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tv   Kulturzeit  Deutsche Welle  June 17, 2021 12:30am-1:01am CEST

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they know that the road is not a solution. they know their flight could be going back. he's not an option. peace ma, i'm on and about a are stuck in the spanish border area. alongside other young people there waiting for a chance that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts june 18th, on d. w. the, the drug companies say there'll be enough doses to vaccinate most of the world against covered by the end of the year. industrialized nations way ahead, but out of the one and a half 1000000000 shots given so far, only point 3 percent has gone to the globes poorest countries. very plentiful
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vaccines of fitly to make and challenging to transport. then there are the politics and money. experts warn it's bad for everyone. it's only a fraction of us are protected. many developing countries are still waiting for vaccines promised by the co banks donation program. china gave 200000 doses to chad this month. the 1st i seem to reach the country where officials are trying to fight the pandemic with limited testing and treatment capabilities. w. west africa correspondent, friends who need reports. i to ask. chad has we put against the pandemic scene of scenes for at least 100000 people? not much for a population of 16000000, but it's something this is the country's main testing facility in the owner proper hospital. they have been fighting the crone of us almost grind. last
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to turn the company, the 1900 situation was katie. at the beginning of the zipper, we tested the patient who can be told and some of them tested positive. some of the health workers and other patients died, of course, the 19 percent. this pump official figures show list and fights called on evictions . and fewer than 200 cope with 900, that your number was almost certain a higher testing. and infrastructure is so poor dot creek infrastructure and deployed ticket to be to charge me at the bottom of the nice for international. but fin help until the last 2 week, when the coffee denied 900 task force, good supplies from china cohen that he fan no farm when we received c. not fun, but since it was really great joy for us. and you will
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receive a health way cause peter grims going to make patients with preexisting conditions. our priority officials know the chinese donation can only be the 1st step. these fridge is ready for vaccines the year to come under the covert program, you would get those if that was much wanted at least 20 percent of the population of chat with us. you know, if you come from but seen many skeptical origin more we had the means to get other back, feel records. but if we don't have the means and this kind of works, and we'll just because it's a chinese vaccine doesn't mean uniform. but theme doesn't yet have a repeat or you its approval,
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but the world health organization stays. it offers up to 79 percent protection in charge. people i used to taking what they can get from doctors without borders. nice to see you again. that report made one thing very clear. the vaccine distribution is totally unequal. what's the main problem in your opinion? i think the main problem is that the distribution through co, back as it was originally planned. so that covert could be an international distribution mechanism then was undermined by light biometric deals that were made by the u. s. by the u. k. also the european union. and they basically bought up the vic fee markets. so there was some little left over for callbacks to actually distribution poor countries. and now with the stock off expectations from india and having the reliance of the callbacks mechanism on the supply from the ceremony
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institute of india, we see this is a grave problem and therefore not many victims left over and in the report a test by the end of the year 20 percent off chance will be able to be vaccinated through callback. that is probably a number that can't be reached at the rate the correct was going. so kofax doesn't . what does it a does work in the sense that adults supply vaccines to the poor countries. what it does not reach is goals that as a pet itself, or it was supposed to by june this year, reach $3.00 of the point percent of the population. but it has only be 25 percent of this. and as i said till the end of the year, cobra was supposed to supply $2000000000.00 doses of 16th as looks like now, only half of that number will be reached. production is obviously a problem as, as we've mentioned a few days ago that europe in parliament called for a temporary waiver of payton,
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which would allow poor countries to produce their own vaccines. how hopefully you that, that will finally happen. we see now and talks and announcements that there are more companies will be more open supposed to be more open for also more voluntary licensing deals. and for technology transfer, we hope that this can happen. fast studies have shown that within 6 months, technology transfer can happen. also for m r a base vaccines. so we urge countries, but also companies to quickly tech transfer so that we can have a scale of all production. because as we see, the distribution is on equal and when we have more production worldwide, we will have less dependent on the few producers that we have at the moment. but elizabeth, the fama giants are just going to give up that technology for free. are they? while they have received billions of dollars and tech tech pair of funding and public funding. so i think at this point it would be key to share the technology
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that has been also developed as in the case with m. r a also with public funding. so it's something that we saying in this case that have already been profit made by companies like fi them by young, like modern or they have made the profits already. and now it's time the so we'll put that make to have the technology shallow pace. and i actually live the pace and so that there can be a scalable production because as we've seen, we are not managing to reach the goal that we want to reach. and the people in poor countries are waiting for the next team. so government need to put pressure on these companies. i mean, it was government that did these deals with these companies and gave these companies out taxpayer money. why do they see the problem here? i think we see a little bit of a divide between the rhetoric and the words being used and saying of the panoramic well, and only run it and for everybody i think they're wearing as of there for that. but i think a little bit, the numbers and the actions divide from that
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a little bit because we've seen now the past weekend, the g 7 have donations vaccines, but it's not enough. they have announced 870000000 doses. the w h o has responded and said, thank you. that is a good effort, but actually we need 11000000000 doses. so we see there is a divide in the action and also with voluntary licenses. yes, the ideal being made, but not enough for the global demand that we are seeing. you mentioned the tech transfer that has to happen. the licensing problem is also the export band problem . india being such a big producer, what need to change their i think all these, all these hindrance, all these barriers for more global production and global distribution needs to be worked on and they need to be lifted because there's no such thing of only the peyton barrier needs to be lifted only the export that needs to be lifted. there needs to be a combined effort of all these things that needs to be
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a waving our patients, export fans, and sharing of technology and know how only then will we have a 5 scale up and moving team for people worldwide. faster elizabeth, from doctors without borders. thank you very much for being on the show today. thank you. time for your questions on the corona virus. over to our science correspondent, derek williams. paul, the friend refuses to get to fact theme because he believes fetal tissue was used in that department. this is true. this topic is a really tricky one to talk about. and there's plenty of room for ethical debate. but, but i want to just focus as much as possible on the science. and 1st of all, let's get one associated social media room, or out of the way coded 19 vaccines. do not contain fetal cells or
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fetal dna. those are not components or active ingredients in any vaccine. however, what are known as fetal cell lines has been used or are being used in different ways for the development. and sometimes the production of various vaccines. a fetal cell line is a line of cells that was established in the past from an elective li aborted fetus that can be propagated in the lab practically indefinitely. the cell lines used for over 19 vaccine production and development were 1st isolated many decades ago. now that the cell lines have been used as tools and the development of covert 19 vaccines should not, in and of itself come as much of a surprise to anybody. fetal, so lines have been used for well over over half
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a century to develop and produce a wide range of vaccines for other diseases from, from hepatitis to chicken pox. and those vaccines have prevented a huge amount of suffering and death. critics of methods that employ fetal cell lines say that more should be done to promote alternative systems. proponents on the other hand, argue that other systems are less effective leaders from the worlds may your religions are, of course, divided on the complex question of whether or not vaccines made with the help of beatles cell lines are morally and ethically acceptable. but, but many of those leaders, while ambivalent about such vaccines, have also not prescribed them me and japanese companies are
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helping out with the country sluggish vaccination drive ahead of the olympics. they had of software on self bank has been showing a vaccination minister around his company's own vaccination center in tokyo. something says it'll fit a 15, others like it and not just for employees. so our only 13 percent of japanese population has received a short. tokyo is under a state of emergency just weeks before the games is set to begin watching, stay safe. ah. people in traps injured was trying to see the city center. more and more refugees are being turned away. the families to be great and we live in the traitors. the people seeing extreme demand
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around $200.00 people around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. why? because no one should have to flee the, make up your own line. w, need for mines. oh, can you hear me now? yes, yes, we got you. in germantown, we bring you on going to a mac or, and you've never had the full price just so what is it going to is medical really what move back to people who follows along the way, admirers and critics alike. how is the world's most powerful woman shaking her leg is paid? join us for macro block? did you know?
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because $0.50 to feed one hungry child for one full day. what went on with the share of the meal. you can share your meal with children in need with just 50 self and a tap on your smartphone. together we can m a global hunger. please download the app. ah, the, the the where, where would we have been during the corona virus pandemic? if we hadn't had this smooth screen, many of us spent countless, i was doing it down linked to our tv and computer screen fine full box. if we didn't have cinema, at least we had shown both on boarding and welcome to
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arts and culture. they say the golden age of television, but in our series is a special section of berlin's international film festival dedicated to the small screen each year. the festival showcase is the most promising series for tv or streaming from around the world. the standard is always high and this year is no exception. it's a sin is a 5 part put a series focusing on a pandemic that pre dated cove it by 4 decades. the aids crisis of the 1980s. i just want to be happy. i want to learn everything the thinking needs to london, london, london, london is 1981, a generation of young gay men, head to the big city, experience life love and lots and lots of sex. it's the thing, captures the euphoria of the era, the 1st time, the l g b t q,
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community to be out. i am proud a party. we're not the party doesn't last long. it was 40 years ago that the 1st report came of the mysterious illness effecting mainly homosexual men . the parents had begun to date it as killed, more than 30000000 people worldwide. so easy to protect, but the hardships in the glean assa waldis community has gone through and this was a time where people were dying, left right and center and you know, it was a death sentence, aids was a death sentence. me the series reminds us of the prejudice and discrimination that came with a grant by some the a play up with blaine put on the victims. but the band demick also gave rise to political activism. to see it's a thin capture that fighting spirit that would change the working together.
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got some news you were gonna i wouldn't dare to talk about this without consulting our residence. sydney asks, what works for you today is with me in person. welcome scott. now it's a thing how did domestic premier earlier this year on british tv? it sat during a pandemic and it was shown in the midst of a different pandemic. how did it go down then? now the berlin, allah. yeah, this series is from russell russell to davies. of course, very well known him in britain he rebooted the doctor who sy fy theory is very successful and is also well known for his pioneering l. g. b, v. to a series of queer as folk from the late ninety's. this show, i mean it's receipt. incredible. critical praise in britain here at the building, and i'd like to do to jump in on that as well. jump on that bandwagon. this is, i think one of the best tv theories of maybe 10 years. it is sort of a frontline story of the aids epidemic and but the way russel tells the story,
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it's not a just the fear and horror about period. it also tells the sort of the excitement and the joy of being being young and sexually active in 1981 to this a phenomenal show. okay. now stay with us. got because began to see from another series showcase out the festival. this is a documentary mini series from the us, focusing on police corruption. it's called philly, da. let's take a look. the, at this point, there are more people of color in prison for all then in slavery at the end of the civil war aggregate a long time ago that the only purpose of the criminal justice system to punish the things are working from the inside. you need to bring someone from the outside of the civil rights lawyer leery crass there was an insider when he ran for district attorney of philadelphia. just by flim chances, he won the series shows him pushing from reforms to reduce the cities enormous
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prison population at the time and have the highest rate of incarceration of any major us city for months the directors followed chrysler day and day. yeah. well, he really has a very deep belief that the criminal justice system in the u. s. is completely upside down basically that it's, you know, it's creating much more harm than anybody realizes you think it's the thing, but there to protect you and create public safety. but actually it's, it's compounding harms on, on people and individuals and families. and it's deeply systemically rate the system in the history of this class, nor takes on police brutality against african americans. we saw what i suggest, you know, shoot unarmed people in the back me. he also goes after corruption in the city. no one for corruption, ah corrupt. do you think the city is anybody who's dealt with this office knows there are speakers. we need to find out the secret. you gotta be kidding me. what
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is the least up to the fighter he likes to take on battles? he was a trial attorney. so i think he enjoys the fight. i'm up kind of what you need to be. you know, taking on an entire system now that it's hard hitting and very political. yeah, definitely is very political series. i mean this is essentially what happens when a, an idealist, a reformer wants reform, the justice system gets real power and the opportunity to do so. the show is particularly resonant now, of course, because it's coming after the black lives matter movement and calls for some in the u. s. to the fund of the police are issues that come up in the show. but for me, i don't, i just under really subtle and interestingly told, look at the justice system, how it really works in the united states. i found a real antidote to sort of under the sensationalist, true crime, documentaries that seem to be everywhere. right. okay. now, me and the others is an austrian german co production,
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and it's tom schilling and laws are doing a. he's a taste the german star tom schilling is back in the spotlight with a bazaar new theories. voice on the bullying would be what would happen if all your secret wishes came true every day tristan gets another wish every day his life gets turned upside down. even even when people go to school and those kinds of this character, the way we get to know them is and every man like nobody, every he's pretty much a man without quality can shop l. tack noise, which starts as a fantasy soon turns into a nightmare. me and the others is the real bazaar. and definitely unlike any
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theories you've seen before. and what did you make of it, scott? yeah, i really big fan of the child. so he's the guy who the austrian writer director created the show. it's so difficult to describe, but i would call it a groundhog day on acid. i mean, each episode, the main character gets one of his greatest wishes come true, but things never go as plan. right now, stop title series used to be a no, no internationally, but that was before the success of shows, like germany's don't find 83 and the french spyro in their original language is all around the world. what do you make of this? the show? what international chances i think it's got pretty good chances. i mean, the show reminds me a little bit of the feel of so control like netflix, it black mirror, but it's a lot funnier and has sort of a real deep psychological element to it, which i guess you'd imagine you'd imagine would come from from austria, home of sigmund freud and of course,
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it's got ross for thanks for binge watching all those shows. and i look forward to following your example. good news kind of full metal heads. although germany, vulcan opened a heavy metal, some, a festival was cancelled for a 2nd year running earlier this month. the organize the say there will be a smaller scale edition later in the year. september the 16th to the 18th. your diaries called blue heads that the festival. it will include bands like germany, blind guardian, and the metal queen dora celebrating almost 40 years in the business. now from heavy metal to something else, rather heavy spanish sculptor jose manuel castro. lopez is fascinated by stowed. he may squan is in court. look soft and pliable as if manipulated by the natural forces of erosion rather than by an artist too. he called himself a stone whisperer and was inspiration from the coastal landscape of his home region
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as calisha in northwestern spain. o soft as butter ah, pierced like skin and folded like class. these are sculptures by spanish artists. jose manuel castro, cars all his works and stone. human us, my relationship to stones isn't really physical. is my, it's magical. your because i feel the stones in a very special way, almost here. yes. as if they obeyed me almost here. yes. and we had a kind of relationship like a friendship on the star. jose manuel castro, trained as a stonemason and sculptor in the 1980 s at the scholar. they can terrace and elisia,
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northwestern spain. it is known as one of the country's best schools for stone masonry. the food on the ration culture has a profound relationship with stone is from the megalithic, monumental cathedral is in the work i do of stone is based on this close relationship shadow missing me. and she, me, the, i see it is something living you know, that he was the sculptor drugs inspiration from the galatian country side. and whether being coastline here, wind and water, the forces of nature, work the stone and create bizarre shapes. jose manuel castros workshop is in the village. a villa day su, so near the atlantic coast here he chisels grind and stands out,
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the smooth flowing surfaces of his stone sculptures with power tools as well as painstakingly by hand. he gives the stone a finishing patina with fair chloride, high temperatures. we remove web, always looking good at drawings. well that other, and i made models for a long time or how to stop it all. but you also need a good imagination, which is that you must feel fuses, neighbors know what he does for a living. and some of his sculptures have been exhibited around the world like this work in granite titled, union, a pair of toes that are conspicuous union or works combined with what i passed through often works with more kenya, a blackstone commonly found in the region. ah,
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this is where he comes to wind down after a long, hard day's work. yeah. oh no, i don't go because i find a relaxing because i feel the urge to do this. but it's exhausting. physically taxing and wires. a lot of dedication was payson, but whenever i completed demanding project, i always feel satisfied me. and what a stunning landscape are. don't forget to check out our website. that's d w dot com slash coach from the whole team. thanks for watching. ah, no more protection. denmark is the 1st country in europe to expel the syrian refugees argument to syria or again. but the people effected by this ruling, or they seem to be arrested and detained upon arrival.
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ah, focus on your ah, 30 minutes on d. w. into the conflict zone with sarah kelly and i citizens cope with unemployment and inflation. president to hardy is getting attention for blocking twitter around for an apparent violent crack on protesters who call for an end to police violence. my guess this week from berlin is material ambassador and joseph regard. how does he explain the track record of this government conflicts? 90 minutes on d. w. eco, india. how can a country's economy grow in harmony with his people and the environment? when there are doers? look at the bigger picture, india, a country that faces many challenges, engines, people are striving to create a sustainable future clever projects from europe and india. equal india
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d w. all the oh, it takes me and feels jewish life in europe. oh, what town producer argues bona and journalist eve cooper, mont more exploring, delving into history and the present i would never have been getting them to believe so openly and so freely and constantly remind myself because i grew up in a completely different way. fraud is the station jewish and the 2 part
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documentary starts july 5th on dw, the news w. news live from burly in the us and russian presidents a great to disagree over 3 hours of talk. joe biden, inside of me, inside there along the way to the summit was positive and they pledged to work together. spots attention and divisions remained. also coming up celebrations in korea for a leftist political outside. although an official been and the presidential
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election still hasn't been announced, we'll go to our correspondence in lima for the license.

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