thinking as the news has come out. i actually think that a lot of the majority of police here in minneapolis but probably around the
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country is keenly aware of that mr sharon 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 yeah mr sheldon 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 we have because i just told you about the other incident from last week but i think it's something clicked there too they know they can't go on like this anymore that's why politicians and agency law enforcement agency leaders are trying to really change the law change procedures trying to change their departments they have to hire the staff on simon's one for us in minneapolis thank you.
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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 terry a ministry spokesman says civilians and security personnel were among the dead no one has yet claimed responsibility for the attack. ukraine's leader has talents russian president vladimir putin's meet him on ukraine's was flown east to discuss and in the cause. there that to me is the lenski also urged western countries to support here and its standoff with russia. and the e.u. as medical regulator has backed the johnson and johnson corona virus vaccine despite a possible link to blood clots last week the company stopped its rollout of the concerns of red but potentially deadly clots the e m a's says the benefits outweigh the risks but that
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a warning should be added to vaccine labels the european medical and 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 care professionals 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. 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 said the cases were similar to those same in their review of astra zeneca
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. the reported cases of mostly in women under 60 years and within the 1st 3 weeks after the vaccine 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 from lucy complainer. 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 vaccine shipments to the e.u. norway and iceland the us is expected to announce its decision on the single shot vaccine by friday.
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now the brand new european super league has that was dramatically announced on sunday appears now to be crumbling all 6 english clubs have abandoned plans to join the breakaway league it now leaves only a handful of spanish and italian clubs in the project that one official has said would save the sport. chelsea fans hearing that their club had backed out of the super league. the many would agree with their 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 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
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decision to pull out is absolutely the right one yet it is hoped that the other founding members of the super league would follow. 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 real madrid chairman also the chairman of the super league florentino perez said this. and i most of 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 i think we are the future and this guy is younger audience you know and people of my dad and people that come before me done a great job to get in position 8 took
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a racist absolute dinosaur things i 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 . his remind of our top story we're following from a minneapolis police officer derek servant is found guilty of murder and manslaughter in the death of george floyd 7 is expected to be sentenced in 8 weeks . out of the get you can also get details you news on the go just download our out from google play or the out still it'll give you access to all the latest news from around the world as well as the case for any breaking news and if you are part of a news story you can also use the app to send your photos and videos of what's going on. but if you are up to date 3 months it will be with you in about 45 minutes with more of the day's news up next is dr phil looking at demands for
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democracy in algeria and again can find much more news and analysis on our website dot com i'm thinking of mamma thank you very much indeed for watching this. you seem to care. and you hear me here speaking to you and the state is just. bringing you i'm going to mount and you've never had time to surprise yourself with what is possible. really what moves us and want. to talk to people along the way maurice and critics alike join us for metals last time.
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i i i. i i i i. starting in february $21000.00 each week millions of algerians took to the streets to protest their country's all for a tarion rulers and unprecedented movement browse the nation that seems to have lost faith in itself. no one expected this algerian revolt in the streets known here as iraq but it's
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swept the country from iran to algiers to go from thomas say like a giant block party. police repression threats of came. last political pressure. for a tarion military regime in power for more than half a century since algerian independence tried everything but nothing could suppress the peaceful iraq movement. league and in a much year of demonstrations i never would have imagined things would go this far i am sick now we don't know where this is all going so we know we have to challenge then. i know. i've endured it all my life but they've always sat up in their ivory towers they don't know why. i.
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don't we don't want to give up we want to live in step with modern times despite our beliefs like in a cloud or rather no matter what he's been leaving. plenty . of. league. play i please. feb 22nd 2019 tens of thousands defied a long standing ban on protests in the capital to oppose president abdelaziz bouteflika its decision to run for office yet again. across the country algerians took to the streets to say no to
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a potential 5th term. lenders we didn't really understand what was happening on february 22nd was not that it had got i was on call that night then i came home and went to bed. i had heard rumors about the demonstration but i didn't believe it like everyone else i was a bit disheartened and i thought we were powerless and there was no way out. but then around 2 or 3 in the afternoon my mother broke me up and said there demonstrating people are demonstrating song and destruction much less help that's exactly what a country where every 20 seconds meant to me. an awakening. is in this event you are a 22nd will stay in my mind forever. it's a great memory a huge amount of emotional. make speaking i will never be able to describe how i
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felt at that moment it was the redemption. i. knew from the sea of years when i headed out that day with very dim hopes i thought there'd be maybe 50 or a 100 of us and we'd all get arrested you. go if you love. i gave a friend some money and said take that and if i get arrested try to bribe a police officer to let me go i can't stay locked up. you can make is a middle i was sitting with friends in a cafe and we were following the he robbed on social media. people across the country were sharing it to them cool we saw a live stream or something big happening in to c o's you don't get it so we went there and joined in a lot of people were there and more kept coming he said it was huge how did you feel it was great that. the crowd was made up of every section of
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society all social classes men and women for the 1st time we were seeing algerians in their different life i. was was. just. wanted to use for the 1st time we all had a common goal to form good luck i was living. i. was lonely too until then we were just getting by now we had the prospect of a future to be done next. oh my god we're fed up we've had enough. we want our children to live in a prosperous algeria i developed algeria. they've robbed us of everything
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they've broken everything. so look what they've done to algiers look how devastated and slow we just want our algeria have back. 6 i believe it was obvious there was i saw the money i think it was this revolution and abled everyone to reappropriate their country to reappropriate algeria we realize it belongs to us all as a financial i. i i was. i was. the only one they marched in against a 5th term it was amazing because most people in all a political they don't give
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a damn to me as one i thank. the names an emotional plea or the most self-aware generation of algerians to come along since the war for independence. and where stubborn. i. thank the algerians won independence in 1962 after a long war against colonial france the algerians over their freedom to the national liberation front or f.l.n. . as of 2019 the f.l.n. had been in power for 57 years. an oppressive regime systematically plundering the country's wealth resources and heritage the algerian people gradually lost faith in
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democracy zen's its independence algeria has suffered a number of tragedies in the 1990 s. the government fought a brutal civil war against a radical islamist insurgency government forces eventually won but not before as many as 200000 civilians had been killed the black decade as it is called hans algerians today less against an eviction but i associate the war with an experience that turned my whole life upside down to that moment when you called my life probably would have been very different if they hadn't murdered my father shown of it but i seen him up there. in 1996 when honey i was 3 years old terrorists shot her father on the street and the cast. her as a former policeman he was a prime target in those dark years. not
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that not my father reminds me why i'm here. so for the books no matter what happened you have to keep fighting and keep living. city and then the community it over he was a man who loved life and lived as he saw fit he did honest with me and he was a man who stood up for single women so he was everything terrorists hated. mug so no more says i'm 26. i was born when the terrorism reached its zenith and i grew up under go to flee go to. he's the only president i've ever known it was a reign based on terror he justified his being there by having brought peace he
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said i'm the man of peace and if i go terrorism will return a critical reason. after being sworn in as the new president in 1999 beautifully kept his promise to bring the conflict to an end. a painful national reconciliation provided amnesty to insurgents who handed in their weapons. to flick a completed 4 terms keeping an iron grip on the country even after suffering a stroke in 2013 that left him too fragile to campaign his legacy consisted of voting fraud and corruption. the joint living symbol was that 1st it was great our savior had come visit the country was at peace and we could move around and travel we can finally breathe that's how the 1st years were all streets so to big government projects began popping up everywhere and we thought great who cares if he has another term. after that it was just dec nation and
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week rational. then it was announced that 81 year old abdelaziz bouteflika would seek a 5th term with the elections scheduled for april 29000 the head of the f.l.n. launch to the head of states campaign with a painting of him. for many algerians this was the last straw. i. i. i. i. i'm not sure they let me tell us you know for 3 put up with poverty and corruption sure as a mate but we weren't prepared to be mocked to prove we should excuse that the
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comment it was really degrading for our president to be campaigning for 1st time in that situation after 20 years they've been as we didn't know any other leader which with i saw their corruption had reached its climax and the government was deteriorating i feel there was a complete void and we were afraid of having both of these good you know that book with thanks. i should say i must say i'm just 28 years i feel tired drained irritated and i feel more like 40 you have to fight so hard to meet your basic needs. you have to justify yourself all the time. if you want to have a drink you have to hide it that's. can't live with someone without getting married . this country damages you would want to do it wastes your time and energy changes
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and i know it suppresses you when it drains you if you didn't always you feel like you're just meandering until you die. just a couple i was going to watch this is it that you get so desperate to spend all you have left is hope that's your shows keep it to see only thing keeping you going is hope for something different simple enough in a dungeon dockside that we've all experienced the dark side with its massacres corruption poverty misery and dirty ness we know how to live with it and survive feel about it how about we try a new way we didn't have much left to lose just ourselves but with this revolution we found ourselves again and we found out who we really are he shall feel what to
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fail not what we feel need to have a lot. of that. is all 3 of what most people follow what's happening it used to be just retired people in cafes in the lead activities here and there. but now everyone is getting political it's wonderful so someone. like me how's it going through now that you i'm good i'll be listening.
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to suggest that. this is a letter to the president. mr president i don't want to be offensive but when did you last talk to your grandkids where were your eloquent speeches you held like heroes when did algeria my love become a 0 and how about my brothers crossing the sea they've gone through hell but you just don't want to see you can do anything but your system is corrupt the legislators are against you you don't care about the youth. so that's not an insult it's just the truth is it. violence. it's why i have to write this in silence she says you know. i don't think the problem is the person sitting on the throne. throne itself.
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it's more what this man represents. he stands for an entire ecosystems. he's achieved such media presence that he's seen as a saint but he's just an effigy. 1234 and someone else will come but the represent the same system. doesn't from their side. exactly. so what is the problem. and it's much deeper and more complicated. it's not about swapping one president for another civil it's about morals. kid between it's quite hard to be a woman in this world and you with staring and many little aggressions on here
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observe more closely than men. who want the slightest slip up and the whole society judges us much more than they do a man we are cut less slack and. there's a controlling more culturally added society women have a much harder time claiming their rightful place of family and it is why they are often attacked and 2nd guessed critics no matter in what millions from young fans will claim you know whether you're a member of the world of the so-called democrats or you move in a more conservative sphere i don't accept that women are always under more pressure than men you could definitely take the family code for instance it only applies to us who could not find the family code states that women always have to subjugate themselves they can't marry without a man's permission as well so we are watched our entire lives but i think.
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country and with this popular uprising some women feel they've been able to carve out a new place for themselves in society. need to get used to being go home or hear places in the kitchen or. you shouldn't be a mystery with the man should i and i fell hard to learn how to be at the point when it was normal for us to be outside this is a huge step forward. and sit down now to men in the past weeks the men even called on the women to join the marches because they were needed do you know women really play a central role in this revolution. now men are learning to listen to women a woman can talk a lot because they finally understand women have ideas women can talk about politics and things that are important to everyone including men we take up on indifference because it's great to mold remember. it's just like. i want to find
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some deductions i have women as opinion leaders with many followers on social media to have people listen when they talk with them so they found the sound in these women they stand for opinions political movements ideas it's a good thing and a big step forward there's out. a lot i love this time plus women have started to take their place to both pledged citizens because it's only just like any other algerian it's why we are all citizens now you know rather we're learning to be citizens minded and that's quite remarkable in itself. in a fishbowl you were absent our citizens now we've decided to demand our citizenship
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i. was i. was. also your plea for taking back the streets before me i saw young and old whole families marching up so that people were able to speak more freely again for algeria it was astounding were like the north korea of africa was that was that was john you've been much money event that really made an impression on me apart announcing a shadowy we were marching and we were surrounded by small nick fundamentalists i'm just now stood together yelling the same slogans with the same goal of him in logic to the oh are all united the people against the traders the algerian people
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we are all united the people against the trader the okemos i never got any nasty looks and wasn't cursed at did me i wondered if we could ever have imagined the in the situation one day when those in stressful time i was still a. taught us to take an interest in each other people from care about to be less and to build us care about shall we it's remarkable. slade thank us.
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but the candidacy for a 5th term woke up the youth after over a month of protests he stepped down as president. in algiers ecstatic crowds celebrated booed of league as ouster and demanded total systemic change. thanks. shifts to feeling generous for the like that toppled one of the strongest dictatorships in africa and at that look a little like i was a dictator the facts and guy along with millions of others which made him feel so small that we threw him out he immediately the humiliation he suffered was worse than any humiliation he made a soccer. player.
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played. such. place . palapa hit i.q. but i don't see that here rock is a revolution it is it so old that the paradigm so a shake the very core of the algerians. he insisted it was only rude what you drew was. the namely the military's i grew up on our politics. after step down the cracks in our democracy appeared and we saw who really was in charge of the military has just general ahmed. the head of the algerian army a staunch supporter of beautifully nonetheless urged him to resign. and took over
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the role of algeria strongman himself a self-styled defender of the nation so law held power until the end of 2019 when he died at age 79. i thought he was put in office by the military former president was a soldier. and dnd was a soldier too. said to really taking the time they were all from the military. that is to stop. while still alive some lawyer trying to appease the demonstrators by throwing beautifully because cronies in prison the tactic failed the general was still seen as a member of the former president's clan as the head of the army was the face of the very algerian system the people wanted to overthrow but the general tried other
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methods to break the back of the iraq movement he made it illegal for demonstrators to wave the berber flag an important symbol for algeria as indigenous ethnic minority the cup biel people. the regime hoped this would divide algerians instead the flag became a mark of solidarity. i think the police arrested dozens of young people on charges of conspiracy against the national unity for flag waving government repression grew increasingly intense but the beautifully good generation had lost its fear. that the fall from 2 in the afternoon to 5 pm the police are usually quite peaceful they just said it's been that way for a year now you go out in the morning and you get rounded up by the cops ok then they tear gas you after 5 guys.
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i. i i i i i i. rhodri i wouldn't go so far as to call the current situation a dictatorship but it's a totalitarian regime that. the system. should commit on my shoe and i would call it a mafia like sisters and i will quote there is underhanded scheming and corruption and they act like a gang. to topple caste but i wanted to
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become a lawyer in order to be an activist passports because the most effective activists are lawyers those are fed enables you to defend people to stand up for justice to understand what people are subjected to to control should it allows you to express yourself at the whims of capacity to do explain make. people see those i primarily deal with political cases and prisoners and you and i see incredible things over of wow are they for the inquiry or. are forced to join when i delve into a case on my desk i realize the justice system is rotten to the core there is no free decision making. to do this year on the simplest cases you can see there has been intervention from a higher level to reach a certain kurdish that you know for them a little more careful planning. tempus
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officially it was just an excuse to arrest him which journal it out it to apply with while a lot of young people have been arrested for no reason get charged with conspiracy against the national unity are locked that's why he was abducted from his home could not pay but when i visited him in prison with my 2 colleagues he looked wretched. we could see signs of torture he had undergone all these all there were even by mach's how their dogs and it's a lot more coming up the story about what he had been through it was really a terrible time truculence for me. get a man of the house with the most sure. we're going to visit him always it's the 1st time for me seeing him since he got out of prison by an influx of support for young boxers like the business and it's all. from a. war
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. zone near the feet of you they brought me a stack of printouts it was all my facebook posts which meant they had been observing me for a while. then the police inspector came in. i think it was the inspector he came in but didn't talk to me he just looked at me then punched me in the eye. then he pushed me. so i asked why are you hitting me he said you deserve to die we shouldn't let you live i should slit your throat. they grabbed me while i was a bit out of it and put my fingerprints under the report. i didn't do it myself. in
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fact i had said i wouldn't do so without seeing my lawyer. so they did everything they could to get me in prison as well. did you think they'd ever let you go. to be honest no. more prison because. i was lying in prison and heard a knock on the door someone said see you can go. i was completely astounded. different is a decision defending one's convictions is a noble cause and most importantly it gives you pride in this as a my message to the rest of the world it is easy to defend your ideas don't give up . do you have to fight for your convictions without fear or hesitation.
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cause the most important thing is to do no harm and you can do it but the. jury and regime knows it's illegitimate she did not in order to create a list of a sea of sorts they must constantly feel superior like they have the power to suppress or. lead to screw. it. this way of looking down on the people helps compensate for their lack of legitimacy. was. the. i. was was the was. was. i.
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2019 shortly before his death general succeeded in holding presidential elections. but. there were 5 candidates the former owner was 74 year. old i'm down to boone who under buddha flicka had been a minister multiple times and even briefly served as prime minister. at the time of the election to boon son was in jail on cocaine charges i just the regime responded to the heroic movements demand for change with more of
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the same. i but the people in the streets stood their ground saying the election was fraudulent they called for a boycott of the new president took office nonetheless i was i i. i was i was i was going along i personally thought that fear really hoping us to have a calm the traumas of our posse after him but i gradually noticed that wasn't the
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case i personally don't think it will happen any more i've lost faith from what i see we're back where we started. to open a different luxury of algeria will change but not yet i have less and less faith to be honest i'm fortunately i'm talking about an event that i've yet to experience and i don't think i will. are young people in algeria happy. the question is an important one. half of the country's 40000000 residents are under 30. the popular uprising awoke real hope. many young people are no longer trying to leave the country at all costs. but other young people continue to flee attempting to reach europe in makeshift rafts. they are driven by oppressive corruption cronyism and nepotism as well as
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a 26 percent unemployment rate among 16 to 24 year olds. mehdi an unemployed construction engineer is struggling as well. as hospital as a trip i went to study in france and spent 2 years there and france i realized how little i knew about my own country and at the same time i realized how much i loved it i spent time with moroccans tunisians and french people and they all knew algeria better than i did some of them mentioned the roman ruins i didn't know there were roman ruins in algeria that was a slap in the face. of huge initial closures she addition a little i wanted to get a business going to create jobs to put my bit of know how to use to invest and live
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here but everything has fallen apart since i returned in 2014 it's not the same algeria anymore i barely recognize it. i can't imagine growing old and algeria anymore and it's sad i tried everything to come back and make it here but i failed i don't want to wither away here that's the word that comes to mind and it's sad but what should i say that's just how it is. city more i have to do you want to educate was my dream to live in algeria lose my house here fight for my convictions here spend time in the mountains of to billy. sumach but the lack of freedom makes me want to leave the country you know move to . squeeze from the world all because i can't imagine raising children and out syria . i want them to grow up in
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a land where they feel free and can live out their dreams with their joys a useful view where they can have their fantasies they can express their convictions freely cremated they should be able to move freely through the world secondly it will not it's sad isn't it because therese that. i want you both if we want i used to consider leaving. it was a viable option for me. but if i manage to live here the way i want to i don't need to leave if you have one that area i'm a doctor and i want to help my fellow citizens so i'm still optimistic too full of it seems. so full of course some will say i'm naive. hearing that a lot lately. but i have faith in us if. oakleaf i love him so but. i'll say it again and we're fighting for life that for
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us are still to life just so this is a new era in the history of algeria that the result of i'd like to believe it's the nicest and most important and. we're a determined generation we know what we want and we won't give up. the hill like she did yeah i've been addicted to the. states become our drug. elna to me have all the time we need. on that song we have the time. the willpower and the rage we have everything we need. love look at the good. stuff. oh oh oh oh
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oh. oh. 0000000000000000000 cut cut cut. cut cut. up close look at what slowed those good good. this is fragile and it's finally being upset by the pentameter. migrant workers not only do they use their wages to support their families. they are also supporting the local economies of their home country. new ideas to help ensure that their families are combined and for it in the future. 30 minutes w. . we have important new members right to the heart of the.
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smoking is healthy. pesticides are good for the bees and global warming doesn't exist. don't believe us. not yet because. you have a great in my mind. industry is controlling your thoughts. it's not easy to spot i'm saying one thing is saying another. the great books of the 20th century. present day hoaxes. and who's behind the. news manufacturing ignorance starts may 3rd on d. w. . this
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