tv Antarktis Deutsche Welle July 12, 2021 1:03pm-1:46pm CEST
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wembley, one italian fan was dressed to deliver the highest of honors, hazy, the whole you wanted, no ring holder was gone. oh. as for the england fans, they dressed down to fit the mood of what was to be yet another footballing wake. the one i was looking incredible saw along the way and i just like everything to get to us on the thing as morning broke in italy, the spoils. the decree will return to their new home. the
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home has indeed come to burn the and with the view from rome, we have seen a group standing by in the italian capital. you know, it's a really big win here for the story. what are italian saying? what are they feeling today? well, i think it's just jubilation across the board. we saw the partying last night here in rome. but to out the country as well as the great feeling, a sense of pride to see the duty of 34 games on beaten led by rober mancini, who had clearly created a very strong team here bringing that final and bringing that car back to rome. the 1st when in the european championships since 968, and let's not forget, they didn't qualify for the world cup back in 2017. and that of course was a real down point. but now are things been lifted up? the papers, the sporting paper saying it all through a bellow is the headline for like to get to the left part and that means that it
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was just too beautiful for the career. then a sport, another sport paper, it's ours and all that. all. and people sport saying simply, it's now is only ours. so essentially, really an overwhelming sense of cry. today the team is expected to meet with the italian president of martha rella, as well as the prime minister model. and you know, we have mentioned that it was coming of course, against the backdrop, a very difficult year and a half in italy, which has been hard hit by the corona virus pandemic in that context. fema. how important is this when i think it's very significant. i mean, it's lee has just been to 18 months like many other countries, but at the same time, italy was the 1st western country to be hit so hard. it was at the epicenter of the corona virus and whether they floated on the stage, italy last more than 127000 miles of bars. and that's the
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largest figure in the european union. so all those tough locked the desire to be together. but not being able to be together, it all culminated in this when last night, which essentially brought people together. yes. again, on a very positive and joyful note. and i think there was almost a sense of relief over that fact when people were on the streets cheering each other on and just feeling nothing but your joy in the piazza. it's the same, a good in rome. thank you. and joining us here at the studio is max merrill from d w. sports max. we have to say italy was really strong throughout the tournament. did they deserve to win last night? i think so on the balance of things. i mean, it was sort of there told them and they grasped it with both both hands. we have to remember they didn't go into this woman as favorites as seem a said they didn't qualify for the world cup 3 years ago. then they came in here
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with a team full of players who don't necessarily play the top clubs and it's least some of them, of course do. but the chemistry was so vital, rebecca mancini was able to find, mold them together into this group, playing energetic, aggressive football. that's not words we usually use to describe italian football them using more courses in patient. they said that they can do that as well against spain. and then again, it's leigh also knocked out belgium on the way so thoroughly deserved really overall with a great group of plays and killing and benoit, she does to defensive still was finally getting rewarded for years of impressive work for italy as well. ok, so thoroughly deserved and that coming from an english fan, we have to mention folks is closer maxine to tell us, you know, speaking of england a story has emerge now of these 3 england players who miss their penalty is in the final shoot outs. tell us a little bit more about that. yes. unfortunately, that has been some racist abuse online and that's something that you know, they've now reacted to bars. johnston has reacted to by calling it
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a pulling. so the football association in england have also said anyone who is doing this is not, should not consider themselves through england. and these free play is also young, also brave to step off in such a high pressure situation. you know, it's a situation where you have the, the pressure of nations expectations on your shoulder at to be so young and to have that happen to use obviously a big blow. but we should reward them for their bravery, for their courage to stand up in the situation. and hopefully that will be more people now coming out, supporting them and voicing them their position against these racists. got southgate, and his whole school have done so much to position themselves against racism, taking in the head of matches and speaking about overly impressed conferences. so we should lord the bravery of all these plays. and specifically those 3 who have, you know, missed the penalties. yes. but had a great tournament and did so much for that countries. they and they did indeed also taken the last night we have to mention on the, at the beginning of the game. tell us, i just want to switch gears for
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a 2nd. and maybe you can push it forward for us now because we know that, you know, we have the world cup coming up and car. how did the lease chances look? now would you say based upon what we've seen now? yes, i mean 2022. well cup is just over 500 days away. so you're not the usual. got we have between 2 tournaments like this. it's really, you know, they have a fantastic score. what i would say is q lenient. uci. those 2 defensive plays were so going to go to that play $34.36 respectively. so we might see but new to retire . we could even secure lini either a higher will come into the tournament just a little bit older than he would like to be for that kind of occasion. so it's a tough one thread so they can, i have to kind of change the god a little bit. but there's a lot there already, a core of plays in that mid twenties and that's kind of the age you want them to be at their prime. the same can be said for england even most so they have a lot of young players and most of those plays that we saw play last night would possibly be in that team for the world cup. so 2 teams of great chance is going into the upcoming well cup. it's lee, maybe just tweak that, that aging defense
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a little bit next. now the w 4. thank you. and here are some other stories making headlines. south africa defense, forcible deploy soldiers to quell unrest. over the jailing of former president jacob's police, if it's fixed people have died in the violence routing and protest broke out in the provinces of quad to the natal. and while tang last week, that's when zoom up began serving a 15 month sentence for contempt of court. mandatory evacuations have been ordered in northern california as firefighters struggle to contain a massive blaze. the so called bet worth complex fire, doubles in size over the weekend and is now the largest in california. it is thought to have been caused by lightning more than 60000 acres hub burnt shells. the people in georgia have rallied in front of parliament, demanding the resignation of the prime minister. they are angry,
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over the death of the tv camera. men who was badly beaten by a mob of anti l. g b t q protesters. a man was later found dead in his home. but it's not yet clear how he died. francis trying to ramp up a slumping vaccination campaign as the highly contagious still to variant of the corona virus gains ground. president manuel mccaul is expected to announce plans this evening for a law that makes the compulsory for health workers to get the job. but not everyone thinks this is the right way to go. just the lien has had her hands full during the pandemic, hoping some of them may want a little at this time and tame se to protect them. the assistant nurse has been wearing masks and gloves, but there is one precaution. she'd rather not take, at least not for now. i don't care, but that was too long to wait. before i get in, you know,
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we need to know more about the you backs in the stars up after all. and the government got a lot of things wrong at the beginning of the pandemic. so i do not want to rush into this precipitation like her almost for francis. interesting stuff has not yet been tonight, but forcing them to would be unfair says just really lately, but i thought 1st we were the pin demick here right now with the black sheet as we prefer to wait before getting the house in. that makes me so angry, just leads manager agrees, she says such rules would cause major problems for the nursing home. they should try to convince, instead of faxing that i think we are already struggling. i find personal, know, several of highly qualified to get them back out in a rather quit that job. yes. so do you actually,
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but this far ologist thinks that if france is going to prevent the next k with 900 away from overwhelming hospital's vaccination will be crucial. and that includes health work as near port cloven cas book song will partake, monitor mobile, the vaccines, hotels at 95 percent against the very symptom walk i provocative. we need to get 80 or 90 percent of the population immunized, especially with a delta strain which has infected people with contaminate up to 8 other school. that's a huge number, one or 2 on the sick rita skeeter, you know, so for just over one 3rd of the french population is fully vaccinated. and the number of 1st jobs per day has been falling over recent weeks. but the government knows that time is of the essence. that's why it has been ramping up its campaign
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to push people to get vaccinated in the media through post. and with him from where we vaccination, like this one, just outside paris, city poor. here. you can get a code with 9 teams app without having to book a slot and it's on making health care workers get vaccinated might help the country approach because that's a nation threshold. but reaching it remains an uphill struggle. and let's cross over to lisa louis, who's standing by with more from paris, lisa, you know, we saw you, they're telling us a little bit more. why is it that so many health care workers in france are so reluctant to get back to needed? well, there are days as in the report who prefer to wait a bit longer. they feel also that they have been at the front line of you know, doing the pandemic ever since with again, more than a year ago. and they've been using other methods to protect themselves against
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could be 19 and they felt that these measures were actually effective, such as you know, global marks and also keeping a distance to people. and also surveys show that nurses and assisted just especially get the information on the co. 19 pandemic, often through social media and on the internet through i'm very light sources and mental likely to actually, you know, believe slightly conspiracy theories really as opposed to doctors who have had different medical training on and who are more likely to get the vaccination of a job, and that's why you know, sometimes more than in certain areas, more than half of the nurses are still locked into get a job because 900 job. wow. and when we look at the broader population as well, you know, it's not just nurses, france has one of the highest vaccine skepticism rates in europe. how big is the overall concern that perhaps, you know, more vulnerable people won't be fully protected, especially with
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a 4th wave looming? well, there is a lot of concern here and the government has been saying over the past few days, you know, all these vulnerable people who are still not all of them, not all of them are vaccinated just yet. they should go and get the job. there are enough jobs available. you just need to book an appointment of the there is a lot of concern because more than half of the new infections are now with the the very contagious delta ryan. and also, we know that at the moment we've got about $4.00 to $5000.00 infections, new infections per day. but biologists are predicting that this number could go up to 20000 at the beginning of august. and so everybody insist that is really important to push everybody to get vaccinated and fast president menu, my phone will address the nation tonight. what we'll talk about he's likely to announce this, you know, obligation for nurses and for medical staff to get vaccinated. he's also likely to
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talk about other measures. we have this so called health path here. you know, we choose thought either you got the 2 jobs that you got infected with cobra recently, or that you've got a negative test and that passes so far only you only need that pass for events where there are more than a 1000 people. now, the government is likely to lower that threshold so that at least at events, you know, a few 100 people inside are gathering that everybody needs to show that they don't have code at this very moment in time. the president is unlikely to say that another lockdown will be coming at the moment. he is likely to bet on other measures to slow the spread of the code. 900 pandemic, at least until people get vaccinated. lisa lewis in paris, thank you. lisa and protests have broken out in cuba with thousands of
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people taking to the streets against the socialist regime. demonstrators express frustration that food shortages rising prices, and the lack of coven 1900 vaccines. the government has tried to blame the us for the unrest them is were rallying its own supporters. yeah, they crying out for freedom in the streets of savannah, be the greatest show discontent with the socialist government. the 1990s packed in the trinkets his protest is the desperate economic situation. right now, the country is suffering from food shortages. we're here because of the repression of the people. they are starving us to death. havana is collapsing. we have no homes, nothing. now the police arrive and they begin to drag off people in the crowd, the arrest and the violence only makes it demonstrated angry. we are not afraid.
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they cry out. security beat me and my daughter a child. they beat us just because we were walking down the street. the supporters of the government had been avenue streets to president miguel diaz can now himself lead this rally was organized quickly in a town outside savannah where the anti government protest began. early on sunday we came here to show it together with the revolutionaries of this town, but the streets belonged to us with the president encouraging, supported to mobilize against opponents. they were ugly confrontation here, revolutionary, detained opposition, protested the cubans who were here. we had never going to give up this revolution. never. the communist regime has ruled cubis in
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1959. it survived the fall of the soviet union, and the depth of it found the fidel castro. now, would it again be challenged. i'm. 7 so lot like the show, it is unlikely to go without a fight. earlier we spoke with ted hampton and associate professor at the city university of new york, specializing in cuba. and we asked him who was behind the protests? it's fairly obvious that the people are behind it. this is a protest that has no leader, has no organization. that may be a weakness of it going forward. but it seems to have broken through because the accumulated frustration over the past due one or 2 years with the economic crisis, few food shortages, medical source shortages cause primarily by the economic system of cuba. that's
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inefficient and unproductive. and on top of that, of course you have the us and margot, that isolates are attempts to isolate and cut off. i think the people are in the middle and they're fed up with excuses with lies with manipulation. the government claims that this is orchestrated, paid by the united states. how do you get people and 6 or 8 cities all across to about thousands of people in each case, the protest from the united states. it's ridiculous to claim that at the same time we don't know really what the next step is, how the government is responding. now it seems to be inflaming the protesters and not leading to any kind of negotiate solution. and that was said hanging, speaking with us earlier elsewhere in the region, we go to haiti now where police say that they have arrested one of the masterminds behind the assassination of president jovan elmo. ease. my ease was gone down to his home last week. officials suspects that the arrested man wanted to out the
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president and take over himself as head of the country. the police have identified the south bank as a haitian national. other report say that the man was a us resident or did you do you live in haiti? on a private plane, a feel of your political objectives of a distributive politic. it was not had contact with a private security company to recruit some of the people who committed the snap. this was the police had already arrested a number of haitians and colombians suspected of being part of the destination unit responsible for last week's killing of president jovan and my ways. but many questions remain. you know, when did they leave columbia? you paid for their plane tickets with whom, with a in communication. what is the source of their funding? who paid them?
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as a team of us agents arrived in haiti on sunday, meeting with central members of haiti's government messy arc with international. i think the international community, especially the united states, who offered their assistance in the investigation in the gastro and our church leaders on sunday asked the come and told people to remain strong. the assassination of the president has created a power vacuum and so confusion by the who is haiti's legitimate leader. told us the fighting amongst themselves. each one is planning on the countries had a leadership problem. since age, you know, for our leaders, never think of the people they always just use,
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the people should defend their own interests. haiti was in bad shape before the president's estimation is plagued by gang violent and corruption. and haitians live in crushing poverty. the quiet streets in the capital portrait prince on sunday of contrast to the ongoing political turmoil. and for more let's bring in and bro, shown a journalist who is based in haiti, and thank you so much for joining us. what else do we know about the latest, about the suspect who was arrested over moist this assassination? the person that was arrested was a so called fix. it was living in florida. and he was making several videos of position videos again. emily's which is nothing special per se, because many people did. he was arrested. yes they. and then he was pointed out by
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the chief of police that he might be the stranger for this assassination. all the one that wanted to put himself in our after route. and what they say is that he found that the colombian immediately after the assassination phones, this man immediately afterwards. and then this man song then, the, to my mind without saying, but they didn't know who them on the minds were, or whether these masa mines would be arrested very soon. okay, let me fill a lot of details be fleshed out there, but at least some initial indications. now we have haitian officials asking the united states for help investigating the case, restoring order, getting some answers here. what should we make of that? well, the united states of america has been several times in the past,
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the asians in order to try to understand what happens in high profile killings. and it is to be seen what kind of person they are going to deploy on the ground and how much they are going to invest in this investigation. however, i do believe they will invest heavily in order to understand what's really happened . how are haitians on the ground? in the meantime, reacting to all of this chaos, while most of the people are trying to get the groceries and stuff in the humble people are trying to make a little money. because there's a lot of for this week that they will be demonstrations uprising the so called the barbecue gang leader. he's name is barbecue because he is burning with him. was declaring war against the 180. and that he is going to take vengeance for the assassination of children. and louise with of course,
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not forgetting that only last week he was saying he has to go. so it is a big mess. and everybody is trying to get ready for this week, as nobody knows what's really going to happen. journalists and ro shown, thank you so much. thank you. and with that now you are up to date here on d. w. news up next to this global 3000, taking a closer look at climate justice and how it may be achieved. i'm sarah kelly. thanks for watching. the news. the news
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the 3000 pico in the noise. the humans and animals are like solution is a big problem in india, specially in metropolitan city. widely underestimated the enforcement action on boys police. it is very limited to 60 minutes on dw. oh was right in front of them. they were all for this one moment. then suddenly
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we agreed to postpone the or olympic games that tokyo with 202421. from of course, during the qualifying round these for sports heroes, actually it was a slap in the face, but now we just have to fight their mobilizing superpowers. i'm fired up and ready. count down during walk down the walk. he goes to tokyo, georgia july dw. ah, the global $3000.00 in northern canyon, a tenacious woman takes the stand for peace and women's rights.
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vietnam's prosperity. res. so does it trust that? chaos is the way to put the brakes on the test. the world is getting hotter because some people feeling the effects more than others. ah, ah, climate justice, the time it just now was that we're hearing more and more climate justice linked to racial justice, social justice, intergenerational jobs. these why they call not only for climate section, but climate just in the most that could shape the century. but we'll take the climate change have to do with justice. we all in this together. evidently, you know, it's been a 1st trial, only some homes will be back to the ground. a mudslide wiped out one village, at least, and not the run touched. it's not just me. oh oh we asking questions in
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to understand climate justice. we need to understand climate injustice to cause of climate change and who's hurt by that 1st look at who's responsible for putting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and heating the planet. imagine this grain of rice is one ton of carbon dioxide. each year the average passing in the area to lessen one grain into the atmosphere that's in, in india, 2 grand and china, 7 grains, jeremy 10 grain in the us. 17 grain in one year. the average american troops 20 times more than the average nigeria. but the problem with carbon is that it stays trapped to me atmosphere for centuries. so it's not just about how much we added here. it's about how much is piled up over time. since 850, that's up to about 1500 giga. okay, so we want to pull up these rice bags on the table to show you how big that really
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is. but after doing the math, we realize we need 3000000 of them. historical emissions matter today because countries arguing about how soon they have to cut the emissions down to their big pollution like china, india, and brazil. look a lot less guilty when you consider that you recently become part of the problem ah, fees to the annual emissions. but that doesn't tell us anything about, you know, why or why we are in the current in 2020 reset to help countries responsible for pushing sir 2 levels beyond the safety threshold that we crossed at 990. the study takes into account how many people live in the country, how much they emitted throughout history, and include the missions across the board of trade goods. the research shows that rich countries have out spent that carbon budgets buy
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a lot to global north admitted 90. 2 percent of the see are to push the planet be unsafe level asia, africa, the middle east and latin america have emitted just 8 percent. even a massive middle like china is just using up its carbon budget now. but if you live in a country that runs on fossil fuels, this doesn't mean climate change is your fault personally. but some of your choices do still make a difference. because it's not just about where you live, but also how much you spend the weather. it's just one percentage. it's quite as much of the course fitness center and delete live all over the world. the unequal emissions are one big reason why climate activists shouting about justice. everyone already is effected by the cancer crisis just in a very different. but if we look at the ruling germany and sitting at the decision table for the past decade, they have not a responsibility for you are invited to others
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now not live, see how to heat the planet by the same amount. whether it comes from germany or kenya, the climate doesn't care about geography. well, geography cares about the climate. the 2nd part of climate injustice is that even the poor countries have done the least to change the climate. they're the ones getting hard to take heat waves and drops heat waves the becoming most unbearable across africa where drought, the even more punishing for cross. ah. then the storms warmer and the hurricanes and typhoons carry more energy and unleash more rain and stronger winds across the tropics. and by 2050 sea levels where the rhythm so high . the floods which used to hit once a century will strike many coastal cities every single year.
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the inequality, the climate change come to the hottest in a country like india. even though people have barely contributed to global warming, there among the most vulnerable india coastal cities are facing unprecedented floods while it's rivers dry. up, leaving pharma struggling to grow staples, lake rice and weak india is one of the most equitable countries in the world. and what we can see is that even if you take a city like home by when flood happens in the city, it's the poor that are the most impacted. this says pile per a climate scientists through campaigns, full time for climate justice. having grown up in a country like india from, i grew up with inequality all around me. and this is essentially what it comes down to. the world is very unequal and it's playing out in terms of climate change as well. but that inequality is found within rich countries to black and brown. people
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in countries like the u. s. for the u. k. a typically part white people. and that mean they have less money to spend on air conditioning to adapt to heat waves or flood insurance to rebuild up the storms. happen to make it fair. well, police and country confess 10 to time and start removing that pollution from the atmosphere. then they could pay reparations for using up more than their fair share of emissions. some countries and company already doing something similar by paying for countries to not talk down part, and instead countries. but instead of using that same carbon to attend to the climate deck, they're using it as an excuse to keep on emitted. ah, so we have to be part of that discussion and time and deck in particular is where we think about who is you know, we kind of divide up who is responsible for the kinds of changes and climate change meet with being and emphasizing. but also the kinds of time it's
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a new doctor that comes up to me. reparations might sound radical, but rich countries already agreed to pay poor ones to adapt to climate change. imagine each of the pete, $1000000000.00 us dollars, rich countries promised a 100 of the median climate finance by 2020. but it's 2021 and they haven't coughed up. in 2018. they gave 80000000000, but most of it was learned is not granted. you can't based charity. sam found that the real aid was actually closer to 20000000000 yearly. we have not been meeting the kinds of target that even global, not countries that time and mechanism, not men actually solve the problem with another approach takes climate justice more literally holding polluters to accounting court deadly wildfire towards portugal.
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in 20176 young activists took 33 industrial countries to the european court of human right. failing to cut their emissions quickly. they argue that the country, the discriminating against young people who have to live with the consequences, the climate change, the vatike to still pending, ah, in germany, in the middle and high court judges have ordered the government to up them. visions on cutting emission activists also want a case against royal dutch shell, forcing the company to pay for oil pollution and now demanding climate friendly investments to ah, so the, the basic legal argument for assigning responsibility is you know, contribution to the problem. so how much do you emit? how much do you contribute to climate change, greenhouse gas emissions. and what is the possibility for contributing to the solution? the defendants argued that national courts don't have the right to rule on the climate because emissions and the impacts of global. but
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a new generation of activists are fighting for them to take exactly that responsibility and give them climate justice. 7, nearly 1400000000 cars in the world today and by 2050, that numbers predicted to double in 2020 alone. 78000000. new cars rolled off. well, so somebody lines more, cars means more land for road, more appellation, more noise and more congestion and big city drivers already spent untold hours and traffic jams. and i'm seen series this week. we have to vietnam where the traffic has become truly monstrous. and it's not just the drivers who are suffering from the feeling of in patients is constantly engine um
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in on my state of mind and my mood last night. the so frustrating and annoying. ah, it's an issue that just the local authorities made heading out on the home. she's not just the odor. sometimes the color of the noise on the lower the traffic jam monster is really annoying. it's dark black and makes unpleasant sound low. it has bice and it looks scary. the
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a similar success. while that answers the b o. but after you've been driving for a while, the car becomes more of a tool and less of an asset with camilla somewhere i'm and i'm a why brown stuck on in my personal observations with the data we've collected show that in the past 20 years and then find that on the traffic related problems
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in viet nam have been getting worse and worse. why not annoyed, developing so quickly? a bunch in by now. it's like a powerful magnet. why my food gave me a challenge for major cities in viet nam right now is the transition from motor bikes to cause. and that will continue in the near future because it became the mars occupy more of the road. but they don't carry many people about them, but now the job vietnamese people are very lazy. when it comes to walking, the maximum distance we're willing to walk is about 300 meters mathematical teaching by one name. i don't think that if we want to promote public transport on
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when we need to pay attention to planning and design to make it easier for people to access isn't why no, no, they're not really nice people, especially in the cities are used to writing motorbike so even when their homes are very close to their offices, will schools me sunday and i need to coordinate the schools to encourage children to rule out how to little activities on a regular basis. and children and parents can change. they have a whole new title and look at me language. look how don't know how i would have learned that when you cross the street you have to stay on.
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