tv Der Islam der Frauen Deutsche Welle May 18, 2021 12:30pm-1:16pm CEST
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doesn't her own real world gives me a hug. ugh can't sleep. ugh closely. car came loose. net 0 carbon emissions by 2050 can be done if all future of fossil fuel projects get scrapped that's according to a fresh report by the international energy agency will talk to one of the group's leading heads of what experts call a knife to the fossil fuel industry also come to india seeing the sharpest spike in wholesale prices in a decade talk to our correspondent about what that means to the penn demick stricken countries and we take a look at the growing number of female entrepreneurs who want to do more with
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business than just make money. welcome to the program it's another stark warning to change course this time from the international energy agency which has long been dedicated to the use of fossil fuels now the group says all future fossil fuels project must be scrapped if the world is to reach net 0 carbon emissions by the year 2050 and to stand any chance of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees the i.a.e.a. predicts a sharp decline of fossil fuel demand in the next 3 decades and wants a rapid and vast ramping up of investment in renewable energy. for more on this let's bring in timor group he is the head of energy technology policy and one of the authors of this report what comes of the program timor good to have you so let's dive into this topic here no new fossil fuel projects you
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propose the end of sales of internal combustion engine cars by 2035 why did you come up with this plan now. well good afternoon from paris 1st and foremost thank you for having me on your show today now if you know the background of course governments as part of the paris agreement have committed to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees and strive efforts to efforts to reach 1.5 degrees celsius and as the science has developed over the last couple of years we are all very committed to reaching the more ambitious and of these climate targets 1.5 degrees celcius and what we have looked into with this report is what does it actually mean in practice for the energy sector energy sector meaning how we do we produce energy how do we consume energy because this is
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what the i.a.e.a. is doing the i.a.e.a. as a devising government on how to implement their very own targets for the for the energy sector so what will be the cost of all of this. well i think 1st and foremost a transition to a net 0 emissions by the year 2050 is a formidable. yet critical undertaking and it's a goal that we believe is chiva build but it's also a narrow goals so it requires really all governments to act swiftly with an vaporing government attention towards this goal the governments have to implement not only long term targets for a carbon neutrality at a certain point in time but they also have to look into many many different milestones along the way you mentioned. no longer say it's all
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new internal combustion engine bay caused by the year 2535 but we also laid out for example that you don't need any. oil and gas boilers being sold by the 2025 more letter energy to let me interject your government to implement these goals so they talk to talk but they don't walk the walk today from your assessment i think it's very important to set goals 1st now it's very important to know what's your direction of travel where you had it the next step is to come up with concrete intermediate milestones with concrete policies all along the way so translating the long term goal into near term milestones and actions and this is what we did in this particular report do you or how hopeful are you that it will actually will come to this because you also say that half of this year 2 reductions needed by 2050 will be done by technologies that are currently in demonstration or prototype
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phase. we say 2 things i believe and i think this is a very important message that we are trying to bring forward 1st we have all the technologies ready and available in the markets to do to get deep emission cuts from the way we produce and consume energy by the year 2030 there is this is not a question of technology we have it we can do it it's renewable energies electric cars it's energy efficiency we have the technology portfolio in our hands in order by 2030 to be on track to net 0 by 25th the lot it is not the de kalb and izing our way we consume and produce energy is not about only power generation and only passenger cars it is also about our ships our planes our cement industry our iron and steel industry felt chemical industry all of which are important contributors
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to to c o 2 emissions and here in these areas the technologies are under development they are currently being prototype they're going demonstrated but here we can't leave innovation just to chance alternatives that we need a concerted push on innovation head of the international energy agency's technology and policy division thank you for your thoughts thank you. it's to india now and as the country is struggling with a record wave of covert $1000.00 and factions and vesta countries also slipping into further economic crisis with wholesale prices up more than 10 percent year on year for the month of april it's the highest inflation rate in a decade and it's mostly due to higher prices for oil and fuel products but food has become more expensive has been especially in the gyms and animal products ranging from need to x. . let's get more on this from
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correspondent new to you write in mumbai. media wholesale prices jumping 10 percent year on year what's behind that. primarily as you said that the commodity prices and then the mass amount there have been hard to name and therefore it has to take them back to the commodity prices in the country and there will be has also been weakened have means they're going to do that in to go before the court has also backed into that. the primary the biggest problem here is the manufactured in costs which the companies have very easy forwarded towards the country less so as you need to talk about the output what that has these significantly we just did a clean back to the hotel prices and as we wanted all that you've built in prices and they hooted patient it's increasing that's did it with the back the consumer inflation which is back to everybody's pocket in the car needed tell us what does mean sort of people in india that are struggling to make it through the pandemic as
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it is. oh so as we all know that india is struggling. for oxygen for basic infests who get infrastructure and adding to the walls of the people right now i mean going to the biggest challenge last week did go to fix that but i think why one thing that would areas has doubled and i mean we've been going to go through increased substantially this means that people who would also looking for jobs on or get a lot of people have said will do because part of me so therefore that i know in gays in the problem but inflation is the biggest challenge that comes unemployment and obviously that part of it has. been here are reporting from mumbai you need a thank you very much. high level female executives are still all too rare as rare are female entrepreneurs but among those that are striking out on their own a global trend is emerging women that do want to do more with business than simply make money. pattern selection for the next batch entrepreneur
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christine as our produces bees wax wraps as an alternative to plastic cling wrap. presents and you'll fall washed off well this is an organic cotton fabric and it's coated with a mixture of wax actually resin and jojoba oil onto those 3 components together and they're then applied to that fabric by us. and stuff. the mother of 2 develops the prototypes in her home kitchen with lots of wax and an iron today she and her company supply 9000 outlets across europe. one important aspect to the entrepreneur is that all raw materials are organic production takes place exclusively in berlin and as their numbers grow around the world female entrepreneurs say they want more than just to make a profit. by and large an agenda that really speaks very directly to this this idea
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that when it comes to prayer ties in social tools of my own mental goals and economic goals men tend to prayer ties economic goals over other goals women tend to pray or try as social goals or other goals this is also true for designer karen jordan she only uses fabric from europe that is produced under fair working conditions she wants to set an example against the cheap textile and fast fashion industry. even if we consider economies of scale what's on offer here is still too cheap that devalues the garments along with the people who make them we simply can't do that to each other so convinced me. with more women creating their own opportunities in the business world no values and modes of operation are bound to emerge. but so more about those with. she's an advisor author or father and head of global digital women a company aiming to connect female leaders and women in tech welcome to w t
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h what does a truly diverse executive board look like to you. executive but looks like that we don't ask and then we don't look for they were city anymore and what we see especially in germany is we don't have the perception problem we have implemented implementation problem so we see diversity as a key of more innovation more resistance and more future for companies especially for mid-size and also large companies to be don't do it and i think that's because we don't have this yet perception problem we have to simply mentor an implementation problem and also diversity is a topic for c.e.o.'s it's a state of the art and also a mindset topic but we don't see it in germany now speaking of implementation germany introduced a quota for women on supervisory boards and as of this year on executive boards as
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well now you support from what are understand this quota but is there an argument that quotas could give women or other groups less motivation to reach top positions in a more natural way no i don't think so i think what gets measured gets down so we need to studies to be needs we need more data and we need more facts when it comes to diversity diversity inclusion and also equity are not kind of a charity project so we need just kind of measurements may need also to have a strictly goal is specially for thoughts and also c.e.o.'s that needs to be a c.e.o. of a topic. because when we don't have called us we don't have a real vision and also mission for a company to become more diverse and also to become more inclusive to do in our own had global digital women thank you for your thoughts. thank you. and reminder
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of our top story for you at this hour the international energy agency long dedicated to the oil and gas to said future fossil fuel must be scrapped if the world was to reach 0 carbon emissions by the year 25th. that's a show folks watching every cell physics of. the fight against the corona virus pandemic. has the rate of infection in developing what does the latest research say. information and context the coronavirus update 19. on t w. this code. tons of species. an expedition. looking to decipher the
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subject. of. the beer company a research team to the pacific to decode the language of those storage consumers on g.w. . in india some covert 900 patients are developing a rare but dangerous infection dubbed black fungus you call my cosas. typically stuck in the airways it spreads through the body affecting the sinuses old lungs then bones and body tissue the fungus can also attack the eyes and brain. if left untreated it can be fatal. fizzle a nice to have you along it's important to note that black fungus is extremely rare
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in india it only affects around 100. 1000 people a year according to one study that's less than one percent of the population but now because spittles are reportedly diagnosing it in patients every 2nd day in these ongoing 2nd wave patients are especially at risk because their immune system is weekends and that may be contributing to the rising cases of black fungus the media. all of a queerly is from the european excellence center for invasive fungal infections in cologne 1st of all what are the symptoms of a fungus infection well the symptoms of cosas that infection is unspecific runny nose fever but then it might turn into a specific sign and it. gets in the craw dick and across big scheme will look black that is why it's actually cold fungal disease it's not really the finest it's a different class of fungi but it looks black on the skin do explain what actually
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happens to a patient what do they go through what do they experience well best founders all those who really are destroying tissue imagine that there is a science to this caused by the fungus that doesn't stop there but it actually moves into the bull and it might destroy bone and then move into the next neighboring organs and tissues and it could be. there for patients report to me and sat well i woke up in the morning and couldn't see anything on this one i was actually not painful because it destroys nerves is. ok it's not painful but the consequences a severe i mean can you can you treat it and can you treat it soon enough to prevent something like that happening. well if you feel it you're kind of treated
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by that it's difficult to get the right point to exactly understand what's happening because the symptoms are specific you could treat it with either surgery or with follow the rules that's the end of all it's directed against directed against fungi or you combine both but you need to be really really fast at all of it tell me why it's such a problem in india right now. i guess there are several reasons why this is one respect to for you the marcos' which is a well known respect or is diabetes and specifically diabetes means that very high levels of blood sure that your blood. that triggers the invasion of the tissues of the of the phones. in india and the region you have of message number of patients with diabetes who are at risk or mentally even
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without her own. another reason i say is the exposure to the fungus the fun those lives its soil decay material. you'll will be more exposed to soil in the rule area of the india that you are for example in the area in germany with the climate is completely different ounds another reason. that i envision. for my police in india and other countries is that they use steroids for example to cope with 19 under control and nation of steroids increase a lot of sugar they mimic a diabetic situation. that the pounds will take advantage of
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so all of us should people be wired in other parts of the world where coronavirus case numbers are also high. in other parts of the world the real problem is not that large as we see in these asia india. the reason might be that fungal infections are not that frequent in other regions north america europe for example south america has a different pattern of fungi and you lycos is has so far only been diagnosed in a tiny minority of patients we don't know what africa actually. trail be very similar to. the old with a lower number of your sil is different regions of the planet have different fungal infections and all of it just lastly this was something i'd never even heard of before the show is that something that makes your work difficult i mean getting
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the funding to research. something that's quite fascinating it's something that's not frequent but. something like a. yeah that's true it's infrequent and for these in redmond infections there's only there's almost no way to get funding so it's heavily underfunded that's one reason why we only have basically 3 drugs that we can use against these fungi which is wait a while a number that's too little and it's toxic drugs quite some of them ok we'll have to leave it there thanks for your time today all of a canadian and the european excellent center for invasive fungal infections. thank you very much. time to as a more of your questions now over to our science correspondent eric williams.
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why aren't injected vaccines manufactured as a single unit instead of having the vaccine in the syringe separate this is a great question one that i've never really actually considered before right now most vaccine manufacturers are are filling and shipping multi-dose vials of vaccine that contain between $5.15 doses on site at the vaccination center or at the doctor's office staff then have to painstakingly draw them into syringes in a complex time consuming series of steps where we're a lot could actually go wrong due to human error and and there are a lot of other issues with the vial system not least that once the seal on one has been broken all of the doses in the bio have to be used quickly leftovers can't just be stuck back in the fridge for use later so so since everyone is getting
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their own syringe anyway why aren't machines just pretty filling them directly as a single unit instead of putting large batches of doses in vials 1st prefilled single shot syringes are already the norm in some parts of the world for vaccinations against other pathogens but but there appear to be 2 primary reasons why the older vial system has been the method of choice so far for the mass 19 vaccine rollout the 1st is speed with manufacturers churning out hundreds of millions of doses it's simply faster for them to score 10 of the time into a single vial that it is to fill 10. separate syringes and with a pandemic in full swing getting as much vaccine as possible out there has been vital and the 2nd factor is cost until now single dose
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prefilled syringes have been more expensive to produce but but many manufacturers say that's changing and that that pre-filing syringes is actually more efficient because then you don't need millions of medical grade glass vials so so when demand for 1000 vaccines begins to slow i think that you can expect prefilled syringes to grow in popularity because they have so many advantages. the u.s. centers for disease control is no longer recommending face masks for fully vaccinated people but the c.d.c. says mosques are still recommended in crowded settings like buses planes and hospitals and anyone who isn't fully vaccinated will still have to wear one over half of the u.s. population has received at least one dose against the current buyers. dancing is
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often about intimacy getting close and connecting foreign concepts in times like these but not impossible as these creative guys explain whether online or in the open air. at the earliest each one downs that home hold everything. in the world but since the summer of 2020 there's been meeting up to form a temple hold airfield a huge public park not far from the center of berlin. now it's a big field. that can be a lot of people and we can feel. close north which were terrified felt here today it is really beautiful there it's really kind of a connection well you know. there's a neutral connection. it was here the 1st moment of call and i have a buddy didn't know all about what school is going on so we would comply and you
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know what places that useless really. that would be me sad to say clear with my mind and redox to save the. euro land based choreographer alvin called came up with the idea for the on line down sessions he calls a dose of pleasure. who's been staying with his family in canada also down since along with the participants from around the world. and are streamed online so anyone from anywhere can join. in the about their their own journey and then because we tap into their research together we tap into the music together we create the community so this is what i really enjoy is that we're all taking ownership of where we are and then we need to
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she got a spot institute for inclusive education. here people like jenny who have mental disabilities are trying to be education specialists they know the issues mentally disabled people deal with firsthand. academic track for people with disabilities close up. a little guys this is the subbing to 7 percent step up fall off of the super tuesday issues and share ideas. i don't really look like. young people kid how decisions the future.
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77 percent now if i'm t.w. you know. i was 15 when i arrived here i slept with 6 people in a room in mt it was hard i was fair. i even got my hair. benjamin language help me out a lot this gets me and they go but you need to instruct lives of say you want to know their story. the fighting and reliable information for margaret.
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and. this is need of a news line from good u.s. president joe biden expresses support for a cease fire between israel and hamas but stop short of calling for. this fighting and to 9th day of israeli air strikes continue to pound gaza also on the program. thousands of african migrants cross from morocco to the spanish territory of same type in one day. hoping for a new life in europe and spanish authorities are already sending them back to afghans fear for their futures as nato troops preparing to leave the country for
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cotton taliban rebels stepha recruiting. and police in germany achieve break through their investigation into 29 teams spectacular jewelry heist interest . i'm so welcome to the program. u.s. president joe biden has told israel's prime minister that he supports a cease fire between israel and palestinian militants even though washington has repeatedly blocked a u.n. security council statement calling for an immediate end to hostilities israel's jets unleashed another barrier of air strikes on gaza overnight and palestinian militant group hamas and continued to fire rockets at israeli cities more than 200 people mostly palestinians have been killed in more than a week of violence. he says radio strikes hit
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on tuesday morning. it's the 9th day of fighting between israel and hamas militants in gaza the casualties some mounting many of them civilians. hospitals already struggling with a covert $900.00 pandemic us threats to the limits. this small girl is among the injured. and this boy has lost several members of his family. the bombardments have to strike homes and displaced tens of thousands of people there many tarion situation is deteriorating that the power supply across gaza has been reduced to 6 to 8 hours per day on average the number of feeder lives not functioning that it turns disrupts the provision of health care
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and other basic services water hygiene and cemetery isha israel says it's targeting senior hamas militants in the group's tunnel and work the military released this footage which says shows air strikes on 5 houses belonging to camas commanders. the directive is to continue to strike terror targets the i.d.f. is doing well today it has eliminated and now the senior islamic jihad commander we have hit a hamas novel unit and we continue to strike it underground infrastructure the hamas metro and other targets we will continue to act as necessary to restore peace and security to all residents of israel for. the escalation in violence began after clashes between israeli police and protesters over the planned eviction of palestinian families in east jerusalem. since then hamas has kept up a steady stream of rockets. some of them make it posses israel's iron dome defense system like here in ash hood where residential building was damaged and several
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people were injured. as global called smile and for an end to the blood the white house says president biden told intend yeah when a phone call that he supported a cease fire but stopped short of calling for one. a cease fire that is gently needed as the violence on both sides continue to spew. it's got more from the he's director of the united nations relief and works agency for palestinian refugees in gaza welcome to day w the gaza strip is a densely populated area so when tens of thousands get displaced as we've just seen in that report what do they get displaced too. good afternoon to you well we as of this morning have 48000 people in 58 all are united nations or schools here clearly the population not least based on the
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experiences in 20 to 40 and still see u.n. installations painted in blue and with of louis u.n. flag on top of it as relatively more safe and secure than their own homes so that's basically one place they can go to and then we also know that many have gone to ground krenz and relatives in the areas they perceive as less. of a target you know and that's away from border areas and so on so there's also significant numbers with friends and relatives and we should not overlook them either are doing and are those u.n. buildings are respected in the shelling. well we have assurances from all sides that un installations are not targets and the israelis know the coordinates of all our installations and we have shared them with them including recently unfortunately this time around some of the strikes are just too close to our
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installations so this morning you know we had a massive explosion right night next to our office called here and not far away from one of the schools that is housing refugees and we know that those solar panels for example where destroyed not destroyed completely but damaged so we are seeing a lot of destruction of civilian infrastructure as i would call it because the strikes are too close to g.'s infrastructure and when you say that too close to you talking about damage being sustained to these u.n. buildings and schools. well on my own compound the office compound if i could take you around it you would see there is considerable damage to the buildings and you know that's that's one as aspect is the damage itself i also would like to mention not just one rhymester nations we know that 2 primary health
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care centers run by the old florida keys have been destroyed we know an m.s.f. clinic has been destroyed we know that the central lab for covert 19 tests that is no longer foundational as a result of off strikes and we know that the central ambulance unit of the palestine red crescent has been badly affected so it has a serious impact on our collective ability to provide humanitarian service where these rockets coming from that these these bills are being destroyed by by by whose rockets. it's the israeli retaliation strikes we're on now i'm very well aware that and for me it's of course i'm except of all as a u.n. person the number of rockets any rockets flying from israel we know that some of them have fallen short but all the information i have and i believe it's credible and reliable and i've seen some of it with my own eyes is that by far most of the
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damage is being caused by the c.v.r. israeli retaliatory strikes right material schneider thank you for joining us and to such follow a from the united nations relief and works agency for palestinian refugees in gaza thank you. palestinians and arab israelis have gone on strike in east jerusalem and several times within israel and the west bank the strike was called to protest the conflict in gaza and other israeli policies that rights groups say the arms disadvantage compared to jewish citizens of the arab community inside israel makes up 20 percent of the country's population protests are also expected later. will turn out or some other news making headlines around the world at least 14 people have been killed after a powerful cycler brought heavy rains on storm surges to india's west coast some 200000 people have been evacuated the country's navy searching for schools of
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people missing after one ship sank and another lost power. or than 40000 people in china sadly are winning the province i've been placed in home quarantine because of a surge in covert 1000 cases well thought use of the measures will help prevent launch ground outbreaks of providing supplies to people in 98 quarantine neighborhoods. the u.s. treasury has imposed sanctions on 16 of men most military leaders and their families over the deadly attacks on civilians following the military coup the army seized power in february claiming that elections had been rigged that killed at least 800 people in attacks on pro-democracy supporters during widespread protests . there a supreme court has agreed to consider a major challenge to abortion rights as the state of mississippi seeks to ban most abortions from the 15th week of pregnancy a court ruling in favor would overturn decades of legal precedent but this isn't is
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expected next year. some 6000 migrants have entered spain's north african enclave of say you to some swimming almost 2 kilometers along the coastline from neighboring morocco of course they say it was a record one day influx to the territory amid worsening relations between spain and morocco. migrants from africa have been trying to get into europe via the speech for years. but never before have they crossed in such numbers. at least $5000.00 arrived within 24 hour period. the largest number in a single day. most were young men from morocco. but there were also significant numbers of women and at least 1000 children some explained why they had decided to attend the dangerous journey because you end up not because when you have nothing no money to spend you have to pay your rent and you have to take care of your children and parents there is no room for fear but you must get out of the hospital
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. as you see all the young people want to leave the country there's no work. aren't you afraid of the sea no i'm not afraid if i stayed here i would be afraid i have to save myself but you know harvey don't quote us if you vote. the beach they want to reach is in the spanish exclave of say water which borders morocco it is in northern africa but is part of the european union and as such has long been a magnet for migrants seeking a better life. most of these new arrivals reach same to by swimming some 2 kilometers along the coast of morocco or using inflatable boats. scaling this 10 metre high wall is one of the only other options of getting into. spain a wreck to defense a try to close off the land route. but this is not stop some migrants from trying their luck over the years. project say several 100 miles to
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get into same to each year but many are deported back to where they came from as they have no right to asylum in the e.u. . most of those arriving of the last few days will also be sent back to morocco. some reports suggest moroccan pleas allowed so many to move towards the border in the 1st place because of a diplomatic spat with spain over another issue. but officials in madrid say they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrants back and we're now we enforcing security to prevent further arrivals. afghanistan where heavy fighting has resumed after the end of a 3 day truce over the muslim holiday he says u.s. and nato continue their military withdrawal recovery around $2500.00 u.s. troops in afghanistan on top of 7000 from nato allies in april u.s. president joe biden promise that all u.s. troops would be out by the 11th of september to mark the 20th anniversary of the
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$911.00 attacks that triggered american military involvement there the taliban ruled most of the country before the u.s. led invasion is the most groupie seeking to regain control and is recruiting more fighters. a rare glimpse of another world a home visit with the taliban. welcome come on in. this father and his son don't want to tell us their names but they are willing to tell us why the son recently decided to join the taliban. i did this for 2 reasons one i had no job and 2 i wanted to do something about iran just in corrupt government so there oppressing the people of this country is that i'm. his father welcomes his decision he's proud his son is now on the taliban side . this makes me happy because we are
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muslims and we should defend the islamic state islamic state allows us to fight infidels we dedicate our lives to it we also want islamic sharia and taliban law to be implemented. but. many afghans are scared of the taliban's increasing power. ali khan is a truck driver he drives all across afghanistan and has to pay passage fees to the taliban on a regular basis just recently he paid the equivalent of $75.00 euros about a quarter of his monthly salary. yet. the taliban are increasing in number and their power is growing. they set up checkpoints and force drivers to pay for safe passage the government can't stop them although the official checkpoints are very far away. jannot cool
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a farmer has had a similar experience he makes his living growing and selling grain from his meager earnings he has to pay the taliban over $100.00 euros on a regular basis the taliban threatened to imprison or even kill him if he didn't pay up he's afraid of what will happen when foreign troops finally leave the country. i would prefer that the soldiers stayed international troops have kept peace here for the past 2 decades if they leave afghanistan the country will go to pieces if. the taliban are already taking control of more and more places around the country and they make no secret of their ultimate goal. we want an islamic state and an islamic government that provides law and order with foreign troops and all infidels must leave our country.
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