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tv   Tomorrow Today  Deutsche Welle  June 11, 2021 10:30am-11:01am CEST

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not an option. peace ma, 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. ah, the welcome to global 3002 buttons who have fled that homeland and making a new life in switzerland. but the hurdles a great, the homesickness in kenya lake is following villages. but where does the water come from and how is it affecting life? and the region, china's delivery drivers,
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what long stressful hours the very little money? how do they chose? fancy a quick and tasty bite, but there's no way to go. the current pandemic, christina bloom, delivery services around the world, food curry, as rush around, bringing a plethora of meals to customers. the global food delivery sector is set to reach a 126000000000 dollars this year. by 2025, it will rise to more than $190000000000.00. the biggest market is china followed by the us and india. but just the fraction of the money goes to those making the deliveries. they tend to earn low wages and worked long days and nights that many to take to the streets and called for better working conditions and an end to exploitation. you can call me wang, i prefer my real name not appear in this report. when, when asked what i do for
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a living or i say i'm a food delivery calendar and other people have sundays off or they have vacation time or what we don't have those privileges. license aging is very stressful for you to come, which is not nice for me. here are rarely the customer say thank you and then there's that moment in the evening when i see how much i've actually earned. and when invites us into his home in the chinese capital, he had to work until midnight the previous night. so we need him at 9 am. when he has to share a room and a bed with another migrant worker, they have no heating. when it reaches freezing temperature that side i don't have running water inside. when that happens, i have to go to public restrooms to brush my teeth and wash my face. i. he pays the
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equivalent of 65 years per month for the roof. the says he 7 year old migrant workers, since every says to his wife and 3 children back home sold that sold only when i make 58 years a day. do i earn more than i did back home at the factory? young journalist, but it's hard to recall. i swear all day long and those are his job requires him to work at a quick pace subject will determine how much time in each trip they assign deliveries. sometimes they pay decency, but often they don't want to cause i said, i need more than 30 good orders a day. i don't know one's listed here are all bad. i get just $0.65 per delivery. ah,
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he almost never ends more than 2 years per delivery. and when it comes to the strict delivery deadlines, he's the partial coach and being late leads to pay deductions. again, as the current rule, is that for every 5 to 10 minutes of being late, my pay is reduced by more than $0.60. no, you don't already sweating profusely. this time it's because of time pressure. i have to wait here until the food is ready. made in a very stressful the afternoon as a stressful time for a little of phasing. these no time to cook for yourself. oh, go out to eat. meals can be delivered for as little as the equivalent of 2 euros and $0.50. one has 10 deliveries. now, for being late, he could lose more money from deductions than he earned from the deliveries.
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about 7000000 food livery workers are employed in china. this recording is from the beginning of march 2021. person is against the industries low wages. this is 10 go chung. he advocates working conditions on the 31 year old as the delivery work and himself his online videos caught our attention. they showed him providing a to his colleagues with communal dentists very organized to switch riders. the 10 go john united people who had previously been focusing on his respected by everyone then suddenly his online videos were nowhere to be found. at the end of march 2021, he disappeared. our contact with him was cut off. 2 weeks later, his parents received a message from the police station where he was being the best to wang,
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he's 2, racing against the clock to deliver those 10 orders. one i made all those deliveries longer and i called the customers for my moped. so it worked out. now i'm really sweating the cheap labor makes life comfortable for the emerging middle person. but all i do is work for them. i don't even know what i do, who i can me if i had time to come. when you're poor, people look down on your view as incapable. that's a phenomenon here in beijing. so everything is all about money. the most commonly asked question is how much money did you wear in last year? mm hm. and i hate myself for doing this job. but everything i do for my family back hard challenges. ah,
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i have a 950 chinese troops invaded tibet and took control of the small mountain kingdom. over the ensuing decades, chinese authorities responded forcefully to any uprisings, including that of 1959 thousands of tibetans lost their lives. countless monasteries were destroyed. in 1959 to bet spiritual leader, the dalai lama went into exile in durham in northern india. widespread restrictions mean tibetans can only freely practice their religion and culture outside of that homeland into itself. tensions between the fishes and the chinese authorities stock, regular bouts of unrest most recently in 2008, and 2012. political repression has driven many tibetans to go into exile with little hope of returning home. so food is traditions of his
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forefathers are extremely important for tens in originally from tibet. he now lives in switzerland. he fled his homeland in 2013 and started a family here to here in destroy my life. and i would like to stay here in switzerland buying all i want to work as a care assistant and provide for my family. own for mind if i just want to live a normal life. i normal lives, live and living. turns in dreams that staying in this swift village and building up a new life here, we've changed his name to protect his identity. his wife also fled from tibet. the couple of broken old ties with homeland was his fear of a kind of contact me mind for me that i have no contact with my family because i don't want to cause so many problems. my familiar with my family doesn't even know
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that i have 2 children that it makes me very sensitive and i'm very homesick to their hanby. they've had 3 occasions for asylum, rejected this with authorities believe tens and came here. fire another safe country and say he should seek asylum there instead, without papers. he can't work, even though he trained the kev sistant in switzerland. but they've at least found friends here. vs often done for them to be tried to help them through the tibet friendship organizations. it's and it's a health. there's a support network for example, where individuals can befriend refugees and help them with everyday challenges. size that so often many tibetan fine consent in prayer and meditation and this buddhist monastery and i was dr. north of 0. it provides the perfect setting tens in love this place. it reminds him of his youth when he lived in monastery and was happy answer and it was wonderful. now you get up
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early in the morning. make your bed have breakfast, play with your friends. in the spade, in a carefree life that ended when chinese security forces began harassing the monks, they initially tried to take a stand, didn't talk, stood and sit on. the authorities came every day, putting pressure on us and restricting our freedom, greg and hobbies. so i put up posters to protest and took part in demonstration and skim milk. he says friends warned him that the police were looking for him. that's when tens in fled. the arbiter, the mon street knows many similar stories, basically they have more full right, to religious freedom. so that's maybe if you asking them against the government that you put in the jail. we wanted to talk to someone from the chinese embassy and
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ben. but our interview questions went on, answered 18 views, tibetans who have fled to switzerland as opposition activists. china is focused on expanding its economic ties with switzerland. the 2 countries have had a free trade agreement since 2013 bilateral trade has grown steadily since then switzerland pursuing economic interests while standing up for human rights. the difficult balancing act, he not paid to name and china is becoming increasingly authoritarian and more assertive of its economic interest and refugee policy listening. so switzerland needs to respond to that and by more coordinated in its approach. 14, not long ago, tense in went to the chinese embassy himself. he needed papers to confirm his from tibet. i'm all i went to the chinese embassy, just one. to get an id longer to hold. but they started arguing with me
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on the phone, and i felt threatened, screwed the mystery, brought the end to see, refused to give him papers. he still feels that risks. i'm china. this with authorities of not granted him asylum so far. and he doesn't know what will happen next. every year we humans produce a total of around $2000000000.00 tons of rubbish. according to the world bank by 2050, this figure will rise by 70 percent to a shocking $3400000.00 tons per year. waste is literally every few areas of our planet remain unaffected. what can be done for global ideas? we went to ginger in her room to find out how the secular economy is breathing new life into the desert. the. these chickens are engaged in important work. they produce eggs like any other chickens,
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but with the help of their own, they're also working wonders transforming the desert. this entire area, the city of ginger per room is dry and barren. there's almost no rain, so it's hardly suitable for farming. green plantation is flourishing mandarin trees, leading with fruit cover, an area of 30 square kilometers. it's all thanks to the chickens and there was our swell owner p most. we've been farming in the desert for many years. people thought we were crazy at 1st. obviously you only normally grow fruit and good soil, but today we're producing record numbers of mandarins right here in the middle of the desert. you know, it's the chickens that have made the desert soil 36000000 of them in all at the 1st
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bicycle, marcia was only planning to show their eggs. but when he found himself ankle deep in excrement, she came up with an idea. why not use it as fertilize the ants all the leftover chicken to the birds feed on corn. they're quite pig. ah, see, this is what's left over yet. we used to burn an up or throw it away. but now we use it to produce bio char, and that's the central element in our regenerate fertilizer. i think it's going to use basco macias, burns, the organic waste in a controlled process called paralysis. it's a centuries old method used by the indigenous peoples of the amazon bio charges rich nutrients and ideal source of food for the trees. but then he adds the chicken excrement to, along with a few other ingredients,
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turning it all into fertilizer pellets. some of them he uses for the mandarin plantation, the rest he sells. look on the music part of the circular economy allows us to make everything efficient, but it's really nothing new. it's actually the way that nature work. sooner to listen. the principle is simple. resources are used in reuse as long as possible, saving money and avoiding waste. unlike normal methods in the capital, lima, the german development agency, g i. c, is advising the pool of in environment ministry on how to encourage more businesses to move to a circular economy. the program is financed by the german government's international climate initiative. i'm very grateful to be part of this project and then for the opportunity to support an initiative like to dialogue for, for that. yeah, it's just people, it's a paradigm shift,
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a whole different way of thinking. you really need to provide help to ensure the shift will be successful. if i do that, i will let you know may be a good starting point for that is to talk to business owners. we've already made the change to learn from their experience like upon neuro o'campo. what about he's a chef in lima and buys all his vegetables from an organic farm on the menu today. fennel, aroma fennel is intense. delicious. he uses every part of the plant, including the bits, other ships and normally throw away like the flowers. i'm going to take some of the flowers, they have a great aroma. po miro is founded.
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an initiative called corey, which means treasure in the indigenous casual language. part of the idea is to train other chefs to use food in its entirety. in kong, young then we founded corey with the aim of making peruvian cuisine more sustainable. by optimizing our use of food means, the aim is to avoid food waste and hunger in peru. he takes his freshly harvested vegetables to a local soup kitchen. staff here are grateful for tips. they work as volunteers, cooking for the needy. they can't afford to throw anything away from me. oh, here costs one euro. but for those without an income, it's available for free advice . shows the cooking to my new recipe, a fennel and beat root salad that uses every part of the vegetable. it's served with integrated made of fruit, p. o, and a kind of pepper corn made of dried papaya seeds. look at the fire,
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we can spoon out the seeds wonderfully without losing anything. a thought normally the seeds and peel would land in the trash. here they end up in the sauce. some of the federal flowers provide the finishing touch really mentally. but isn't one of the renewals on sample. i'm happy and grateful about me, the throwing lots away before and now we use it and don't waste anything. chests are now showing others how it's done. boscoe mercy has also wants to share his idea for fertilizer and see this form of circular economy take off elsewhere. if fruit can flourish in the desert, the possibilities are surely english. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning, backed by global ideas,
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go into their lives, environmental theories, showing you how climate change and mental conservation is taking shape around the world with teacher resources as the already educators can start right away. knowledge sharing, download it now for free. the global ideas, learning east africa had been hard hit by natural disasters. after years of drought, locusts destroyed harvest. heavy rains then floods each fields with villages and dismay. the area gone, go. volcano erupted, displacing hundreds of thousands of people. repercussions were felt throughout the whole as the east african risks system, which stretches from the red sea to southeast in africa, is also home to kenya's late nicole to the once natural paradise become a menace to local people. and animals lucy, me and says she used to walk along here when she was living near lake and crew. now
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she can only come by boat to the spot where her family's home once stood. the 54 year old has 3 adult children. last year, this area included farmland and the shore of lake. now young man cast their fishing nets here in the hope of finding anything of value. the lake swallowed up the entire hon. nothing and lucy's life is as it was before i could get you to the lake. no kura kept rising. peter with what it all began in 2020 you might. then in march of last year, we had to move out because the water had reached a dangerous level. suddenly we were home and made for we raised poultry. but the chickens died in the water. now i'm penniless and have nothing left to my name was
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the me in one way. lake, no. who is a paradise? it's in a fantastic location in the middle of a national park. that's the unesco world heritage site. and its just a 3 hour drive from kenyan capital nairobi. it was always popular with tourists. but for the past 7 years, the lake has grown steadily. the water level is now twice as high. lucy and her husband have moved to a hut just 5 or 6 square meters inside their old house had several rooms their children are having to support them financially. see me? 22 and a minute. i'm not the only one whose house has been submerged. montgomery, my neck of my neighbors have suffered the same fate. genie si, fi room this life you can't cook probably come out will know if you know when you but you can't sleep properly because nothing listed out of several 100
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others who lived on the banks of lake no who have had to move to emergency accommodation. this is once the main entrance to the national park, the number of tourists coming has also declined. this is dodie, you know, most point of the big show and from here to the 100 meter, to the actual lake. so this is the beginning of the woodland night, has moved more than 3 kilometers. we joined joseph from the canyon wildlife service . the state agency responsible for conservation. he's been observing the changing landscape with great concern. the lake level has gone up more than 5 meter. initially the lake level was about 4 meters, but now we measured in december to tell me to 10 meters, but now the lake level has gone back by half a meter. so it's about 9.5 meters. initially we had a few fresh water,
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but for example, we had about $117.00 africa. she goes, i forgot, she got to see don't fish, and mainly found in fresh water systems. it had serious consequences for the entire park. roads have had to be relocated. animals and birds are struggling to find enough food and suitable breeding grounds that force. many of the flamingos, for example, to leave like nicole root is just one of several lakes and kenya's, great rift valley that had been effected. but what's behind these changes? and could they to stabilize the entire ecosystem? experts are still debating, cause environmental activist elizabeth one yeah, believes there's no easy answer when we say just the levels of water. and it could be attributed to a complex and made the interface of climate change. lenses change and geological factors which is a through a number of social economic impacts and also
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a hydro and political impacts from the back to lucy and her husband. they say there's been very heavy rainfall in recent years. dear friend victor, in the in do has also had to move house. he and his family used to live next door to lucy. now their neighbors. again. victor lives with his wife and 4 children in a corrugated iron hut that he built himself. he pays $20.00 rent a month to the church that owns the plot of land. but i'm with you. and these, those years you can see it is very small and i will not even when i talk to their management will be allowed to meet the truck at that time. so i realize that so much of the breast i really do in my life, please see that are still thinking. so thinking, because when i see the way i was and see where i am and maybe count of where i would be that i see great, great loss for me. and my entire, i mean,
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doing the end do struggles on day by day. he does his best for his family, but finds it hard to stay positive. like a crew continues to shimmer with all its beauty and attract tourists, albeit in smaller numbers. but the entire area has changed. meanwhile, the younger is deeply unhappy. she dreamed of enjoying her retirement by the lake. now she faces an uncertain future. oh, the 2 children. one julian problem would be my name is jason doing related how will climate change affect us and our children
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learn more at d, w dot com slash water. that's all from us that global 3000 this week. don't forget to send us your feedback, right? to global 3000 at dw dot com and check out the health facebook page d w global ideas. bye for now. take care. the the news news. the news
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the the the, the ah, the luxury has a power thing this is discretion to use on 15 minutes on d. w. ah.
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the news in many countries education is still a privilege. hardy is one of the main causes some young children working minecraft . instead of going to class, can attend classes after they finish looking millions of children all over the world. go to school. the. we ask lines. because the education makes the world more just the make up your own life. w. made for mines. ah, how it really
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feels a jewish life in europe. ah, that's what film, sir. bona and journalist cooper monument, exploring, delving into history and the present. ah, some things are painful. many are surprising. everything is important because life is so much more than what you think, you know, i would never thought they could be live. so i really remind myself, because i grew up in a completely different way. it's broad explorer sticks. jewish in europe. the 2 port documentary starts july 5th on dw,
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the in the news . this is the w news coming to live from berlin. g 7 leaders pledge, 1000000000 covered 19 vaccine doses for poor countries. at their summit in cornwall, england, we'll discuss the plan to vaccinate the world by the end of 2022. u. k. prime minister boris charged. us president joe biden unveiled the 1st stage of the plan. also on the program famine in northern ethiopia, the united nation says 350000 people in the conflict it take your region are already effected in millions more.

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