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tv   World Stories  Deutsche Welle  May 16, 2021 9:15am-9:31am CEST

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and watching the news as a reminder of our top story. israeli palestinian violence has continued through the night and south press writing and strikes destroyed its power in gaza student housing several international media organizations israel says the building was used by hamas intelligence to palestinian militants fired dozens of rockets toward israel's coastal city of tel aviv's that's also the south we'll have more headlines at the top and i. mean. imagine how many portions hold lunch us right now in the world's climate change a different office story this is my plan for the way from just one week cut. cut close can really just play. with still have time to work i'm going to. touch. plus a. recording that. you feel worried about the planets move through. a meal himself on the green friends pulse and so many
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it's clear remains true. joining critique dive into the green transformation is a made for you for the cops took. place. last place this week and world stories. alaska speedie that seemed rolled out in the us. with face recognition in russia could we begin in india where the subcontinent is suffering under the world's biggest surge in karelia infections this huge burden on the population this triggered a mental health epidemic that's closing people to seek counseling online class.
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breakdowns feel anxiety these other words 29 year old uses when asked about how she's coping with the 2nd week of school with 90. both her parents are called positive and health father has been in the hospital for days russell family been an emotional me him in the 2nd wave my dad became a victim and a very serious one and it's made me realise how crazy things are at the clinic around an online mental health platform mind. which connects people to terrorists. and the statistics are enough to tell her that she is not alone. about feelings i-t. depression and grief that many are already experiencing she says a lot of young people me and that suffering with p.t.s.d. or a magic stress disorder last year there were about $50.00 to $60.00 parity that were coming in in one day and right now from the last 3 to 4 weeks at least that has
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started to 50 already the 2nd wave has been catastrophic images of people gasping for breath and collapsing in front of hospitals where no beds or oxygen are available have a back to the mental well being of many some experts are convinced this wave has triggered a mental health epidemic of its own. therapist shweta ashley watson says many young people who come to her feel hopeless and anxious over an uncertain future will also collectively going to a traumatic experience right now. on anxiety. which means that none of us. to handle and. i was difficult. she was in adds that being constantly connected with the world online and accessing new information why helpful is also impacting the country's youth. well i guess you
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know. those who make a majority image of these very very generating very distressing in regions not the west state and that in reading some nice and or museums i don't think it's an experience that any of us will ever recover from yes we need help. on this yes he. regards there are. plenty of increase conversations about both. have been doing what they can to help my athlete thing the quest for emergency aid on social media they say that while there is an overpowering feeling of helplessness there is also some optimism in the way young people have been mobilizing help in these times. the 1000 texan campaign is well underway with millions already vaccinated
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surprisingly the state of alaska as the country stands. to split its remote location. final preparations for a vaccine flight near the arctic circle in alaska kimberley and on house with her 50 shots of the modernity vaccine she hopes they'll help bring an end to the pump demick which has had rural alaska hard one person get said here that's. you know that's 5 percent of the population almost so that one household pretty much can cause for the whole village to shut down that means nobody hauling water nobody hauling fuel nobody you know you're not leaving your house to go get stuff that you need ok it's going to things down to 20 minutes would be despite its remoteness the state of alaska has rolled out the corona virus vaccines faster than any other state in the u.s. today the team of health care professionals will be visiting several indigenous
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villages in the arctic wilderness. the village of vienna time has no mobile phone coverage no supermarket and no permanent doctor. landing on a gravel runway covered with snow all goods have to be flown into vienna time today's air freight is the covert 19 vaccine the village of around 200 inhabitants has only 2 cars one of them is the ambulance snow mobiles of the most important means of transport here a quick ride takes the team to the local health center. inside around 20 villagers are waiting for their shot. i think. like most of the villagers lawrence roberts belongs to the gwich'in tribe for many years he's relied on his strong constitution but in time of the pandemic he wants
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to play it safe. from wherever they go the way you would have to get sick or you know if it will prevent hospitalization this could. take off to the next village it may be one of the world's remotest places but when it comes to the vaccine program alaska is leading the way. a shanty town on the southern edge of the trade is what if you were the poorest neighborhoods. people here lack a lick tricity you know their basic that it is and the government looks on without taking action. regional authorities and the process of demolishing these houses. social work a canal he menaces eyewitness to this transition right in front of us is where they
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will build a regional park. demolition the government's attempt to stop the illegal settlements here but relocation is slow going the trucks can be seen coming and going to the ring sand. the minister and his team often come to visit to bring families basic supplies and are middlemen between the authorities and those who want to leave this place. ok. living conditions here i knew maine children can't be expected to live like this that's why i think it's important that we all help that way these families can exist in normal housing conditions until they're relocated back to her as the front of point at least as far as food hygiene and electricity is concerned here. look at it here are the power has been out since october but cannabis plantations further up an area 6 encreasing need training to power supply families here were once able to get electricity from their own lines across the oh fernandez
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has been living here for 30 years it's never been easy but now life for her and her children has become impossible it's sad to have my children grow up here but i want them to have a good life i want them to have running water and electricity for t.v. set. we put the buckets here then warm the water in them and then we pour it in the bathtub so we can wash ourselves these families suffer most year in the cold months as t w reported this winter feeling forgotten by politicians they found other solutions . is a bit relieved now that she has solar panels and electricity. don't install the panels his charity organization wants to help 70 other families to get started with solar power. the most in all this is a community where people live illegally and that's why government authorities calmed intervene like they usually would i mean the thought of this would be asking them to do something highly unusual and at the moment we don't have any politicians
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who do on the usual thing us because you need courage for that and you have to be willing to take a risk with. the regional government has taken a clear line of the more electricity use gives them to more than marianna plantations will take money they take advantage of these people's poverty. but local police only have limited powers i used to says the central government has to do something but they won't. be a minute doesn't understand why not. violent says in the air here it's a ghetto a ghetto for the poor and that generates crime a lot of people using drugs and selling them that's not good it needs to stop. is a place with many faces this is just one of them. you know a person supermarket chain customers can pay by simply looking into
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a camera. but some activists are sounding the alarm about the tensional data protection abuses. cash cards and cell phones os so yesterday today is the blink of a camera lens is all it takes and under the tap a spite face i did acknowledge is now operating in the around 50 of the x. 5 retail groups moscow supermarkets just look at him and his ilk. we want to make it convenient for customers they save time and don't need to get out their phone a wallet just press a button the system reach their face and they can go home quickly or sister my. cell far facial recognition payment is only available to customers who have accounts with a major russian bank and for that they have to provide to the bank with or they're a biometric data one study by credit card institute shows 70 percent of russians
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would be willing to use of the technology once because they've heard about it. never heard of it before and if you could would you do that why not maybe. this just in the so now they're going to recognize our faces to grangeville have to get used to that. yet facial recognition technology. a part of everyday life from lost because more than 170000 cameras register and regulate public life half of them with the help of face i.d. while it's a blessing for police officers it's a curse for data protection advocates. privacy activist alyona popovers campaigns against of it must use of facial recognition and is critical of rational hopes she says as they are too vacant to don't protect personal data well enough but paul has even sued in moscow city government without success. our biometric
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data is part of our private lives which no one is allowed to enter with their dirty shoes once it's deposited you can never get rid of this data your voice your gate in your face that's data that accompanies us throughout our lives. that became apparent to during recent opposition protests hundreds involved in authorized demonstrations over the last few months have been subsequently investigated and punished by police in moscow. but a data protection arguments haven't convinced software developers they're currently on the lies in customer reactions to the technology the goal is to later install facial recognition cameras in more than 6000 self-service terminals across russia.
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prepared to. come on your. own doesn't she and modern day euro. artists search for treason. there mark. 21. d.w.i. . the greater the danger the bigger the rush. thrill seekers on the hunt for the ultimate adrenaline kick willing to risk their lives in the process. we're in little masochistic we want to take things to the edge knows more zones and disasters the extreme truism. 45 minutes on w. w's crime fighters are back to britain africa's most successful radio
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drama series continues from the olympus odes are available online and of course you can share and discuss on w. africa's facebook page and other social media platforms to crime fighters to mindanao. on the one hand you had this kind of narrative of european civilization on the other hand you had exploitation. the question should be what is colonialism it everywhere and it fit in everything and that nobody can really see it her name and what most european countries did was sell it civilize admission.

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