tv Freundinnen. Fur immer Deutsche Welle December 29, 2021 12:00am-12:46am CET
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how much was can really get we still have time to go. i'm doing with his subscribe like ah ah, this is d w. news line from berlin. germany tries to head off the threat from the omni cron corona virus variant protesters event their anger as the government introduces new restrictions on private events and public gatherings, and also calls me unvaccinated to step up and get the jap also coming up and the
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show. russia supreme court shuts down the country's leading human rights group. the g o moral dedicates itself to documenting the atrocities of russia's style and his past will that era's crimes now be forgotten? and looking back at the key arctic scenes at cobble airport, following the u. s. withdrawal from afghanistan, we meet some of the desperate afghans who made it out as they remember those who they left behind. ah, i'm here and tilton, thanks for joining us. new corona virus restrictions have come into force here in germany. as attempts to slow down the spread of the army, kron variant with new year's eve approaching, the government is placing tighter limits on public and private celebrations. it's also urging those still on vaccinated to get the jap just before the new restrictions took place or took a rather people protested in cities across the country.
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ah, hundreds of people demand to pass tensions run high on the streets of tito in the eastern state of saxony on monday night. just one of many protest so organized across the country against the government's coroner, by restrictions and covey. 19 vaccines. it was a tense, but a peaceful protest. in the nearby town of foutz and police were attacked with fireworks and butters as they attempted to break up an authorized protest for sorry, it is reported at least 10 officers injured in the capital berlin. there is a little understanding of the violin that has erupted, and for those who still refused to get vaccinated, but you, we all get the every mandatory vaccine where we go on holiday without questioning it. so what's happening now is ridiculous from a move move, nothing. it's not necessary to take it as tweets and attack police offices to use
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violence. you should do it peacefully with either rate all in the same boat. so why do some have to kick up a fuss? come from it. i think i don't know if it's the right way, but people probably don't know who else to express themselves or almost a year to day after the vaccination campaign started berlin, mayor of francis cag, if i visited a covey 19 intensive care unit, she repeated the government pleated a quarter of the population, steal and vaccinated in germany. lessons is this infant get hard as unaided, as i can only say it again and again. the people lying here in these hospital, much, many of them are probably thinking if only i had done it is perhaps, then it would have prevented this from happening. i washed by probably their, our opponents to the vaccine and measures that over half of the population support measures now in place. but officials are bracing themselves for a new wave of infections with the more transmissible army chron variance,
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which could, over when germany is critical health care infrastructure. germany's constitutional court has ordered parliament to immediately issue laws, protecting people with disabilities. in pet debit related tree are situations, the case was filed by a group of people with disabilities and pre existing conditions. they expressed fears that they would been denied. treatment of the pandemic pushes hospitals to their limits in intensive care, but left on his own without a ventilator. it's a nightmare. scenario. constantine gaz feared that due to his disability, he might be left to die because his chances of survival are deemed too low. he went to court and one. now there must be laws in place to protect people with disabilities whom lessons of perspective in this, for from our perspective, the constitutional court took a great weight off our shoulders. they told us and society that we have to have an intense discussion about this needs to do with you,
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sir. now it must be debated and put into law how doctors decide who is saved in emergency situations. if they cannot save every one. up until now that's been covered by professional guidelines. those guidelines say that the chance of survival is decisive. doctors look at the patient state of health frailty and whether there are serious pre existing conditions that will reduce the chance of survival. the judges of the federal constitutional court ruled that the current approach does not protect against discrimination and demanded a legal framework that guarantees it a relief for doctors who feel left alone with life and death decisions of all tell him that the gun i'm spoken to a number of colleagues, laguna, everyone would like to have constitutionally set guard rails what rules that are resilient. so this is a good ruling iep from dia, is this good this? what tied federal justice minister marco bushmen reacted on twitter.
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the most important thing has to be that we don't get into a tree our situation, but if we do, then we need clear rules that protect people with handicaps from discrimination. the government will develop a draft law quickly. the court has left the government plenty of room to maneuver as it drafts the new law, but also says they must act immediately. let's turn now to some other stories making headlines around the world. in the syrian port of let the key a firefighters contained a blaze, hours after missiles attack. the facility from the mediterranean syrians, date medias said that the attack was carried out by israel, but didn't give details on the damages caused by the strike. the israeli military has not commented so far on the attack. members of jordan's parliament have treated blows during a debate about gender equality and changes to the constitution. the punch up began
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when deputies discussed adding the female noun to amendments that guaranteed equal rights for all citizens. no one was seriously injured. in the living emergency service to say they have rescued at least 48 people stranded by flood waters. heavy rains had central regions of the country last week, affecting farming and damage and hundreds of homes. authorities believe 13 people have died so far in the flooding. just in the latest blow to russian civil society, the supreme court there 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 error oppression. the court agreed with the prosecutions argument that the organization violated a law and so called foreign agents. morial and its supporters say the charges are politically motivated. russia's oldest and most important human rights organization now disbanded, supporters defied
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a protest fan 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 lit the mask off russia and look critically at its history that is being eliminated abuse. now you're distorted. memorial was classified as a 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 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 reputations
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of nazi collaborators in world war 2 was a moment of using. 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. so why is vladimir putin his kremlin? so determined to have memorial close down the w, put that question earlier to pavlov underlay of, from the organizations board of directors. hello dear yours and i think i need to say that it's so long history of repression against new moral as in speech and came to the power. and i think there is 3 main reasons. the 1st one is that there's no lifestyle legend or prison and he's close friends. he's the former keegan officer and all the many people around around him and who has now the biggest power in russia. they a former occasion officers and for damage. and the moral always was the enemy
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because we started to what they did in thirties and the old, their service history. this is the 1st point. the 2nd thing, it's because new moral wasn't only historical society. and we not only work with stalins repressions, but also was their biggest part of new moral work in the human rights in modern the russia. and that's why it was, it was all this was hard topics for the russian government in church now in the, in, on all other fields or relation of human rights inside a freshman. and it was very stressful and tomorrow will be the 2nd case against the human rights center of new moral. and it probably also will be bound to work. and the sense thing is because they're putting in more than 20 years in power. and they're now preparing the next next history to the keep the power because they now they prepare until the transition of his power ought to keep him
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from one more president election. and then that's why the tricky down of all, in the huge, independent organizations that was puzzle and ray of memorials, board of directors there. and now, as the year draws to a close, we want to take a look at some of the lasting images of 2021. the united states withdrawal from afghanistan was as chaotic as it was. sudden, as international forces departed, thousands of locals tried to leave 2 hundreds got on to the runway at couple airport. desperate to get out. such was their desperation that as one us military plane taxied down the runway, some clung to the body of the aircraft. many fell to their deaths after the plane took off. the u. s. did take some who could show they had the right to leave. others gambled on the humanity of the soldiers at the airport. t w's. harry schultz met a couple who meant to leave with some,
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but not all of their children. hello less, sophie says he understands though shocking scenes of desperate afghan parents passing their children to american soldiers at cobble airport. i cannot remember people way became because even if anyone one wanted to live marked for assassination by the islamic state, due to his work on national reconciliation, sofie was among those trying to get his family into the airport onto a plane to promised refuge in the netherlands sophie was in hiding in late august when he was told in the middle of the night to go to the airport. he tried to gather his family from the different locations where they moved for their safety. his wife missed the call. his brother brought the children who were staying with him, but it was so dangerous at the airport. sophia, initially sent them back. i saw that the people who are in there was fighting and the people injured. after 24 hours, he managed to make it onto a dutch flight with 4 of his children, his wife and the others would be forced to flee through pakistan throughout the
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ordeal. 20 month old. hi and never cried. her father says treating the trip as a great adventure, which they almost do now starting over in the netherlands. tanina satari is doing the same, a gender adviser for the dutch embassy in cobble. she became an asylum seeker over night, literally, despite what her dutch colleagues had promised. i remembered the last night we were with them. how like, you know, like a family, we were there and they were talking to us and then we will be there with you and we will not leave you if something goes wrong. the next day the taliban took control of cobble. when satari and other afghan employees showed up for work, they were alone, no warning, they just left us and we, it was a big shock. the dutch foreign and defense ministers would later resign in acknowledgement of how badly the evacuation effort was managed. fortunately, orders did come through to evacuate satari and her immediate family. it took 3 tries and during taliban beatings, but he says she knew, especially as
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a woman. that flight was her only hope for survival every time that we were going back, it was so disappointing. and i was like, if i stay here, i will die. even if i, if i'm alive, i will not have a life. she's not sure yet what that life will be. she and her family are living in a refugee camp awaiting permanent housing and dutch passports, domina satari and colorless sophie both know as difficult as this was. they are the lucky ones. they speak of their heartbreak at not having been able to help others escape. sophie says 2 of his former colleagues who were not evacuated despite his please have since been killed. authorities and columbia have rescued a rare big cat that might not have otherwise survived in the wild. let's have been working around the clock cleaners deal by no juggle. randi come back to health. drug or wendy's are a type of pullman native to north and south america. but this is thought to be the 1st albino of its kind to be found in columbia. since her chances of survival in
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the wild are limited, she'll be transferred to a conservation park when she has received full medical care. you're watching t w news. i'm aaron tilton, more news at the top of the hour of next pablo foy ls is here with your business update. take care and see you soon. ah. every day for us and for our planet. a global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do
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we make cities greener? how can we protect animals and their habitats? what to do with all our waste? we can make a difference by choosing reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable smarten solutions over steam set in our ways. earth is truly unique and we know that that uniqueness is what allows us to live and survive. google ideas. the environmental series in global 3000 on d, w, and online with . ah, stock markets are in a feat mode as the year draws to a close while investors are monitoring the arm across crone of virus variant. there is a sense the impact might not be as serious as one severed. we'll get the view from wall street,
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germans or looking elsewhere for their new year pyrotechnics as authorities again banned the sale of fireworks. some are even heading to denmark as supply chain woes named spain is urging more women to keep on truckin on public lillius. and here's your business update us stock market open stronger on choose day on optimism that the i'm a chron. corona virus variant will not derail the global economic recovery. stocks came off a bit, as traders closed their positions for 2021. and there are lingering concerns about on a cron driven traveler disruptions and store closures. but markets are surfing a holiday week, wave boosted by softer rules on corona, virus infections that should offer help for staff challenged businesses will james sweeney has more from the new york stock exchange. hi james. good to see. stocks are edging higher as we approach the end of the year to the markets feel
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that i'm a crohn is less of a threat than previously thought. well, i can't really speak on behalf of all of the markets, but evidence would suggest that to be the case is oma cron. less of a threat to the markets. yes, it has been here. the u. s. at least we went from being told to be in fear, but deadly 3rd variance a well, it's more contagious or contagious than delta, but not as deadly to the cdc here, recommending 10 day quarantines for breakthrough cases and our recommending 5 just yesterday we've had hundreds of celebrities, athletes, traitors, who on wall street, they've gotten it, they're back on camera, they're back playing sports thousands across the world. have it right here in new york city. there's thousands lining up. they're just being safe. they're being cautious and trying to prevent the sped. but is oma cron less of a threat for the most part here in the united states. it is not. you do have companies like apple here in new york city that announced that it won't let any shoppers physically inside the store regardless of vaccination status. but then you have a study like today from south africa that said that the omicron infection appears
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to protect against the built the barrier and could displace it. and that's not from my words that's from the africa health research institute. so with all of these mixed messages and all of these mixed headlines, yes, omar crohn fears here in the u. s. are less of a threat than previous lot thought and are pushing the markets higher. and also all you have to do was look at the holiday numbers from yesterday and realize people are still out there shopping. all right, well james, you're basically just said that i said it's not looking as seriously as previously thought. so this is obviously playing huge factor in the situation there. yes, it definitely is. that's definitely playing a huge factor. the santa close rally was in full effect starting yesterday of 300.350 points. the markets are up to day and again, restrictions they happen to be all over the place here, the u. s. and it's led to a lot of confusion and that's been since day one. and regarding the confusion with cobit roles, the markets are taking that in and they're trying their best to consider like how can you take this threat seriously, if they don't even know what the threat actually is that they don't know what the rules actually are to prevent this threat,
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and that's the real. that's the real concern. here we have companies again like apple that are not living inside the store, but then you have airliners that are saying, gillis, 5 days reprieve. right. attendance. seems like there's a lot going on. james sweeney in new york. thank you for that. well, like much of the world, europe is seeing a shortage of truck drivers. it's causing quite the pinch in supply chains across the continent. in spain, the government is looking at ways to recruit more people into the profession, especially from traditionally under represented groups. this is far from begonia, are manette is 1st time getting behind the wheel. the mother and grandmother has been a truck driver for the last 26 years. i guess it's true that we hear the phrase, you don't look like a trucker. a lot. it happens to many of us. and why don't i look like a trucker?
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what must i look like? it's just that you're so tiny, so skinny. i don't need to be tall and fat. they're still a stereotype of the truck or woman's physique. i don't know why we all have to be very butch, very manly. we buddy much. what we'll do, a recent estimate shows europe is missing, 400000 drivers needed to deliver goods. spain, meanwhile, is missing tens of thousands of drivers alone. guy with a miracle, there are fewer and fewer truck drivers. and this is just the tip of the iceberg. there are 10015000 or 20000 truck drivers missing in spain. that's nothing. now. in 10 or 12 years there will be more missing because if the average age of a truck driver in spain today is 50 or 52 years in 10 years, there will be none because there is no generational replacement. they are not making it easier for new people to enter the workforce. many people are invested in getting out ahead of this problem and making the often lonely and difficult job more attractive. a driver's union recently won
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a battle with the government and drivers will no longer be required to load or unload their trucks. the government is also looking at ways to attract not only more women, but more young people. both groups are under represented in the industry, but as more drivers retire every year, this fast moving problem has no speed bumps in sight. while the pandemic has brought tough times for the global fashion industry, consumers confined to their home spend less money on clothes, on, shuttered, shops couldn't sell them anyway. fashion designers have also been struggling with lucrative showcases often being canceled. we met one such designer in india, videos from 2019, bring back fond memories for a fashion designer, blue maker cheda. she was at the top of her game back then with models at india fashion. we can mom by before the pandemic business was booming. people who will not be for me,
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i know that i believe that it is not that intention, not the baby. ah, but they want to. but it just that the dime that difficult slide from my had again uni at the for them that if their businesses are good, if they do good. ah, if they come out of the situation quicker and foster, i think even i'll be in a better position. and then my money going to be to leave. the pandemic drove the tourists away to on the street, and mom, by fashion stores of clothes down in droves. boomy kancheta also had to close her store. everybody went up with her clothes on the business. oh, yeah. and this, it ordered was one of i shouldn't have had begun really does of it, but giving up is not her style. she could no longer afford her old design and sewing workshop. so she moved her business to a much smaller location,
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less than 10 of her 45 sewing machines remain in operation. and she was only able to keep a handful of employees. you jessie and jessica. this is, i will be. com good. the will, the impact on work has been too much. earlier we had a very big staff. we had 110 or 111 people working that way, but i'll be watching somebody now. that's not the situation right now. we only of 8 to 10 people working here as we don't have as much work as before. no, it's like having no work at all fairly this like ami made us of leg work. come cut the me, which will graduate fabrics and patterns fill the store rooms. before the pandemic, the workshop was a roomy, 400 square meters. now the boss can barely find a seat through all my of i will plan is concerned. oh no, i'm not going to shut it. okay, so slowly,
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gradually, oh, earlier than i used to make for myself, my own brand, and i used to explore the noise. that transition has been to sustain and sort of i, i am making other, but i'm sort of him now producing for them i design and make sample for the brand on which they give the order these days boomy, ca, cheda only gets to designed late at night, in one of her shops which she's converted into a grocery store, another step in her crisis management plan. usually new year's eve, here in germany is a noisy and colorful affair because of all the fireworks going off. but this year, german authorities have again decided to bind the sale of fireworks. so germans are crossing the border into neighboring denmark to buy rockets and buyers or use even berlin typically goes off with
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a bang. but the 201920 to curve. it was different. in a suburban street, in the midst of crowds of revelers. ah, a huge explosion from a home made bomb. hundreds of thousands of euros of damage. scores of people injured for berlin's authorities. it was the cracker that broke the camel's back. then, with the onset of the pandemic, authorities feared the usual stream of wounded would overwhelm hospitals, already groaning under the load of covered cases. and national ban was put in place . but germans just want to have fun via plus and get as event despite everything we want to celebrate the new year. last year it couldn't happen. therefore, we are happy that it's possible this year in germany, we are not allowed to buy fire crackers, but we are allowed to set them off. fuck them up, then decide. so many germans, i'm making a pilgrimage across the border into denmark to buy their fireworks. ha humble. they
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come from hamburg, hanover blame and rust stock, dusseldorf, purveyors of pyrotechnics had been worried about their economic plight as denmark prepares for a more subdued and new year's celebration than usual. but now, business is booming. your height is that the german customers have helped safe does it. so that's been nice. hemmings in estimates that this year german customers account for 65 percent of the shops turn over. so it looks like, even though the brandenburg gate party is strictly no spectators, nightclubs will be closed and all indoor venues will be off limits to the un vexed germans will still be able to make some noise to welcome in the new year. here's a reminder of the tough business story we're following for you. this. our stock markets are in a feat mode as the year draws for close investors sense the impact of the i'm a crohn corona virus variant might not be as serious as previously feared
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on pablo foliage. in berlin for more business news, check out our website, d, w dot com for slash business. and we're also on d. t w news, eh, youtube channel. and you can find us on facebook as d w dot business until next time. take care. ah ah how to eat without feeling guilty about the impact on the planet or according to german food, pioneers is possible. they are creating environmentally friendly alternatives for
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popular foods in the kitchen. and the laboratory. is this the solution to a growing global population? global 3000 next on d w. their importance to the economy is huge. oh, but getting hold of them is often a dirty business. critical commodities make us mo bile make our smartphones smart. how can today's global hunger for lithium cobalt and more? the satisfied made in germany. in 60 minutes on d. w. o. to the dark side, where intelligence agencies are pulling the strings,
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were organized crime rules. were conglomerates make their own laws? we shed light on the opaque worlds who's behind the benefits and why are they a threat to us all o peak wolves starts january 5th on d w with ah, 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. it is 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 to 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 planet's population booming, the global population pyramid is whitening and becoming flatter. life expectancy is improving thanks to progress and developments in medicine. better health care provision and a greater awareness when it comes to health. age distribution
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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 family planning policies. although beijing is trying to turn this around as yet, there's no baby boom insights. as though they think chinese parents want their children to get the perfect start in life, all dingey being offered new mothers, a full package of services for their new boys are, which will harlan, you appear to work i. this is a talking diaper. it tells the mom if the baby paid all the babies, temperature is higher than $37.00 degrees. so it says momma, i have a fever before mom hour. how shall i shall official accomplish it?
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each diaper costs $0.40. the sensor alerts the mother smartphone, the our product from the baby industry. she insists on demonstrating how it works. 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 costs around $13000.00 euros a month. that room is over a 100 meters square, big had a normal room cost between $57800.00 euros customers with a middle or high income can afford that film. galvan janica latch in italy, 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 under 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 glass. but even she can only afford to have one child right now. you got me and they will know soon the officials i if we manage to earn a lot of money quickly, then i'll consider having a 2nd child who 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 in
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english soon. i don't want my child to fall behind the others. chinese parents have such high expectations to highs about celia gall this generation is growing up with wellness programs like this. you, china having a child cough an average of 805000 euros. by the time they reach 22 my. 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 if you are 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 have to report a baby or pay
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a fine. now chinese 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 or the a show ball pension and health sectors are coming under increasing pressure. yeah, i mean the economy will shrink and expenses for social programs will rise with local administrations, will have to go into debt yet. they will we g in hey long john province. the consequences are tangible. this area and 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 the 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. one 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 g durations are paying for shanks upbringing. ah, yes. oh yeah. i think no one in the country can afford a 3rd child lessons and no one can even afford a 2nd child. that's why they don't want one 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 on hello. when you're a line, you can thing. when you get mad jester, your math, i mark your hall social here was huge. i hope she will one day be rich and have a happy life. 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. today 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 i logical 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 livestock sector. rafael vogue and
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singer as a cheese aficionado from a swiss presented family with a long standing love of dairy products for him saying no traditional ratcliffe and fun dues doesn't come easy. he want to find cheeses that 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 a food biotech company based in berlin. he wants a cheese that can be eaten with a good conscience. thanks to christian fermentation. we instruct micro organisms to convert the nutrients sugars and nitrogen that we feed it to convert that into milk proteins and make 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. but without the cars, and if you get rid of the cows in this whole value chain,
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then you're also able to get rid of most of the, of the downsides. really, whether that's in sustainability, ethical, or, or, or health related. unlike house microorganisms aren't picky about their food. informers, lavin bon funky east and bacteria fed into fermenters with by products from the regions beer and potato industries. then they program to produce organic molecules . these micro organisms a 10 times more efficient than cows in converting feet to proteins, plus they'll a pretty much anything organic. this technology can adapt to what's available locally all over the world, such as cocoa or comb plantations. currently, former is making cheese products with a short maturing process. recada and mozzarella. in this food lab at the taking university of sterling, logan sing on his colleagues are experimenting with various flavors and textures. they aim to serve not only weakens but true cheese lovers to. i super nice
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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 tons 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 vulcans xena ones for mo, to become a leader, implementation based dairy 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 moraine
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component mix with spices, potatoes and onions. i ran in that. so calgary will go 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 and with the term, you know, that's how we came up with the idea of making products where we incorporate. i'll keep it all to come around my whole, really for dr. over design integration to give the body all these minerals vitamins and all the essential nutrients him crop. what sushi of 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 algae. the company uses 2 types of micro algae, red and ram, and one type of nico althea. there are unassuming organisms. all they need is a clean oxygen rich see to flourish up to 2 meters in 4 to 5 months. the harvesters must be careful not to damage the roots than the algy rapidly grow back again. one
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harvest usually yields around $5000.00 kilos. lever maurice produces sausages at this factory once a week to keep it vague and production starts at 6. i am 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, riley bure shops, m, b, them probably don't have bio shots and also give the body a lot of vitamin or brown. hammer cure, alvi like the red dulls algae. it can be eaten straight as a salt substitute at sites or it can be deep fried and then it takes like bacon. yeah. bacon substitute for ligans. i'm not sure was unchecked as us will be gone or i'll be 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 elbow 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's hope though, members of the gorilla guardian club of fighting back this rain forest can only be reached on foot was on to tear and the able forest research project team are on the lookout for rare primates. oh, yeah. oh look and that's a guerrillas nest. we brianca martin usually build them on the ground water after their evening meal. they make themselves a place to sleep longer. so.
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