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tv   Precht  Deutsche Welle  December 28, 2021 4:30pm-5:15pm CET

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i choose culture information. this is the w. w. naval mines. ah, hey there, i'm david and this is climate change. briggs, it sucks. oh, how business in 3 books. this is the book for you. you'll get smarter for free, didn't will you? book on you turn. ah, welcome to global 3000. this week we had to the rain forests of cameroon, home to some now well protected gorillas,
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cheese without milk and meat free sausages. is this the food of the future? and we find out why chinese parents are hesitant to have a 2nd child despite the government lifting it's one child, ruled every 2nd, 2 people on our planet. $1060.00, that's $80000000.00 people per year. according to the u. n. one in 9 of us is over 60 years old by 2050. that will be one m 5. with life expectancy rising and our planets population booming, the global population pyramid is whitening and becoming flatter. life expectancy is improving thanks to progress on developments in medicine. better health care provision and a greater awareness when it comes to health ah,
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age distribution varies greatly from country to country. nija has the lowest median age world wide, just 15.2 years. japan, meanwhile, has the highest 48.4. germany's median age is 45.7. china's population to is aging rapidly. the result of decades of government imposed to family planning policies. although beijing is trying to turn this around as yet, there's no baby boom insights. as all day 3 chinese parents want their children to get the perfect start in life. all dingey being offers new mothers, a full package of services for their new boys, which will harden jo pierre to work. this is a talking diaper or if they have, it tells the mom if the baby paid all the babies, temperature is higher than $37.00 degrees. so little it says momma, i have a fever which will mama will, how shall i shall official. i should each diaper cost $0.40,
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the sensor alerts the mother smartphone stated the are product from the baby industry. she insists on demonstrating how it works. yeah. as well as selling baby products, dingey being also runs a real estate empire. she owns more than $460.00 luxury hotels for new parents, where mothers can go to be pampered, right after the child is born. this is how hot holly is. the luxury suite cost around $13000.00 euros a month. that room is over a 100 me to square big had a normal room cost between $57800.00 euros customers with a middle or high income can afford that film called i'm john. oh, gotcha. okay. especially in the wealthy cities, the lobby of this baby hotel and beijing looks like any other luxury hotel with a welcoming committee for every guest than you and her family have
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enough money. they are renting a room for one month. she belongs to the well educated, a lease with a college degree and a good job and the internet sector. but even she can only afford to have one child right now. oh, you don't know, they will know soon. this is will they? if we manage to earn a lot of money quickly, then i'll consider having a 2nd child. so we want to make sure our child grows up in prosperity to how that into ha, ha ha. the midwife sleeps next to the new mother so that she can take care of the baby at all times. plan you still seem to lack confidence and is anxious about doing the wrong thing. getting ahead in chinese society is a challenge that starts at birth. in 18 years. he's expected to go to university, only a very few make it that far. oh, poor. so we hope that our child you'll be able to start learning math, physics and english soon. i don't want my child to fall behind the others. chinese
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parents have such high expectations to highs about celia gall this generation is growing up with wellness programs like you china having a child cough, an average of 805000 euros. by the time they reach 22 very high, the midwives come from a lower economic class. i could never afford hotels or outlays like those. the communist parties desire for more babies can't be fulfilled. i may be families in the city have the financial means to have more children. but for country people like me, it's difficult every year either. if only one parent works, the family can't survive a 100. for decades, the chinese government only allowed families to have one child in an attempt to reduce china's population women who got pregnant a 2nd time how to abort the baby or pay
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a fine. now china's population is getting increasingly older and there's a risk that by 2050, it's population will shrink by 28000000 president. she jumping needs more babies to realize his dream of china's greatness. he will be a show ball, a pension in hell sectors are coming under increasing pressure yemen. the economy will shrink and expenses for social programs will rise with local administrations. will have to go into debt yet. man is they will we g, in hey long john, province. the consequences are tangible. this area in china is aging. the fastest life is hard. most people here are farmers. the cultivation of corn brings a meager income. this year, floods destroyed large parts of the harvest. there are fewer and fewer children here and parents here have to make a hard decision. was everyone wants to earn money, but you want to be with your child to. you have to decide either raise your
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children or make money. the city of no her the elderly keeps of themselves. street life here is changing in front of the houses. tenants are thought for vacant apartments. juan jeff, who lives in one of these houses, the 50 year old butcher and his wife are raising their grandchild chung. the parents live in shanghai because the pay is better there. every month they send home money. several generations are paying for shags, upbringing. ah, yes. oh yeah. i think no one in the country can afford a 3rd child, and no one can even afford a 2nd child. that's why they don't want mine. long. jeff, who has ambitious plans for his only grand daughter. he helps her with her homework, but that's still not enough. in a few months time she be taking private english lessons. the child's life motto is
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hanging on the wall. oh, when you are confused, you have to read hello. when you're a line, you can thing or when you get mad jester, your math, highmark your hall for you here were she was, i hope she will one day be rich and have a happy life again. when she grows up, i hope she can go to a good university and find a good job. in the last 10 years, the population of no her has shrunk by 30 percent. the city already has a ghostly quality. china's leaders are afraid of a childless future. in their her that fear may be slowly becoming a reality. coming late in the countryside, you see houses, but no people with the last generation here we hired while the last generation fears an aging country, many in china fear an aging population. the adults at this baby hotel will continue
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pampering. the precious new borns are no other types of food require as much land to produce as meat and dairy. according to the un livestock farming accounts for 78 percent of agricultural land use and no matter whether it's organic or conventional livestock, farming has some seriously negative consequences for our planet. to day though, there's a huge range of environmentally friendly alternatives. oh, what distinguishes these cheeses from these ones. this is the difference. so mess dary production is exceeding its biological limits. industrial farms are exploiting animals and require postulates water and energy. globally, milk production alone accounts for almost a quarter of all greenhouse gas emissions in the last stock sector. retail vulgar,
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seen as a cheese afficionado from a swiss proceed family with a long standing lump of dairy products for him, saying no true traditional rack let's inform dues doesn't come easy. he want to find cheeses, the replicate the taste, experience, and texture of cow milk based ones. but with no animals involved. 2 and a half years ago, he founded former as food biotech company based in berlin. he wants a cheese that can be eaten with a good conscience, thanks to precision fermentation. we instruct micro organisms to convert the nutrients sugars and nitrogen that we feed it to convert that into milk proteins and milk proteins already to the basic building blocks of all the products that we love. when it comes to dairy, they are responsible for the functionality of the products, and we are producing them bio identical the same way you would find them in milk. what without the cows, and if you get real the cows in this whole value chain,
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then you also able to get rid of most of the, of the downside 3, whether that's sustainability, ethical, or, or, or health related. unlike count, microorganisms aren't picky about their food. informers lab in bon funky east in bacteria, a fed into 2 mentors with byproduct from the region, be a potato industries. then the program to produce organic molecules. these micro organisms a 10 times more efficient than cows in convert to feed to protein. plus a pretty much anything organic. this technology can adapt to what's available locally all over the world, such as cocoa or comb plantation. currently, former is making chines products for the short maturing process recruiter and mozzarella. in this food lab at the technical university is the lin, logan singer and his colleagues are experimenting with various flavors and chas. they aim to serve not only weakens but true cheese lovers to i to pronounce
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creaminess. this is a bit more crumbly. no, you can already. yeah, you can tell what like how it's nice and cool. health sounds cool for most cheeses aren't available in shops yet. the company is in the pilot production phase and the technology is being validated on a small scale. oh, good 0. once for mo, to become a leader, implementation based daily in europe, 52030. with the world's growing population. conventional food production can't satisfy demand, bought, new technologies and diverse ingredients could help increase sustainability. taked algae commonly found in asian cuisine, but largely overlooked elsewhere. hamburg based b, the mars is bringing alvy to german dinner tables in the form of the beloved breakfast sausage. but these are vague and an nutritious thanks to the marine
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component. mix with spices, potatoes and onions. i ran in that. so from calgary, william increasingly important in the future to feed the growing population and they give us so many minerals and vitamins that are important for the body. you know, i was the term, you know, that's how we came up with the idea of making products where we incorporate. i'll keep it all for come around my home, really for dr. over design, integration to give the body all these minerals vitamins and all the essential nutrients him crop. what suitable for up the algae come from an aqua farm of the norwegian, north sea coast, where viva. maurice works with local fishermen. they know the sea, like no one else, and a perfectly equipped to harvest the augie. the company uses 2 types of micro alkie, red and brown, and one type of nico althea, there, unassuming organisms. all they need is that clean oxygen rich c to flourish up to in meters in 4 to 5 months. the harvest is must be careful not to damage the roots
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. then the algae rapidly grow back again. one harvest usually yields around $5000.00 kilos. lever maurice produces sausages at this battery once a week to keep it vague and production starts at 6 a. m, before any animal mate has touched the machines, the founder believes that the new alternatives for sausages and other foods we love could help reduce over consumption of meat and fish. al gay is the perfect ingredient, and not only for sausages i love your shops, m b, them probably didn't have bio shots and also give the body a lot of vitamin austin. how about am pure algae? do like the red dolls algae? it can be eaten straight as a salt substitute sites or it can be deep fried and then it takes like bacon. yeah . bacon substitute for begins strictly i'm not sure. was unchecked as absolutely gonna album sausages are more expensive than the meat variety. but these don't have
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flavor enhances or food coloring, and they're reagan. ultimately, it's up to the consumer cameron's ebay forest is one of the world's largest rain forests, and almost unbeatable when it comes to its variety of animal and plant species. but deforestation am poaching pose a threat to this unique environment. there is hope though. members of the gorilla guardian club of fighting back this rain forest can only be reached on foot was on to tier and the able forest research project team are on the lookout for rare primates. oh yeah. oh look. and that's a gorillas nest waivers on camera. usually build them on the ground water after their evening meal. they make themselves a place to sleep long as a pushy or offered courtesy on board. we have 11 primary species here,
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the including guerrillas, chimpanzees, drills, and prices red color. this monkeys nicole obeyed to press. the primates are in high demand with poachers who can sell them as bush meat. jaunty tear also used to make his living that way. but for most of the last 10 years, he's only study their tracks to find out which animals are traveling way in the forest. he lives in liberty on the edge of able forest. one of the 3 villages that are taking part in the project. they do when i of grasped what impact voting has and anyway, like, it's not really a profitable business, particularly. okay, yes, you can earn a bit up, but the income is very irregular. that's why i decided to stop hunting is angeline snoopy shaheed. usually now he only gets to see the animals in video footage.
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the reset is have set up 17 trial cameras in the part of the forest re gorillas, la. besides chimpanzees and gorillas, these forest elephants are also threatened with extinction. and the extremely shy drills are particularly at risk. the eval forest research project was set up by the san diego z wildlife alliance which supports primate conservation. it's been collaborating with the villages for more than 10 years. many of them used to be poachers. now they've learned to collect data on the animals or set up camera traffic. anyone who wants to take part must join a gorilla guardian club. then they get paid for their work. for gandhi, dwayne fernando, i have to thin out the clearing a bit. so the camera isn't obstructed, cassandra, i hipaa laconia once
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a month the team spends a few days venturing deep into the rain forest. they use campuses and t p. s to find their way. marcell kitchen has been part of the team for 9 years. the environmental scientist recalls precisely where each animal trail is found. what's particularly interesting are the movements of the around 25 gorillas that were discovered here in 2002 to then they were only 2 known gorilla subspecies in cameron. one group living south of the seneca river and another hundreds of kilometers away to the north. for the reason why we call we are collecting the sample is to do some genetic analyses to find out, well, how related the glass of able to doors, fans hard of the cassandra, the crockery where good less is very significant. and it is even these analyses are finally, you know, finally come to a conclusion. we might realize that in camaro,
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near sort of having tools hops, dishes of glory love, we might be having a 3rd one able forest in southwest and cameron covers an area of almost 1500 square kilometers and borders are nigeria. it is part of a large rain forest region, the 2nd largest world wide of to the amazon in brazil, to protect the rain forest in the future. the project aims to include the residence of the more than 40 villages surrounding the forest. the 3 villages taking part in the project so far all have a gorilla guardians come to enable the residence to feed their families without having to resort to poaching. they can joined the local club. here they get helped to buy life stock or plant vegetables or cocoa. joseph buckley, another former poacher became a farmer almost a decade ago. he farms vegetables but focuses mainly on cocoa beans cultivation. if he ever has problems, he can get support from the gorilla guardian club. like all the other members.
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members, linda cole, i. the cooper plantation has changed my life. foolish us hunting is very tiring and you get little money in the end or ala plant as your dealer. with the cocoa plantation, i just have to get out back and go to work and then harvest as much as possible. could you put on a y o? like here in mit? there is a small school in the other 2 than it is on the edge of the forest. the teachers receive training from the scientists and protecting the forest and its animals has become a fixture of the curriculum. and what kind of animal is that? 11, a gorilla man, lee. the idea is to raise awareness about the topic among the youngest villages. so can look bled al, but i like about the cause it is the gorilla. com,
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lazier like people l a. d. and what i learned is that hunting isn't good because animals, i like people on the project has made many of the visitors see the forest with different eyes like 70, to some 90 percent of the one time coaches have become farmers. and that's what the children see while they grow up. but the gorilla guardians clubs don't want things to stop there. longer. i'm fed, do we want to know, go zone to be created was on which the measures to guarantee the survival of the guerrillas are respected because the species is endangered. extension finished bodies. you're not alone. that's why he only takes his children to the edge of the forest. well, look clear, this trail, what animal left, that trail, that he saw a porcupine. he wants his children to know about animals, but he also wants them to know when to leave the forest to its inhabitants.
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in today's global living rooms, we go to mexico. ah, ah, ah loa. when i started. hi there. i'm pedro calderon and welcome to the rancho as well. no house in chihuahua and come in. well i i went up of the manila secchia in through la kaiser l rental luma. the ranch is owned by the mexican fund from nature conservation. he, yo, yo,
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ma nichol. i manage a deal, and this is where i live. i read an effect, and if the casa, i am really fortunate to live here in the ranch house in may, north, like on, i love it, been best. he was built in the 19 seventy's by the original ranch owner. you know, he lived here for 40 years and maybe occupant and much of what is still here. was his them of it by your delicatessen. from been financial out. he not, it wasn't like wasena gave, this is the kitchen without. here is my computer a my coffee. it's very cold here in the winter law. that's why we don't work in the office, but in the kitchen where everything is close by. and well, i really like my coffee, so i'm always drinking a more gothic battle though. the thing on the coffee, though, at the ample, ah, tell rankel in this used to be a busy kennel rash from there. there was between 1003000 head of cattle here. now the ranch is used for animal species conservation. we have heard of mexican bison
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here, and a few cows a not like that. then we'll get no hope at all. there used to be meals for the ranch, hands here in the house, and canceling back then they had these large tables where the food was served as, as grand as on may. but today will use them for workshops, or when people come to help us work with the bison, your knee even though ian in and that you haven't looked at a 100, he's on. ah, that will put up bucking me for this is a john made by the puck he made and which are one of the 1st cultures among the original inhabitants of northern mexico. ac i as in law sally, this is the living room. i mean, there's also some of the original furniture makita. that's a game table made out of a barrels, a chuckle. there's also a pool table and on my side, but it is more of a work and storage table. they had a cool place to put things for a day, but i could be out of the island and took it in wales. we always try to keep the
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ranch, feel it, some of the month and everything, but in a lambie. and then the rancho here are some of the saddles and put as in rancho. yep. and this is my gear, horses are my passion, but when you get empathy on phone, look i you i, this is the ranches official office because it's so cold here in winter. we hardly use it and i work next door in the kitchen. me for my house, i wouldn't know, but i collect data here, information about the wells, the map of the ranch or records of where animals have been spotted. thanks a lot for visiting. and thank you for allowing us to share a bit of our life here and give you a few impressions of what its like on the ranch, bye for now and all that. oh 02 children to countenance one giant problem. and we really
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appreciate a delay. fax in now will climate change affect us and our children? ah, learn more at d, w dot com slash water. that's all from us that global 3000 and this week please do get in touch and send us your feedback. we're at global 3000 at d, w dot com and check us out on face. but to d w global ideas. see you next week. take can ah, with
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who a war and eternity time. it can be measured precisely. and yet each person experiences it differently. as if there are different forms of type
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type of phenomena, a dimension and illusion about starts december 31st on d, w, u, the power affordance. and when i come from, i never saw the sun wet lipstick. have you gone up in brazil? the sun was always a man since the points of his word for son is masculine. when i moved to jim when he has a 10 year old, i watched a cartoon on tv that was a how i see the world. because into i'm with family, it 5 saving now, but the side of a girl is solar. sorry, the pony tail instead of a deep voice, extra learned of the guy seemed absolutely incredible. i realized how language shaped the thinking, how definitions. i'm not only mental, it may just put out a whole perspective of the world is inside save my life and was one of the reasons
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i became a journalist. i'm a storyteller, and i use my words to help with in her cultural understanding. my name is ellen quailey and i work at the top, the list enough people, you're headed for climate disaster. and yet, every year, governments spend the hundreds of billions of public funds on fossil fuel subsidies . imagine a bridge spent hundreds of billions per year subsidizing giant me to yours. that's what you're doing right now. around the world, people are living in poverty. don't you think helping them would make more sense than i don't know. i ain't for the demise of your entire species. you've got a huge opportunity right now as you rebuild your economies and bounced back in this path demick. so here's my wild idea. don't choose extinction
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savior species before it's too late. it's dabbling in humans to stop making excuses and start making changes. ah ah, ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin brush is supreme court shots down the country, leading human rights group. police detained, protest is outside the court house as the n g o. memorial is liquidated. memorial dedicates itself to documenting the atrocities of russia that stalin has passed.
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will that eras crimes now be forgotten? also coming up, china expands. it's locked down, says corona virus case, is there, kate? rising. hundreds of thousands more people joined the millions already confined to their homes in china's worst cove at 19 outright sense. woo hon. and both artists and activists. the nellie mo, holly's iconic photos, shine a light on black and queer culture in south africa. and exhibition in berlin. features they groundbreaking work. ah, i'm rebecca writ as welcome to the program. in the light is blow to russian civil society, the supreme court has ordered the closing of memorial, the countries most respected human rights group. it defends the rights of political prisoners in russia and helps victims of soviet era repression. the court agreed
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with the prosecutions argument that the organisation violates is a law on foreign agents. memorial and its supporters say the charges of politically motivated, rush, oldest, and most important human rights organization. now disbanded, supporters defied a protest band to gather in front of memorials headquarters. they said the decision was politically motivated. was that idea of critics of being eliminated? so is the opposition. any one who wants to lift the mask off russia and look critically at its history that is being eliminated obese. now, your distorted memorial was classified as if foreign agent. that meant the organization had to comply with various requirements. the court found it in violation of those rules. the n g o is now banned and must stop its work in russia . for many memorial represents the historical conscience of the country. it aims to make sure that the reign of terror in the soviet union under
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joseph stalin and the inhumanity of the gulag prison camp system are not forgotten . when earlier this month, russian president vladimir putin accused memorial of rehabilitating the reputation of nazi collaborators in world war 2 was a moment. views of the organization denied all allegations and wants to appeal. it's representatives say they may take the case to the european court of human rights. it's bring in felix light, a journalist in moscow, russia. felix, welcome. tell us more about why the supreme court shut down this human rights group . rebecca, as with so much in russia's sort of legal system, this really is a sort of a story in 2 hobbs. on the one hand, we have the sort of the official justification for this lawsuit. for this shuttering of memorial, which is breaking rush is very controversial, foreign agent lose memorial has been a foreign agent for some years, and it is allegedly refused to market some of its sort of products on its
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literature as such. but i think allies at memorial stress that this is less about a sort of a technical violation of the, of the foreign agent laws and more about memorial sort of gender more general clash with the general sort of narrative that's, that's prevalence in russian society right now. is which is that the stall in his ear or the star, his crime should be sort of forgotten and that we should instead sort of emphasize the countries achievement in the, in the 2nd world war and winning the war. suddenly what we saw today in the course of very much sort of supported that argument, we saw the state prosecute to say that a russian shouldn't be ashamed. russians shouldn't be sort of repentance for the past, and instead they should be take pride in the achievements of the started period. so i think this was really a case of, you know, there were many note there were many sort of potential red lines that the criminal laid down the memorial had crossed. and this was sort of a case of a perfect storm, almost many, many sort of claims, many
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a pretensions on to memorial from the criminal side today, certainly and memorial says it's become a target of the same repression. it's trying to protect people from an at the move here is politically motivated. are they right? well, it's difficult to say sort of categorically, but i certainly think that there is a political dynamic here where we saw in the court today. the prosecutors making a very strong argument that this was basically about the memory of the 2nd world war. they said that memorial had been founded as an organization that research repressions that helped victims. but that it moved in recent years towards what they called sort of blocking the name of the soviet union and dispatching rewriting history. these are the very much there was and so i think we certainly saw a political angle here. now it's very difficult to say what the specific sort of violation, what, what it was it was doomed memorial was, but i certainly think this was a case that was very, very highly well, dissipated russian and very intensity. what both by sort of representatives of
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liberal, civic society and by representatives of the criminal, this was very politically charged. without a doubt, i think they're almost out of time. but is there any avenue for appeal? all? well, certainly the legal side, the legal representation of the moral have said they will appeal and they can take it you or they can repeal to the russian supreme court so they can go to european court. but it's going to be quite frank. the chances of success are very limited and i suspect, acknowledge them selves. certainly, i think memorial even if it continues in some form. it's existence as a sort of a registered civil society organization in russia is reaching the end of its road. i think phoenix line chandler and moscow, thanks very much for your time. at 10 now to some other stories making headlines. age group save the children has confirmed 2 of itself were killed in an alleged attack by the man man, military on christmas day. the workers were among the charred remains of more than 30 people found in the countries aisd. the military has denied any involvement in
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the killings. dozens of women have marched and cobble in protest against policies of the countries new taliban government. the protesters called on the government to respect women's rights and accused its members of covertly killing soldiers of the asked regime since taking power in august. the taliban have continually pushed women and girls out of schools and public life. iran's foreign minister says he's confident a new nuclear deal can be quickly agreed with world powers talks between the west and iran on its nuclear program. resume resumed in vienna on monday. one condition for terran is that it be allowed to export crude oil as part of a new agreement. china is expanding its corona virus locked downs with hundreds of thousands war people in the northern parts are sanjay province, ordered to stay at home. a spike in case as there has seemed the highest infection rates in china since the outbreak in whoo, hon. nearly 2 years ago, the new measures come as beijing prepares to welcome thousands of overseas visitors
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for their february's winter olympics. it's been almost 2 years since china has seen the streets of major cities deserted. but once again, millions of back under lockdown or forest is widen the restrictions across. shun she province on tuesday as a grapple with the country's biggest outbreak. since the initial months of the pandemic, china has pursued a 0 tolerance approach. rolling out must testing and draconian lock downs for relatively small outbreaks. on despite administering almost 3000000000 jobs, initial research shows the locally produce sign havoc offers limited protection against the on the chrome variant. the strategy that the government is implementing here 0 covert. and that means even if there are only a handful of cases,
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whole cities, they have been sealed off. and one game changer was that now than you, a variance of the virus are more infectious and the authorities have to act even faster. the beijing brings at olympics are set to start in just over a month with only spectators from mainland china permitted to attend. with diplomatic boycotts, already announced, begging will be eager to ensure that covert outbreaks don't further chill the already frosty atmosphere. germany's constitutional court has ordered parliament to immediately issue laws. protecting people with disabilities in pandemic, related tree are situations tre. ours is the process of prioritizing patients for treatment. for example, if hospitals are unable to cope with a demand for intensive care, the case was filed by a group of people with disabilities and pre existing conditions. i expressed fears that they would be denied treatment if the pandemic pushes hospitals to their
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limits. as the army con variant of the virus spreads, germany has introduced new restrictions. they include tight limits on private gatherings and public events. the government is also urging people to step up and get vaccinated even during the festive season. housings of people are getting their job like at these vaccination center in berlin. at the moment, more than 70 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, and around 36 percent of all germans have received a booster shot. the booster info. most importantly that either postal jo booster. as in the right now, we are barely giving any 1st shots in vaccination centers, up to 98 percent your booster jobs. people who come here are already pro vaccine, kind of actively sought out of vaccination underwood vulcan. people turning up here for a booster shot, believe it's the key to ending the pandemic lowers,
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i think it's good, the more people who get vaccinated, the better it is for all of us. that's why it's also very important for me to run. it's super important and i think it's very, very important and i'm a bit worried that's why i'm here that i've been here for this, or i got it because my job is important to me and i come into contact with a lot of people. the booster and my health are important to him, and he has introduced new social d sensing measures and restrictions, and are the so called to t will only does vaccinated or recently recovered, may enter many venues and events. and a 2 d plus through people also have to show a negative test result on top of that. thanks to these measures, gemini has managed to have the number of infections per 100000 inhabitants between the end of november and the end of december. all annoy will also be here over the new year to vaccinate people. because we're in a really critical phase. we're in a situation where every day counts here and where it's better to be vaccinated to
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day, rather than to morrow. authorities fear a new wave of infections due to the army chron variant. we not only had to population hard, particularly the unvaccinated, but could also affect to running of critical infrastructure such as hospitals and other public services. south african photographers, n l m, a holy is known for the trying sexual freedom and black queer culture. and a museum here in belin has dedicated an exhibition to the artist, an activist. it's an insight into south africa's l. j bay. take you community and a reflection on apartheid. proud, powerful, sometimes vulnerable, or even royal. these are some of the faces of xin, alamo, wholly his work, also confronts trauma. for almost 20 years, molly's been documenting south africa's l g
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b t q. community discrimination against sexual minorities has been illegal and south africa since 1996. but in day to day life, gays lesbians and transgender people here are still at risk, as well as non binary people. like all it i think you live with that, that every day. but i cannot stop doing what i'm doing because it made sense to me, and it forms part of the south african history. post up update. molly's exhibition and berlin shows survivors of antique. we're hate crimes, including so called corrective rape. but there are also images of love and care. molly's photos are a collaboration built on trust between the artist and the subjects. gaze out at the viewer with confidence and dignity for the series, faces and phases, behold, followed subjects over several years.
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in that we put elgar thea is a continuing journey in life of building visual his trees are with the community. and so they also invite their friends and associates to look fairness to be bold to be desiring to be unafraid of the camera. confident and empowered to nail him holies haunting images, celebrate queer beauty and dignity, drinking them visible to the world. just a bit of tennis news. now a head of the upcoming australian open dominic tame has decided to pull out of the grand slam you to a risk to injury. the 2020 us open winner is the latest big name to withdraw from the tournament. joining the likes have roger federer and serena williams, among others, the 28 year old austrian who was ranked number 3 in the world,
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hasn't played since june, and has slipped to 15th in the rankings as a result in watching data. but the news has a reminder of the top story. we're following foyer, russia supreme court has ordered the closure of the country's most respected human rights group. memorial chronicles the crimes of russian state repression and advocates for victims. the move comes caps a year of cracked sounds on russia's, the civil society watching need of any needs coming up next in your business days with rob watts at pablo poli, alias will be here next out at that for me. thanks very much. watch and i got some hot tips for your bucket list. i magic corner trip.

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