tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle June 27, 2021 1:00pm-2:01pm CEST
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and how we can make a difference knowledge and grows through sharing. download it now with the ah, this is the w news. why from berlin? search for victims and a search for answers in miami. people hope for a miracle, for the nearly 160 people missing in a building collapse. but the rescue efforts are facing setbacks and many are asking why stark warnings about the building safety. we're north also coming up. britain's health secretary steps down after breaking corona virus regulations. man hancock
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was caught on camera flouting the rules by kissing a difficult mental aid and an apology from candidates prime minister, after hundreds of unmarked grades are found at a foreign boarding school for indigenous children. ah, a michael coo, welcome to the program. questions are being raised about the safety of an apartment building their collapse in florida on thursday and engineering report warmed of major structural damage 3 years ago. so far, officials have confirmed 5 deaths, but more than $150.00 people are still unaccounted for, hopes or fading that any more survivors will be found in the rubble. every minutes of this painstaking rescue operation is crucial. but for days there
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have been no new signs of life. emergency crews have struggled to contain a fire smouldering deep within the wreckage. despite the yards rescue as a holding out hope. spurred on by knocking sound reverberating from deep down in the rubble. our top priority now continues to be search and rescue. we continue to have hope. we're continuing to search. we're looking for people alive in the rubble. that is our priority and our teams have not stopped it after so long without good news, many losing hope. a prayer vigil has been held for the dead with worship is praying for. there is still missing the public. rodriguez says his mother and grandmother would likely asleep in their apartment when the 12 story blog can crushing down at times it is complete the station. and then you know,
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there's periods of disbelief where you get a little calm. just saying, well, the sitting up and it's impossible if it's a real nightmare building don't collapse. they don't fall. so for the building to be at a point where it just collapses on itself, without anybody knowing anything about or is very, that's the part that angers just how a high rise apartment block could collapse without warning is what miami authorities and now asking themselves. but they may indeed have been a warning report from 3 years ago, revealed major structural damage to the building federal investigative. and now looking into the causes of the tragedy. and the mayor has announced an audit of old buildings over 40 years old. relative, continue their anguished wait for their loved ones to return, as their hopes dwindle. the demand for answers will only grow stronger. w,
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catalina moore has been following the story from washington, and gave us a few more details about that report. currently, 3 years before this happened to a consultant found alarming evidence of major structural damage in that same building. the building is 40 years old, and the engineers report showed plans for a very expensive multi $1000000.00 repair a project that was set to get underway soon. but this did not happen obviously, and the report details significant cracks and breaks in the concrete in the walls, which required repairs as soon as possible to ensure the safety of the residence and off the public around the building. now the mayor of miami dade county, or this building is announced a 30 day audit for all buildings are 40 years and older i or the county jurisdiction to the u. k. now, britain's health minister has resigned over
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a breach of current of virus restrictions that he himself had implemented and infallibly enforced. that hancock admitted breaking the rules after photos and video emerge of him kissing and embracing an aide in his office. hancock had made regular appearances on television, telling people they must stick to the regulations. he thought he could ride out the controversy. hold on as britain's top health official. but i've been to see the prime minister to resign sector estate for health and social care. it was just such a bad look, those images of his alleged affair. no matter for the moment. he's a married father of 3, but he'd been telling the entire country to mask up social distance. steer clear for the sake of saving lives for britons massively overburdened hospitals and for its health infrastructure. the sexual, this is the rules of that for everyone. and that incredibly important and that that
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is serious. then he was caught locking lips in the office and cctv shared to a tabloid ones was about candidates, the company that and then to go on, break them more informed about trade as well. often i said this guy's waiting for the storm to die down was no longer an option. hancock conceited. on saturday, i understand the enormous sacrifices that everybody in this country has made that you have made. and those of us who make these rules have gone to sick by them, and that's why i've got to resign. hancock's replacement such a job, it is no, not for his health care background. but for his stint as the case finance minister under boris johnson. until he resigned in february of 2020. during hancock's tenure, britain endured one of the world's highest official death tolls from the pandemic,
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but also saw a strong vaccination roll out. that last may now be overshadowed simply by a feeling of betrayal. on friday, u. k prime minister boys johnson refused to fire hancock, saying the matter was closed. we spoke earlier to d, w, charlotte, shelf, and pill in london. and astro. why the ministry ultimately reside resignation have come. there are many, particularly the opposition policy, main opposition party. you say the prime minister should have acted, but it's clear the last couple of days that the health ministers role has just become untenable, not is not only has this been personally extremely humiliating for the married father, 3 to be been captured in the sensational images in the sun newspaper, the leak cctv footage, which really is gripping the nation here. this is about so much more than that. this is about the fact that the man who, who made the rules and as you said in your opening,
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that the man who preached the rules for months and months over and over again, telling the public care how to live their lives. then seem to break the very same rules at the time that these images was taken at once against coded guidance here in the u. k. to, to have an intimate to be close to people outside of your own household. so it is indisputable here that this was a breach of guidance, not just called so much upset amongst the public who made so many sacrifices, like so many around the world to stay in line with the guidance. and the question was, can the man who had done not then go on to be chatted by the public this pandemic is far from over. he will have time to continue to make public counts messages. the question is, will he be listened to and, you know, the point to make is that this is just the late in a series of sandals to best set. the health minister,
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nit text messages. a legend from the prime minister accusing the health minister of making miss steps is not being suitable for the roles. so a lot of questions about his conduct during this pandemic about this scandal will continue to follow him. he does use shoulder chelsea pill reporting from london. let's take a look now at some other stories making headlines around the world at this hour. francis voting in a 2nd round of regional elections with politicians wondering how to get more people to the polls. the 1st round saw a thrashing for president emanuel mac homes, party, and disappointment. for the far right turn out among young people especially was a record low. a search in cases of the delta corona virus variant in bangladesh has led to a rush to flee the capital darker ships at a river terminal have been packed with people returning to rural areas. before new lockdown takes effect tomorrow, friday saw the country 2nd highest death hall since the beginning of the pandemic.
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new york's broadway theater district has or fifthly reopened. 15 months after it went dark because of the pandemic. singer songwriter bruce springsteen's autobiographical show kicked things off. all attendees were required to show proof of vaccination. most other shows are due to open. in the coming months. 2 more catholic churches in indigenous communities in western canada have been destroyed in fires that authorities call suspicious. days ago, 2 other churches went up in flames. this comes after hundreds of unmarked graves were discovered at former indigenous boarding schools run by the church. a field of pink flags, all mocking the place where a gravestone should be. carol, who remembers being subjected to abuse at the merry vows boarding school, was one of the luckier attendees. i feel like i want,
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i feel like that they couldn't take the indian out to me the, i feel that, that i lost nothing but my language. but i could get that back, didn't take everything they thought they were going to take from me. they didn't take it. i still have it here. carol was one of the 150000 indigenous children false to attend christian schools in the name of assimilation de, description, everything of our own culture of our own people. they didn't want us to practice our own, our own spiritual activity. discouraged, go or discouraged our son dancing. they discouraged their b thing. physical and sexual abuse were rampant in the schools where thousands of children died. the cause was not recorded and more than half of the known deaths. the secrecy has caused trauma for many, only to be triggered again by the discovery of marybell's unmarked graves,
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uncovered with radar mapping. besides a believe to have once been marked with gravestones that were later removed. removing headstones is a crime in this country. and we are treating this like a crime scene at the moment. canada's prime minister apologized on behalf of the government after the discovery and called on the same from religious bodies. i have spoken personally directly with his holiness po frances to impress upon him how important it is. just that he makes an apology, but that he makes an apology to indigenous canadians on on canadian soil, the marybell excavations were launched after $215.00 school children's remains were found at a similar school back in may. the discoveries have encouraged 1st nations people to continue their search for more graves. sport now and in you are 2020 italy or
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a true to the quarter finals, but they needed extra time to get there. after scare against austria, a horde for 90 minutes ended goal is before italy scored twice an extra time. to federico, casey and teo pin sina, sasha lady managed one for austria that they couldn't find a 2nd and fell in a to one defeat. in the early max denmark became the 1st team to make it through to the quarter finals after beating wales. in the round of 16 striker casper door, burke scored in both hands to set up the victory before the danes added 2 more late in the game. to seal a 4 nail when they all now faced the netherlands or the czech republic in the last 8 in formula one max for stopping is well place to deliver a 4th straight victory for his red bull team. after taking pull position at the syrian grand prix. in austria, the dutchman was fast in qualifying finishing ahead of mercedes louis hamilton, whose crown are showing signs of slipping after years of dominance. in the austrian
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alps a place called spielberg off at an epic view, a formula once new landscape, not to 4 consecutive years. the hamilton pilot, mercedes domination 2021 sees a new era where young dutchman max by step and is the pay center in find a qualifying look for once like the pressure was showing on hamilton over. so he recovered to post a competitive time that after last week's technical fail in france, the mercedes brains trustees under the microscope and dealing with a 3 place penalty to dr. l. 3. both dangerously spun his car in friday. prank grace goes out. the video killed the fin, and you frustrated team ready stuff for stephens part depole was smoother and of course quicker the 23 year old corner and straight line speed once again, a cut above them. sideways right, bull mechanics celebrated as louis hamilton struggled to put his new predicament
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into words. i don't know, i just didn't have a really good globalization. the call feel great and the 3 and just the same color, qualify some kind of baffled by that. on the home to read full, i will place to make it 4 winds from the last 4 grown pre next step and the man to catch again on sunday. world stories is next. i'll be back with more news and 45 minutes. you're watching the w. two's every day for us and for our planet, global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make cities greener? how can we protect animals and their habitat?
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what to do with all our waste? we can make a difference by choosing reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable martin solutions overseas said in our ways or is truly unique. and we know that, that uniqueness is what allows us to live and survive. google ideas, the environmental global 3000 on dw, and online me, the refugee space and uncertain future and practices terrace plans to attract tourists . again. we begin in russia 80 years ago, nazi germany at the soviet union. launching a devastating war,
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the remnants of which could still be found a red muslin today. many bodies have yet to be recovered and identified. step by step, combing the forest for traces of the war. you may have to give. this is an empty cartridge from a german plains. that means it fell down here while the plane was shooting from i look out for 40 years now sort of has been searching the area in her home region with a metal detector. she often comes with her husband to look for remnants from what is known as the great patriotic war. here in russia, there was a soviet air field nearby. these forests and fields where the sight of fierce battles around a 1000000 soviet soldiers died. protecting moscow from nazi forces between 1941 and 42. many of them went missing in action. galena states that event digs in her free time. the work can be dangerous. it's lucky. galena is
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a trained bomb diffuser for the russian emergency services. sometimes she finds shrapnel and old mines, but there are also human remains under the roots. within a book in the round is filled with war. the earth hides all these interesting secrets and traces of past remains of people and traces of vehicles who just imagine for walking around this wonderful forest, girls and boys are picking berries. and there's a skulls sticking out of a trench that shouldn't be normal. it doesn't say on the skull, whether it's russian or german, it has to be buried no matter what. over 40 years of digging colleena has made many fines. she has collected them in a museum called a soldier's fate in her home town of opium, south west of moscow. 3 years ago she found a bomber in a nearby swamp. the remains of 3 soldiers were inside. using archival information about the plane galena has finally managed to find the relics of 2 of them. today pub, in my taught in the commander of the plains crew will finally be reunited with his
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family. he was 24 when he died. he was missing all this time. nobody will be living after today. it's very emotional for me that he'll be returning home when i was little, my mother said that my grandmother used to cry when she looked at his photograph to bubble black, maybe issues with regard lena re, unions like this several generations later are emotional what and then the local, local pitcher we reap on each other's shoulders. you can't really find the words to say the communication is happening on some sort of an emotional level. and of course, people just keep telling me, thank you. thank you. i super spicy. sometimes people say, why do you dig? why disturbed the dead? but i think there's somewhere in the ether, faceless, i don't know how to explain that, but their souls are restless. every year, catalina sets off on her search. again. there are people like her across russia.
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people here say the war isn't really over until the last soldiers body has been buried. galena has made that her life's work. the in pakistan or a 1500000 african refugees have been living there for decades. aren't sure how this happened because they weren't registered and so that that will change students and many fear deportation. the hardin con, runs a small grocery store in this refugee camp in pakistan. every day he checks his income and expenses. what he was about the same age is this child when his family flat afghan has done some 40 years ago today it's a distant memory what a young that we have out there was
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a war going on. so when the situation became, was we flat school for the youngest on to say, when we've been able to live here like the harvey, by her to say, fled. i've kind of stone after the soviet invasion in 1979. he has lived in the camp ever since. it's one of 20 in this province alone. more than a 1000000 afghans within pakistan, they're largely on their own. you would be lying. if i said we got financial support, let go. the truth is, we don't get any aid from the pakistani government to milan. now, for the 1st time, pakistan is registering the african refugees residing in the country. registered refugees issued
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a biometric identity card. many children born here have never been registered to its hope. the day civil gave into national agencies a clearer picture of the needs. in the refugee community site. we are collecting a most updated information of africa such as educational bookcase and also maybe language. it might not be just updated. the information is also going to be the same wrong of activities. not only in the file was gone, some went to africa package. johnny authorities have tried to encourage refugees to return home. nadine and jobs is interviewing families to see if they are ready to make the move off the nato troops leave afghanistan. the new
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id card the only valid until 2023. questionnaire me. so i'm going to questionnaire . it's a situation in afghanistan normalizes. and do they want to leave 2 percent 90 percent of the refugees answer with a no they do not want to go back to their home country the here. busy for the holiday in con, one thing clear, he will only return home if this piece the instance africa. you come in a virus infections or any other concerns of a 3rd week in some regions, hospitals or capacities. the vaccination campaign is fluid and people aren't hearing to corona regulations. the message shouldn't be new to anyone, one and a half years into adobe pandemic wash your hands maintain social distance where mosque. but the disaster management officers in cape town. they have observed that
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more and more people are not sticking to the rules. i'll plead to them really to consider. they love the ones, even though they may be resistant to comply with total but they must think of the family members in the lab wanted. oh, because how would they feel like teddy divided the day to come pick the people i don't and potentially be losing enough to i'm not wearing math in public as a criminal offense in south africa, yet many people don't. but mostly this mosque and everything is for each people, you know what i mean, because they have so a lot of money, they don't want to die. eating us. it is tiring. it is tara, it's better for those who goes to school. like kids. now there must go 2 days a week like it's all it's frustrating man, it's frustrating for a lot of close to me die because are far already on the 2nd wave.
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so i'm, what are you doing this ted wave so far? the province of how ting around south africa, economic have you had this book has been hit particularly hard making up for more than 60 percent of you infection. scientists expect strict locked down rule soon, but will the 3rd way fits the entire country harder than the 2nd? no, we don't expect to in the, the areas at listing the cost of provinces of south africa will be worse than the 2nd wave. why that is because the 2nd wave was very severe in the coastal regions of south africa. and we also know from the science that we have done that people that got infected with the bits of variance. i had released a very high level antibodies. so we expect to see a kind of population immunity around the course. we'll be home in cape town, the management team,
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encouraging the elderly to sign up for what we call the community restrictions relaxing in europe. and people can travel again, including the parents, the french capital is trying to wear to his back with special offers. easier said than done. ah, paris loves its stories. that's the message. these young, multilingual ambassadors are trying to spread. why should you know to return? it shouldn't hesitate and just come to paris, we'll help them find the bearings here, the saunter, pompey do, and all the other parishes such a pleasant city and more and more of us to help visitors. this makes me happy, some of the buddha up to 500 of them, will be deployed this year in an effort to kick stop tourism again. after visits and numbers plummeted by 2 thirds last year. but the tourists who normally
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represent a large ship, the cities, visitors, people from asia and the u. s. might be a bit longer incoming, or sweat school or model of the movie, the more we would like everybody to come back to paris. but we are obviously aware that the french and european choices are likely to be the 1st one factors as it's still easier for them to travel. some pressure on the too many hotels are trying to learn invalid kids with special deals with some luxury establishments, offering discounts of up to 70 percent. but no offer will convince those already desperate to get out of the city. this french couple have chosen to go to higher ground, 50 kilometers north of the french capital. people. with this pandemic, people have understood that they needed to disconnect from reality. such as special offers aren't necessarily so important for me. we need to breathe and take
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a step back from work, especially as we've all been working from home for quite a while now. because they are not the only ones who feel the urge to get out of the city, but reservations at these cabins have skyrocketed. say to i'm only dicky for i measured 3 different like people have slipped since the beginning of the cave in 1900 crisis and realized that they needed nature to reconnect to who they are. we can't keep up with demand and, and now planning to construct an additional 5 cabin by the end of next year. it will fuck new will given the ceiling portion. and yet some might argue, this is exactly the right time to visit paris or other cities. the news
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this is the show for africa, my charity, 77 percent. this time our st debate comes from cologne in germany. our focus is on everybody's talking about africa stolen, ours. the wind will finally be returned to the needs to be brought back to 70 percent more hated in future hope or to mortal danger? yes, please. no, thank the the radiance dog story of nuclear energy
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that is politic. humanity in 45 minutes on the wi fi double used crime fighters are back africa. most successful radio drama theories continues. all episodes are available online course you can share and discuss on v w. africa's facebook page and other social media platforms, crime fighters, tune in now. me hello and welcome to another edition of the 77 percent. this is the show for africa. majority the youth like you and i, eddie micah, julia is the name and i'll be iving. you through the program this week, our focus is on art. let's check out what we have for you on the show. street. the beef takes us. we museum in germany to discuss what should happen is that for some
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then we'll meet african artists who are taking the well by stalled out into 6. and we'll find out how the bus seems against 19 meeting the if you're ready, then let's dive right into it. i'm sure you've been wandering, why? there's been an ongoing discussion about for my colonizers with heading africa stolen artifact. countries across the continent are still struggling to get back. what originally belongs to them? now in kenya, the secret in gods, the drum of the puma community on the countries coastline was stolen by british colonial offices more than a century ago. and is today still kept in london's british museum. it is just one of thousands of artifacts which are now captive museums abroad. the africans once back,
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the manually as them by returns every so often to these groups in shallow on the banks of canyon. santa river. he belongs to the become a community. the grooves once house, the book almost secret and got the drum which was stolen by british colonial officers. little 100 years ago. in the possible ellis, who had been kaji in a place like the succeeding secret place in the forest and hope, but not even small children could find their way. he the drum or gadget was once revere, does it become with center of sovereign power? it determines their way of life. well, i am in without it, the grove is no longer secret and the governing council to reach manuel belongs, has lost most of its authority. since then, god was taken, we have been affected because our society no longer has l. does like,
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manually have vivid memories of the colonial period. they were too young to have set eyes on the drum themselves. after taking the gods from the coma, it was shipped abroad and kept in storage in london's british museum. the homeless king moran young gus or the 7th and the elders and his kingdom. i will reap the drum will never return. then i'd like i knew my genie if i had the miss west minister the parliament in england if i had met laying some way and they using it as a footstool. what the british need? yes to them. it's this isn't drum on savages, but it is which is not only you,
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but it has some news in terms of function. why should you deny an object? it's functions like the many communities across the african continent have been demanding for the return of the london cultural feeling. kenya's national museum and exhibition is taking place. the invisible inventory is questioning the results of the object. ah, yes. like visual basic, like empty boxes because like when you go to a museum, you don't expect to see empty cases. the missing objects include items such as mass shield, smoking, pine cones, grave markers, drums, flying on, you know, the invisible inventory program, recorded like 32000 missing object plan was to create
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a database of canyon objects that are spread out across the cultural institutions across the world because because can never know where it's object find what they are. we decided to visualize every object as a shipping label. because for us, every object that left can was shipped out, right? and honestly, we've covered all the walls, but this is only like 2000 the british museum has one of the largest collections in the world of cultural artifacts, given the breath of its colonial empire. while other former colonial powers have already begun the process of returning looted at britain still dragging these all these mural cross see laws against movement of objects, which is really strange that you know, you take objects from people and then you create laws to prevent them going back so now it's if, if illegal to return objects, what says legal to take them right?
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tell minor a digital heritage specialist was shocked by how much of the restitution debate and even the actual return of objects takes place behind closed doors. she co founded open restitution africa and online platform that puts together data on restitution and bring the african physicians to the forefront of the debate. especially when you look at technology by say we are saying that more people can access this information. more people who are not in expert circles, let's say academics, or even in museums and people who are on twitter and instagram and have nothing to do with museums or hate age can actually access this information. and i think that's powerful in, in creating awareness that yes, there, there is material that has been taken to macaroni for common. king recently got communication from the british museum that they would like to talk a huge step forward from when he 1st large initial request. if he had to go his
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community, which numbers, roughly 200000, live in one of the poorest regions of kenya. many no longer here to the old traditions and question the relevance of the drum today. yet, macaroni remains adamant about it's important. it is really very important center for our people, but in the museum, it's just a moment of attraction here. it is bound to the life of all these. who did it. this is our property. if it can then be returned to our symbol, not by for so many hygiene, low food returns or life in king michael ronnie and manuel he has been by both aware, returned to the old days, will not be pacific here under the lash mangled trees. by the river there, hopefully this society is distinct. identity will one day be able to record an era
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for become a one that's really about restoring a community identity, isn't it? now? the invisible inventor is exhibition you saw in the report, is a collaboration between the national museum in kenya and 2 museums here in germany . how this takes us next to cologne's route and straus your museum. leaving reason, awareness about objects and artworks that were storing from africa and not all parts of the world doing colonial times. at the same time, the museum itself is in possession of many of these objects. now to delve deeper into this, michael lee christine wound to i went there to lead a very engaging debate. the hello everyone. these here are some of african most prized artifacts. they're called the beginning bronzes there,
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from the ancient kingdom of been in, which is today known as it all state in southern nigeria. they were stolen by bridge soldiers in the colonial era, and sold to buy is in the west since then. they've been on display in museums in north america and in europe. now today's street debate is coming to you from the rough and shelf us museum in the german city of cologne. that is because this museum is home to 94, been in brunswick, but also germany said to become the 1st country to begin returning the been in bronzes to nigeria. and so, you know, i want to pick up with you because you're from been in city and state, you know, a thing or 2 about how to make a 1000000000 bronze. tell us what makes them so special beyond arts, the core charge of the story of my people. so it's not just looking at t t s. piece of our culture of things we're taking to our language room. we're taking languages we have taken was tripped off of a cloth in of our way of life. right. so it's,
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it's beyond the pain. i'm going to come to you now. and that's it because you have been the museum director at this museum since 2019 the conversation about returning the bronze is, has been taking place for very long time. why do you think it's taken germany this long to finally say that it's going to return? the bronze is tonight area i would return the creation. why is germany at the ready to give back one of the most important african harry teaching european museums. and i think because there is no emotional link written, i, jerry a for example, do the relation between germany and the media because of the genocide fear of genocide in 2020 century is much more difficult. that's why, for example, at this moment, germany is ready to execute been in bronzes, and for example, the british museum in london is absolutely refusing even refusing the discussion
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about palo. and i'm going to come see you now, because this is in producing this idea of connection. that's why it may be harder or easier. why do you think it's taking germany this long to return these bronzes? i think it's taken so much time because germany or even other european countries have a huge problem. also in acknowledging the colonial history and the cold, you know, colonial past and colonialism of the museum as an institution itself. and was acknowledging that museums, institutions that actually produce racism or reproduce, reproduce race. and in a way, i think this is something that has just maybe, maybe started to or that people are even more mending. right? and asking into demanding for institutions to consider that and to think critically about their own history. right. i want to pose that question to you and say, how do you feel as somebody of you know, somebody who's got affiliations to the african continent when you walk into museums
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and you see items that belong to africa, for example, that you know, people on the continent went back, how does it make you feel? the thing is, it's an expression of power. it's the same expression of power that it used to be 506-8208 couple of 100 years ago. so this is why i think that it needs to be brought back, not only because people need it over there, but because it here it actually does harm in giving the wrong image of african cultures or giving people still the possibility to dwell and to believe in these colonial ideas of possession and this and occupation of dominance. yeah. okay. so i'm going to come back to you and say what function should the been in bronze is have when they are returned to nigeria. i saw one of the walks day and i could recognize the dow was taken from a shrine. so we always talking about museums and museums. some walks were broken
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off the dos of people's houses by the end of the museums. here you see a low pod there. what is low power to you? it means something to our feet more than just an animal. i don't know if your parents truly have a connection like a culture, a connection to it. why are we talking about how we will keep our own property is ours to give you back, jerry, i do want to come to you because you are a historian. do you think that we will be able as a continent to preserve these artifacts when they are returned to us in a way that ensures that they will be the centuries the time. we can accuse the appearance of whatever we like, but they have kept these items. will we do the same in africa? we will, we still have been in bronzes, into 3 centuries if those been bronzes and other artifacts are returned to the country. absolutely, i mean they came from arse. so if you were able to preserve them percent for so many generations and puts them on from one generation to the next until they were looted, why won't we not be able?
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when we get them back to be able to do the same process, not only they made the bin in bronze, but most of the artifact that's still in the museum, this is just a part of it. but the, so marsh even here, will be a, standing on the seller. you know, the so much that is coming from the whole of the african continent. and it's just kept somewhere, you know, in paper is all, you know, wrapped somewhere. and then this history goes the way you know, we kind of have and then are a colonial amnesia within the african continent of the teens that they took. and what actually, that means for us as young african people that we have our histories lying somewhere invisible in duck sailors. i do have a question for you. yeah, it's germany going to return every single than in bronze in exposition actually is . it is really, this is the decision to nigeria to say ok, we want to have everything back. i would say every so we can into preach this paper, these documents on very different levels. my interpretation is now we have this
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paper and actually everything could return to nigeria. ok, and you know, i'm going to give you the last word now because it's just germany so far that made the commitment to return the bronze. it's true number of countries. the brits which have the biggest collection, the british museum, they've not said anything about retaining those funds is what is your message to country that still hold onto these artifacts? if you'd already turn these walk, you're not taken away from morse. you're taking everything that makes us off, that's what you're taking. and or that's what i've been taken before, right? return in the art. it's just one way of saying we did wrong. have this start to learn by your people. and that's, i think it's something that everybody can relate to. and that does it for today's st debate here in the german city of cologne. but the conversation really doesn't end here. of course, we're interested to know what you think about what we've discussed here today. if
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africa's stone or not is going to be safe when he just returned to the continent, then perhaps, what is your message? 2 countries who have not quite taken the decision that germany is taken to return to africa. what's rightfully belongs to the continent. so for myself with him on the team, it's been great having you with us looking forward at your engagement in the coming section. bye for now. the. the thanks a lot, christine, for you very insightful discussion. while countries like germany and the us, how commit that to retaining the bronzes. i will keep you in the loop on how fast things develop. now, if you want to watch a longer version of database, you can catch it on our youtube channel. some of you are ready sent us your comments, let me just get to a couple of them. stop in width on the my plan who wrote, i stand against the return of the arts because it is now out dated. they should pay for all the stolen african object financially. ok. interesting one that thank you
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very much for that. then donny donny wrote, we need to change the merits of the taught us in history class. that is and restore our african heritage for future generations. so these i a couple of the comments we had keep got to be going on. you page. now we're not done talking about art. let's go meet 3 artists from nigeria and kenya, whose art will blow your mind, especially if you're into science fiction. in the art of cyrus could be discarded. technology is given new life of ads and radios, become space, age communication devices, wrapping your bicycles called white mothers. are turned to sculptures that could have been left here by an alien civilization. the series of eyeglasses called se
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on me to be famous, constructed from trash collected on his travelled, thorough mash up of different cultural for different to me of tablet is a feature later on by nation of different cultures. this material different from like global a tv. it's how something new, clumsy, be more of a little more a shift. no, it's more awful. future kenyon, photographer, osborne lataria, reimagined, kenya's legendary mal mouth independence spiders as high tech optician. to help over throw colonialism from a carrier, apple futurism is about reimagining, an african pass either stolen or forgotten countries from the colonized and people didn't get to settle. see that history or
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see them in the history or a lot of that history was not documented or was data rolling images to find the mostly negative view of africa seen in western media. we do have issues, but our issues don't want to remove our own poverty from 9 disease, you know, war, this, tory, that we can tell that sort of give a different perspectives. my whopping owners bones because always be confident. the message yesterday, to be a boy as perception of africa across the continent in nigeria, afro futurism is also taking root. a new generation of african artists is looking at their own culture from a new angle. common folk artist, yoda g ma, kinda credits, black panther aqua got before. no, i've been known to be for about the a 3rd world country and then black panther bring seats to
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the 4th floor and i think was power that is completely loaded with technology. it was my glory africans everywhere were wow, black panther might have brought acro futurism to the mainstream. but mackenzie believes the next wave of storytelling will be home from that. when we talk about africa choices, it's like i'm intersection of 45 things. technology science shows. it should african intelligence african traditional and african cultural. this culture in itala geez, or region up from yes because we are more on the weather in comics, movies, music or design. the art of afro futurism combines tradition with imagination, vision, a brighter future for africa. and the world that's
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right, creating a bright future for africa on the well, some cool stuff that the east and west combining to give us the best. but let's the in my area use lead creative hub on training center. in my degree is using modern technology ideas, exchange and doing our capital to unleash the potential of young nigeria and photographers and filmmakers. my degree, the federal capital of nigeria is born. i state over the past 10 years, the fight against the terrorist group of bucko rom has repeatedly up ended people's lives. perhaps not the most fertile ground, the young creative thought ups. and yet the city has a small emerging star. how plain aren't you pronounced like mohammed because see a huge potential and how much is the founder of the co developing hub or cd in my glory? this is where he sees the future of the regions job. in 2018,
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the hub is become a training center for tech in previous a meeting points for creative young people and a lead for digital storytellers have done so many solution and innovation program for young people to build on the ideas, to use, to generate ideas, but not only to generate ideas, but also to see how they can be a benefit to society using the id as without much support from people. so tom will 100 and his team of trained over 1000 people in strategic community, asian, graphic design and photography. they also help young people like a team shami realize their career goals fell in and all of the transmission lines as to be wedding photographer. i have passion but to go for a long, but i didn't get to know how it is. delight compositions, angles. i don't know about them at 1st, but know that i know about him. i am very happy to my because of the more compelling than the aside for theory classes,
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mohammed and his team support filmmakers and spoken word artists bring their productions to the next level. and generate social change across nigeria, the when it goes to behave, let one engineers me. this is a disease that has been killing people, not based on gender. lee jones, also. all right, we'll call for god's sake. i'll go to think and you make us f o for welcome enemy. i want you to understand you are talking a press, the window place where you have you ever had the what the, what i dislike the insecurity in the region. well, how much? because hosted to be it's trimming, vitalize north, east nigeria, creative drive so all hands on deck could be the challenges in life for a better future. now, i'm sure we all looking forward, we call it and demick free future. right for that to happen. we have to dig back,
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see when we have a chance to many people have concerns about taking them. so let's help ease your fears with a video that explains why vaccines us the for you. am i, rene vaccines against cover 19 a safe for you and your genes? social media posts claim that the new coffee 19 vaccines were irreversibly change your genetic material. this is false, me pam, or renee vaccines messengers which give instructions for sell to produce a so called spike protein. the spike poaching is found on the surface of the virus that causes causes 19 in the nucleus of your cell, your d. n. a is surrounded by a double membrane blocking the messenger from entering. after this fight protein is created. the messenger vaccine is broken down into smaller harmless molecules. the
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immune system recognizes that the spike approaching does not belong lee, and begins building antibodies. shoot the real corona via enter your body. it now knows how to protect itself. contrary to some claims, the vaccine want to reprogram your d n a. but that provide yourselves with the necessary information to kill device. you know, i recently got my fast job of coping vaccine. so do the same. if you have the chance home that notes, that's all we have for you on the show. you can follow up on the social media and write as an email to 77 at d, w dot com. that's all for me. i am at a michael junior leave you with some music from poly food with both saw you next time. i
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you know? yeah, yes. we are in half germantown, we bring you angela mac, or as you've never had before surprised yourself with what is who is medical really well packed. and once we talk to people who follow along the way, admirers and critics alike, and how is the world's most powerful woman shaking her leg is be joining us for macros. last it's about billions and it's about power. it's about the foundation of the world order, the new silk road. china wants to expand its influence with this trading network also in europe. china is promising this partners rich profit. in europe, there's a sharp warning you ever accept money from. the new super power will become
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dependent on it. china's gateway, europe starts july 1st on dw, the news. the news, the this is b w news line from berlin. a search for the victims in search for answers in miami hopes fade for more than 150 people missing in the collapse of an apartment block. the rescue efforts are facing setbacks and many are asking why storm warnings about the building safety were ignored. also coming up, britons health ministry steps down after breaking corona virus.
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