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tv   Kulturzeit  Deutsche Welle  June 30, 2021 6:30pm-7:00pm CEST

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me all the money and money and on the voices. the only way i can be is to create my own empire story this weekend on d w. d w a show coming up today, hong kong, new climate. the yeah. it is one year since john, i both a top security law. we ask what has changed since the crackdown and we hear from a young activist determined to continue speaking out. we feel like we have to stay pumped, especially when prominent figures are either in jail or in exile deli bunger, they're suffering aside the number of over 1000 cases. as the delta variance spreads, the government is prepared to introduce drastic measures to try to bring the
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numbers down. and plastic pollution is a growing problem in indonesia. authorities are unable to even collect much of the garbage. now though, a startup has come up with a way of producing waste. the news i british manager, welcome to the the other news a show. glad you could join us. right group, amnesty international says hong kong national security law has created a human rights emergency for the people of the city. one year since its implementation, anti government protests have been muzzled. 100 the rested for endangering national security and prominent activists put behind bars. but still some persist, like student pro democracy activists long, yet chin riding his politics and his love of hong kong into his skin.
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they'll be with one your chin even in the darkest days. solving talk on the whole. i hope me remind me of the beliefs i started with, even if i'm jailed in the future. one started the group student politicize from last may just after hong kong or is heard about the national security law. at 20, he's one of the oldest in the group. there is young as 15. there's some of the few still visible on the streets. many other groups are gone, but i still have got no many political influences, seldom speak in public. fear that could be called under the national security law with all else, especially with that being so uncertain migalia how we feel like we have to step out. especially when prominent figures are either in jail or in exile, one has been arrested for times in the last year, twice just this month. march is our band under pandemic rules. he and his group
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hand out leaflets instead, but it's enough to get him into trouble. what if, even the terms, freedom and democracy become to be one day, i will compromise on my speech or that if you will, she and his group support those already in jail. they take supplies to protest, years behind bars and all. and we've got many see we are the kids chosen by the time, but i think it's we who have chosen this era. i think i've seen the symbols on his skin state, his certainty, the tattoos are messages of defiance to his future self and jeremy. now for morris hong kong, for democracy, actor is different law and it's an up people like born yet chin was still publicly protesting against the government. a rarity in hong kong now. well definitely after the implementation of the national security law,
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government basically fees or protest brushing the national security. and it, people who are rested under the law could face up to decades or even lifelong prism . and so we impose what tara in hong kong. so people like one chin and other who are still protesting on the street has bravery to go against this fear. probably readiness for decent long, jo, time so they are definitely not as many as before. but i believe that even though for those who are not protesting on the streets, they still have a lot of opposition and content source, the government can you describe for us how life is changed in the city since the law was implemented? i'm wondering specifically if the impact is only in the political arena or it extends to other aspects of daily life. well, the, the facts of the national security law is actually covering all aspects of life.
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it is not only introducing a new law in john call, but completely different ways of governing the city. we used to believe that one country to the, to, to system mr. that is a fire war in between hong kong and china system. that hong kong still is freedoms is not told him in democracy. but i think the while the meaning of the national security law is more than just a low transplant. the way that the government sees the centralization of power, men and china, and implement them into hong kong. so that you could see lots of officials now claiming that he has no deficient power. and from the government is trying to you rhodes or the checks and balances available in society. so not for protect this, but you can see that journalist media education publication also to
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expect in the civil society are being severe the courthouse and scrutinize or even some of the organization dispense. because the government for nowadays does not allow any checks and balances and monitoring from the society. and if and a beijing always maintained the national security law was meant to bring about prosperity and stability to hong kong. do you think the majority of hong kong guys would agree with that view? well, definitely not. if you look at the 2019 district counseling election when the pro democracy came, which was a little troll movement, they won't landslide victory. you will actually express the view by voting one of the most ordinary practice in the classic countries. and that's a very clearly they won't democracy. they want the government to be held accountable. the implementation of the national security is quashing our freedoms
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and that not what all people want. now this law is only one year old, but as time passes, do you think voices of protest in the city will gradually fade and be replaced by the reality of the cities political situation? well i think that would definitely be the way to protest, but it just takes time. we've been to, we've been through a lot of ups and downs and a lot of countries, even though they have more strict political situation like momma but still people coming out to protest, patricia moved on the cycle. so i believe that in the future when the energy in the civil society grows and approaches and less than that will be definitely another way of protect. and if you left hong kong about the same time, last year as this message was coming into force, was that the right decision for you? well i think for now i've been able to be
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a voice of ongoing continue to become phone call and continue to do my in special effort as work these are unable to achieve when use remain on call. so i think that i have played a role for now. i think it's important for the movement law. thanks so much for joining us today. a bit now about another. she has a situation with covert 19. the country will implement the strict locked on from thursday to tackle rapidly rising infections initially planned for a week. it comes up to the surgeon cases, particularly in areas bordering india. the delta variance has run rampant and the government want to avoid a repeat of the devastation it caused in india. the mid 19 crisis is pushing this hospital near bangladesh and border with india to its limit. relatives desperate to secure medical care and oxygen for their loved ones. the one will be important issue with the patients we're currently seeing is that
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oxygen saturation levels, they can't be managed properly with only oxygen cylinder concentrated. and if we can't provide them with a central oxygen line, god forbid the casualties may increase. more than 14000 people have died in bangladesh since march last year, and daily infections. a currently skyrocketing after the pandemic case, a devastating peak in india in april, death began to rise in bangladesh. the border between the 2 countries was shut, the people continued to cross illegally prompting new infections and fatalities. the virus is now raging through smaller towns and villages in the border regions. easy by making the tests free, we can now locate the covert positive population. people from the villages are
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coming to get tested and it's proving the virus has spread significantly in the villages. the surgeon cases have pushed the government to double down restrictions and a partial shut down began in phases on monday, leading to a rush of migrant workers to flee the cat from decker. as of this thursday, all economic activity will be halted and a stringent nationwide lockdown will kick in. but will it be enough to combat the delta there and, and alaska vaccines. 1000000 doses of china. so i know from vaccine recently arrived in bangladesh, but it's still waiting for 20000000 astrazeneca doses from india and the 2 and a half 1000000 doses of the medina vaccine from the u. s. before those arrive, mass vaccinations cannot begin. plastic waste is a proven to be a growing problem for indonesia. a lot of that comes from single use ashes that are discarded, but cannot be recycled. now
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a start up into capital jakarta has come up with a seemingly simple way of tackling the problem. and as the report is proving popular with the locals, delivered straight to one's door cleaning products without the plastic packaging. it takes just a few clicks on an app or a text message. and growing numbers of jer, cartons are taking advantage of the offer. got sick las we can refill our bottles and reduce the plastic waste neighbors here of joined us with a billy cyclic was set up in 2019 especially for lower income communities to help reduce the use of products that are packaged in foil pouches. these single use pouches do offer convenient access to every day household essentials, but even when they're discarded, they often stick around. indonesia has a huge plastic pollution problem. the country generates almost 8000000 tons of
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plastic waste annually. and more than half of that waste is not managed properly. a lot of times, you know, in indonesia actually only 45 percent of race gets collected. because a lot of the small towns there is no funding for it. it's not, it's not cheap. you know, and so i think that the government is looking for a solution that are not just ok. let's recycle. i'm all for recycling. but a lot of these products, actually you cannot recycle. so it's good if there's ways that you can actually reduce it rather than you know and have it out of the system. and so that's actually really helpful, and i think the government is supportive demand for the deliveries is growing fast . and not only because they're actually cheaper than the stuff in packages. so the companies c, e o. i think indonesians across our class as they see the plastic problem and they
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care about their country, they care about making it better. and i think this is really why the responders been so good. good enough for plans to expand to more indonesian cities, helping people reduce and reuse their plastics. is more on our website. we will see you tomorrow by the, the literature invite just to see people in particular. and i like to seem to find the strange grown up world. only objective is to share with the same beautiful didn't the books on youtube? oh, it's about billions. it's about power, it's about the foundation of the new world order. the new silk road.
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china wants to expand its influence with this trade network and also in europe, conflicts are inevitable consequences. unpredictable gateway to europe starts july 1st on d, w, the the, the, the hello and welcome to arts and culture. well, after being deprived of live audiences for well over a year, the restart of cultural life is not without its challenges for some moral not. and also coming up the turkish tv series, known as d z, our breaking ratings records all over the world from pakistan to chili. and we looked into what makes them so successful when he calls himself a musical maverick. and when he chose to become an organist american cameron
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carpenter knew that he had to tread some new ground. so he decided designed a digital organ that he can take on tour to get it out of the church, so to speak. and his flamboyant on orthodox performance is typically take large audiences by storm. but despite all that, getting back on stage in berlin, after months of lockdown has not been a cake book. the. he's one of the worlds fastest organist. but even cameron carpenter got slowed down by the pandemic. now he's awakened his digital turing, oregon from his lockdown slumber and is once again playing live in an indoor venue before a small audience. ah, coming back to playing just now before the people after playing for thousands of people. i feel definite nervousness. and of course now i'm older, so we all are after good ben demick really helps in the aging. so,
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you know, of course now it's, it's not so nice to be feeling a little bit nervous about playing in front of people and finding myself a little shaky. oh, the location is not a concert hall, but a former mint in berlin built in the 1900 thirty's during the nazi era. and in use up until the 2000. me. it's difficult for me to imagine it being an industrial room because i know this room by its acoustic and, and if you think about the hammering of 3rd right coins and discontinued smashing of metal. it's, it's of a thought which is so ugly to me that it's almost, it's almost foreign when i'm sitting here playing the organ, the complex is now a cultural center. at the started this year carpenter moved in as artist in
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residence. having lost his rehearsal space during the pandemic sponsors covered the cost of moving and installing his touring, oregon, which carpenter himself designed. ah, i'm very lucky and i'm in an unusual position most of this oregon, and then with my career and what it's been. and i probably still have more, more opportunities than the average bear. but even in my position it's, it's been totally destabilizing and i have to say, artistically destructive period that he tried to fight against them. in the summer of 2020, he taught through germany with a truck performing outdoor concerts including in front of nursing home. but that wasn't enough to maintain the skills needed to play such a highly complex instrument. it's a bit like being a high level athlete in a way, you know, if you don't need to compete at a very, very high level, it's impossible to maintain the level the
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the carpenter is gradually returning to top for him on his touring morgan. but he doesn't think it will be easy to restart the entire classical music business in general. ah, it's a battleship. it's very difficult to turn quickly. obviously, it's important to get as many people back to work as we can. but i think it remains to be seen what the public comfort level with engagement and many, many other issues down the down the economic analytics tree, what those will be. the camera carpenter is planning more lie defense and even a new cd of composition bypass. he's cautiously optimistic for the future.
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well, exciting news in the art world as stolen paintings by pablo. picasso and dutch painter, peak monthly on, were recovered from a gorge in greece, picasso's, head of a woman, and monthly and early work summer, when mil it were stolen in a day. she is highest at the national gallery and athens back in 2012. during a presentation of the painting, at a news conference on tuesday, the work was perched on a table top, where at one point it even flipped onto the floor. culture minister lean, i'm and doni said the picasso would have been impossible to sell as it had a personal inscription by the artist. because they had gifted it to greece in recognition of the country's resistance to nazi forces during their 19412442 patient. a portraits of british painter david hockney done by his long time friend and contemporary, lucien floyd sold at sotheby's in london on tuesday for
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a whopping 14900000 pounds. that's about 17300000 euros old freud. and hawk me are among britons, most acclaimed artists, and the portrait painted at the peak of freud's career is now the most expensive work by him ever to sell at auction and friends of the marvel comic franchise showed up many of them in cost play at a red carpet event in new york on tuesday for the much anticipated film. black widow stirring scarlet hanson, she plays natasha romanoff, a. the black widow, a russian born despite turned avenger. and the film is among a slate of upcoming major releases that were postponed last year. due to the pandemic and cinema operators are hoping it will revive ticket sales when it hits theaters on july 9th. well to television now and as john ro, theories that's been taking the world by storm all the while steering clear of the simplistic labels soap opera or tele novella,
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d z with titles like magnificent century or 1001 nights are made in turkey. there sweeping epics with long episodes that tend to focus on family centered dramas. and meanwhile, they have huge audiences in asia, the middle east, and even latin america. this is the city with a population of over 50000000. in easement some 100 kilometers away the turkish tv channel t r t is filming the series. the last emperor. ah, it's about the life and times of the 2nd. the last powerful ottoman sultan me. the action begins in 18. 96. when until 100 is fighting on all fronts, against european palace, domestic revolutionaries and
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a range of other opponents. they want the same thing to bring down his ottoman empire. between 10150 minutes are produced each week. soon 5 seasons will have been short. the theories has been a runaway success in turkey, but also in many other countries. turkey has become the world's 2nd biggest exposure of tv shows the hollywood known as disease. these turkish theories have an especially big fan base in pakistan. resurrection to rule about the founding of the ottoman empire in the 13th century is showing here in this cafe dubbed into overdue . meaning it's common for whole families together to watch the turkey series together. this is the be, be sure that detail how the small dynasty,
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one of the greatest dentistry in history was formed. and these type of slummy historical tv shows are getting a lot of popularity and pockets done mostly because we lack this type of contact here. but not everybody is such a fan of some critical claim, but in these tv drama, history is being falsified for political purposes. they accused the government of turkish president richard ty, at one of using disease to glorify the ottoman empire and islam while defaming religious minorities. and undermining democracy. oh, they say the last emperor is revisionist and historically inaccurate. in 2 seasons of the series. one of the sultan's arch enemies is t. i don't have soap the founder of political zionism, and seem to be the spiritual father of the state of israel to fix it as
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a devious and to city a schema to keys regulatory authorities, the radio and t. v. do control what can and cannot be filmed. 6 is not allowed, nor drugs or swear words. homosexuality is to do masculinity and strength, a celebrated human law and how does the american canal currently 7 mainstream channels? they all struggle with censorship. the main problem is that the rules are not clear . i mean, no one knows what's allowed and what isn't all the normal does. and if you don't know what might be penalized, you are on the side of caution. yeah, much. oh cool. he's the producer of chicago, or the pit, which is about an influential murphy, a family in a dangerous it's danville neighborhood. the 2 is popular all over the world.
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and turkish series and not only popular in pockets done which is largely muslim. but also in sheila which is mainly catholic the. ready isabel driggers purchases turkish theories for the children channel t b n and ben, your whatever. so nancy, they resonate a long way because the stories are about everyday problems. they are universal stories and it doesn't matter whether the turkey and assembled or in santiago, chile. so these topics to women in particular day and prize the main audience, the telling a valid live when and what might be shows that features strong women and families. but ultimately it's men who have to say one's turkey is a patriarchal country. ah, considered the rise in conservatism, not only in turkey,
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but also in the world by starting back. maybe it has reached conservatism, is now decline again off. but because these turn to show that they're in a way stir, i like to be watched by somebody over the world. however, these turkish theories are interpreted, they are clearly a breathtaking success. normal and this fails, are expected to reach over a 1000000000 us dollars in the next 2 years. the well to finish off just days before it's reopening, the t. i truck along in buenos aires, argentina prepared, it's majestic chandelier. weighing 1300 kilos with 3700. 35 lights. pardon me? it was lowered from the main hall dome for its annual maintenance ritual and will leave you with some impressions of that and until next time all the best from us in berlin and stacy. the. ready
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news. ready ah . ready ready ready ready ready ready the news, the news, the news ah,
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you ready to these places in europe are smashing all the records into a venture. just don't lose your breath. the treasure map for modern globe trotter's cover some of us record breaking. and now also in book form against the corona virus pandemic has the rate of infection in developing what measures are being taken the what does the latest research say? information and context, ah, really, by recent data, special, monday to friday on d. w. the
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case feels jewish life in europe went home, producer, owner and journalist eve cooper or exploring, delving into history and the present because that i would never believe so openly. i'm so freaking my company to remind myself because i grew up in a completely different way. it's broad, it's jewish in years, the 2 part documentary starts july 5th on dw,
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the, in the news . this is the w news life. and then the last year, me and the soldiers arrived home from afghanistan as well in ends in peacekeeping mission, nearly 20 years with afghans left behind. what about what will happen to them when all the international troops have gone? also on the program. a deadly heath ways and gulf in western canada doesn't die as temperature is a record breaking.

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