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tv   Europe in Concert  Deutsche Welle  June 12, 2021 4:15pm-5:00pm CEST

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my go, i still keeps busy using his nose. was indeed the new life of berlin up. next report cost the out the date on our website, d w dot com, i maybe micah junior. thank the news the we don't want to see what they are, the street, our water, our. we're opening your eyes to be on the scene. our new global 3000 series threats. you're facing the heroes taking us fans. it's not that i
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know it will make up until the global 3000 series starts june 21st on d. w. ah, no path is too long for me. no, no hand. certainly not the camino de santiago. walking is a way to find himself. a miracle for me that the camino is definitely existential. the electric, it's real life. he's walking that camino to santiago toward the catholic pilgrimage scientists and go to combust taylor in the northwest of spain. it stays in 1909th time on the route. scott, despite the fact that he's an atheist and is recovering from the covert infection. ah,
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ah, lee, on spain's atlantic coast, it's 6 am. when manolo begins his journey, it's more than a 100 kilometers to santiago. he wants to cover the distance in 3 days. how does that when i leave that this time i read that i feel much more alive this in which it's a completely different feeling, you know, in the thought of i couldn't set off at 10 in the morning and you know, a project orland in the my know know is ways in early riser, even back home and sat down nearby for luna. he's a lawyer and around this time he'd almost be at his desk of the law firm. but here, the 65 year old let himself be driven by his inner impulses. and by nature, the hello.
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this lie bird, something in the. if these are colors, when you are home in your city or visit inside, you don't feel or what law you don't perceive him. here you can enjoy real life the work or that he's out of the not every pilgrim is as committed to high her as my normal at the lighthouse at cape finish. there you meet someone else who happens to be from the region and be moved from that cause a hard re guys can't manage long stretches of hiking anymore. but still, leverett or he's come from videos that they admit that he got a,
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a buy taxi monitor and bought a suitcase with him, but he'd like to hide. but it's just because handle carrying heavy loan, especially because the roads around terra steve through the whole thing does the pilgrimage for in the just reason when asked for mrs. casey, you own or for me, i promised one of my sisters either me or another lesson was younger than me. you're safe come the other piece where he does he'll, she's gone to heaven in turn. this port. i promised her i would walk the community santiago coming over the summer. she's always with me much. he simply love with me here she is like when we go then conference my normal made his 1st pilgrimage 24 years ago. he had a meal peroration and wanted physical exercise. he also wanted to test himself. the religious side of the camino is foreign to him. so yet there he
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got to leave him to walking. it's me a lot, nothing religious. there are a lot of the letter. it gives me physical and spiritual strength and a lot of line. i mean, i come to find myself. you know this when i get home after a while, my nurse 10 topic and because of what the stressful place i life love, native of lucky that and my wife and my daughter say this, i know low. maybe it's time to set off walking again. and this, yeah, so if i go again on the camino and i come back a new man. i mean, are we going, i'm going to, will he be fit in a this did the in finish. there. manolo has his pilgrim passport, stamped to prove he was here to get his certificate or compl stella. he has to walk at least a 100 kilometers. good morning. can i get the pilgrim stem pen? keep her for over a 1000 years,
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people from all around the world have been making the pilgrimage to santiago the supposed burial place of saint james in spain. can the region with the locals, pilgrims are simply part of life. even though neither of these 2 have actually become, you know, to san diego, happy to chat with my sister has been getting this come up with the pilgrims. life here has changed. there is more tourism as much in the beginning. they weren't welcome and some other people saw the is heavy, you know, people with no money who are just a nuisance order. today they are an economic factor in the finish their region, the standard. since the 970 camino de santiago is popularity has searched in 2019 before the pandemic, maybe 350000 people, went on the pilgrimage for all sorts of reasons. now thrown up from amino makes me
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and that's a person come when he got a muslim unit, just normally i'm not so open and i'm going around other people here. i saw a couple. everything like a sponge. you know, i want to talk to everyone. camino does the changes make. i mean, the traditional greeting among pilgrim's is when camino meaning good pos will have a good journey. after 46 kilometers and 10 straight hours of walking manolo, which is his 1st goal, hustlin will give you another pilgrim of a 1000 to the fastest of them all. how are your wounded completed on the spot? well, we haven't changed her 7 great sailor, better than the 1st aid kit and went on bush more than normal.
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some of the pilgrims, nay for today from the town, if not pay her right now, minora, always known, almost wherever he goes, making you connections with people is part of the experience and the last and you get to know people without any preconception, then all i got on them because some things just don't matter hair that all they don't know and you also don't know if you'll ever see each other again and some really authentic connections come about me very quickly. now for a month. wait. ah, ah, the next day? 35 kilometers a wait a minute. no, i, i use it's a struggle. the distance takes its toll,
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his feet get so. but that's nothing to what he went through last year. the corona virus infection hit him hard and he even ended up in the hospital. he still feels weakened because of it grandmother and i recovered from coach and left the hospital. it was something was missing that all that now and i be able to return to the camino de santiago despite the virus and all the difficulty. it's like having an additional lie, a 2nd line or any of the, the roof. is this a wait, i leave the fx, if the pandemic were felt everywhere here, board closures and locked downs. many few pilgrims visiting hospitals and restaurants was now publicans like pac lopez, us merely trying to get back on their import them. it's important that people are coming back and feels good level and helps us forget the past year that you give us
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pass out. my nolo keeps moving. he doesn't like taking long breaks all in all. he's already covered more than 20000 kilometers on the camino de santiago. not that he's interested in setting records. it just turned out that way. just so you, but i think i'm hyperactive with other comment. i'm still a little money. i will come off and go to the hospital hotel. it's 11 or 12 o'clock or not. i couldn't just stay there until the next day. that would give me, maria. and even if i'm moving very fast on the camino, i don't, i don't know. sounds on in the same thing. ok. after 35 canonical years, then 7 and a half hours, he reaches nicholas her money on the satellite that the beginning of the neck to morrow will be hard if it's no walk in the past because i'm in or that long as i warm up, it will be fine,
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i always try to reach my limit that that helps in life. and if i know what my limits all with hiking, like a know they are my personal and professional life. so if you need to come up, or if, if i know how far i can go, and i can always go a bit further. for that matter. i, one day 3 manolo has the high another 22 kilometers. but finally he snaring santiago. the goal of all the pilgrims on the camino. ah, you got us on the arriving here is different every time and money always feels different. i system but sometimes you'll overcome by emotion and to other and sometimes fatigue. but i don't think any of the 99 times has been the same for them in the center of
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the after 103 to normative, he's done. his next image will be his $100.00. my know, know is given his native compost and the tickets in latin with the sample, the cathedral effect. and we're not really going to see him, but i mean, we have hundreds, camino de santiago will be something very special and personal for me if you want. anyone else there it is. me really that there. i'd like to feel really on my own. it's all up to now he wants to, we unite with an old friend, so to speak. in the cathedral of santiago, a compost de la st. james had to be buried here. standing face to face with the st. is enough to make even the atheist manolo feel
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devout. he says that when he dies, he would like it to be on camino de santiago to see could they be the circle of life? opposes with them. it was that yet, i'm not afraid of it, and i'm no stranger to it. you know, in the stuff when it approaches me, i want to happen in the place that gives me lines in the middle of that. a camino to santiago in the san diego. ah ah ah, that 77 percent on this you will be talking a lot about african music and asking what business like for a woman who plays
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a traditional instrument or a white appart in my name is raise the movie position. and in general, how big is it actually in times, 97 percent view 2 wars d, w richard walker is flores, evolution of digital warfare making military process more efficient. deadly just only those with the best algorithms survive. future scenarios. absolutely not. including me. what matters to us me,
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that's why we listen to their stories reporter every weekend on d. w. i hello and welcome to a new addition of the 77 percent. my name is la show and i'm thrilled to have your company today. here's what's coming up and the next 30 minutes. we're talking about depends amick within a pen to police brutality in africa. need to be up and coming influencers h town kin frayed from the room. a neighborhood. and i wrote and prima ballerina in lagos carries off into the magical world of performing once. the 1st thing that come for your mind when you see a police officer across africa,
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there have been many reports of the police abusing citizens for no apparent reason . in south africa, the victims of police brutality are now demanding change. the el dorado park in soto outside johannesburg, police by a rubber bullets at protesting youths. enraged at a police officer who shot a 16 year old in the head and chest nina, sun, life. right in the mess and family, then they go. we go to save our review was the victim. nathaniel julius was unarmed and living with down syndrome. neighbors say he was shot because he did not respond to officers. questions. now the community demands onset from the authorities. a provincial official, arise and finds a devastated mother and seem to where you will. it was
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voted when they get the way when they did the phase body. know what it's supposed to do. what we did, they, nathaniel julius, is death comes as police face 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 week before the shocking death of julius we visited the el dorado park police station, an establishment at the heart of a drug and gang ridden neighbourhood. many residents here believe the police is corrupt and in cahoots with dealers, constable kinsey,
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and could see our rookies who wished to change that perception. to be honest, i don't feel, i don't feel good at all. when i our colleagues down myself, i'll say the person, they might them in what the community may mrs saying about the young constables in 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 street dealers. 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 a community more vital to stop in. so one thing
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stop 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 vickers 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 top. i think the problem with the police is that they are not sufficiently trained. they do not have proper leadership. the head of the police have stolen the scots, keep them on it, which is a should kick and bunch have they, they are the ones in itself that they think they can do it. and what the fees, without any call 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 unaccountable police
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that protect and serve the people. the. it's not just in south africa where cold for just this and an ends 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 impunity 2 is 3. i risk with no explanation because that's what police has painted themselves as if by really bad was it avoided? sad that people that should actually give you to go. you know, avoid, because he wants to feel there actually is
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also not a bit. it's also because we is young people. we are fearful of those. we're supposed to be protecting us in democratic societies. we see police forces as opposed to protecting the citizens. but in our kids event, they're the ones what are meeting as the police officer, they have to sort of go back to school and be told how to handle the public. well, you heard it love joy from zimbabwe, suggested that educating police officers could help tackling this pan african problem. we also want to shift our focus away from the problem itself and instead find solutions. that's why we took our st debates to kenya's capital, nairobi, i believe you just money, met up with victims and activists to discuss what needs to be done to improve the relationship between law enforcement officers and citizens.
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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 march a curfew was put in place as a covey 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 uniform to police officers here. we did send them an invitation, literally come to their office, but they didn't make it, but the show must go on. and so i'd like to begin this conversation with perpetual karaoke. she's actually from the co lead 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,
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i lost my brother through the initial execution. so then i called in follow up the case because we had no idea or this sort of whole all through. but in 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 looked him from outside and that's when the police came and executive him and they use us. it wasn't like there was no mention of you under arrest. we're here for you because of such and such. no, no, no, no. so, demons keep on are standing next to kids 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?
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well, no, this sounds quite familiar. tragically, this happens, especially in port areas where the fight against crime is a fight against the youth or 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 seen very many cases during this period. they've been 20 cases. 20 killings of young people. wow. anything a 13 year old boy. that's crazy. we're talking for much because that's when we had 20 people 20 people. okay. i want to speak to a bun, 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 severally not once or twice. i can't
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count for one reason, just my physical appearance. just having dreadlocks missed 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 that, 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. 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 cause of june. we received a 500 complaint and but then i want to see that those are not what is killings funds. those lead from i thought the debt is of course, but he's kidding, but the us, but he's got that. so how many has i, how many convictions has they managed to get?
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in fixed config shows on life sentences and hang and hanging, but i don't want you to look at that. but 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 the body was formed, but the fall or the companies that we get to not adopt in court. because we see for them we look at what is we didn't know what is not. we know that we delegate that as policy bought, what the sector or, and the visuals that handle those. my thought. all right, so thank you so much. i definitely understand that. but byron, 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 in that sort of situation, you know, what would lead a police officer to draw his gun and kill another person coming from
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a community or very high liability organization. either special for this. i know for certain that when life is supposed to be tech and the division is very, very critical. and so life that we can 2nd is that which is, is been taught 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 the, to the 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 a lot to operate the hop distal when it comes to the way to just 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,
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politically, they don't wear uniforms, they don't identify themselves. we don't know who they said to because some doesn't 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 them for 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 been so gracious to stand with me as a sun goes out. i think what we can take away is that the police office as a being us, 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 to explain this. thank you for watching
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the big thank you to either send everybody who took part in the street debate 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 their priority videos and remakes, i totally get why they are so popular. and why thousands of fam follow them on instagram. the trust props a little backyard camera and action. that's all you need to become and instagram star. these are the h town kids from the room, a neighborhood of nairobi,
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and they have big dream. i want to ask the big if there was when the kids are the stars. but rosemont is the woman behind the instagram count? she's a local ice cream vendor and taught herself to shoot and edit videos about a year ago, she started making videos with the neighborhood kids growing up. i wanted some things i wanted to do, but i never became so that's what i'm saying. yeah, on my parodies, music videos, social commentary, nothing's too big for these kids today. they're shooting their version of be on says music trailer black is king. it's an entire day of shooting,
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featuring multiple sets and costume changes. and the crew needs to pay attention to thousands of tiny details. sometimes i look at a phone and see what that looks like. then i go and good news there. 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. mm hm. i you, i got every that you can come out. good. that's what sometimes i'm very sick to the kids. but for the kids it's about more than acting. the neighborhood doesn't have many youth club, so other activities on offer when i come here, i'm not lazy and we have each other
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a lot. i like that 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 serious place in our 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've talked to this group to at least keep the kids safe and busy. i'm out of roses, knack for trending topics, haven't just hone the kids the 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 someone too much land and legal for the most one they saw from
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the another group of young sir is hoping to make it big one day and show is, is a ballet job in the lagos, my area. now, admittedly, ballet is not very popular, 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 elegant moves. when you think of falling, may cause might not be the 1st place that springs to mind, but allow me to when i, when it dancing bodily is half coverage form of not only exercising but also self expression. when they come then i get everything behind. it does make me feel copy a makes the person i feel how i feel. i forget the class
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now 18 year old or nami. they grew up in the neighborhood of ojo, which is maybe social problems going on. mom it is 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 get ready so we're will be doing done and jala has been teaching students like allow me to for free since 2017. keeping them focused on achieving goals in the display of family. but those goals may not only already be related to dancing. some of them are not going to become professional. don't that
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we know that because you don't in the training that gets you can be applied in any if you're like, daniel is assist port professional dancer who uses the streets of audio to showcase the comments of his students. some people are clearly delighted to get official of us are perhaps not open minded enough to appreciate the hard work that he's students have to put in doesn't give me just leave a message or they feel that it is in descent for talking with alex up lower arrow be seen where it's not like the well now me there is a hard worker, not just when it comes to haunting hop on these skills, but also at the sewing shop wish is employed even behind the sewing machine or nami, it keeps practicing bali. i don't care what people reaction on the my thing i'm me forget about everybody behind i just on my i know what i want for my family
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is a way for me to to cope with whatever lights froze at her. at the end of the day, she only has how bonnie sleepers and how fellow dances. you may be familiar with the somalia of the country in the horn of africa. but have you heard of formality land? well, it's a self declared state bordering for mal. yeah, it has its own government, but internationally as seen as part of somalia, 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 hannah 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
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africa and i was terrified because all i had was the idea of what i saw on the world vision traveling. change my mind about that the she took us to narrow b 1st and i told my parents, i wanted to get married and moved to her case to be with my husband now. and they were really shocked because they have no connections to some of the land. all i, when i was, everything was just, i was really reliant on my husband to show me around to take me everywhere to communicate for me. so that was really, really difficult. the biggest thing was a 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
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a demo when he was about 6 months old. so i started just experimenting with like coconut, well, random natural things that i could put on him that could feel the exam and nothing was working. and then i went online and i read about shape or being really good for him. 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 get. 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 were like, hey, why don't we just fire to city the when i 1st introduce butter 2 people and i realized that the trust and believe in any product that has like a white person face on it. once i started explaining the benefits, they seemed a lot more open to it. and actually
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a lot of women that have beliefs their skin realizing 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 like the fact that it will erase the damage, but it can help. he'll 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 back to the continent to pursue opportunities, we'd like to hear your story. send us an e mail to 77, f t 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 that maybe and
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quite so artist. he's his song is called magic and he is calling for unity and love, especially now during the panoramic enjoy and feel next time for nothing. never got to make the the good guy. good. even think that's really just the change
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right now the me the lose lose lose the
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the the the future wars w richard walker explores the evolution of digital warfare, making military market more efficient. deadly, especially those with the best algorithms survive. future scenario. as we know, dw, the show, the titles, the issue is shaping the continents of the news, africa, the government, the what's making the headlines them. what's behind
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the way on the street to give you in the reports and insight all the trends to use 90 minutes on d w. ah, the news is to bring you more conservation. the how do we make seniors green or how can we protect habitats? we can make a difference. the local ideas, environmental theories, in global 3000 on d, w, and online ah, case tele
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feels. the jewish life in europe went home, producer, bona and journalist eve cooper, are exploring, building into history and the present. ah. i would never think it is convenient, so open and so freely of my company to remind myself as i grew up in a completely different way, fraud the station. jewish in years, the 2 part documentary starts july 5th on d w. the news
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of the news life, i'm barely, he's that lead us in south west, the new england, i agree on a global infrastructure plans to count that time as rise and influence on the 2 of the summit, the welds for just countries the building best 1000000000.

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