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tv   37 Grad  Deutsche Welle  June 4, 2021 11:30pm-12:01am CEST

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imagine how many portions of last turn out in the world right now, the climate change. if any of the story, this is much less the waste form just one week. how much was going to really get we still have time to go. i'm doing some slides or more like this is d w d as africa coming up on the program. it's been 40 years since the 1st case of a was reported here from some of the africans living with me today. i said in my desk, and if i came to me wanting to let us go to the unit and take that, implement steri light after the day and then i realize okay,
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this, this one says it's not going to show me some models that you don't have to choose not to count one namibia and germany reach 1000000000 you're agreements as reparation. so the colonial era genocide on the head and non people that deals is filling divisions that has nothing to do with our do not for the ration they are pulling us and it's only $0.03 and they don't accept to say the minority basically and we visit the families in going to have to start rebuilding their home in mounting. it was part of destruction when africa has most active volcanoes st. feeling into the city really? oh, that same angel maxine from guy. she's been public to the identity and that's come
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with a price for her. and others like her. ah hello, i'm christine wonder, it's good to have your company. it has been 40 years since the 1st case of age was reported. and since then, nearly 35000000 people have died from h i v related disease. now while they still nurture, there's been great progress in developing treatments today and fix of people only have to take one tablet a day. but a tie, the is still the leading cause of death of women, of childbearing age, especially in southern africa, which has the world's highest infection rates. i'll be talking to an activist about her life with h. i v. after this report from the kaya leach a township in cape town, where one health campaign is working to make sure people stay on their medication.
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finding his way in between the homes made up of corrugated iron seats, is a challenge. if in 454 year old michael, michael is a member of the movement for change in social justice and works with the local community and kind of ensuring that they take a retreat. and i wanted to come and said, today i'm coming, checking up on sunday slot chose i'm a few years ago. people like sandy saw where he did from the public by the families . because it was a taboo to talk about a child who was a big stigma stigmatize. and it was like a dead sentence, or that mr. dudgeon into an as that and it meant and september 2004. my family was very supportive because when i was diagnosed, he said to me, wanting to mothers, go to clinic and take you treatment. one major challenge michael faces in his work is people stopping their medication because they feel bad. he constantly has to
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tell people they should never stop taking their medication or their health will deteriorate, but you'll get cabins, keep it up for to take them because it's a one template and now is the change again. you take it only in the morning. it's elena zation, we are dead. we encourage and make awareness. this is not difficult to take a tablet is 18. have to being diagnosed at the age of 22. we sick, i will not much. i thought she was going to die. it took me 3 months to get out of bed. i was so depressed, waiting for my death from april may june, july i said, and my death never came. and then i realize, okay, this, this age, i was not going to kill me tomorrow. so i better wake up and do something. so i woke up and i took her tray. i went to kaylee in 2003, we say, and other activists took to the streets to demand life safety medication. she said
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their public prominence was important to break the silence. h. i had no fees. there is few people came forward to say, i live with h, i z and this is my life. we had very few people were coming for what, so were not organized in the sense that our voice was united. so we have to begin by socialization to break the stigma down. we say now has a ph. d. and is a living testament that one should never give up and that it is possible to achieve great things in life, we say. and michael said there will never give up the fight to ensure a better life for those living positively with ty v. and staying on the mode of living positively with h, i v my guess today is doing just that, storing more and more. i was born with a b c joyce, me now from her home in i robi, where she is the founder off. i am a beautiful story. welcome to the w. news, africa,
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doreen. your campaign is called i am a beautiful story. tell us about it and, and how it relates to your own life. thank you so much for hosting me and yes i am the found away. i'm a beautiful story, which is its moral nowhere near the stigma campaign. again this k h a v. because one of the things that i relate to and way see i am a beautiful story, is not only to just share my johnny, but also to, to show people that there is a life after i have the indeed the most you and you don't have to teach a really need to use totally have to continue. it has to be beautiful. it has to have all that life comes. we beat and you don't really have to meet with that. so basically, the whole reason i created them a beautiful story is to check and sell stigma and all of the tests will say to call because most of the challenges we have is people even need to be boy known to,
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to behave in a stigma. i've actually been, i mean, the tissue into achieving a lot of things in the heat response during the advisement of medication means that people with a chevy can leave healthy, a normal life. tell us about your experience with, with empty retroviral drugs. so i started with 16 years ago, and at some point i stopped taking my leave because i thought i had been cute and my experience amusing v as has it was not, it's some at some point there were regiments that came that were a little bit extreme and they had the side effects, but as with and we come from with him, we may started, i would take 6 pills. and now i'm down to taking just one peel a day. so it's, it's basically it's growing and we are hoping to see even the introduction of the
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injectable. so okay, but but dory and even with the availability of life saving dr. aid remain the leading cause of death of women, of childbearing age women, your age, my age. what do we need to be doing to save lives of women and girls in sub saharan africa? first of all, availability of proper health care services is really lacking because we know that it's almost 40 of the age spend in it. but still the people who i've yet to, to get their proper access to the entry to via, or drugs. you know that efficiency in sub saharan africa, which is still much of the reason why we keep still roll and we get to people who cannot even find enough amount of money to travel to their cleanings every
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month efficiently from the time that we came. now i'm talking about the situation. there are people who don't take their medication where they leave. so for example, someone is going to swing by the train coming up could defeat a stigma. so such kind of things keep taking us back behind because you find that these people and you find this is probably a young girl, she's being university, she's taking medication from may, roby, and now they are close to school and she has to go home. so she will definitely default either be good, backing up, lack of proper access, the issue of stigma, discrimination. and that definitely the issue around the, the health care because i love talk to him just just not exactly friendly and sometimes when you do school, but you have just a quiet, he's probably too sexual relation. then it ends up boiling down to like you of the
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person who was promiscuous. so a lot of people don't go back to stigma. maintenance with the choose not to accept the indication doreen how has your life changed since you came out with your status in 2015? so do thank you motor to interview i plus the use of thinking about sharing my story. and then i realized that it was more than just sharing my story. it was impacting people's lives. it was encouraging other people to disclose that when he tried the status and she had the january, the rest of the world, and i am so happy to see that finally people are coming out and we are no longer asked us to speak. but now we are human being. so putting a human thief to us and that alone makes me happy. and besides that, i've got into a walk with a vision that i probably will only have them to where i can leave him while you're such a shining star. and inspiration to so many dory them. it's been
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a pleasure talking to that story more than what i told him just when i will be. thank you dory. thank you so much. the after 5 years of negotiations, germany and namibia have reached a compensation deal for the genocide committed by german colonial troops. more than a century ago. but the sentence of victims of the massacres reject the 1000000000 euro agreement. the w africa went to the village in the movie where a german general gave the order for his men to kill tens of thousands of africans. correspondent adrien crease, takes up the story. this is an emotional place for many heroes in the village of g naina. they call this tree out april hundreds of hero, prisoners of war. where hang to you by german troops to go through the next
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and they hang them. sadness. certainly anger. yes no, not that a human being could actually be doing this for what reason for the reason that all on sisters simply stood up in refuse to give up what belong to them, namely violette, more than 100 years ago, german soldiers killed almost 100000 hero and nama and the former colony of german south, west africa, in 1900 and for lot of fun towards her, gave the so called extermination order. it included women and children. now germany wants to recognize this as a genocide and has pledged 1100000000 euros for development projects. that's what the government negotiated without record. let's
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a deal between 2 governments. our development aid. it has nothing to do with our demand for the parishes. they are fully in us. we are not force caro, a for my attorney general and then maybe and to support as, as a considering legal action. but previous attempts have already failed in several, you escorts are msf record workspace that he is representing 95 percent of the heroes in the country. but not everybody in them maybe sees it that way. we are on our way to the small town of cholera, 2 hours away by com year to the majority of the population as hero and their several traditional lead us the bottom on shift ship think is not in existence, but you don't see him as the he's not, he's not that i'm not seeing, he's not the traditional leaders. he don't, she is singular viewpoints,
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some support records, legal actions, others in favor of the deal negotiated by the government. some of us, once a re negotiation, demanding more money for this poor region. unfortunately, the new jersey and did not come back to us to tell us how did to the german government arrived. and if you guess the have concluded. so i'm not yet of the opinion that i did to government should go ahead with the, with the agreement until the consensus with the effect in the capital vin took that gov, you were led negotiations for the 9000000 government for more than 5 years. the diplomat is also hero. we would have liked to have had more, but after 5, yes, is as been demonstrated, says you should watch the since the them affordable financially. politically,
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that you were has a list of 27 traditional chiefs of the hero and nama who went volved in the negotiations. and it's when they said who said they don't accept. so you say the minority basically of options. now that are people, of course, who are thinking of their own name, ego story. so i think one can't worry about watch one or 2 refuse chips and follow us. say, i go over the agreement and supposed to turn the page on a painful chapter of the past, but the paramount chief records and his support as against it. they went reparations and new negotiation the you're watching d. w. news africa coming up later in the program. the home of the designs that have
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been done by some of africa, his wealthy and powerful, including nelson mandela. but 1st, when africa's most active volcano erupted in east and democratic republic of congo, the city of golden was flooded with lava and thousands of people were forced to flee the area. now they are slowly beginning to return, looking for what remains of their homes and their livelihood. dw correspondent, mario miller has been in the city to meet with some of the impacts it. the music of homes was lost. everything. her house where she lived with her children and her family business, the entire life she had carefully built up over the years, consumed by flames in a matter of seconds. so good, we decided to flee, hoping that lava would not affect our house. but on sunday,
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when he came back, everything was gone and we were left with nothing. she had no time to take any belongings with her. now she's living with friends that could only take 2 of her 10 children, the others. i was neighbors. one here, one moment. okay, i'm going a little. it's making me very sad. there's nothing i can do about it like must be got over $4000.00 people have lost their homes and the entire livelihood. some of them contract at friends, houses, or in nearby towns, but now they depend on humanitarian assistance in order to survive me. masika could have saved at least some things if there had been a warning in the plant evacuation. she's not the only one who thinks that vocal was going to. our leaders told us to move away that the volcano will still wrapped, but they were not able to tell us the 1st time before it will get to work on behalf
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of knowledge is that when they rupture happened, we were not informed. we would have run, we feel not safe. we are living and we don't know is the volcano interrupt again? why was there no warning for goma? about 2000000 people live in the area. director of the goma volcano observatory, says the world bank did not renew the funding for their work. with no funds they were unable to monitor the will cain or properly and upset. in october, the internet was cut off, let cause problems. we have stations that 150 kilometers away. then we didn't have enough fuel to get there. but because you know, from when the internet is working, the observatory receives data from sensors on the volcano every 4 minutes for 7 months. that was not the case too long. everyone knew that we didn't have them in the way that we worked with difficulties. but some broken ologist say there were clear signs that they will cain or could erupt in the next few years. civil society
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activists say the blameless, squarely with the government. and the good mobile cane observatory itself. or even a wedding is corrupted. if they didn't spend money or for j founded by bank they, we could prevent the dead. right? know, masika isn't by that. who is responsible, all she cares about is trying to rebuild her life as being in dizzy. where is nowhere else? i can go. there's only one goma. there's only here for me to stay with my children or get to know what i like most the people of go live under the shadow of one of the world's most dangerous volcanoes. they can only hope the city will be better prepared. by the next time it erupt. the the hash tag free. the 21 has brought
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international condemnation for ghana, the 21 l g b, t activists who were detained in late may. the 16 women and 5 then has been charged with illegal assembly because they organized and attended a training event. we went to whole in south eastern ghana from where dw africa was . isaac ology sent us this report. the angel maxine is transgender. she came out publicly more than 5 years ago since then magazine has been a woman magazine. it's one of the very few o g, b, t. people in ghana speaking out publicly about the sexuality and gender identity. but with that bravery comes constant humiliation, abuse and discrimination from the society around hey, one time i went to the market to buy stuff for myself,
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like food stamps and all that. and when i entered the market and people realized was the me who to not me is sold, see me. why you money wants to be like this. why is greasing as you're the people who wrote poverty to ghana, yet somebody they said, all of the reason was his salary has reduce where i knew him from know, you know, and it touched my heart. i'm like, what other people can then me what i stood in the market and i cried through music magazine is able to express her feelings about life on o g b t person in ghana and those feelings where suddenness and outreach after the rest of $21.00 octave is not on oj beat, the rights which show up in gun is for to origin. police accused them of lawful assembly after the rest, the way the team for days without try out. a judge denied
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a bill or application for the release. many of them suffered physically and mentally behind bad. the condition i would see is, but it doesn't look good there. i don't know. well, in terms of like was who showed the decrease. there are others who are for, for dues who have children that haven't been able to see the actual grade. so some people like holding, like more worried of having to be able to see the family and all human rights lawyer see the continued detention of the 2 to one is own low for and previously used to be. the key is that there were certain offenses that you could not get veal from at all, that has been scrapped. do to make keys with before the supreme court and sue at this point, there's no such offence. however, the last so stands that laws criminal procedure could, you know,
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there are certain things that the court is supposed to consider dying, i would in view, in this case, bill was denied. as prosecutors asked for more time gun i thought who stopped please for o. d. b, c, people from a 4 week abuse and violence, white sprayed activists see, given up now is not an option. the ones on end to all forms of hatred toward the minorities in the country. little by little i feel like setting groups, minority groups and gone are going to be harassed, intimidated at risk that it's thought that from somehow so there's not far all some of these people in here to be the 21 people being held legally. i need some of the key for my craft, some of them i use the school teacher, some of them i a book, there's some of them days where efficient be indefatigable society. despite the threats, maxine is still pushing for accept bones with hoofs for
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a future way. just walking on the street won't come with fear of getting arrested and detail. the now he's styled prominent africans like nelson mandela, morocco's king of judah. the 6th and wondering president polka, gummy, the orient designer party were drago, known as patio is on a mission to promote fashion as a fundamental element of the continents heritage. for 50 years patios designs have graced runways, displaying the best of what africa has to offer the world of fashion. at this event in abbey, john ivory and government officials are honoring him for his work. the patio has built his name over decades, but he feel that fashions still need greater respect in the project. it's
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not fair that a continent like africa doesn't even realize that we henry, part of africa as well. part of that well has to do with the development of the fabrics. patio uses the cloth that ends up on the runway is dyed by hand here to create the patterns was this is called the happy when i see important men wearing my one. i'm happy 11 thanks to pat hill, that's up by then the fabric ends up in the workshop where again, tailors work by hand to bring ideas to life. to do for you know, every day you have to create. that means you always have to be have to imagine how much in innovative anticipate change. that's what fashions all about the. and that's why he's so well respected that he is
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a monument of african fashion. and i wanted to come and show him all the gratitude for this profession that he's chosen. patio continues to lead the way inspired by every day men and women he sees in the streets to produce outfits. the africans can be proud of and we're proud of that for sure. that's just for now. be sure to take this choice on d. w dot com, forward slash africa rules on facebook and twitter. ah, the news. the news
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. the news the news, the the oh, the news you feel worried and asked me to kneel. host of the on the grievance
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to me is clear, remains to change solutions or out that join me for a deep green transformation to me for the future wars. the double use richard walker explores the evolution of digital warfare, humility martin's more efficient deadly decisions. those with the best algorithms survive future scenarios. absolutely not. future wars starts intense on the w every day counts for us and for our planet.
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global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make, how can we protect habits? what to do with them all our ways? we can make a difference by choosing smartness solutions over same set in our way global ideas or mental theories. on d, w and online humans love interaction. sometimes you don't have a robot will provided that's great. they're going to replace people manufacturing, they're going to replace doctorates and lawyers. they're going to replace people in jobs. you wouldn't think they can't. if all the work has been done, my machines, what do they try and keep getting better, better indication and take more and more advanced job, or do they end up doing other things, making art,
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having social interactions with each other? are we going to have enough humanity to make it possible for everyone or some people going to say, i want everything and the rest of you guys before die? it allow individuals to discover their humanity. they have to learn new meaning for life and new things to do. that's a social revolution. and hopefully we can move to slowly. the news the this is dw news, and these are our top stories. hundreds of people have gathered in hong kong victoria park to mark the anniversary of the 1989 gentlemen square massacre. the vigil took place despite attempts by chinese authorities to prevent any commiseration of the students uprising. police.

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