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tv   Maybrit Illner  Deutsche Welle  July 3, 2021 7:00am-8:01am CEST

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the money can be a process of flattery and the best laid plans and often go astray will win the game of diplomatic poker use power plays and the lines behind the climate. some it starts on d w me ah, this is d w. news and these are top stories. us defense officials say the last remaining american and need to troops have left a bag or military base in afghan and stand and handed over to afghan forces. bag room was the center of the u. s. in nato's war against the taliban, and i'll call you to the west say they're on track to remove most us forces by
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september. the german chancellor, uncle america, and british prime minister boys johnson say their countries will work together closely just by britons exit from the u. right after face to face talks in london, medical said she hopes britons have been fully vaccinated against corona virus. will soon be able to travel to germany without quarantine. with her last official visit to the u. k. before stepping down later this year also appears to spain and italy, fans are celebrating after their teens advance to the european championships in the finals. spain be underdone, switzerland in a dramatic penalty issued out in italy and belgium, packing after $21.00. when in regular time, heavy weights, italy in, spain will finish off on tuesday in london, wimbleton stated in this is dw news from berlin. there is much more on our website at w dot com the
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the life it is and the germans and grace is not people playing the music. people breathing and so different, separate the man it means for me because this music touched me really deep. i love every single nose. it's
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me. the church of san marco, in the heart of milan. it was here that just a verity, they viewed as requiem and $874.00. and exactly 145 years later, you're doing currencies. is the conductor stand? he's directing his music. i town of orchestra. enquire, comprised of 180 musicians and 4 vocal soldiers. mm. mm mm.
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i think the very beginning of with a changing, whispering recruitment and donation looks all these way. she discovers these mysterious light and lack of we spoke this morning from all the sensuous so munching. ah, [000:00:00;00] i use the
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use me o me me the. 2 news you need to get the kind of spiritual, wandering, spiritual adventure of searching the place. and then at one point you fell in the same pattern, was the composer and then you have
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a lot of information to bring up here. ah you said the verity is one of italy's most famous composers. he wrote 28 offers and one funeral mess. the message directly nearly composed the requiem in honor of italian poet, the novelist alessandro my own, precisely a year after his death daddy's requiem had its premier to church, a son, micah the news. everybody even made some critics that said that there was an ultra not sacred music, but everybody recognized from, from, from the 1st bad moment from the 1st need you to that was a major work of art and master piece. moving everybody in
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a way that still is so in fact different. yes. so in europe, since the 1st perform, i mean i know everybody wanted to get the performance of missed that and it became one of the most important works by the end sacred music pieces. the not, some in general performed and be laughed by, by the, the mm mm
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mm ah, the composer yes, is music in a certain dimension and brings this music to our dimension. goes music is not the nodes. is these the same metaphysic emotion. then you can feel with your helper senses about something and then you start to find a way to bring him down to transcript in language or sound what it is in another unspeakable and undetermined place.
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then of course the composer is not for me, this kind of creator that she creates from 0 this she just jensen this environment and brings it here. now the performer, what has to do is to start from this environment here and go back to this search that the composer was, take the music and brought it here. the me, born in athens and trained in saint petersburg to currencies is one of the most exciting conductors of our time from 2004, 2010. he was music director of the noble, severe sc. they'd opera ballet theater. it was there where he found it, his music, eternal ensemble,
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and chamber quire. the news when he became artistic director of the opera and ballet theater in western russia . he took music. i turned along with him. right from the start couldn't see demonstrated his passion for getting people excited about music. ah, so what i'm doing is to prepare all this connection we found inside of listening and gender and understanding and every mean and what is the function and then
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try to bring this mysterious light in doing the performance the reminding can, gets transformed. and these, all these functions august quality doesn't remains in the 1st layer of quantity, but becomes kind of sacred between people in the in the me
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the the me me. 2 ah, i use i me. 2 ah
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ah ah ah, the yeah me i i use
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i when i met him it was for me like it kind of artistic fusion because i, i immediately understood what he wanted. maybe i could not give it immediately to him, but i understood what he wants and i totally approved what he was looking for. so the very special thing about his vision, and of course the vision we are altogether trying to bring with him to you is finding again, the original score. and when i mean your original score is that we have to be aware that invert is core v r a moment where it's written 6 piano. and then suddenly you have, i think, 4 or 514. so in an hour and a half of music, we have to find a way to do 6 piano and $514.00. and you need to,
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to hear these differences. ah, the ah, ah, the me. oh, the me. oh
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i this music takes a lot of efforts from every musician playing and singing. and of course the main challenge is to, to follow doors, fluid vision of this music. every time he changes details, she is like never satisfied with what he's doing. so he captures the exact moment of the birth and life of the sounds. and depending on how it goes, she can change really like really a lot who could change really a lot anytime the
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ah ah ah, the me the. 2 2 2 me ah
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ah, use . we'll need to be trying to tell him the same language. so considering that we are like, really kind of people. it's kind of a musician to get together and this is very has to get but when you get it it's really comes with a k o o o the oh. 2
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the the. 5 me ah ah oh, i like the fact that in this piece you feel being a part of something great. and as a solar you have to of course very,
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very exposed solo moment. and then suddenly you have to mel traverse in the course, the trio, the quite sure how to do it. and for example, the new day is the, the most exposed moment because you are at the octave with the soprano, you're seeing exactly the same same, but it has to sound like a unique voice. the ah ah,
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the news news. the news the ah sir,
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there is not this is going to be connected all the time with what he's going to something like which is change. and this is something very honest and very hard to follow and very has always for him to find the truth. everything about him is special and to work with him, of course it's a great privilege and that really deep satisfaction of, in, in a way of creating music together. but also it's a great challenge because he's obsessed with the quality. i think he's a genius, meaning that he is totally in the music. he's completely involved in what he's doing. and for me, the genius is this person who is what he explores what he's
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magnified. ah oh the. busy busy busy ah, oh yeah the, the. busy me
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oh with ah this oh, surely not, engine is soon enough, perfectionist. and just i think sue a little bit different things in scores from other musicians. i'm a little bit individual. i will say that's the only thing i can say among those and up so that friend of the composer that i decided to interpret the
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the the, the, the, me the, the, me to be the
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i use regular rate to grade form for doing some because you deal with some things that you deal every day actually just deal with death and life. and while you do rec, them your you are code to answer to, to, to from,
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to mental questions. if you believe in life after death. and if you believe in life before death, who need them all in? are all ah me
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me ah. the me the news the the finding a job and learning new skills. young african to themselves from way to watching that to be a motto of
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a tenure thing or who returned from the us to know, roby. it just makes me realize that we actually have a lot of in person, dw, the do you like it? do you want the ok then luckily put the pedal to the metal. let's ride the red. 60 minutes on d w. ah, what people have to saying matters to
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me. that's why you listen to their stories. reporter every weekend on d. w. women in asia, i me little put all the money and lunch and on the voices. the only way i can be on top is to create my own empire story this weekend on d. w. welcome to a new edition of the 77 percent. the show for africa was you with, i'm your host lead show on this we show will focus on how women often have to go to great lengths in order to find work for me to young, uganda,
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and entrepreneurs who decided to take matters into their hands and create their own jobs. we get to know karen kenya's rising r n b star, who chose nairobi over boston for her career. and together with you, we are fighting gender based violence. you sent us your videos, dancing to the song. she was there and produced maybe as ease and the 77 percent. now the stages yours, work hard and school so that you get a good job. that's what many of our parents told us when we were a little. but finding work is tough for many young africans and south africa use unemployment rates are staggering. also in cape town, numb's not is one of those desperately looking for a job, but she knows that sitting around feeling sorry for herself won't help. so she's
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taking steps that she hopes will bring her closer to the launch of her career. me when i'm la and have friend school walk in in cape town, high street, rouzan and not buying is currently the only option. the 25 year old south african. it's unemployed and money is tight. i frustrating because there are a lot of things that i want for myself that i kind of myself and also for my child as well. so it's a bit frustrating and it's disgusting. as a home number, la city, psychology. i couldn't afford, has student fees anymore and have to stop by. she knows that even her classmates who graduated have difficulties finding the job. you have to have connection people employ their own. they get their own causes,
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the own sisters to get jobs in their own working places. so it's hard for you as an unknown to, to get a job. in addition to that, many women face the expectation of having to offer sex to get the job. if you want to have a job, you have to live with someone and it's not easy for some of us. i am married until i can do that and i can't live. i don't have feeling for so i'll just stay home and wait for my husband salary. while i'm still trying to get other forms of job. ah, in south africa, every 2nd person under 34 is currently unemployed. women of color are especially vulnerable and economy in recession is one of the reasons for the job crisis, but not the only one. most common chatting. she's chief operating officer of the youth, employment and geo her be the indication system fails. young people,
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young people are saying that they don't know how to go and look for the job, so they don't have the networks. they don't have the finances and they don't have the quality education. and they don't know what they'll be good at. so they, they don't know where to start. one number decided to tackle the challenge step by step, the 2 facebook post. she learned about how to m b and apply for a course. the n g o partners with companies to help young just find employment in the course number lie and their teammates learn about job essentials. they teach her how to make our own easy, then how to do things with a team because they know that okay, you've been an employee for a long time and then you don't really know how to tackle the challenges to team working with a team because you all all about to fax,
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the subbing we program, she's equipped with new skills and self esteem. i'm glad that as people can see that i am a positive person and i'm or is it shows that what i like to say. i also put in extra says the end of the program, and i'm hello found a temporary job as a teaching assistant, a big step in achieving hedging of getting permanent way. so there are 2 approaches to finding work. some like number last, she was to apply for jobs. others decide to create their dream, jobs themselves. and i was treated bay to just been carol and she talked to young entrepreneurs in the garden capital, compel up. and they discussed the thrill and the pitfalls of starting your own business.
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the hello and welcome to the 77 percent st debates. my name is joseph, encouraging and we are in company today with a young team of interpreters that will be speaking to us about the challenges, but also giving solutions that young people can pick from as they get into enterprise ships. so we're going to quickly start and i'm going to start with tarry, sorry, who is a young person, you just graduated and why are you looking for for my employment? i have been looking for a job since i started university. surprising. i've been looking for a job because i was like, i don't want to get out of university and then i don't have a job. but then when you're applying for job, everything you know is going to find people asking for experience 5 years experience 6 years, experience 3 as experience. i mean, like having studied walking it. so how am i going to have that experience? and besides that, i think it's not only gained the experience when i'm giving them an opportunity to walk. also, the good thing about it is next to you at 2 people who've been in this field for
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a long time. but i'm curious before i move on to them, what do you think it's going to be like? do you have a plan and do you think it's going to be an easy journey? i love cooking. i love, i love would full. i'm is a thing i've done so it gives me that images of food we used before. i had done things. i love cooking and i've always wanted to have a research on my own. but then also i research and i need copy to. i've been also to have that copy too. that means i have to have something i'm doing in order to get the copy to. all right, so sundry, you've been in business for a couple of years now. i'm curious to know what your tax was like, would be easy after my 5 degree. just like ha, i was looking for a job and i failed to find one. so at that point of time, i would want a skill and that was how to mix up. i say i'm making the soap during that night. during the day i would look for plans to buy from me that someone go to ricky, who is a bit of a celebrity. what was it like for you at the start?
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i was in the board about the industry as a motorcycle taxi rider and grew from being a motorcycle ready to being a tour guide and lost a friend in the border related accident. and saturday was an advocate of road safety. well, was just promoting m at wearing and that's how the idea was billed to now what we know today are safe border which has grown to become the number one right. adding up and say, what taxi in africa. i think i like them because they're 5, they get us in place in time, but then it's the safety issues, marin, you're in one of the businesses that it's quite scary for a lot of people into money lending. tell me about the one thing that's happened to you in that business. that was situation that has have had been to me was when i came mean you have lived out many to people and you are seeing that tuition that to find out what's working van or to doing anything. and then you have to recover your
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copy to back your why did i proceed? but you cannot receive it because i don't moment, there is no way you can tell someone i want my money when they are not working. i'm ready. all right. the challenges people, most policies done by young people, you find a policy like if you go to the bank, you have to collect your. i'm telling you about that you by about 25 percent. that's very expensive. and we've been sharing into a business setting, you know, ricky, i'm curious about the challenges you fist along the way. you will hear some of the stories one day, the business that has been killed because of that fission and, and to, to, to, to be on. you would really believe that that vision is good for this country, but we don't want technician to really be like a tool that can be used by certain units and government to kill businesses. thank you very much, ricky sandra. i'm curious about, you know, listening to what tricky saying does this also speak to the investment climate? do you think that our climate here encourages investments?
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the environment here does not favor investment. if you're going to go and burn money, you're burned. that's about 85 percent. but if you go to many linda, you can get that money at 10 percent. $0.15 per month at the very high. she said it's betty present that you pass a test that's very high play investment. because you see me, i must show up when you are to i invest, we mostly impact looking at impact more. so when you give me this money, it's expensive. i'm of the metric tons that and then i may make does maybe after i yeah. so that's what makes the investment. yeah, very expensive. so we need more alternative 30. i'm curious about, you know, one of the issues you raised was lack of capital. and i know that there a lot of government programs for young people. so the youth livelihood program and so on, these things you've thought about, have you tried and failed? is it just not working? what is it? i haven't really tried out, but then i've had it from friends, i've had friends say the government programs that help. but then also,
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i don't know how to approach these people. how do we approach them? what is needed? where do you start from? i'm going to listen phase about the things and we are in school about in the school and stuff like that. ricky, you left when we mentioned be so when we spoke about government funding, you are laughing and i'm curious, had you tried this before? have you had stories? what is it about it? so i'm actually laughing because i kind of see you as an agent or a promoter, you have what we call foreign investors. and the foreign investors, mostly from $22.00 countries, india to be specific on china. these people have good, huge investment. and you've, you hear of stories that an investor is going to build a hospital, and government is going to find the investor to build the ospital. and these are the things that really, really had to end. the reason this is happening is because they're able to really give money to a few other people able to convince the government we want a government that we got and we love our country. so my go supported by that of
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young people and employee and employed the people making sure that i was 1520 percent of the total population of uganda. let's get real about this issue that when you think about in inclusion for the people. and i think one of the key things that i hear you sort of hinted is the people who are making decisions. youth as you should actually be us, the people are making dish and for asked don't know, as one of the things constantly here is capital to start a business is one of the things that tory mentioned. and i'm curious to, to the ladies and decide what your solutions to tori's problem. so the fact from where you start to what you have 80 percent is behavior. you have to lock the display and you have to keep on improving. just solve. i invest in a book every, every month i read a book, i listen to different people speaking, mentoring me. i had to learn how to play. people had to learn how to hire. i had to learn how to fire. so i so much believe for most businesses that the most the key. so we have solutions,
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but we also have challenges and i think it's up to everybody out there to, you know, pick whether they're going to take them up and utilize them. but i think they've been really great solutions from people who have started from nothing to get to where they all. and so that's it for the 77 percent here in compet. thank you for joining us. and that's it. the thanks a lot to everyone involved in this debate, and you can check out a longer version of the debate on youtube. well, making a korea sometimes comes with the wish to go abroad. and this is exactly what thing are karen from kenya did, but when she was in the united states, she realized that the best place to make it is actually her hometown nairobi. so
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she is back on the continent. 2 2 my name is karen and some people who are not the kern, i musician i thing i produce. i felt like i play some instruments here and i just got back from berkeley college of music. couple years ago, i was in boston, and i decided to come back and live in arabic. me. it has been a part of my life. so apparently since the age of 4, i've known that i wanted to be a singer. and so i just pursued things that would keep me in line with that taking music lessons performing and every chance i got in school wasn't hearing to make the performance track for the dance team in school. i always found myself doing something musical. i when i heard that
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3 in 5 kids wants to leave the country. i'm not surprised like conversations that i have my friends. everybody always like. yeah. but you can't do it in kenya. so you know, ma'am, working to get out of here or even meeting. so i, i work with without mckennan limitations in mind. and so i hope to travel. and so when i did get to leave the country for the 1st time, i've never been to the states. i never lived abroad. that was with cool, but i was somewhat disappointed. i feel one of those you that really want to leave countries. i would say do it like go, travel, go see the world go acquire as much information as you can. and so leaving isn't always a bad thing. is this like, don't leave and then don't come back to need. we still need young, great minds and my purpose is to break boundaries using music. and i think that's something that we did back income la and something we didn't
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really set out to do. we just did it naturally and that was all of our purposes at the time. and i feel like i just have to continue doing what i do just to show others that it's possible. be just making pop music, making alternative music being a female and african making music that can transcend boundaries trans, on borders. yeah, i think there's a lot of doubt self down in kenya and a lot of suppressed artistic expression. and so i feel like i just need to pop up bubble and just allow the people to use that. it's not that we don't have talent, it's just that talented people don't see that there are, it can be useful. i'm already super passionate about other artists and i mean i got into this industry by being
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supported by the artist and i have people like octopus who would give me advice. you know is the have my back blinky bill or the have my back with any of the drama queen and they still do so mentors and mentoring people that just opened my mind up so much. i've met so many different kinds of people and then it just makes me realize that we actually have a lot here in kenya and people are really talented. people are really cool. people are stylish, we have a lot to offer. and so the fema juxtaposition is like being in the states. everyone talks about the faces so much opportunity. and i really think that the opportunities are in africa right now. the so much possibility and our perspective hasn't really been considered. we haven't really explored what we can do you by me. i just love what karen said about the fact that there are lots of
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opportunities in africa. i mean, these days it's common to see women in managerial positions or working in sectors, but used to be male dominated for example, i t or engineering. but what we often don't hear about is how many women are being for us to have sex with men in power. in order for them to get a job. we asked women in lagos, nigeria, how common it is for men to ask for sexual acts during job interviews. me is it common thing for the female ad of a story. ok, friend is somebody so close to me. you know, she wins for jump or thing and she got to the place. the man told her that's
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before he can give her the job. she has to do some stuff in the like, gets a better man level of level of law. and she told me each has been laid out. that's the we the man does for all the female stuff. walking with him there, the money journal whereby that just in position to employ them. we say you want to go out to them before the car secure the job. so it really happens in this country . if you must get songs in, people do see if you must get something you use what you have to get what you want . so is for like those people in charge, they want to access you to sleep with them one or 2 days before they can find the job. and you that's really need the job. you, we have to do the absolute to do those
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testimonies are just sucking. and the sad fact is that this is not just happening in nigeria. on facebook, we asked you whether it is common for women in your region to be coerced into having sex for jobs. and here's what you wrote. spar are true, fina says in namibia, it's a culture. thomas, one moment says here in uganda it's even worse. and honestly, it's the only option for our dear sisters. and finally, girl, a club says it's a pretty full situation. in cameroon, it's everywhere from churches to schools and even companies. well, but my dear and woman in our next report is fighting against this. i said to cobb, dumble wants to protect women from sexual violence and she offers job opportunities to those who need them the most. the women in the refugee camp in my degree,
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in northeastern nigeria, one of the cities, the most affected by the local, her insurgency. i should to come down, boss is on their way to visit women living at the internally displaced people come in my degree, the capital of nigeria, northeast street. she said gender equality, activist, and whole sweatshops. ah, i used to come for the i difficult time to time to discuss with woman on the importance for them to allow their doors as to what school was i talked to them on how to prevent them from issue that has to do with vendor dis valez especially sexual gender. there's valez over 1600 cases of gender based violence. well, water in north eastern nigeria in 2019 alone. this includes re assault and 4th. marriage. mark cases have been reported since the beginning of the book. her, i'm in the, in 2009 i said to herself,
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was forced into an early march. most of it had to stop her own n t o b one i want to not is out why it is 34 issues that has to do with sexual valez on all forms of gender. there's vaughn is, i want to know is, can i do the out 111 face you want to, i spell for political office, know what you will be able to, to, to, to, to bring her down using some cultural disease. i look at him for women in she just region is difficult and dangerous. religious fundamentalists have threatened her with physical violence and truth harass online, but i should is more determined than ever. she has reached over 20000 women and girls creating job opportunities and vulnerable workplace skills is high priority. and the sewing machine has helped me a lot. if i have financial problems,
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i can so one or 2 items and get paid for them. so i can solve my problems myself. i'm so grateful to those who have taught me the skill. now go there. i don't know. what else i should just workshop has become a safe haven. after experience and trauma, the hands of the insurgents tell you that they surrounded the whole place and started shooting. but we managed to escape from you at the camp. we've learned so many things. for instance, we don't send out our goals alone, but their male counterparts idea that we women have also become self sufficient so we can take care of ourselves and our children and that will happen today. she continues to grow, hey, initiative. she is dream is to improve the lives of many women and not niger area as possible. sexual violence continues to be an outraging issue. also in the media. some time ago, young women took to the streets with
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a powerful message. enough is enough. this inspired namibian musician ease to produce a song against vendor based violence in collaboration with us. but that's not all you all joined in and sent us your video clips. so always feel free to get in touch on facebook or our new instagram channel because we always love to hear from our followers. and here as a final treat, i present you the version of ease a song feature ring. you are a $77.00 per centers. i was show, thank you so much for being with us today and for always supporting the show. enjoy and see you next time. the way that
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you work with interest to get you say you're the king, but you know what i mean? cuz we always take care of that. we don't, we relate them perfect. now we go on the board agenda via my why, why that might be a problem. we can have women girls avoid being taken. been sure to be safe . i'll be making this sheet that kind of thing to the 2nd country don't,
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will the entire company. we'll this moment and we don't want to go through this again. no woman to go through this. recall is that the quality, the end of life? just what is my dad? the the ah,
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the news? the news, the news, the news, the the what's going on here know, house of your very own from a printer. computer games that are healing. my dog needs electricity. just explains, delivers fact,
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and choose what the future holds. living in the digital world, shift in 15 minutes on dw, the do you like it? do you want it? okay, then local us put the head of the metal and let's ride the in 30 minutes on d w. oh, it is as good to know as soon as
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it was, but he told me how it feels. a jewish life in europe. oh, that's what tim, producer of his own and journalist in cooper, mont, more exploring, building into history and the present that i would never think could be live. so open the i'm so freaking and closely to remind myself because i grew up in a completely different way. is fraud.
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the station jewish junior, the 2 port documentary starts july 5th on d. w. ah ah, the page database, the news line from berlin while size across western canada. rescuers search for missing in the missing in towns forced to evacuate lightning has bought several blazes fuel further by a record breaking wave. also coming up. the last us and nato troops,

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