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tv   Maybrit Illner  Deutsche Welle  June 12, 2021 7:00am-8:01am CEST

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the frankfurt ought international gateway to the best connections, althea road and radio. located in the heart of europe, you are connected to the world experience and standing shopping and dining offers and growing our services. be our guest at frankfurt airport city managed by fretboard. oh, the me, this is the w news, and these are our top stories. world leaders have wrapped up the 1st day of the g. 7 summit in the united kingdom. gathering of the biggest global economy is focused on ending the pandemic and fighting climate change. the group aims to supply 1000000000 doses of cove in 1900 vaccines to 4 countries. a critic say their
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pledges still fall short of what's needed. me. hundreds of israelis and palestinians, the protest it'd be possible eviction of palestinians in east jerusalem. a group of far right israeli settlers is trying to use in israeli law to expel the arab families from their homes. the dispute helped spark days of deadly violence between israel and the hamas. milton group in gaza. health officials in brazil say nearly half the residence of rio de janeiro have received at least their 1st cove in 1900 shot. the city only began its inoculation campaign last month and had been quick to loosen restrictions. rios vaccination rate as well ahead of the national average, but hospital workers warned there's no room for complacency. they said d w news, you can find more on our website, t w dot com the.
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ah, it's never been this much filming. it's going to have never been as many reduction in germany as right now. he's a radical progressive and groundbreaking out. yeah, because i'm a suddenly ros history. history. sounds like a city. someone had called the clock on like a capital on homes. but now city life is starting up again and arts and
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culture then use open thanks to low infection rate. we took a trip through a city making it's come back 1st. stop. cup of legend. yeah. your customer? oh, huge tentacles. draw us into the cosmos as artist joey, christ, summer, the con, damage dots. berlin scoop use bo is showing a retrospective and owner of the 92 year old japanese artists who adds a spot of color to everything. oh. so the real, i think the desire of her to create needed like a parallel unit worth in which you know, she sometimes lives in. so the bulk of our way to create also for us completely different ways of looking. to summarize, one of the world's most important contemporary artists. well, she create psychedelic and i popularly colored for the customer has suffered from
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panic attacks and nation since childhood. cheapest uses flashes of light come to mind to installations, provide a glimpse into like that, like the yellow or, you know, you get slightly busy. you suddenly think what's happening with the floor. and if you look longer on the wall, you suddenly feel like i was actually the wall, there is this kind of going into into debt. so it is a for that kind of way of playing with the way we see in our vision. and i think she's very good in kind of retaining how we can see. and therefore, also of course, questioning what is the normal way of looking to the last 4 decades. who has chosen to live in like hospitals in co q every day she works. it is to go next to painting dose, dose and move in the i am not sure if it is a suggestion from my own or whether it is because i am totally absorbed in the
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piece. this is really what you need to do when i am creating my work, everything disappears around me and my hand creates my work. throws herself into work until it consumes has approached, as she calls self obliteration to art has been a form of self therapy to escape traumatic childhood. she created her own summer universe. this playfully captures a child like fascination that she still retains to this day. but this is, you know, struggling, going to go to school. it's my desire for peace to crazy for my son, predictability, joshing, mystery of universe to intervene. so, so someone welcome muslim. the retrospective traces artistic journey to 7 decades
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of wild creativity. in the 900 sixty's christ on the left to homeland of japan and went to seattle and then new york, finding her place among the flower children to protest against the vietnam and prudish sexual mode. she organized happenings that were political, irreverent and shocking. including painting her, poke it all sounds a naked body. yeah. because on the road he was one of the 1st, you know, who did make it performances and even at the time and your that was shocking. and i mean, that is something of course was, has, has revolutionized also the, the presence of the body, the idea of that we can be naked, the sexual. but it also shows on their ability. it shows a way of how the human body connects with the environment as one of the few women in the art scene at the times because someone had to fight male dominance while top contemporaries like andy warhol, shot to fame and fortune,
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who summer was barely able to make ends meet her work is full of status symbols cross the question is a man's world. she also talks about the fear of the penis, which i think i think she was very good and also writing stories about herself. so i looking at the works, i don't feel it's a fear. i mean it's, it's, it's clearly not session. it's then for the man, it's been for kind of, you know, something a woman also just to kind of reflect on the relationship between women and men and how in her time also. i mean, even if she wouldn't call us as a feminist, definitely changed the perspective on women could achieve that rascal has been both controlled and impulsive. works playfully push boundaries from gender to personal, spatial and luminous infinity mirror rooms gives us few as a cosmic glimpse, as seen by the artist. the berlin is fully booked. never has there been as much building in the german capital
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as there is right now. the back a lot of studio battles berg looks quiet, but behind the scenes where we're not allowed to shoot things are as busy as ever. one year after cobit 19 shut down, everything production is in both wing again. but if the year ago i was stunned, every production was suspended, and the international filmmakers who were here in the country, they've had the full tumbling training. every square centimeter of the studios filled. you hadn't been so many. there was nobody, there was no one knew how things were tenure. one cannot give us the site again. but while the berlin government stumbled from locked down to lockdown, battles berg was able to press restart and finish production on big blockbusters, including the 4th matrix film starring piano. read the welcome
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green list with coven safety measures. now in place and demand for entertainment higher than ever prospects for 2021. look very good via hobbins. these we have at least 3 big filters this year. to be series streaming services and spies, which are great for the workload because they stay along longer than you know to the for the also some toys invited was a feeling me and keanu reeves will be coming back to berlin this summer, promising to shoot up the german capital and the 4th film of the john wake action franchise with series and film production booming across the city battle for its biggest problem these days is keeping up with the demand. it's never been so much in production as there is right now. and i can't find cruise this year because there's never been as much filming
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in germany as there is right now. you can't walk 2 blocks in berlin these days without stumbling over a film that like this one for german tv epic, babylon, berlin, the shows producers had 3 series on the go and cove. it had, they had to learn fats. how to shoot safely in a pandemic. we have to set up a protocol very fast for the 3 shows. and we use this knowledge and always adjust this protocol for all productions which we do afterwards. you know, we included doctors, medical advisers and people like this. it's always to be right in time with the newest information since then, production has been nonstop. x. crime drama. julia shot in the middle of the 2nd wave of cove. it with crew shuffling between
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scandinavia and berlin. with german romantic comedy. i'm your man. even manage to shoot up hacked and mass placene and bought a house. berlin, the cities 19 twenties dance club. then we had a t extra as dancing with each other. flirting kissing each other, plus the crew of at least 30 people plus the actors off. but we did it under strict corona conditions. one of the film's producer calf actual couples for the dance seems to keep the number of households and possible infection risks at a minimum producing under cove. it is more expensive and time consuming, but so far it hasn't changed how filmmakers tell their story.
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thank a shit. the berlin producers are proud of the solutions they found, but there is still frustration in the sector caused by the months of locked down or politicians. maybe they do not have the time to hear the cultural sector right now does, because you know, the cinema associates as everybody has a concept to go back to work right now. but they are not able to, to use it. they are not allowed to open. thankfully, cinemas and other venues are now allowed to open, but the public sector is still be careful. and so for now, parties like this can only be on screen.
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after years of renovation, the noise national cannot be in berlin. it's finally reopening. and it's monumental . simplicity is as impressive as ever. the renovation of berlin in national gallery took 5 years to complete. currently, the museum by looping needs sandra, can be seen completely unadorned. and judging from the exterior, everything looks the same. the building remains a temple of light. to indiana off this whole is unparalleled in terms of opening, see if there isn't another museum in the world like it could not preserve that and didn't change this openness. often we crammed lots of technical equipment into the ceiling where it can be seen cancer or not after the renovation can be summed up in the credo as much me as possible. the german born american me found a ra, became the icon of modern architecture. the extreme clarity and simplicity of his
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designs is always striking. yet the noise national, the most radical nissan roy, was commissioned to design the museum in the early 19161200 metric tons of steel had to be welded together on site into one giant plate. hydraulic jackson lifted the roof into place at the top a pillars. it was a masterpiece of engineering and attracted many visitors. the museum was the last building, the founder was completed, the senate of his career, the good. this guy, the nor in national gallery opened in 1968, and became a cultural highlight, 1st of west berlin and then at the re unified city. it hosted one major exhibition after another and maintained its own important collection of 20th century art. club, after 50 years, the buildings technology had become outdated. i renovation,
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which needed english start to touch david chipper fields had fallen in love with the federal building. early on, the radical uncompromising piece of architecture was quite shocking and very impressive in the elements being very ident 5 comprehensible. you know, everybody can understand how this works, chip or field who had previously overseen the reconstruction of berlin's more damaged noise museum. one, the contract for the new national galaxies renovation. it was an immense undertaking. $14000.00 granted plates had to be removed, restored and reinstalled the entire structure was guarded from the electric outlets to the light switches. everything was meticulously inventory and later reassembled like a massive puzzled renovation in the spirit of miss vanderbilt means holding back what was needed from david chipper field architects was not designed,
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but practical solution was also on the glass to shuffle. the biggest challenge was acquiring the glass on your food as you will. almost all the outer pains were split before the renovation because it had no longer been possible to obtain such wide glass panes when the armed and we found the glass manufacturer in china and the logistical pain and getting the approval for a one off glass product from china without a certification was definitely the most complicated part of the renovation. they could be complex and go with the lower level exhibition spaces have also been updated. in the case of a fire, the original 960 stores will now close electronically clear forms, steel, stone, and wood fried from everything superfluous needs. standard signature style is still present. the artworks are set to be moved back into the museum and the sculpture garden. this summer gets picked up in classical modernism and then into move on to
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show up from austin 1945 and with a special emphasis on east and west and for east german lecture on via the very much look forward to that. but i will have to continue in this way until we can display the collection with the new building. the new building is the museum of 20th century being built right next to the new and national guard. but while that is still in the works, new found with building can be rediscovered right now to get goals. one major work of me vander ro as in germany or in europe after world war 2. so it will automatically regain and play off, cuz i think everyone has been waiting for answers, and one building is re integrated into the urban space. there will be new exhibitions and new experiences here, though, we're very much looking forward to this building being open to the public, once again from the north. national gallery may still be empty, but the building alone is worth a visit. the museum is set to open with an alexander calder exhibition in august.
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if all goes well, berlin has been robbed of its legendary night life over one year, many clubs, the struggling, but they haven't given up the fight. no music and no people, just empty, quiet, don't flows through for a year. pandemic has 10 berlin club scene into a wasteland. and a new photography book entitled the cash captures, the skyland photographer militia got visited over 40 clubs for the book. she worked as a dormant for many years and wanted to document the effect lockdown has had on these places. and you know, my love of the for, there's no basis that normally stand for the music, extra fun and letting loose. and now they're just empty and there's a hush, which is also the title of the book. there was, when is lover,
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and none of us realize just how important the spaces are for people, engines and pre covered berlin clubs attracted people from all over the world. and pasted the capitals reputation as a party city. but they also provide a livelihood for balances, manages, and ball cantos. for them the closing of their clubs. mean financial worries, 1st and foremost. but that's not all. the 15 is, i'm fast down. there will for many it's the place the feel good. the colleague, some guests give it a family like atmosphere. it's a piece of home and came out many clubs to trying to maintain the sadness, fear, even if it's just online clubs like the collections keep in contact with the community over streaming platforms and operator pamela chavez. also headphones club commission. she says, staying in touch,
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helps those who are worried. the more listening has proposed recently we had a facebook post. and the guest wrote that seeing us staying present the fighting during our streaming and making an effort. and clearly believing that will survive when authentic, he believes it does really, and that helps him. this have blocked out up to 15 for over a year. now the club scene has managed to scrape by, but everyone knows streaming. can't replace that real live experience. i think the community sure, i think about the community while i play, i know people are watching port still. the main parts missing that sense of close clubs without outdoor space is, are closed indefinitely because of the pandemic. although some are working on cobra concepts. recently there was a pilot concert during which everyone had to have a negative cobit test to enter where mosque and maintain social distance to concert
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among people, even if you can move around for me, i'm glad to get dressed up again and go to a cultural event even since the beginning of june, things have been able to open up further thanks to the lo, infection rates. soon open air policies will be allowed. the story is another indoor venue or the full time we very much i understand that our inner space is aren't compatible with the pen demik to the combination of aerosol. and so moving our doors as the only possibility. again, this is a fatal for all of us that this prospect is now being taken away from us. and even though we all know that events aren't really the problem defined, so i don't envision list of problems. and just how long can the scene hold out? well, the book hush wind up being a requiem for club culture. as 20
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minutes. we said, of course i really wanted a club stick revive, and hope that we will be able to party again without fear. but right now, i can't quite believe it. i hope they'll all survive, but there's still no end in sight. because the clock is ticking for many felons. clubs. and some fear time is running out out here under the open sky on temple offer feld. life goes on despite cove. it an exhibition exploring how europe is doing is now finally open port used to be located in west berlin, surrounded by the wall with a breach to the free world. these days there are no more planes landing on its runways, but people from all over the world still room here. and an exhibition is now creating another bridge to the world. diversity united features 90 artists from 34
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countries and depicts europe of disparities. vital, a few well over $400.00 pieces. by no means do we want to say that this is an absolutely comprehensive view of europe, and it's simply gives an insight into the office to face that with our intentional ops. what's made clear is that an exhibition austin was chosen boys. one said doctor is like a permanent name for the what lies ahead for europe, where countries and people are drifting apart, where nationalism is driving, and hotspots are emerging. whether be a happy ending, and where should we begin? and we can now, man took her own origin as a starting point, but not as i was born in east germany. it's not all that long ago, but sometimes it feels as far away the stone age. that's why i found it interesting to combine this idea of the stone age is,
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are key ology of ruins or rubble. that wasn't really clear to something that still relevant for many people. when i said this above us was relevant for the mention. this is jim and tennyson. i've combined it with an ear piece that looks like it's from the instance. also from the, from a flash in the installation. all these pieces of furniture and objects going to be fixed to the whole. all it's a lot of work must have basically tilted a normal room by 90 degrees. so the ground is no longer beneath our scene, which is my attempt to create a visual language to describe what happens when the system ceases to exist from one day to the next room from an old rules are replaced by new unknown ones. figuring this mega lawyer you can get one on this can last have a homeland of ground beneath the feet are important themes in the works. have many artists from former socialist countries, some reference lenin,
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o pe trays. highly nice place on his recollections that the jewelry, his mother burried during the civil war and yugoslavia recreated out of war debris . not that long ago, more refugees for house here at temple house. what seems far away can sometimes be close by in 2007, lucy and jorge or 10, created a 10 village in the at arctic the 1st place in the world for which a treaty was drawn up. to ensure all use of the area would be peaceful and cooperative. it was an important symbolic to create this village to, to found this world community, the community in syria without us community for cooperation, for sharing, for piece, for collaboration me, the global slogan, diversity. united runs through the whole exhibition of climate change. war and
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hunger cannot be combat by countries acting alone. we must act together to succeed, to orders have already issued over $70000.00 passports for their articulate. long as it was supposed to. essentially, this passport deals with the big problems of society and obliges or invites the holder to transmit that to all generations. to this, you know, this kind of duty and it's possible to transmit the values and the values are, act in favor of sustainable development. simple data acts that we can all do, and the other would be did defend the lateral environment on the fact as a global public resource, and fight against climate change generated by human activity and support human humanitarian actions aiding, displace customers of the world. there is darkness and the challenges humanity is
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facing. but there is also hope and to trust that things can change for the better. like in the silent picket line by the russian artist it katerina move on to eva interesting. it's a time when there is political speechlessness. often we need social dialogue. the office in the exhibition that demanding could come to bridges that goes beyond political, difficult to stand against. this has been a very important experience for us. if the panoramic allows it, the exhibition will trap on to moscow, where it will attempt to build another bridge. meanwhile, outside the city of berlin has reawaken, and cultural commerce is finally taking off me .
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the news. the who's the the 77 person on the show will be talking a lot about african music and asking ourselves what this is like for a woman who plays the traditional instruments or a white pretend my name is the one raise the movie in general,
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how big is it especially in times of co, 1977 percent i was told with the rising female stars the scene. now lou, she's a donkey, darlene love. her b. m w. a lot of how i see no fear, no limit, no mercy. 15 minutes on dw people in trucks injured, went back to the city center. more and more refugees are being turned away. families to the trade people are getting 200 people
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around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. why? because no one should have to choose to make up your own line. the w need for mines the me hello and welcome to a new addition of the 77 percent. my name is la show and i'm thrilled to have your company to date here's what's coming up. and the next 30 minutes we're talking about depends i make within a panoramic police brutality in africa. need to be up and coming influencers
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h town kids trade from the room. a neighborhood of nairobi. and a prima ballerina in legal carries of off into the magical world. warming. once the 1st thing that comes to your mind when you see a police officer across africa, there have been many reports of the police abusing citizens for no apparent reason in south africa, the victims of police brutality and are now demanding change the el dorado park in soto outside johannesburg, police by a rubber bullets and protesting youths. enraged at a police officer who shot a 16 year old in the head and chest. nina, sun, life. right. the next one. family then they go. we go to save our review. they gave
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the victim. nathaniel julius was unarmed and living with down syndrome neighbors that he was shot because he did not respond to officers questions. now the community demands answers from the authorities. a provincial official, arise and finds a devastated mother and seeing where it was the way they get the way when they did the phase. you know what we did. they, nathaniel julius, is death comes as police faced allegations of brutality throughout the country, with $300.00 to $500.00 people killed by police bullets every year. many south africans ask themselves if law enforcement still serves to protect the
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week before the shocking death of julius. we visited the el dorado park police station, an establishment at their heart of a drug and gang re the neighbourhood. many residents here believe the police is corrupt and in cahoots with dealers, constable kinsey, and could see our rookies who wished to change that perception. to be honest, i don't feel, i don't know who it is. when i year old stuff about our colleagues, stuff. i always tell myself, i would say the person they make enough in what is the community member saying about the young constables and el dorado park wage. a daily war on drugs today, constable could see and kinsey have taken illegal drug labs apart and arrested a number of st dealers. i'm the sort of
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seeing that the police is actually doing something against the gangsters as well received. what i got to do with who's, who's keeping their communities more vital to stop in search. everyone did the listing top is gabriel. i don't know that a 2019 report by corruption watch suggests, but least of the most corrupt public servants with abusive power and bribery being writing lawyer, vic, a stale and johannesburg wants to see more responsible police officers in charge. he represents victims of police brutality and says the trend is systemic and has been institutionalized from the talk. i think the problem with the police is that they are not sufficiently trained. they do not have proper leadership. the head of
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the police have thought that the scots keep going for tuesday should kick and bunch have they. they are the ones in the south, and i think they can do it as and what the fees without any culture back in elder park. the shooting has stopped by the residents are still angry. if nothing changes, they say the police station will be burned down. they demand and accountable police that protect and serve the people the it's not just in south africa where cold for just this and an end to police brutality are getting louder. we ask people across the continent how they feel about their relationship with the police in their country. when everyone sees police here in uganda, what comes their mind? one is the infinity. 2 is torture. 3, i risk with no explanation because that's what the police has painted themselves as
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if by really bad, was it avoided like bad people that should actually give you to go? you know, avoid because he wants to feel their actually default not a bit. it's also because we is young people, we are fearful of those. we're supposed to be protecting in democratic society as we see police officers are supposed protecting the citizens, but in our case events, they're the ones what to maintain. as the police officers have to sort of go back to school and be told how to handle the public. well, you heard it lovejoy from zimbabwe, suggested that educating police officers could help tackling of this pan african problem. we also want to sift our focus away from the problem itself and instead
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find solutions. that's why we took our st debates to kenya's capital, nairobi i colleague, you just money met up with victims and activists for this cause what needs to be done to improve the relationship between law enforcement officers and citizens. the, the 77 percent has been to italy. we've been to germany. and now we're back in the capital city of kenya, nairobi. and it's in this country that in much a curfew was put in place of the corporate prevention measure. and it's reported by the human rights watch that in the 1st 10 days of that curfew, 6 people died at the hands of police officers. and so today we're asking who do you tend to when you need protection from the police? and as you can see, there are no uniformed police officers here. we did send them an invitation, literally come to their office, but they didn't make it,
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but the show must go on. and so i'd like to begin this conversation with perpetual karaoke. she's actually from the social justice center. but beyond that, you know, this idea of police brutality, it's not just abstract to you. it's affected your family in a very personal way. could you please tell us about that? in 2015, i lost my brother through the initial execution. so by then i couldn't follow up the case because we had no idea or this touch of whole of button, which is can you tell us how your brother came to even be in contact to the police in the 1st place? so from this story we were told by the police is that he will, he went to his friends house, who was, i wanted guy. and the guy got out and locked him from outside. and that's when the police came and advocated him. and they said it was, there was no mention of you under arrest,
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we're here for you because of such and such. no, no, no, no. so damascus owner is standing next to his from amnesty international. does this sound like some of the reports you're putting in place? because, you know, when you talk about the numbers, it's easy to forget that this human beings behind them. what is the situation currently, if based on your own assessment on police brutality? well no, this sounds quite familiar. tragically, this happens, especially in urban areas where the fight against crime is a fight against the use of that area. just like what happens in the us, in black neighborhoods where the police decide that the policing in this area is going to be punitive. and we have very many cases during this period. they've been pretty kisses to killings of young people. well, anything a 13 year old boy? that's crazy. we're talking from much because that's when we had to can 20 people
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20 people. okay. i want to speak to why, by and who is a musician and a blogger, and a resident of these low income areas. mother, have you been in a situation where you felt the police were being violent towards you? exactly exact. i've been in that situation several least not once, not twice. i can't count for one reason, just my physical. just having dreadlocks makes me criminal. yeah. so that has, has, has made me come to the police so many times so much that i've become more adjusted to bags, you know, like i know really how i will be able to respond to a policeman also based on how he approaches me. yeah. so let's come to mr roy dungeon. we're hearing already some very staggering stories. so what you must be getting in your office must be out of this world. how many cases do you get to an average of people complaining about police behavior. between much the cause of june,
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we received of a 500 complaint and but then i want to see that those are not but he's killing bonds. those lead from i thought the date is, of course, but he's kidding, but the us, but he's got docked so how many has i poor, how many convictions has they managed to get in 6 convictions on life sentences and hang and hanging, but i don't want you to look at, that's the stick. come on. i knew that one must do that. we understand that the cases take really long and judicial service also has its problems. but if you thing 500 complains in a span of a couple of months. and 6 convictions since a body was formed, possible for all the companies that you get to not adopt in court. because we see that we look at what is we didn't know him, i did what is not the norm? i did, we delegate that as possible. what the sectoral and visuals that handled was my
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thought. all right, so thank you so much. i definitely understand that. but bio and i have to come to you because we obviously don't have a police officer here, but you're the closest person. we have to one. what goes through the mind of a police officer when they and that sort of situation, you know, what would lead a police officer to draw his gun and kill and then press them coming from a community or very high liability organization or the special forces. i know for certain that when life is supposed to be taken, the division is very, very critical. and so life as opposed to the 2nd is that which is has been thought about so many times. and we set up so many times in terms of decision making on the part of the operators. so the judgement around the practice of security on order to be what is the key to top? it's got to be re, thoughts on the functions that oftentimes leave in the training or the professional, even debrief, or the particular operators has got to be refined to the last minute detail of that operation. so my solution would be that the police being the big brother here got
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to operate the hot distal when it comes to the way they dress themselves to insecurities and how they also apply themselves to the provision of the key to service. okay, perpetual very quickly. we opened with you, i'd like to hear your final thoughts and also what you think can be done to bridge the gap between citizens and the police. most of these police allegedly, equally luckily they don't wear uniform, they don't identify themselves. we don't know who they said to because sometimes we go to the police station and report a case and they'll say, come later. so my and i solution use this policy reform to be implemented everywhere in this country all see to this of this country and we have to be treated with dignity. we do deserve to be treated with dignity. i can think of a better place to wrap up this conversation. thank you so much to my panel who've
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been so gracious to stand with me as a sun goes out. i think what we can take away is that the police officers are being asked that their slogan, to michigan to service, to all needs to be to all and from the community service from all that we also have a responsibility displaying this. thank you for watching the a big thank you to either send everybody who took part in the street debates in i robi. and if you want to watch a longer version of this debate, then visit our youtube channel and be sure to subscribe. were saying in nairobi in the room, a neighborhood to be precise and there we meet a group of talented kids on their way to becoming social media celebrities. after watching just a few of the higher the videos and remakes, i totally get why they are so popular. and why thousands of fam follow them on instagram.
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the process to improper a little backyard camera and action. that's all you need to become and instagram star. these are the h t on kid from the room, a neighborhood of nairobi, and they have big dream. i want to ask the big if there was no good man come in and the kids are the stars. but rosemont is a woman behind the instagram account? you'll see the local ice cream vendor and taught itself to shoot and edit the videos. about a year ago, she started making videos with the neighborhood kids growing up. i wanted some
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things i wanted to do, but i never became so that's a i'm trying to make. yeah. on my parodies, music video and social commentary. nothing's too big for these kids today. they're shooting their version of be on says me. the trailer black is king. it's an entire day of shooting. pietro, multiple sets, and costume changes, and the crew needs to pay attention to thousands of tiny details. sometimes i look at the phone and see what that looks like. then i go and get neil's, the mommy that tells me what to do. like now she's told me to get the bicycle. so now this bike is like a horse. our mom says every to be exact. so that you're good. that's
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what sometimes are very to the kids. but for the kids it's about more than acting. the neighborhood doesn't have many youth clubs or other activities. i'm up when i come here, i'm not lazy and we have each other a lot. i like the group because there are lots of gifts here and i'm not on my own . and i think if one of us makes it, will all become senior in now. who would that lots of bad things going on. there's lots of biases that they can fall prey to out there on the street. it's dangerous. we started this group to at least keep the kids safe and busy. i'm out. yes, miss roses not for trending topics, haven't just hone the kids. yeah. why? skills in creativity, they've also been tackling global issues like the black live matter movement. and the corona virus pandemic. the one you said
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someone too much. and the last one they saw from the another group of young sir is hoping to make its big one day in show is, is a ballet job in the lagos, nigeria? now, admittedly, ballet is not very popular in many parts of africa. in fact, when i was growing up in terms of me, i didn't know anyone who was doing bullet, but the dancers in the area are passionate about what they do. and they hope to inspire others with their l. again, move. when you think of the latest might not be the 1st place that springs to mind
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. but for me to when i, when it dancing, bunny is half sovereign form of not only exercising but also self expression. when i say i get everything behind it does make me feel copy a mix of this person. i feel how i feel. i forget i love the now a 2 year old or nami. they grew up in the neighborhood of ojo, which is many social problems. but when mommy this tips up to the bar, she forget what's going on around. she is part of the 12 students who train in this make shift you twice a week. and some of them, as young i guess, will be doing dinah ayala has been teaching students like
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allow me to for free since 2017, keeping them focused on achieving goals in the discipline of family. but those goals may not only be related to dancing. some of them are not going to become professional, don't that we know that because you don't in the training that gets you can be applied in any of your life. daniel is a professional dancer who uses the streets of order to showcase the talents of his students. some people are clearly delighted to get a free show of us are perhaps not open minded enough to appreciate the hard work that he's students have to put in. doesn't even be just legal manger, they feel that it is in the central valley up and lower arrow be seen where it's not like that. follow me. there is a hard worker, not just when it comes to hunting hub allays kills,
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but also the sewing shop. wish is employed even behind the sewing machine and it keeps practicing. bali i don't care what people reaction i'm doing my thing. i'm me forget about everybody behind and i just on my, i know what i want for my family is a way for me to cope with whatever life was at her. at the end of the day. she always has her bali, sleepers, and dances. you may be familiar with the somalia, the country in the horn of africa, but have you heard of somali land? well, it's a self declared, the state bordering formality and it has its own government, but internationally as seen as part of from our yeah. we met asthma hadn't met her parents are from some island and although she didn't grow up there, she took a bold step to discover her roots. in my name is
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smith. i was born and raised in canada. before i left canada, canada was the place to be. and the 1st time we traveled was to africa and i was 7. and i remember my mom telling me that we were going to go to africa and i was terrified. cuz all i had was the idea of what i saw on the world vision traveling, changed my mind about the ship because to be 1st and i told my parents, i wanted to get married and moved to her case to be with my husband now. and they are really shocked cuz they have no connections to some other land. all i, when i was, everything was hard to just i was really reliant on my husband to show me around to
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take me everywhere to communicate for me. so that was really, really difficult. the biggest thing was the language barrier being a mom, or even just being pregnant was the 1st thing that got me thinking about nachos can care. after i gave birth to my son. he developed a mom when he was about 6 months old. so i started just experimenting with like coconut, well, random natural things that i could for him that could feel the exit and nothing was working. and then i went online and i read about shape or being really good for eczema. so that was the 1st time i tried it and it really worked so i would bring it with me from canada to how to k. so after i bring it here, we run out of it and i go looking for in the city and it was really hard to find. so me and my husband are like, hey, why fi? it's in the city i. when i 1st introduce butter 2 people and
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i realized that the trust and believe in any product that has like a white person's face on it. once i started explaining the benefits, they seemed a lot more open to it. and actually a lot of women that have their skin utilizing how harmful it is to them or the damage that it's done to their fees. we're very curious about whether she better could help them. so they really liked the fact, it will erase the damage, but it can help heal the my advice to young people and i want to move back to the continent would be to be very open minded and humble yourself to new opportunities to learn and grow. what an inspiring story and if you're an african living abroad and you're planning to move
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back to the continent to pursue opportunities, we'd like to hear your story. send us an email to 77 at the w dot com or get in touch with us on social media. well, we've come to the end of the day, so thanks for watching us today. i'll leave you with some music from then maybe and quite so artist. he's his song is called magic and he's calling for unity and love . it's actually now during the panoramic enjoy and see you next time. i never got to make the
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the good. good. even think that's just what i meant by the the who's
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the the the, what's going on here? no house of your very own from a printer. computer games that are healing. my dog needs electricity. explains, delivers facts and shows what the future whole living and the digital
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world shift in 15 minutes on dw i instantly with the female star of the scene. now lucy, vo, a donkey, darlene love, related her b, m. w. a lot of time. she has no fear, no limit, no mercy on d w ah, don't miss highlight d w program d w dot com highlights sometimes the seed,
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it's all you need to allow the big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning facts like global ideas. we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge of growth through sharing. download it now for a young moroccan emigrants. they know the police will stop them. they know that the route is not a solution. they know their flight could be fatal. like going back, not an option. peace ma, i'm on and the other day or spoke in the spanish border area alongside other young people there waiting for
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a chance that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts june 18th on d w. the news . this is debbie news live from berlin's world leaders drop a blueprint to head off another global pandemic. also on the agenda at the g. 7 summit in britain, tackling climate change and keeping a lid on russia and china plus jubilation for italy, football fans. the 1st victory of you 2020 at the tournament delayed by the corona
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virus finally kicked off a year later. ah .

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