tv Hotel- Legenden Deutsche Welle July 19, 2021 1:03pm-1:46pm CEST
1:03 pm
so there were so many people out there that you don't even know. i don't even know where they come from, around here helping to clear up so much were willing to help. it's wonderful. come talk about children. despite all the volunteers, many people have been left wondering why there hasn't been no help from the authorities. yup. and all those at the top are trying to bring order to the chaos, but it's not really working. a lot of help is coming from volunteers and residents showing an awful lot of initiative. but you can't really say that people at the top of helping really open from not with so many areas overwhelmed by the floods rescue services, say they're breaking point isn't quality freely. i enjoy it. and it's pretty difficult to get help to everyone. and we have to prioritize if we get a report that someone still trapped in
1:04 pm
a building and people with water in the basement and being pushed to the back of the queue on as much work to be done. but many volunteers say they'll stick around long after this weekend or the chef on fire game i'll boss is given as monday and tuesday. so we can use the time to finish the job. support the local from our home . you don't mentioned with many residents still wondering how this disaster could have happened. that help will be much appreciated. let's go right to our correspondent julia so deli, standing by for us in our vinyl. that is, one of the towns has been worst hit by the floods. hi julia. it has been 5 days now since the flood waters hit violent the surrounding area. can you bring us up to date on how things are looking on the ground and whether there is any news on the people who are still missing the level of devastation here is astounding. now people from there, the ground floors are trying to get rid of all the destroyed objects. for example,
1:05 pm
you can see here behind me it is full of things that's for example, an ice cream shop. and the fringes are all thrown outside with ice cream. still in it and all over town, people are trying to clean up, get rid of mud and debris. but it's not only the material losses that are important here. the loss of life is just tragic. over around $6116.00 people have been declared dead and unfortunately all authorities fear that the death to a will continue rising. they are still looking for missing people. there is one good piece of news coming from neighboring north ryan with failure, where police have said they were able to get in touch with around 700 people who were unaccounted for. they were finally able to reach them on the phone and make sure that they were safe. julia, we saw that report this incredible effort of volunteers coming to help with the clean up. but what about the official operation who is involved and do people on
1:06 pm
the ground feel like they're getting enough help? as we've heard from the report and i can confirm from what i've seen here in the people i've spoken to. a lot of the help is coming from volunteers. some people here have told me here in the neighboring villages that the fire department and the army only arrived 3 days after the flooding had occurred. and before that was just normal citizens coming from the nearby region, bringing their own tractors, their own equipment and, and helping out that way and volunteers themselves, and residents speak of a lack of coordination. everyone is sort of trying to figure out how to do this. massive cleanup operation, but no coordination from above is coming through. our reporter julia. so deli, there in, vine, a. thank you. and let's get some more perspective on the story. now. we have our political correspondent in mind was shot for more. hi emma. good to see you. more
1:07 pm
than 150 people have been confirmed dead in germany and now there is a debate that started as to whether this loss of life could have been prevented. tell us more about that. exactly. so me, the european flood warning system had was the power it is in southwest and germany about a probable flood days in advance, so well ahead of the disaster. and likewise, the spokesman for the german weather service said that the warning had the had been given was enough advance not his with, with enough not his autocracies were notified that way up to 200 liters per square meter would full. that somehow, those warnings did not get through to the people and they did not know what was going to happen. and this would be the responsibility of regional and local authorities to relay those warnings. and the question is whether or not this was done timely. any measures such as evacuations were appropriately and timely carried
1:08 pm
out. now, the district administration of all, viola, one of the west affected areas announced that once they will have dealt with the immediate aftermath of the disaster, what an investigation will be made into the timeline of those events. now, 2 questions was enough done on the warnings came through, but also what had been gone over the last few years to prevent such catastrophes to happen in terms of infrastructure around rivers or in a more long term perspective, in the fight against comma change, w corresponded political corresponding manual shells reporting for us. thank you. let's take a look to mother headlines from around the world now ousted me and mar, leader on fancy. she did not attend the annual martyrs day ceremony. a young girl that honors plane is a pendant heroes including her father. so she's absent and days of speculation over whether the military authorities would allow her to attend the 76 year old has not been seen in public since a february, coo, firefighters, in the u. s,
1:09 pm
state of oregon are battling the country's largest wildfire known as the bootleg fire, which is already burned through an area of the size of los angeles. it's just one of dozens of major blazes burning across several western states. erratic winds and parched forests are hampering fire fighting efforts and more dangerous fire. weather is predicted. cartoon as courage. westergaard has died at the age of 86. the dane was known for his controversial caricature is obvious. lamp prophet mohammed in 2005. the cartoon spark protest around the world, some of which turned deadly as regards narrowly, survived an assassination attempt and live with bodyguards for the last 15 years of his life. most governments around the world are targeting the phones of journalists and human rights activists using a spy software called pegasus. that is, according to an investigation by more than a dozen news outlets,
1:10 pm
but the intrusion goes far beyond wire. tapping the packets of malware allows intelligence agencies to secretly activate the microphones and cameras have their targets phones, turning them into 24 hour surveillance devices. his smartphone was the target of a sophisticated spying operation. in 2019 the hungarian investigative reporter sandwich bonnie was spied on for months with pegasus software, according to a forensic analysis of his device. and his own government may have been behind it. they could do that because all my emails, my calendars, my for those, my windows, they could even turn on my, my microphone on camera measures pegasus can be installed without the victim, doing anything, usually by an invisible message. one upon your colleagues was also under surveillance, according to an investigation by an international team of journalists. coordinated by the nonprofit group forbid, in stories. several media organizations in germany took part. they analyze records
1:11 pm
that included more than 50000 phone numbers, possible spying targets, apparently entered by customers of the israeli software developer. and so they included human rights activists, government critics, and journalists we thought, find some people, some human rights activists. one day decided to go in district and mexico to protest, and then the next day they were on the lease pegasus apparently also played a role in the killing of saudi journalist demarcus oak g turkeys chief investigator was on the list of potential targets. the spirals also linked to kiss or kisse to be on same the israeli firm. and i so, and says pegasus was only deployed against terrorists and criminals and says it would end collaboration if the spyware was misused. the company denies any connection, took a showcase murder, subtle japan. you doesn't know the extent of the damage to his sources. when asked about it, surveillance, the hungarian government said it followed all laws. you're watching the w new still
1:12 pm
. the come on our show french's, the where you are investigating the alleged war crimes, but the theory and rebel boot judge on this one, d. w, spoke to the survivors to say the group engaged in systematic torture and persecution, and formula one driver. louis hamilton has won the british grand prix on his home turf, but the celebrations were marred by accusations for rival extra stuff, and that race was unsportsmanlike. we'll take a look at what is behind that controversy that's coming up in just a moment. but 1st, the british government has lifted most corona virus restrictions in england in a booth that's being heavily criticized by many scientists. the mandate for wearing masks has been revoked and social distancing. rules have been scrapped. now, london, transport authority. does it still have a math mandate? place in many commuters in london, victorious station here continued to wear face covering today, the british government argues that the u. k. a high rate of vaccination will
1:13 pm
protect the population again, falling dangerously ill with the virus and dw charlotte shelton pill is following the latest for us from london. hi charlotte. how controversial is this? move to lift pandemic restrictions while the virus is still spreading. this is something that's being widely criticized by scientists, epidemiologist, they're looking at the case numbers which are rising rapidly. in fact, according to the government's own estimates, cases could hit record 100000 a day, perhaps even doubled that one expert warned england really is entering into uncharted territory. here, as you mentioned, authorities are relying on vaccines to do the heavy lifting. the big questions remain about what happens, what will happen to the health service. with this unprecedented number of cases, there will link between cases hospitalizations and death. thankfully has very much
1:14 pm
been weakened, but it's not been broken. as scientists, as well warning about the risks to those who remain on vaccinated the risks of long period and as well, the risks that widespread, the widespread cases could lead to the imagine of a new strain as well. so a good deal of concern here. the government that was doing that really thing restrictions were always the cases there are, if not now in the summer months than when amid these concerns. charlotte tell us what is and what is not changing today in england? well this is about said missing most of the remaining legal restrictions. so large venue like stadium cinemas will be able to operate that capacity. now you do have nightclubs opening as well, which so a lot of people very excited at the, at midnight yesterday evening as face ma, squaring as well social distancing rules. they've been relax with. i have to say that we have still seen widespread mosque wearing on public transport and shop so
1:15 pm
far today. one thing that will remain in place of course is the obligation to warranty. and if you test positive and currently the quarantine, if you come into contact with someone who's tested positive that's causing considerable disruption at the moment with the prime minister. in fact, among those isolating off to coming into contact with his health minister that seeing a lot of people off work at the moment, a lot of warnings for him from businesses that, that seeing staff shortages say, well, this may be freedom day. significant disruption does still remain. you mentioned the prime minister there. there is also been some controversy over politicians themselves following these pandemic restrictions. charlotte, so tell us more about that thing that you are referring to. a pretty spectacular. you tend to form by the government yesterday, initially prime minister barak johnson and the chancellor off the coming into contact with the health minister said that they were taking part in a pilot scheme,
1:16 pm
which meant that they wouldn't have to complete the isolation could to continue to what that was huge out pouring of upset about that from opposition. politicians on social media as well. they them backtracks saying they would in fact isolate like all the people being off to. but of course, it's a love allegations once again being leveled at this government that they think is, is one rule for them. and another rule for everyone else. d w. charlotte shell, some pill reporting there from london. thank you very much. now for the 1st time since the syrian conflict erupt more than a decade ago, a western country is looking into atrocities committed by rebel groups. frances war crimes unit confirm to d w that they're investigating. josh, i was law once considered the strongest armed opposition with the serial database investigation team spoke to several witnesses to say they suffered abuse and torture at the hands of the hard line islamists,
1:17 pm
the this is how hotline islamist group jelly slam portrays itself brain rebel fighting the regime for free and just syrian shop owner could be affairs, that's all lies. the group was only fighting for power. they shot him in the face in an assassination attempt. he says, and later imprisoned him for being an arrival rather group in his home town quota, as they won't show up at all. now, they tortured me in many different way. they wanted me to confess, anything that i was homosexual working with isis or the regime, or was selling drugs. it didn't matter what they brought in for teenagers to beat me continuously. so i wouldn't be able to sleep. they beat me non stop until i collapsed and started to hallucinate for hotel with video from after the regime retook the region show, the small says where,
1:18 pm
right to spend more than 2 years in isolation was that about all they have part of a prison network where he has told us about the slam health and torture, hundreds of people, opponents and civilians, alive or nothing for there is no difference between the presence of jason and the prisons of the regime. it's the same torture, the same mis treatment, and it's all the same stuff after this. the w's investigative team spoke to several witnesses who told us, similar accounts. they said jealous lamb went after political opponents, activists, and religious minorities. in the city of audra, the rebel group worked with other jihadists to capture hundreds of christian cent. alibis the later put them in cages and use the prisoners as human shields against us. forces sciences abuses the international community for years,
1:19 pm
embraced islam as the strongest, and the position force on the and the political leader. even let the opposition delegation to you and sanction talks on syria. j slam told the w, it denied the human rights abuses. but for the 1st time, a french court is investigating the group. it was this international team of lawyers which filed the criminal complaint. the allegations include torture, executions, and the use of child soldiers. it is time to say out loud that the 7 population has also been victims of other groups who pretended to be fighting for the revolution, but to who also turned against the population. they hope the court will issue charges in the coming month. their biggest challenge now is to find more witnesses and convince them to testify. many are still in syria,
1:20 pm
some even in territory controlled by jason as long as the serene regime. and they had the slam, still have a lot of power and influence and capacity to intimidate and threatened the victims and the witnesses. so this really is a major concern for us because any prosecution, successful prosecution will also have to rely on this kind of testimonial evidence . now in 2 teeth rattle pre be isn't afraid. he would like nothing more than to testify in court. jail islam he says ruined his life just like the sat regime and he wants to see them held accountable for what they did. lewis sanders is part of d w's investigative unit, and joins us for more on the story. hi louis. your report looks that judge lambs, past activities, but what can you tell us about how influential the group is today? well, militarily, they're a shadow of what they once were. today,
1:21 pm
they have about 6000 soldiers among their ranks. when at their peak they had roughly around $20000.00. now that doesn't mean that they don't have influencing power to, to this day. and we found that out through our investigation as we were speaking. and people that, you know, had gone experiences that were mentioned, for example, in the video in the report. a lot of witnesses were afraid to speak. there were, they were afraid that they would be, you know, maybe gone after by the group. if they said anything. and so that just goes to show that the group continues to maintain power continues to have conclusions and, and that has repercussions also on the trial to your report. touches on the fact that the international community embraced this group joshua slabs. so tell us more about that aspect. well, the conflict was what it was today. so back then the europeans and
1:22 pm
americans were very much interested in getting some sort of influence within the conflict, especially as it started to spill out outside of the region, borders. and so they didn't have very, very many allies on the ground. now at this moment, j shows them with ascendant. they were the strongest armed opposition group on the ground. they were the most organized, and they were, they were sending. and so it just made sense. the international community would bring them into the fold and would make them part of the un sanction talks. part of the few spider talks. now, one of our diplomatic sources told us that, you know, look, we weren't thinking about human rights at this time. we were, look, we're thinking strategy, we're thinking about how we can get more involved and have some sort of stay in what's happening on the ground in syria. we know that france, as you mentioned, your report is now looking into these accusations. do you think that members of josh, hello, some will ever be indicted?
1:23 pm
that's a tough question. so last year, friendship sorties were able to arrest a senior member of j shows. plus he was there spokes person for about 5 years. and, and the way they were able to do that was because he was on the french soil. now the way universal jurisdiction works in france is that if they could only arrest someone or indict someone, if a french national was involved in the crimes or whether the perpetrators on french soil. now the group today is backed by turkey. and it's unlikely that truck is going to be handing over any, any of the leaders of a group that they support. and so these are one of the challenges when we spoke to the team of international lawyers and pears. they said, look, realistically, we don't see, we don't see much more happening in terms of developments with senior leadership, but also because european countries are right now focused more so on investigating
1:24 pm
atrocities committed by the regime. not by this period armed up the position louis vendors from des investigative team. thank you very much. thank you. and if you want to watch t w's investigation into josh hell of law, please head tor documentary channel on youtube. moving on to sports now, and louis hamilton has won the british grand prix after a thrilling race in front of $140000.00 and fans at silver stone. the brit sealed a record extending a win on his home turf. but there was controversy after a crash between hamilton and his main rival mac 1st stopped and left the dutch driver in the hospital leading the driver's standings and looking to turn the street on an increasingly unsure looking lewis hamilton mac switched up and started on pole in silver's then, but he didn't even complete a lap. the rivals collided as the entered cops corner, and the impact pitched 1st up into a spin that saw him later taken to the hospital for precautionary tests. despite
1:25 pm
the sporting applause, as he was helped from his car. red bill where incense calling hamilton's move. dangerous, desperate and unacceptable. hamilton received a 10 2nd penalty when the race restarted, but cheered on by a packed and rock, his home crowed. the britain, hunted, don't race leader sharla clare. and eventually over, hold him with 2 lamps to go. as the most ranks of locals healed a record extending a pretty strong pre victory. got the best crowd. a home crowd is a bit. thank you people. i think we have to beginning the day 33 points off the pace. hamilton is no, only 8 behind, pushed up and but the next few races of an invigorating season will show who this
1:26 pm
controversial when was fired up more the britain are for stuff and, and his see the red bill team right now to are the olympics american tennis star cocoa golf says pulled out of the tokyo games after testing positive for corporate 19, the 17 year old was set to become the youngest olympic tennis player in 2 decades. the world number 25 says she's disappointed to miss out on her dream of representing the u. s. at the game. other sport stars including roger federer and serena williams have already announced their decision to skip the events. meanwhile, a to south african soccer players have become the 1st athletes inside tokyo, 20 twenty's olympic village to test positive for cope at 19. and the video analyst within the squad also tested positive, as well as the head coach of south africa. rugby team, which is based in another city,
1:27 pm
1:28 pm
1:29 pm
w eco, india. in a secluded valley in the himalayan mountains, many people still live without electricity. hydro electric power is meant to solve the energy problem. but the clean power plants are restoring local agriculture and the population is starting to fight back to india. in 60 minutes on the w. oh, the little guys that is the 77 percent the flat bone for africa due to the beat issues share ideas. ah. you know,
1:30 pm
are we in north africa population is we young people clearly have the solution that belongs to the 77 percent. now every weekend on the w. mm. the welcome to global 3000. this week we find how young people in uganda turning their dreams into reality. we learn about a potential solution for the label food waste. and we meet the photographer
1:31 pm
documenting the effects of global warming in the held more than a 3rd of our tonics is made up of deserts and dry lands. and that percentage is rising every year. an additional 70000 square kilometers of fertile land turns to desert. the main causes a deforestation, overgrazing and the over use of water resources. one of which to treat the soil of essential minerals with temperatures set to rise over the coming decade. the rate does that if occasion is likely to speed up considerably more to scarcity is already a problem for 1000000000 people. most of them in africa, the world's risk index says the situation is particularly precarious in the health region. the late chad and west central african people here has lived for fishing and farming for thousands of years. it appears that at 1st glance,
1:32 pm
but one of the world's biggest environmental catastrophes is unfolding here. 20 years ago, the link surface shrank by 90 percent. and now climate change has brought extreme, whether that's destroying the local farmers livelihoods, photographer andy spiral is working on a photo project that documents the effect of climate change in the entire so health spyro is the mass reporter in the region before the outbreak at the corona virus and demick back home in germany, africa, the problem seemed far away. still, they have a direct impact on europe. 80000000 people live in the south region . the lively helps will be taken away in the coming years and decades into lives. the people have to go somewhere and go, they will mentioned you just a matter of where i go. in online chat, experienced 1st hand how the climate catastrophe led to conflict wars, terrorism,
1:33 pm
and adver keen, extreme weather is getting worse, harvests are failing, and large parts of lake chad could no longer be traversed because nature can no longer provide for the people. here, there are intense fights over the remaining resources. entire villages have been burned down the road to villages that ended up in war with each other. and it was clearly about resources. and so it was but access to water, access to food and fishing rights conflict of the weapons they use whereas archaic, the landscape spears bows and arrows, tons of people's dialect, shot each year due to the regional complex that have been brought the region like a non conflict of interest in anti spyware has photographed and syria, afghanistan, and in the balkans. he shoots with a wide angle lens,
1:34 pm
which means he has to get close up to people. inspires work isn't limited to farmers. he also photographs warlords islamic extremists and women who have been raped and he understands the interplay between hunger, war and religious extremism, from seeing them 1st hand, including only chance focus unfastened i spoke around, drives around the lake at night, and recruits young man, avoid the offer of $500.00 in that a $47.00 is very enticing to someone who is livelihood is disappearing in max. i'm going to be in school luggage from that card. if we can go ahead and sign. we're also went to nigeria, where the conflict between the nomads and the farmers has been escalating for years . it's now one of the bloodiest civil war is in the world for a week. ira accompany muslim fulani no mass is they drove their cattle? heard the southward during the dry season, but dwindling pastures cause the situation to explode when full money hurts greenstone farmland, the farmers shut the candle,
1:35 pm
the nomads burned down the farmers villages in retaliation. those belief they are in the right and the government is unable to resolve the conflict with spit of the under the laser. we heard the other side of the story. we went to the christian farmers and listen to their version of what happened on this one village called bar . i was completely destroyed by the full army people. dozens of people were massacre. people were compensated and they took the heads with them. it was very brutal ah, in my only internal conflicts led to a military coup. truth marched through the streets of the capital barnacle and force, the president and prime minister things to resign. the nowadays, and the deployment of the german military, which had been in the country for 7 years, could prevent the total collapse, and the government in march and anti spyware, was the multi area that was once popular with tourists. today,
1:36 pm
the region is isolated and millions of civilians suffer violence. there are calla fits and ethnic militias, but no government. molly hasn't been safe for quite some time. the minister dawned. we went to visit there with the prime minister, and there was an armed unit, a kilometer long on a 100 vehicles just so we could visit. the village. says a lot about the security. there was me more than 2000000 people from the lake chad region. have flint due to hunger more and extremism. anti virus, provocative pictures, show the impact this has on people, and how violence leads to trauma and devastation ah. dance, no choice, but to flee. and they won't be me
1:37 pm
. hunger is on the rise all over the world. now effects around 820000000 people. and yet some 1300000000 tons of food are wasted every year. in developing countries, this is often down to a lack of infrastructure as a result, on average $6.00 to $11.00 kilos of food, a wasted this way per person, per year. in industrial nations, that figure is 10 times greater retailers and consumers often toss out food just because it no longer appears fresh. extending the shelf life is produced could improve the situation. fusion vegetables rotting in feels or during transportation to consumers. according to the un food and agricultural organization or f, a o, some 14 percent of food is lost after harvesting. and before it reaches the market retailer. if you go to a particular country or particular,
1:38 pm
you are likely to see running levels of food losses. and these, depending on the situation, would go up even to 50 percent. if you're talking about, let's say fruits and vegetables, for example, if the format does not find the market for that particular food product in a timely basis. now this is huge amount of food, and if you, you convert it into monetary quantity. this is a lot and if you, you can read it as well into the loss to the environment or the environmental impact that is also huge. when that happens, water, pesticides, and resources used for transportation or all waste as some 7 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions can be traced back to food loss and
1:39 pm
waste. the chief causes include problems of transportation and refrigeration. the power from harvest a kitchen table is a race against time. a california based company appeal sciences might be able to help founder james rogers and his team have developed a liquid that could extend the shelf life of fruits and vegetables. appeal is a little exactly like it sounds peel that we apply to the surface of fresh produce . you can't see it, you can't, you can't do it. but it slows down the factors because the fruit to age help, even without refrigeration appeal as a liquid coating that dries into a kind of edible skin. the coding helps the produce last up to 4 times as long that buys time, time to transport, the produce to storage, and to eat it before it spoils. appeal is based on liquids and other natural
1:40 pm
compounds found in fruits and vegetables. they're extracted and blended into a taylor made solution by combining them in the rate ratios when they dry a dry into an arrangement that allows us to control the factors that cause fruit to age, which are basically water going out and oxygen going. yeah. so same materials were just teaching them a new trick by finding the right formula to apply to different kinds of praise, in order to give them the same kinds of protection that you'd have on women. on a cucumber or on a dutch wholesaler nature's prize cell, some 120000 tons of fruits and vegetables. a year. they import from 59 countries, especially latin america. in rotterdam, the imported produce continued to ripen before it's sorted, packed,
1:41 pm
and shipped to the retailer. sportage and waste is a common problem in the industry, but the company helps to minimize these losses in the future. so through the way they actually bought it and they don't use it and that costs money. so in the chain, if we don't throw it away, you don't spend that money wrongly with a b, we can reduce weight was 50 percent as we say, the level food that used to live in the trash can now be sold every day. natures pride treats 6 tons of cars with appeal before sending them to supermarket shelves across europe. the main customers are in scandinavia, germany and the netherlands. nature's pride is the 1st company in europe to use appeal. they're planning to start treating other kinds of fruits and vegetables soon as they're coming by air, by using a view, we might give them the possibility to go buy votes. and that is, of course,
1:42 pm
the same reasons. so there's lots of units so far the new technology is mainly being used by large companies. smaller ones can't afford it. but a few says it's planning to change that with a new business model in which retail chains and supermarkets pay smaller producers and farmers to install the necessary set up in return they receive longer lasting produce farmers in places that haven't had access to national international markets could also benefit and so the opportunity is to be able to use appeal to reduce the transport taishan costs and increase the quality. so it's not aid. it's a way. ready for a some, a small producer to grow something that's intrinsically valuable to collect. some of that about extending the shelf life of projects will help. but it won't end the problem of food. lawson waste for the transportation and refrigeration systems will
1:43 pm
also need to be improved and expanded on consumers will have to stop throwing food away and start only buying what they'll actually eat this week and global ideas. we look at employment opportunities. how can jobs be created for young people while at the same time protecting all planets and its resources? just outside the uganda and capital come parlor are reported. julius mcgovern visited and learning hub, which encourages young people to turn that creative visions into reality. our house collapsed on the devil when mother died from the intervention suffered. so i tend to my pin for post into motivation. i never knew that's what i'm doing. ton this big to me on to the environment. i fought, and now i followed,
1:44 pm
discriminated because of my often falling seat from malaria. i am now part of the solution in my country. please people each with a vision. joe, now the beggar produces, says, with a sense that repels mosquitoes. according to the un, every 2 minutes, a child under the age of 5 dies of malaria. even if i'm not kidding all the kids that are suffering right now. i am actually saving the ones that i can. john mary, consumer is founder and director of between business up cycle africa, which builds houses up just recycled plastic bottles. so for me that was the question in africa into employment opportunities for among those groups of people. so we called selecting affordable homes, consumer annella, vega, our graduates of the social innovation academy o sina facility is located in the town of p,
1:45 pm
about 30 kilometers south of uganda capital component here, young people, including orphans and st. kitts learn how to develop their ideas into successful businesses. due to the current, 19 pandemic. only a few students are currently able to attend classes on campus. it is not giving them information like a teacher. this is what you need to do or does is the right answer, but helping them to discover their own answers to understand what are the next steps, what are the gold's, how can they achieve what they want to achieve? jim and social entrepreneur h. ian's eyeball unfounded. c 924 team for people who want to build their own career paths. the academy is financed by the nation. it's been over 10 years since i bought met joan angel. mary. well volunteering in an orphanage. they've known each other a long time valuable and quickly realize that a lot of young people in uganda have no formal work. the country has one of the
65 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on