tv Kulturzeit Deutsche Welle May 13, 2021 6:30am-7:00am CEST
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young people clearly have this admission that you just know. that in the 7 percent return on d w. hi everyone welcome to focus on europe i'm happy to have you with me here in europe we really are feeling the effects of the climate crisis with extreme heat waves droughts and out of control fires portugal has been hit particularly hard by forest fires over 100 people lost their lives in 2 deadly blazes in 2017 as
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wave after wave of flames closed in on the country's cities rescue workers were totally overwhelmed and roads cut off that has left this young portuguese woman cloudy had to walk to augustine you know wondering what kind of world are we really leaving behind for children european governments she says are not doing enough to protect the climate she feels they are literally putting her life at risk and so she's taking legal action against 33 countries in europe to change that. this side lives cloudy or do i have to go sit in your speechless. she can still remember when everything here was green. but ever since the wildfires the pines are all dead. it makes me very sad to see such an amazing place that was destroyed by the fire.
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this is very symbolic because it means that it will keep but if nothing it's then this will keep happening in other places from from our planet and we should fight to change that. wildfires rage through portugal often in 2017 defies claim to the lives of some 120 people and were deemed the worst in living memory. as each summer becomes hotter and drier than the last the risk of devastation rises. 2 cloudy a blames the climate crisis that's why the nursing student from malaria north of loose bone is stepping up the pressure but since her voice wasn't being heard enough on the streets she took her case to the european court of human rights and sued half of europe. i'm taking this case against 33 countries because one day i want to being
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a world that's healthy and with no danger. claudia's fellow plaintiffs are her siblings and her 3 friends her brother martin is 18 and suffers from asthma they say more and more people are getting sick from the increasing heat and fire is. going to change breathing problems will just get worse. people like me won't get better just it's going to get worse and worse their parents are supportive of the lawsuit or to reason is 47 years old and grew up in germany she says she has lived a carefree life but can understand her children's concerns for the future that's why she is glad that the judges in strasbourg have classified the cases are urgent i am a little girl she's only 9 what will her life be like. i feel guilty i didn't really do anything by that god i didn't contribute to the crisis. but i
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also didn't think about it little less fight it like my kids i feel bad about that . cloutier does not want to blame all the generations after all they couldn't have known any better but those who deny the climate crisis are fooling themselves. when people don't believe in climate change i think that those people are the ones who feel more guilty because they don't want to believe it because it hurts it hurts a lot to think what they are we doing to our planet. lawsuits like this so what the irish human rights organization global legal action network specializes in the strategy of their lawyer gerry liston and his team was risky the european court of human rights could have referred to national judicial channels but the judges have admitted these young people's case were. but failing to adopt the
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necessary emissions reproached overseas. to avoid catastrophic consequences. discrimination on the basis of. placing a. generation. greater risk of future harm. to me just like the show with the lawyer means he's referring to agreements from the european convention of human rights and the paris climate accord to keep global warming well below 2 degrees celsius as pledged countries would have to make a much bigger effort to reduce greenhouse gases cloudier is optimistic and believes this can still be achieved the case is just one of the ways pressure on governments is mounting. a lot of people come to was then they think for what we are doing and that makes me very happy but we still have a lot of work to to do and
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a long way so i think that we have we we have. the power and we want to to do something so we are very hopeful. it remains to be seen when a verdict will be reached. for now the $33.00 states charged a still fighting against the lawsuit. now well european governments will have to take a formal position now by the end of may after a court rejected their argument that the proceedings were not urgent. germany is trying to ramp up its energy transition but when it comes to building new wind turbines in the north and baltic sea there is some pretty explosive danger down on the seabed more than one and a half 1000000 tons of explosives and munitions from the 2 world wars have all just been sunk into the sea for years this out of sight out of mind approach works just
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fine but not anymore. their job is to find ammunition collect data and gauge the damage to world wars have left behind on the ocean floor. when it's still there in their sewer munitions from the 1st world war that was more than 100 years ago now a century later we're still dealing with the aftermath of. the scientists from the home center for ocean research in kiro wants to shed light on the subject. with the help of these autonomous underwater vehicles he wants to get a better idea of the exact locations and quantities of munitions dump it to the ocean. it's a systematic survey of explosive waste sites in the oceans and the 1st of its kind
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that mission is crucial. i think her mission is so important because it's meant that we finally started to compile a comprehensive inventory of munitions and look emotions where there were certain groups you wouldn't want to leak. in late summer toxicologist who are out on the bay of back to investigate the danger posed by explosive devices under water. the risk of them suddenly exploding is one thing even more hazardous other harmful substances they release as they corrode. in larger concentrations. these substances can be cost an agenda explains professor adman masa head of toxicology in kiel. government and i'm at the base and we expect more and more of these explosives to spread through the sea why the mayor is it and the more the greenies a main thrust the mayor more substances are released into the environment there's no votes on this all we need to monitor this closely and with so we don't end up in
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a situation where certain fish or secede become too contaminated or sort of able to push the limits or cause it up to the shops over. along the entire german coast scientists have already been able to detect traces of explosives in the water. here in the bay of li back there using muscles to investigate the level of contamination . the baltic sea is only about 20 meters deep at this point. in the past 4 years a lot of munitions were swept under the proverbial drug here. several months earlier muscles were placed at various locations some closer to 9 initial sites some further away. just found in the box this is where the muscles are the older ones are attached to the core the younger ones on the books but feel no. muscles felt in your
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dreams out of the seawater by passing it through their bodies. that makes them ideally suited to help detect talks in. the test found evidence of compounds typical of explosives in the muscles and in the water samples. the pressure of do not explosions we are still trace levels and christopher no we don't have to worry about consuming fish in the baltic or muscles from the behavior because what somebody wants a consumer but the problem is pride rests. on the expeditions into the baltic sea the research has with the end dry net spatter no ather at. the hazardous waste from the war has not only had a major impact on the environment it has also come at a considerable cost to locate it and carry it away but findings show the agence he of doing just that. gets you to make and have plenty of food to stand video
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as well as images from the underwater vehicle is that i've documented it what's really doing their thing is that the old. ticking time bombs on the seabed and that no real secret or. findings have shown we can keep pretending they are. watching ships is always fun but for europe there schick it's more than just a past time that's because he also sees more than passing ships since the bosphorus in istanbul leads to the black sea and is a gateway to the mediterranean for russia and also because in some places it is just 700 meters or about 2000 feet wide that means that when a foreign warship passes through europe would be sure to know about it.
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this man looks like any other tourist on a ferry taking in the sights of istanbul. but you know this ship is actually observing the ships roughly $50000.00 pass through the bosphorus each year nothing special for most observers but for him each ship tells a story. for example freight ships like this one often travel to the crimean peninsula that russia has an excited i'm interested in what's going on. they really had what they say they are do they really have the cognitive they say they have sort of your group or film of the false verses one of the most important streets in the world connecting the black sea with the mediterranean basin 30 kilometer zone always played an important role in the push and pull between the world's great powers. access to the black
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sea is important to nato and it's also important for russia to have access to the west to the agent and mediterranean sea we're talking about maybe i was just a few days later shows as an example when tensions last rues between russia and ukraine russian warships pass through the bosphorus on their way to the black sea. he then discovered a cargo ship that he believes was transporting me to military equipment to a romanian port in the black sea. when he returns home he rushes to post his discoveries and photos on twitter. there is a whole community of spotters around the world. what they point to it can be quite sensational at times. you get a full view of the fact that russia was planning to intervene in the syrian conflict 1st became clear for me crazed number of naval ships in the bosphorus i
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was able to record. just how they were equipped on deck apart from the russian naval ships there were also civilian cargo ships we were able to prove they were transporting weapons to syria to participate every check that. gives you a little bit. apart from arms smuggling. he runs his own consultancy analyzing maritime activity has also observed shipments of illegal waste or animals being transported in inhumane conditions. he says it's not spying because the information is freely accessible. he's also not scared i share my observations openly on twitter net but i try to refrain from making any political judgement income all roun be given that can be. of course his apartment also has a few across the bosphorus and he stays in touch with other stuff there's 247.
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we don't have to want each other in advance if a ship set sail somewhere i know roughly when it should arrive here. i know how fast the different models travel i shall you've got to give me a who's in the. concern from his perch europe the ship will surely be watching the next time history unfolds at his door step. china is expanding its economic influence here in europe and for those people who have come here to flee the chinese state that influence can really feel like a threat as it does for this man from tibet he didn't want to tell us his real name but he's part of a large community in exile in switzerland he says he does not feel safe because despite the fact that the swiss government is harshly critical of the extensive
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human rights violations against the battens in china it also maintains good relations there. a bit is monastery about 30 kilometers east of syriac where it's quite enough the prayer is. tens in not israel name grew up in tibet he comes here quite often the prayer hall reminds him of his younger days and the time he spent in a monastery things were simpler than that life came to an end when chinese security forces began harassing the monks here than talk to students every day they bullied and suppressed us and our freedom with affright hope bug and i put up a poster against it and protested their grief put this to the mark friends warned him that the police were looking for him so he fled to switzerland where thousands of other tibetan refugees had gone before him tents and has been living in the
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alpine republic for 7 years now and has a family of his own he continues to observe tibetan prayers and traditions. first but like to stay in switzerland and work as a nursing care assistant. or also craig assistant. all i want is to be able to provide for my family and lead a normal life. to asylum application submitted by his family have already been turned down because he entered switzerland through another country a humanitarian appeal is currently under review the friends he met in switzerland have helped the family deal with the authorities we're. trying to assist in 3 tibetan organizations for example as a network of sponsors to help make their daily lives a little easier life. in china tibetans who fled to switzerland have regarded as dissidents from 2015 to 2020 switzerland granted china the right to dispatch their
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own security officials to check the identities of suspected chinese citizens. the agreement drew considerable controversy. this writes in switzerland a debate over rose when a contract turned up showing that the chinese authorities had assisted in a fine chinese asylum seekers who swiss authorities had projected and that raised concerns that tibetan refugees may also be affected if the swiss t.v. reported that the chinese ambassador rejected any such speculation regrettably in this document switzerland makes unfounded accusations and attacks upon the political system minority policies and human rights situation in china our reporter would have liked to have spoken to the ambassador in person but also that request went and answered we would have liked to ask the ambassador about china's economic relations iceland georgia and switzerland are the only european countries that have
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free trade agreements with china a profitable arrangement for companies on both sides the swiss exporters have maintained their market share and some even increased it and the chinese have exported more to switzerland so both sides have really benefited by the fight and goldman but pursuing economic interests while protecting human rights is a delicate balancing act. that politicians are wary to progress made good progress but now we're seeing that the free trade agreement has to be developed further we have to shift our focus on just human rights issues even when we talk about our relations with china. china's expressed the desire to extend the agreement and identity checks for refugees the profitable economic ties could easily swayed switzerland's position critics warn. you know peter china is behaving increasingly or for tarion in asserting its interests in economic and refugee
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policies switzerland will have to react and coordinate its response a better you don't call it in your thought 40 tenzin also when switzerland to take a clear stance phase i own peace of mind so i see even yarden i haven't seen my parents or my family and friends for 7 years now nick is in. so haven't had any contact at all all and that makes me very sad. out of fear for his relative safety tens in hasn't contacted them since he fled they don't even know that he has started a family in switzerland. it's painful it's permanent it's expensive and not everyone actually likes them tattoos now i don't have one but i do know that most tattoos whether it's an anchor
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of flour a dragon or even a bumblebee they usually mean something special to the person who got them. with so long how long there's a lot of room for interpretation though the frenchman is a teacher and he's also a living work of art. despite his years of experience so. he freaking who is still not used to the pain the 35 year old is the most tattooed man in france there's hardly a free spots left in his body. the poor don't know all the love of it what you want your skin is the mirror of the soul of the ring so true to me because it means i'm free and can do what i want what of course while respecting everyone else around me all the big boys all told them oh. freaky hoody got his 1st tattoo 7 years ago he was living in london at the time he started on his arms with images of muscles and
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insects. in london i met a lot of people with tattoos who were very tolerant of the tattoo culture is so different there i fell in love with tattoos at 1st sight and that's why i kept doing it more and more over the years. it might come as a surprise to hear that he's a primary school teacher. but his pupils and their parents don't seem to mind. any permission has got nasty he's really nice that much on the old i have to choose to so i have nothing against them but no it's what he wanted to do. is use nice guy you know now. what counts most is that he's a good teacher. it's made for t.v. he's very nice and i think he's the most tattooed man in the world if you like.
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it hasn't always been easy for so. 2 years or 2 he was working at a different school and some parents complained. they said their child was having nightmares because of his appearance now he's no longer allowed to teach preschool he doesn't want to change professions. being a teacher has always been my calling you can't do this job if it's not your passion i have a lot of fun with the students at the end of the year or christmas they give me presents i get a lot of nice messages often the parents tell me that the kids didn't used to like going to school but now they love it it's great. so they also hopes to convey a message. before i will really sure if my looks can help move things ahead if my
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students grow up more tolerant less racist less homophobic less anti semitic that would make me happy because i will have achieved something and helped break down prejudices this is 2021 after all. tattoos are still not widely accepted in mainstream french society but the times are changing says sylvana learns favorite tattoo artist. that it has been a process of liberation here in france. but it's nothing like in north america or england it's still a to do topic here. to have opened up a new world to him. he's a model in the art world and an actor. and now has a huge number of followers on social media almost 80000 on instagram
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a loon. if you think that i trigger all kinds of fantasies. i know that a lot of women and men find me attractive from over there is a dog i get lots of messages and office. but that often evaporates as soon as they meet me face to face and realize that i'm completely normal if you turn on my. hopes that he can continue getting tattoos for the rest of his life. he doesn't worry about running a space. he can always include for alternatives. yeah i still think i'll wait for my 1st tattoo but that is it for focus on europe today thank you for watching and goodbye.
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trades. that a lot of folks she went to extravagant outfits and the littered glitter glitter. the fight against prejudice i don't hold cable like i did nothing i'm just standing up and form recognition. be our little stars on the big stage. true scotsman 17. w. w's crime fighters are back africa's most successful radio drama series continues this season the stories focus on hate speech cholera prevention and sustainable chocolate production. all of a sow's are available online and of course you can share and discuss on africa's
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facebook page and other social media platforms. crime fighters to mindanao. devastated talos this all star weekend with the monsoon cars carrying the. effects of climate change i mean felt was the forestation in the rain forest complete carbon dioxide emissions have risen again. young people from over the world are committed to climate protection. what impact will they have. because change doesn't happen on its own to. make up your own mind. w. lead from minds.
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this is the the news live from berlin tensions between israel the palestinians escalate as israel press ahead with its offensive in gaza hamas launched another barrage of rockets at jerusalem in tel aviv the violence has triggered the worst jewish terror of violence inside israel in decades the international community is calling for restraint so far to no avail. also.
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