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tv   Markus Lanz  Deutsche Welle  June 19, 2021 7:00am-8:01am CEST

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remind myself because i grew up in a completely different way. it's broad explorer, le stickers, a jewish senior that support documentary starts july 5th on d w. the ah, this is the w news, and these are our top stories. polls have closed in iran after fridays presidential elections were voter. turnout was reportedly low iranian officials extended voting to encourage light coming to cost a valid but many said they didn't support anyone in the rice optimized reformist or moderate candidates were bod, from running. many voters also say they are angry over the impact of international sanctions and rising unemployment. jim and chancellor until america has
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welcome french president, manuel mack calling to berlin to discussing franco german corporation ahead of next week's european council meeting in brussels. pandemic restrictions main. this is the 1st time they see the chancellor has welcome to visit from abroad. it's likely that this will be medical and macaroni last formal meeting at the chancellor is not standing for reelection in the united nations general assembly has elected antonia good terrorist to a 2nd 5 year term as secretary general checking you at the office. mister terry said he would work to build trust between large and small nations, and promised to draw on the lessons of the cove at 19 pandemic. this is the w news from berlin days more now website t w dot com, the blue. ah, the for the ideas of identity were written in
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poetry in what's happened between the point a and point b. that gap could be fields with literature in the world is changing into what feels like a whole new one. the climate change, colonialism, migration. the big issues of our times and just some of the topics explored by the 8 nominated for the german nonfiction prize this year. yeah, in portugal we meet young rights is not afraid to confront. the docket. checks is
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a big country in history. but 1st american novelist, jenny awful on the challenges of writing fiction in times of crisis. the melting icebergs causing flood thousands of kilometers away. wildfires caused by drought. the locust plague climate change here and has been for some time even if we prefer to not think about its effects. jenny awful is novel whether is about life in the pre apocalypse. and what the threat of looming disaster does to people. a huge success when it 1st appeared in the u. s. in 2020. the book has since become popular around the globe. whether it tells the story of mizzi a university library in lives in new york with her husband and son. she obsessively
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reads nonfiction about climate change, and turns to buddhist wisdom for comfort. liddy listened to the people she meets, very concerned about the future and looking for alternatives. the oddball facts and we had survive of wisdom, a tragic and very funny. at the same time. we asked jenny also if it's fitting to use humor to explore such as serious subject. i tried to make this a different kind of novel that was going to tackle climate. so yes, she becomes really worried about the climate crisis as the book goes on. but in the beginning, i think she's in the situation that many of us are where we of course, noticed it's happening. we look at it out of the corner of our i, but we don't look at it to directly because we have so many other things that we're taking care of in our present day life. i also was trying to see if there was a way to make it funny because you know,
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so much of the world of prepping and imagining disaster is actually sort of strangely funny. oh, doomsday profits. have been around forever. but what shocked also doing her research is that now a scientist who astounding the alarm startling to meet search a little more into this and see that it was the scientists who are saying at this time. and you know, scientists, by dint of their profession, tend to state things in a very even handed manner. they don't want to go beyond the data. but if you went into conferences and things where they were really talking, they were frightened and they were talking about where things. and then i felt like were coming through in the news. you know, whole cities that would be habitable or temperatures, you know, in,
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in my lifetime and my child lifetime, that would be hard to survive in certain place the. but what should and can we do writing whether a, turn jenny, awful into an activist. she's involved with the environmental advocacy group extinction rebellion and has started a blog called obligatory note of hope. the site provides links to other groups. and she has inspiring stories of activists from the past and presence who believed in and forth for a better future. like so as the show, a young woman who was executed for participating in the student led white voice resistance movement against the nazi regime. jenny awful is pinning her hopes on young people. they're the ones fighting for change in organizations like fridays for future. they also have the most to lose the one of the
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reasons i think, years ago i started to think about writing whether was that i noticed that my students absolutely felt this in a bit, throw away the ruin of the world, the sense that the world that was being handed to them was was going to be terrifying and many of them would, would write almost off handedly in their stories about how they might not have children or they would. and i could see, and also this rage, you know, which i think people my age might not, you know, 5 years ago have realized the rage of like how, how could you not a few more in whether these questions are matter of fact rather than dark. the novel is a wonderfully funny book about a deadly serious subject. after roll, nothing less than the world as we know it is at stake. but jenny often hasn't lost heart. and once her weight is to remain optimistic,
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two's, it was important to the writer that whether convey a sense that it's worth fighting for change. if i have a role at all, it's to write as truly and as precisely as i can about what i see and feel in a particular moment in time. i think that writers are, i don't think we're meant to morally instruct people, but i think we are meant to perhaps create a space for more empathy. because i think that that's one of the great things about, about reading a book is that you get to enter into another world and explore it in a way that is sort of the secret and interesting and you get to wander around.
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thank you very much. bye bye. thank you so much. larry is novel about a terrifying subject, weighty issues. we're also explored in the books shortlisted for the german nonfiction prize awarded for the 1st time this v 8 books nominated for the german nonfiction prize, standout among thousands of new publication. they educate and inspire thoughtful conversation, invaluable in the time of fake news and social media. they tackle new issues and timeless ones. right now, 80000000 people are displaced more than ever before, but refugees have always existed clean, a human history, less refugees tell their own stories, historian and last cause quotes from letters, diaries, novels and poems. this is even consider very important to look behind the story,
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or behind refugees as a whole, and to see the individual individual. these stories are about the loss of the homeland then, and now casa shines a light on those who suffer that fate. in her book, also dada describes coming to germany from another culture. she's the child of iranian exiles, me in reflections of a barbarian. she explores the themes of home, exile and identity, and what it means to grow up in a country that feels foreign. most times what i want to say is that foreign doesn't always have to be frightening or threatening, just because it's different. as don says that her other notes has only ever been an issue in germany. her book is a call to confront the fractures in our society. for over 5 decades,
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researcher hika beth and has lived and worked on and off in africa. now she's written an autobiography that goes beyond the usual tropes list of her. it was important to me not to focus on heroic accounts of ethnographic field work. and so, but only other side, the side and human is ation of an 8 hike a bell and describe how misjudgments and chance have shaped her work as an ethnology and how she as a stranger, became a research subject for african daniel, liza also wants to do away with cliches, by chance he found some notebooks at a bathing flea market, the legal opinions of a people's court in which the crimes of the malware cultural revolution were tried . mows long shadow describes how china the communist party, managed to preserve social cohesion and its own power, while still confronting the crimes. she's not to be at the party tried
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different approaches to deal with the injustice. is it caused 1st of all and it didn't solve political issues, but supplemented them with social policies as a kind of caring, dictatorship or dictate to or for again, lisa book presents a nuanced picture of the people's republic of china, different from the country. we think we know in many societies, ignorance or superficial knowledge, turn factual dispute into ideological sites. but where does fact end and opinion begin? ah, science journalist, my team, when kim uses wide ranging topics to show how scientific discourse works, where methods differ and where there's consensus then via visa, if we could change the strengths that science has to. i was social and political debate. we could really argue, constructively, all then, all doing it based on,
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again, boss, and in the lowest common reality. my, to me, when can argue for more scientific spirit in social discourse. but is that enough, after all populace have the power to change the world? the pandemic has exacerbated many problems. what about the restriction of civil liberties? is democracy and danger? in degrees of freedom constitutional law expert christoph millis reflects on how to count that threat and what it means to be liberal today. them is. if we say we have liberal social order that's being threatened by authoritarians, we have to was what we're actually defending. looks at things like the common good europe and climate change. one idea connects all the observations for murders,
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both individual and collective freedoms, belong side by side in a democracy. what makes great literature, who are the great stylists, and who gets celebrated for breaking all the rules? michelle laws aims to find out in the snake in wolf's clothing. the secret of great literature dealt with him and my book. once you've read 600 pages, you have some ideas about what works, what you can do, once you maybe shouldn't do this in the mountains or 2 selections don't come from the literary canon, but from his own library. for him, it's about passion, as well as a desire to knock one or 2 great authors off their pedestals. the winner of the german nonfiction book prize was announced at a ceremony at the home bolt. for an inter lynn the foundation said, but culture on the promotion of reading awards, the 2021 german nonfiction prize. you're going to have to have goes well.
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the, the author himself seemed almost surprised that a history book was met with such enthusiasm to kind so keegan. my book is not about the president. it might be about a philosopher perhaps the most significant german philosopher them. and he was about at the beginning about present in the late 18th century, early 19th century. but it's a long way from hegel to the presence of a long way comes in black. me the philosopher and professor gala de la chicago was always exploring new areas of science and questioning his own thinking. he taught his students in tubing and berlin to do the same. he was a fear, a state, the state, and the rule of law. anti slavery thinker, he had a very great knowledge of european aesthetics and all these things. he was a very universal and complete thinker and competitive calibus prize winning book is
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about he goes world the world into which the philosopher was born in 1770 was in a state of upheaval. the american revolution was raging. the french revolution erupted in 1789. the montclair year brothers invented the hot air balloon and james cook sailed around the world. taken was one of the greatest german idealist philosophers, saying that the competitive might have been complained against noir of it. the world was changing completely, and there was the impression that a whole new world was coming. part of haggle store it was devoted to the question of what would remain of the old world. what should be done with philosophy, religion, and art from before 1800. but he was also someone who had faith in this new world and the unrest that came with it. he believed it should be confronted with thought . we can think of any kind of committee jurgen,
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called the believes that reading hagar is necessary to confront all those today who are satisfied with simple truths his book makes the reader want to discover or rediscover the philosopher in time. now to travel to portugal, a country with a troubled history and home to an exciting young generation of writers, not afraid to explore is past and present. a problem with me has been destroyed many times during its history by craig, by fire. it here is where portugal rise as a colonial power. less than half a century ago. it was the seat of power of author retiring prime minister and so new the only way to salazar. today the city has a population of some half a 1000000, including a week out of those markings, one of portugal, my 1st vices,
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a journalist on screen writer. he also writes plays short stories and novels appreciate everything that comes from the external world or something that i, that i just see on the street top the film one year. and that thing mostly is, is always important for my work because people say things extraordinary. all the time and people are suffering all the time, a laughing and an altima to that, that comes from from life, can go to my work in one way or another. those machines comes from out in tissue, in the rural south of the country. if the poor region, but he describes it people as proud and dependable yet the suicide rate and now it entails you is significantly higher than in the rest of portugal. those machines
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explore this phenomenon and his w novel published in 2006. it became a best seller in fortune for belgium, into the vanguard of the country's literary scene, and was translated into english as glad to die. he went on to publish full prize winning novels. they sent around people who struggle with the burden of history. with sing looked about d r, mood, deed with africa, for example of asia with our conquerors. but we do tried to understand as a how little country did all this in the world and what's left, several responsibility to tell the others to tell the world about this and to create i think that's the main purpose emotions and beauty. way that we're writing it on a pallet about age, read a lot of portuguese literature growing up and on goal until $975.00. it was
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a portuguese colony, its own tradition, and heritage was depressed me. i was here to be a fortune to speak very well. fortune is not the speak any of the african languages and not to mingle with the we mean and sort of vision and all of the uses of, of african societies. but even me as think there was a big teeth about all those people that were near me. but i could not i could not know i could not speak. i could not mingle with them because it was not alone. the afternoon goal again independent in 1975,
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civil war broke out and lasted until 2002. the advantage fled the country in the late 19 seventies. after independence, she settled in portugal and goals for new ruler. many africans from portuguese colonies, did the same witnesses to adopt chapter in the countries past. the although she lived in lisbon for more than 40 years, still sees on goler as her home and cultural wellspring. she is honored in both countries as an and go with them. poet, she says, the poetry is the language that is best understood in the land of the 1st ideas of humility. the 1st idea of an identity was written in poetry. there was, if i can say there was a wall of 1st created
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in leech then in real in real only in the 1975 the day of the independence. but before there were many, many bullets that created be there to create a representative and gola mbm, golan and gona only achieve independence after military coup in 1974 known as economy ocean revolution, which overthrew the author italian government established by sell of 40 is elia the oppressive regime, restricted freedom of thought and did not tolerate this engine writers, writers show se luis pe showed you was born that yeah, he's grateful he never experienced that it paid to ship before the
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revolution during the sake there ship. there was this obligation to write in, in a way that was social intervention if politically charged . because if you are writing about social events or, or directly about politics, you were communicating with this, the political situation. but also if you are writing about trees, are flowers. you are ignoring all this issues and you are also taking up was a stance politically a show to is one of the most renowned portuguese writers of his generation. and also one of the most internationally successful his poems, travelogue, and novels have won numerous awards. ah, stories a melancholy, steep and gentle humour. his novel felt the eyes,
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the 2nd poverty stricken rule. seldom portugal. what a show she was born. it tells of love, betrayal, and passion, and the fight to survive. portugal is a small country in terms of surface, but it's a bit of a balance from my perspective, the development in your been areas in rural areas is very different. and in terms of rural inferior we've, we face problems of population getting older and older. and also the certification in this village that gives title to the novel on that period in, in the 8. this was more than the double. it's the size that's today. for example, the bookies right to the field rarely translated,
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but a few poets have nevertheless attained global fame. one is for them to show and lost or melancholy museum has been dedicated to him. another is joseph mago, who was awarded the naval prize for literature in 1998, the only portuguese writer ever to win. one of the most important literary prizes in portugal is named after him in 2019, this went to eventually unknown mighta phones to raise capital for a novel based on a true story. in northern portugal, a group of teenage boys befriended a lonely brazilian transsexual court. and tortuga and left it to die. the story warranted the young writer was thinking and believable. and at the same time it was really,
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really literally shannon challenge. because what's happened between the point a point be that gap could be fields replace richer could be filled with a story that was based on the real one. but it was mine. it was another thing altogether. it was literature, i least, i hope it is. although he'd been liking since childhood a phone to raise capital only publish his 1st novel in 2014, it sounds the story of a boy like his brother who has down syndrome. i just writes about things i really i enjoy or seems that compels that compelling. so, and in a way i have a lack of emotion imagination for a concrete thing. so i like to base my books on reality or to, to realities and anchor to my books. so that works well for me. so it's just, it's just it just, i don't know if,
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if it will continue to be like that that's from my 2 novels. until now. it is what you go. fletcher to reflect system. all history exists, the wounds and vibrancy of the south, but also the sorrow and pain of the past and the weight of the present day anxieties. it's high time, more people around the globe discovered novels and poetry from fortune go. ah, as french vitamin philosopher, voltaire, one said, leading matches the soul. so let's all day more of it. join us again next week, until then i'll be t as in, i'm goodbye. the
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news. the news, the news the initiation would still take place africa, things, and humiliations on the path to manhood, to female genital mutilation. when it comes to young people who are talking, smash gender stereotypes, the 77 percent on d, w. back to the future with the electric version of this
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guy list motor icon. the oval mantel vs the prototype. classic design on the outside. latest tech, on the inside the mantra, fandom is charge and raring to go. read a 60 minute on e w. people in trucks injured, went back to the city center. more and more refugees are being turned away. families to be crated. own in trade. getting 200 people around the world. more than 300000000 people are speaking with huge. why?
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because no one should have to flee the make up your own mind. double you need for mines. hello, welcome to the 77 percent the show for you africa use. i am mike looting. this edition of the show is coming to you from our crop in ghana. yes. what's coming up for? you can wrap up my. the goal shows us around the downside of done dora. boxed up patricia for last one a talk through the 5 in pitt income. paula: and in our street the debate would discuss at the initiation, right?
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female genital mutilation. our main topics to be harmful and deadly initiation, right? before we talk about f t m. let's look at what some young men have to go through. the numbers may not be as high, but they suffer great mental and physical pain across africa, different cultures. monk, the transition from boyhood to manhood. what initiation rituals in south africa, many young men lose their lives. as a result, we do african close to the fall rhythm. early in the morning these initiation students practice traditional chance. it is a highly secretive process. we're lucky out of 20 students these 5 and that teacher are willing to talk. they perform a cleansing ritual in the river every morning. these schools are infamous for the allegedly brutal methods, but this young initiate shows no sign of fear. some guys are scared,
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but only because other people like century things. so some have this fear for me, but because this is our culture, i feared nothing. i for, i feel like most of the boys here have to go through it over when i was in the, the traditional class and pay the ethnic groups believe a boy can only become a man if it goes through the rites of passage like chanting sticks, fighting and hunting, the rite of passage culminates with the circumcision of the students performed in an open field by a traditional healer. while only a nora t of the schools are accused of mistreating their students. many push questionable ideas about masculinity. because when you come from this please you can or to cry. it's like if someone you get out of post the way or even if you feel pain is like here with forming leg tenea literally be to be as soon as you attitudes like
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this made this young man's experience all the more painful at the age of 18 or lightning acosta was sent by his father to an initiation school. as soon as he arrived, yet his cousin was subjected to daily beating. while our new person was a proud young man and defied the humiliations. so he was often taken aside and punished repeatedly with further beatings. one evening the eldest took him away once again to teach him a lesson. this time he never returned. a cousin never came back because he was a fighter. was one person that could stand up for himself, they beat into a plan whereby they killed him. and when they realize that is gotten too far, and they just came back and i think the initiation schools on to registered or monitored much like female genital mutilation. initiates can also die as
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a result of budget circumcisions, traditionally known as local or lose one manhood forever. when kalani asked about the whereabouts of his cousin, one of the eldest, threatened him with the same fate. all i knew then that he had to flee for me. i had to choose in terms of her to my mother and my father by being a desert to my mother and my father by being did. so i've you said and, and thought which one is best buy or any option for life that night he ran away and never returned, but his decision brought disgrace on his family and he's too scared to go back to his community today. years after the ordeal, he still lives far from his village and has no contact with his parents. i've been in a lot of fights actually. because even this one,
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you constantly have to prove yourself as a man. and i don't think that will end. and till i get the confirmation for my son, having an open discussion about the point of initiation rights is almost impossible because the young men are not supposed to talk about their experiences. many who are traumatized carried with them for the rest of their lives. in south africa loan more than 400 young men has lost their lives in the past 7 years. now the challenges faced by these young men, this multiplied a 1000000 fault. when we talk about the young women, i'm referring here to female genital mutilation, or f, g m. for most young women and girls, it's a booth top lation of the physical and mental well being,
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harris cars with mall. hello there and welcome to the spread a safe space where we get to discuss everything, sex and relationship. so there are 4 types of female genital cutting, also known as female genital mutilation, or f, g, m, c. type one is the partial or total removal of the collector is type 2 is the partial or total removal of the collector and the menorah type 3 is the narrowing of the virginal orifice. then fusing the wound shut, they leave a small hole, the size of a pinkie, finger to your name, and for ministration. once she has intercourse for the 1st time, it's up to the man to open her up again, which obviously causes a lot of pain and leading type for includes all of the harmful procedures to the female genitalia for non medical purposes. for example, passing banning or incision so many women have and continue to experience both
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sexual and reproductive health issues. as a result of this, some of the facts could include complications during their ministration. you hemorrhage and infection so severe they cause death in an effort to end f gmc, there are communities worldwide that are working hard to eradicate the practice. this involves having conversations about the dangers involved. all types of f t, m, i. so come on in many african countries for the latest addition of our street to be our water. it is money problems to the not all in kenya that in can yes. my side region, many young women, i still expected to undergo this painful proceed. yeah. to speak to a young woman about what she went through and was their mother who for her to be come in in the year 2011, kenya passed
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a law that basically said the female genital mutilation was illegal. despite this, it still being practiced across the country and even here where we are in narrow county and we want to investigate why. and i'd like to begin with selina, who is actually a member of this community and an activist. i know for a fact that you had said to your mother that you didn't want to undergo this right . and she forced you to i think for me and my mom of course, she wanted me to grow up like a normal my say child go child. because my grandmother was cut, i used to go to watch many girls being sick unsafe. so it was such a jo matic experience for me. and i kept telling my mom that it's something i never want to go through. so she didn't think that my vision or my choice counted the she went ahead and save it for me, leaving planned as a surprise ceremony. and upon coming home from visiting my uncle,
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everything was said, and i found a group of remain and we just locked me in and close to me. so my, my la possibly just heard from your daughter that you forced her to get f g m. why did you do that to me last night? and now go to my young the, you know, number after they moved in your area and in the hill, you might not even, we're happy. so you mean to tell me that if there was no law against, if jim, you would still practice it? come after one by 9. the let me know when i'm sam i say get them another one. you stand i, susan items. then i made a mom about, i guess i can adapt aide as i'm, i don't understand why william was as well. so let me ask the men in this community . we have some very good looking morales here though the come up one on me. what you must say when there's a co, a modem can buy, had to cut one step because i've been in the muscular that they've
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good to go. what ended my day? but i did, we're talking about humphrey practice here. what are the long term effects of f jim? what have you had to contend with psychologically? if jim is not something that in with the day you are god, it's something that follows you for a lifetime. 2 hours after the cut, you start shivering. you start feeling fever, your body temperatures, right? so you can construct infections, but those other short times after you are no mature, even the misses coming out is a challenge. another thing is that when you're married again, you go through a process called in phoebe lation. it's another the opening then when you are, you want to give bath and in our community we give, but as long as we can. so that means after every bus you have to be cut for you to pass this the child. yes. alright,
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but also hearing from all these women who've undergone f, g m that it does cause complications that is harmful. so do you want another one of your daughters to go through that matter right now? math absolutely. no matter about when i'm listen. i mean my was n with you guys, how gonna and i mean you good bye. she's here you are. somebody comes to the police station and says of just been forced to go through the gym and we've read some instances where the police office of ask them for photos of the thing happening. this is not realistic. what make these guys not report at the time? they go there that being nasa seminar on the lewis a demo was this day. yeah. but is that that just should be because most of the stations don't predict him send most of this to him at that time. maybe that doesn't that go to the, to put to the police station. so,
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but isn't that why we have so many layers of administration so that if the police, if you, as a chief is not able to come to this community, should you be able to send people to survey? i sent people just have to check. and i mean if we're saying that the people being circumcised or you know, going through g m a 9 or 10. what, how will they know to come to report to you what we do and that i've, i've had a lot, we collaborate to the churches, philadelphia as, and the community added at lag. ok, but to, to be fair chief, we already know that that's not working. it's not really working entirely, so let's talk about arrest. have there been any people arrested in network? well, yeah, yes i for many even the kids. ok, so i did not agree with you, but i want to come to selina 1st because is this ringing to to you? do you feel like you can trust the police officers to enforce the law festival?
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we don't have any police this morning. my really chief, we're being told you don't even have a police station here. so where would you even begin? in fact, we have, she's saying she's saying and most mostly in fact, that is not. so how do you enforce a law when the enforcers are not there? we do we try. ok, so speaking of stakeholders, kaz, what more can we do as women to work with the women who are still going through this? how can we be more active stakeholders? i feel like we really need to be able to understand the ways in which different communities are able to absorb information and then use that and take that and find ways to educate women and make more precise question is, how do we begin to change the mindset of mama who is old and very settled how, how do we begin to educate or to have conversations with in a way that she can have a ha moment where she's like,
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actually we need to stop that. ok. edification is something that you're very keen on. is this the way for her to stop after him? do you think we have a center in mostly ro, it's more of a rescue center now, because guess i fling into that institution is getting ted married. and if jim, so creating sets, if this is and guess a new kitchen would be a huge being that can solve this issue of if jam ok study or what is your proposal moving forward? how do we finally get rid of this? we need to have county and community based approaches from a community may be engaging, the religious leaders will watch for the mass. i may be alternative right, right of passage. what? because these people have values attached to it. so how do we link if jim, from religion, how do we link if jim, from culture, what are the political leadership doing about our female politicians to begin with?
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you're talking about changes right from the talk all the way to the bottom. this is where we have to call it her up. they've been fantastic solutions which have been suggested. i really hope the people who can implement them listening. speaking to you, chief, thank you for watching. the reason awareness is the best way to cause lasting change. and in because that is exactly what some young people are doing. they've created a radio program, and on this program, they discussed all manner of topics like rape abortion, and f g m. 18 year old greece has been a junior reporter for 6 years. she lives to not be shown the capital of the ivory coast. it has society, women do not have the same rights as men on certain topics like female genital mutilation. simply not talked about what grades that say we from tough topics.
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today's radio report is about abortion. there's a lot of people don't talk about it. the thing is they seem to keep secret from their families, which cues a lot of young groups. and it's a big, complicated to talk to people about abolition. but i do my best to convince them it's a copy. we have to interrogate. $771.00 will be the subject is terrible in the advocacy because many people consider it's amanda. all interference with god. will many abortions take place in secret without medical support? and under hygiene italy unsafe conditions. greece was to open the conversation level and we noticed that more and more you have an abortion i would like to know. what do you think about risky? the girl could die become infer time will have consequences for her social life. it could hurt physically, women's empowerment remains the challenge in topic in the country. i veterans are not used to being asked to these questions, especially not by
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a young woman. breaking the code of silence. this is the goal of the radio show. a young person, a message here, everything will be discussed sexuality, domestic violence, rape or female genital mutilation. the project was launched in 2014 since then. greece and her colleagues produce the one our show every saturday. that when the i k is one of the senior, to support the junior reporters automatically the notice the kids opened up, they express their feelings. they talked about things they would not have talked about before. they got involved lashelle. what used to be awkward has become normal for the 18 year old, and that feels graces and with pride. let's say we need to congratulate young girls like grace we take initiative, because thanks to them, we can move forward. really, we need to encourage them presented their level encouraging young girls to speak up
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. this is what greece and her program stands for. the total on this she can say yes, they could, you know, instead of $4000.00 the grease that decided to study journalism and she's determined to empower young girls like hair very difficult to get over shine is what i encourage my friends, my grandparents, my parents, my brothers and sisters, the people i need to talk about taboo subjects. but if we don't talk about no one would do it for us. least once to continue speaking out for the voiceless, not raising her voice is simply not an option. a more freak up. raise your voice. that is the message that i got from the last report. and here is another strong voice straight out of come paula, you've done the books are patricia apple lot. she's there rain in, weld kickboxing some field. but the to time will try to hold off this. she won't
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fall, agreed until she is defeated, sexual harassment in you can transport lesson. you don't want to mess with me. with 13 titles to him. name patricia, a polite is the reigning, well keep boxing champion in the female lightweight division. this is just a lot courage to stand up. it takes a lot of courage to make it live. and when you make it to the top, some people doubt. but if you listen to the voices of other people than listening to yourself, you find out you look out yourself from what really wants to be. the 2 i'll take area. she has faith naked. steven implementation in uganda. kickboxing is considered immense on the sport. so patricia se rise to the top was an uphill struggle. the people born to
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that's what i want to change. you either choose to be one or you want to i should be a champion white because when i was younger i had a lot of bedrooms, don't commute. so i reached a point where i said, i have followed enough what people are telling me. but what do i have to tell my the to time world champion isn't just it's half open and in the ring. she also supports female outlets. we have suffered sexual harassment and violence. apollonia has a very clear message for the perpetrators. people are mentally sick because you have something to show to the world, but someone is actually limiting your access to which way you want to go. men of the gods record crying about sexual harassment. a lot of them. but it never occurred to me because one i showed them what i wanted. no one even ever thought about coming that. hey patricia this and this because for me this my,
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my school days i'll bid to hell out of you today. patricia upload knows that she can't just let her fists speak for themselves in a home village. laura the 29 year old founded a club or mostly young female kickboxing. she believes that hope for a better future. that's with the young generation. especially if leaders also work towards creating a safer environment to further develop the autonomy we can do this, we can achieve it. we have good than who we are actually we at the beginning of every, ah, this year she is focus and defending and well titled he is convinced that he achievement to inspire more african go to stay focused on what was the last time you raise up your voice, how did you speak up against inequality and your pressure of women? let us know. at 7 to 7, d, w dot com all through our community on facebook. now from compiler we had
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straight tonight will be to meet the rap on monday. go in her hood of done daughter . significant thing about done today is that it's a slum, built on a dom site. not the kind of place you expect wrapped to be, but i leave you to be that job. introduce in my the goal and it done dora rock project now, you know, well we have, we don't need that. most people think that music is done to me. i think the people say that only men can do it. so the that i am, i got a new people,
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but when they make, i feel like i'm in my own one in that been talking to me. you know, most people knew, i just didn't get a call. we need to visit the people but then it must be done or we could do that next. the largest dumpsite is the majority of robin's most of the ends up here. they're not acting nora. many people see a crisis. we see, i said beyond doubt, after april c t, we are going to change that. it's not let people be to be here before just getting on board. they know,
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the only way i can live is to stand out and believe the motto on this can be mission, the vision. it's all about making change, talking about issues affecting the community and fighting for the job to be sure many 77 percent. it's all about crease in space for the beat, and given voice to the voiceless. so monday, go to. this is home. you are super welcome. good bye to you. of us. see you next time. this pandemic,
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we the to get to have been affected more than anyone else. we have last time you school, our parents have lost jobs, but none of us has lost hope. i could have gone through this figure to record the best i decided to do with that getaway. ah, oh, oh oh oh, i am in that gets that gets that
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gets, gets, gets, that gets gets i get that gets you way. be we the the, me, the news, the
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news, the news, the the the, what's going on here, house of your very own, from a printer. computer games that are healing. my dog needs electricity. she explains, delivers facts and shows what the future holds. living in the digital world shifts in 15 minutes on d. w. back in the future with the electric version of this
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stylish motor icon. the oval mantel v as the prototype. classic design on the outside. latest tech on the inside. the manta fandom is charged and raring to go. read in 30 minutes on the w. o the, we want to see them putting our street, our water. now up here, you are related to the scene. our new global 3000 series, the threats when you're facing the heroes taking the stands,
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it's not important to make up the global 3000 theories starts june 21st on d w. it's about billions. it's about power. it's about the foundation, the new world order. the new silk road china wants to expand its influence with this trading network also in europe. china is promising partners, rich profit in europe, and there's a sharp warning. wherever accept money from the new super power will become dependent on in china's gateway. year starts july 1st on d, w ah,
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ah ah, this is beat up the news alive from berlin, iran on the verge of electing a new hotline leader, but many votes stayed away, frustrated by the batter economy and the lack of moderate candidate. also in the program a 3 day travel band in lisbon, portugal capital city in partial shut down as a super infectious delta variance of the corona virus. it spreads nationwide ad already won defeat down in football viewer 202020. and germany need a win against defend.

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