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tv   Global 3000  Deutsche Welle  June 8, 2021 12:30am-1:00am CEST

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the future wars d w's, richard water explores the pollution digital warfare makes the military law more efficient and deadly. those are the best algorithms survive interest scenarios. absolutely not. future wars starts to tense. w me. the children may seem well equipped to deal with cars at 19, but the pandemic is leaving. it's mark school closures, and isolation from friends are bad enough, but some kids are forced to face the pandemic alone. research shows over a 1000000 children have lost at least one caregiver during the crisis,
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robbing them of critical support, and exposing them to poverty and abuse. me, i'm been physical and nice to have, you know, the pandemic has put some kids in an extremely risky situation. as you'll see in our report in a moment. india is emerging from a deadly wave of infections. it's claimed tens of thousands of lives and created a broken generation children and teens orphans and exposed to not only emotional trauma, but exploitation for 9 years now, the people that had worked with children from under the community on a daily basis. she deals with children who have experienced creek laws and forced to grow up before they're ready. but since the outbreak of who with 19 their numbers are growing, children are being made to quit education and pick up household responsibilities and are also being pushed into child labor as their families have lost income.
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secondly, since they are spending a lot of time at their home, now many cases of child abuse are also coming up. having already been disproportionately affected by over 19, many children are facing another project fall out of the band, and many have lots, mother, or father are both, leaving them extremely one of the since last year, the angel, a pretty work has provided support to 13 children who have been often new to call the 19 by helping them settling with their extended families. so no opposing the founder of the organization says that while children who have been often had much tougher and need immediate attention, a more realistic approach is needed to address every child in distress. there's a lot of conversation about it often, but honestly, on the ground it such cases are probably 5 to 6 percent. the other 95 percent cases that we're looking at is where the bed, the very best of these children are pushing them into sexual trade. transactional
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sex and child labor. the real issue really is to look at the vulnerability mapping of which child is in massive distress and which side needs more support that there is a need for a more comprehensive approach is something that an iraq can do. the head of the deli commission for protection of child. right. also i'm looking for something for 3 things need to happen. one, these schemes that provide the financial assistance to these families so that the basic subsistence is insured. the 2nd thing that needs to happen is the government have explore ways of keeping the children in school, the toward either ensuring a livelihood for the family. what ensuring that there you start in different existing schemes of the government could be a russian or whatever. but ensuring the, the family has adequate needs as an immediate urgent step. the commission has started a health line for children in distress. and back at the center pre p says that many
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children she meets with are in crisis. right now. we've got a home because of over the years of hard work that we and the children had put in seemed to have gone waste our home. we are now trying to get them back to their studies and 2 different activities we are trying to use them and help them come out of the difficult situations. they are still brief. he says that despite their best efforts, it will be a long while before the children are able to cope with the heart. and the trauma that the fun to make has inflicted. the rain sure is a clinical psychologist and works closely with national and international agencies . she joins us from london in india, they're talking about a broken generation. are we seeing this elsewhere? absolutely. it is occurring elsewhere that your question is always seeing as and i think people are focusing on much today's retirement. so for every adult who comes to covert, you would have often heard for their children and even for grandparents,
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where it was customers and older generations, you have co residing and caring grants. parents for children are dramatic, and we need to show from alan's to them. and just what sort of magnitude are we talking about in some parts of the world? well, it's high, we have a paper coming out in the last couple of weeks that tries to create a model to quantify it. but it's related to the fraternity weights, the size of families, and the burden of covert and their country pushing we are seeing figures will probably be in excess of over 1000000 children and growing and growing. we know in countries with hydrogen to more to fix it. and very often gravitates to low income countries. so looking at countries like india, as he said, south africa when it's true coffee usa,
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i'm across new k. in brazil. many, many countries across the conference. it's a global phenomenon. while another concern is the pandemic scene of inches, clothes and children sent back to their communities. what, what happens then? well, it's a complicated story because we know that orphanages are probably not going places for 5. we noticed before the panoramic and sadly amongst the h harvey, academic, we saw him mushroom, where we do have very good evidence. the family care is best for children. so we, we all of your programs to close orphanages and to families for example. and you can do this an excellent program and in one day. but the plant closure is very interesting issue. so we could jump now and support the families we. we, complet children go unsupported with no resources. and maybe
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some of the policies on child care and child care and the fundamental rocks essence of adult care needs to be bought in focus with resources we. we shouldn't forget that this is a cause of casualty. as well. lorraine, have we learned anything from other pandemic? absolutely, so in the buddha and in, in h r v, an age we saw the mushrooming of children and a huge portability. we also know that the phone with energy extends lifelong. so once you've lost a parent or a child experience, often hood, we know that it matters who dies if it's a grandparent in his mother, if it's a father and we know the multiple but like double opening multiple las it in both really poor you for the child and we often the age matters, the younger the child,
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the more dramatic effects and care responses are crucial for the immediate care and the ongoing, sustains care and all kinds of disruptions like schooling and will be a need to be tags if the child is to again, we also knows that if you do push instructions, they work. so we have to be very cautious of poor quality care of it, accessible for islands and a piece of children. and having national and government supported good program and with a short plan from children. a, the rain share their clinical psychologist. she joined us from love and thank you very much for being on the show today. pleasure to now for our science. corresponding derek williamson out of your question about how the buyers affects young adults. oh, how does cooper 191215 minute there are
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2 facets. this. this multi faceted question that i'd like to talk about. the 1st is of course, the straightforward issue of what the virus does physically to an average young adult as compared to someone who is older and they are the statistics. tell a pretty clear story. cove in 1900 mortality increases dramatically with age. let's look at recent data from the u. s. more than 4 and 5 deaths there have occurred in those over 65 and fewer than one into 100 reported deaths had been in people under 30. but as vaccinations rise among the elderly and countries like the u. s, doctors say that the average age of patients who are being hospitalized with the disease is dropping dramatically and that many of those younger patients will end
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up with conditions like crippling damage to the lungs or the heart. so, although coded 19 is a lot less likely to kill a young adult, there are still really pressing reasons to get vaccinated because getting it can have devastating long term health consequences. the 2nd important facet of this question is, is the pandemic, emotional, social, psychological, and economic impact. it's affecting everyone of every age, but is experts say in many ways hitting young adults especially hard and, and that a key time in their lives. there are no warning that due to lock downs and other measures generation cove, it is facing shortfalls in opportunities for, for crucial self development. many young people are rising to the challenges but,
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but psychologists and other therapists in many places like like here in germany are also currently being overwhelmed by this tidal wave of young adults in need of help . and, and a lot of those professionals now say that even the serious toll taken by infection in today's young into holes, could in the long run, be overshadowed by the impact cobit 19 has on the groups mental health me, derek williams. i keep sending in your questions, just use our youtube channel. finally, some good news for residents of delhi and will bite. the government is using lockdown restrictions. there is new infections in india full to a 2 month low shopping centers. reopening with some restrictions in place. how the transport is operating again at reduced capacity. restrictions came in april law
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for india was with most severe corona outright. to date india, one of the worlds was 2 countries with around 29000000 registered cases. despite easing restrictions, authorities are wanting residents against letting down infections, maybe falling, but coded related deaths remain at high levels. watching. stay safe and see you again. so ah, ah, you're welcome immigrants. they know the police, which they knew that the route is not a solution. they know their flight could be going back. he's not an option. peace ma,
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i'm on and the other day are stuck in the spanish border area. alongside other young people there waiting for a chance that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts june 18th on d. w. the hello guys. this is a 77 percent. the platform will ask you to defeat is used share. i did you know this? i know we are not afraid to catherine africa. totally. sean is willing to 5 people clearly have the solutions that do the 77 percent. now, every weekend on the w sometimes
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a seed, it's all you need to allow the big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning, like global ideas. we will show you how climate change ended, fire mental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing, download it now for the me, the lo from berlin and welcome to arts and culture coming up a new face in german literature. david novelist, sharon, go to a oh to explore as racism, and trauma spanning centers. and later on the show fashion, photographer christian charlotte goes to extreme to capture his perfect shock.
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but 1st live performance is back here in germany. the opera world even saw a premier this weekend at berlin's commercial open. after 7 months of shut down, the german government is now allowing limited audiences to gather again in doors to experience music, dance, and theater. the music and people are filling berlin streets after a hard winter. berlin is blossoming the while many temples of culture remain closed at the door to open the berlin state. belly had it's sold out. premier this past weekend with increased hygiene measures and reduced capacity. the oh, i
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mean waiting for this moment in excitement and i just fell down this exciting thing and clamping and being happy just for the moment, forgetting what is happening outside and this. so bringing back to the happiness as well as classical styling. there was also a contemporary piece set to techno music and the wildest cities, famous techno parties aren't happening yet. some of the spaces are being creatively reclaimed. the play toy hunt techno portrays the development of techno in abandoned factories and the former east. germany. after the collapse of socialism were telling the story of the early nineties and the connection between the growth of techno and the privatization of east germany's economy. brought the play is
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a conceptual and immersive experience spread across different dance floors of the underground berlin tech. no club about black. the response to the play which filled out in just 48 hours has been ecstatic. as to be back in love, we really enjoyed nothing. i could just cry for joy at him. he's not. i'd love to have danced and jumped around in the garden and just enjoyed the summer. i think i'm not going to play also offers lessons for today. now we're getting to the big picture proves that, you know, stuff will reemerge one way or another. whatever the regulations are, people will make culture and people will claim spaces and people will reclaim spaces. while the clubs are still closed, a spirit of survival lives on more culture news now. 33 year old british writer, director and actress mckayla cole picked up
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a slew of prizes at this year's bafta awards for british television. her so i may destroy you one best many series and best actress. she follows a woman's attempt to rebuild her life after a sexual assault called dedicated one of her awards to the intimacy coach, who helped to make the cast feel comfortable, while filming scenes, effects, and re thank you for your assistance in our industry for making this face face for creating physical, emotional, and professional boundaries, so that we can make work about exploitation, loss of respect, about obese to power without being exploited or abused in the process. more and more directors are using intimacy coaches in the wake of the me to movement course that she thinks they're essential to any film project touching on issues of consent . her so i may destroy you also one baths for best directing and best editing.
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while like mikaela co author sharon dodo r o to grew up in london as the daughter of getting a and parents. now she lives in germany where she's become a new face of german literature. up till now. oh, to read mostly in english, but now she's put out her 1st full length novel and it's written in german. the book as realm follows a woman's experiences with racism and colonialism across countries and even centuries. sharon dough 2 o 2 is one of the most important voices in contemporary german literature. born in london to parents from ghana to move to berlin 15 years ago. and has since become a german citizen. the writer and activists is also the mother of 4 children. her 1st novel 8 as realm begins in pre colonial africa. a young woman, ada is grieving for her baby who died shortly after birth. i then for the 1st time
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she encounters a portuguese conqueror, he kills her in order to steal a golden bracelet that belong to her ancestors. if water can yeah, i wanted to show that it was a bracelet that had significance for society, which believe did have the power to grant some people fertility and allow them to bear children for back to that and kinda go back to cut in to says that looted, artifacts like that still held in european museums continue to be felt as an absence by people in african countries. in her novel, she traces the bracelets passed through history and whither either occurs in several different incarnations as the real historical figure of mathematician and noble woman eaten lovelace the trailblazer of computer science. as a polish world war to concentration camp inmate forced into prostitution. and as a modern data, a pregnant computer science student from ghana,
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searching for an apartment in gentrified, berlin, over the course of the century's o two's heroine changes her skin color. sometimes she's black, sometimes white. and so was i wanted to reflect a bit on these moments of identity of how identity is constructed and that's very clear with ada in 2019. she says it out loud, right? she says she wasn't black and gonna that term was useless to her because everyone there looked like her cub, but in germany she became a black person. at the entire time would, is it 1st is the victim of racism, classism and patriarchal silence, which oh, to describes without resorting to suffering porn. that's due in part to the unusual narrative perspective. in a disembodied being takes the form of various things as
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a broom. a door knocker, a breath of wind, and a passport. it accompanies us through the centuries and bears witness. of course, it's important to sharon dodo to that she is both a writer and an activist. for years she's been involved in the initiative of black people in germany. and she writes in german, in the hopes of helping people in her adopted home, learn more about colonialism and racism over the course of the novel, 8, again, strength, naming both personal and collective traumas was revoked. either what i tried to do in developing this character was show that by the end she's facing up to this past. when i'm in the end, she tells those responsible that if we really want to address the past, then it isn't going to be easy. but does need me
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o two's novel is not always accessible, but it is humorous, philosophical, emotional, educational, and entertaining, and sticking with entertaining for now fashion, photographer acosta and surely puts not models and some pretty wacky situations creating bold and i catching images for magazines like vogue and harper's bazaar is also a regular feature on german television. on the set of german fashion photographer cookie, i'm sure there's shoot. there's always a lot of action. his photographs are known for their complex and imaginative stage, and the leave is perceived specifically. i love to tell stories. i love seeing photos as not just to dimensional. the ends on the more like part of a film to the granite seats. and i'm not one to help the story quietly. mia? i'm more the type who works with she does. she does elephant elephant sad shoots of
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parachutes or thousands of all those just a little boy who loves to play when the well known magazines often commission him to deliver fashion spreads using his expressive photograph. some even grace, there covers a coach for any fashion photographer. he needs this chemistry between model and photographer, is key. when it doesn't work, you have a problem, you need to work together and they have good relations loud and be able to concentrate it's about together and that doesn't work and you have a big problem for me. since 2007 that has appeared as a photographer and juror on the tv show, germany's next top model alongside its host german supermodel, heidi kuhn here to who his adventurous shoots are among the highlights. each season at 1st. sure wasn't accustomed to finding himself in the spotlight along with the models. unlike heidi clues go. that is it,
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it's great working with her. she's a real professional. who knows what she's doing because women and my are strong women mentioned admire people who can do things like this is rare. she's also a good person that is great to work with them. and so i was really lucky that even with 5 here, sheila is working for the arabic edition of the fashion magazine, harper's bazaar, the chute is taking place in the do by desert. they start at 5 am. when the sun comes up because that's when the light is best, that's with every shoot. shallow is trying to convey a story through pictures, the d. c to promote that means i get a story behind today. shoot fairytale about a little girl who sets out to conquer the world. kind of mentioned us, the idea is that she catches the hot air balloon and the parachute high school fun has an adventure. angelica from due by to berlin. after many
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years in new york in paris, christiane charlotte and his family are once again living in the german capital. she dealt with moving back to his homeland in his new book. individualists, dancers, artists, and characters from berlin's night life are among his favorite subjects. the habit dimension is looked for people who get things rolling evidence or really live their lives the way they envision the theory force. they're not at home in front of the family. they wake up and are that isn't somebody saying they're just crazy if they're not normal, that's isn't crazy. you for the creating the face of tomorrow. be sure because it's crazy, but anything else would be boring. i mr. long no matter who or what to say, i'm sure the photograph, his passion for his profession is clearly visible in every image. from big photo
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shoots now to a tiny piece of paper worth a lot of cash. sotheby's is auctioning off the world's most valuable postage stamp, the one and only remaining british deanna, one cent stamp from $855.00 is expected to fetch up to $15000000.00. and i can think of a lot of other things i'd rather buy with that money. thanks for joining me and see you next time for more arts and culture. ah, i trapped in the clutches of human traffickers. countless children, india are working as in health, slaves. their only chance is to be rescued in a raid and handed over to aid organizations, which offer them education instead. the in the child plays
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in 30 minutes on d, w. kick off. rules score in record sheets. coming stores in the salt light. the prize team get lucky traditional club in free call. the 1st part of the review of an extraordinary minutes on d. w. every day for us and for our planet global ideas, it's on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make things? how can we protect we can read a different global ideas,
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the environmental theories over 3000 on p. w and online ah, our case manager in the field, the jewish life in europe. oh, that's what film producer and his phone and journalist in cooper mont more exploring. delving into history and the credit that i would never have thought that could be live. so open the i'm so freaking me in to remind myself because i grew up in a completely different way. fraud the station, jewish years,
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the 2 port documentary starts july 5th on dw, the, the news . this is the w news line from berlin. a blunt warning from the us vice president for would be migrant. do not come. come, come on harris conducting some tough diplomacy on her 1st foreign office. we'll look at her tricky migration mission of the us border also coming up.

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