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tv   Global 3000  Deutsche Welle  June 1, 2022 4:30am-5:01am CEST

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fortunately and a south, a mother was going to spend the rest of her life behind bars for murdering her 3 dogs. if you call me back, i really need help with i see the site that was part of psychosis as an awful illness. postpartum is a nasty mothers nightmare starts june 4th on d w. m. ah, ah, welcome to global 3000. re wilding, the woods in romania nature. conservationists of protecting forests from
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deforestation. the return of green people on the island of borneo a bringing back the trees and make shift living the covey pandemic has left many people without a proper home. having an adequate place to live is considered a basic human right. and yet an estimated 150000000 people are homeless and says, the un that number is rising. homelessness is commonly caused by poverty, unemployment conflict, and natural disasters. worldwide in 2020, around 1600000000 people were living in provisional accommodation, including tents, hot, and vehicles. even in ostensibly wealthy countries like australia. the wind in the waves are just right. it's a fairly typical day in byron bay,
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a town on australia's eastern coast, several spend the day out on the water hanging, 10 and enjoying life. gaz morgan is also back on the fish giving surfing lessons again for almost 2 years. australia's porters were closed, he said was a devastating blow for tourism. and all those who live from it, like gas, morgan stopped. how well stop, i've got to get a job, a real job. now going on real job doing this, and i've had this business for 23 years. we had to go back firewood. we had to go do some labouring. we had to do something else so we can get some money to buy food and live, you know it's, it's been a crazy time and it's not over yet. many have lost their jobs and their homes. byron bay street. so full of people who have lost everything they get by thanks to
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free food from the local soup kitchen. before volunteers are cooking for a growing number of needy people here they get food and more if we can offer him a friendly face. hopefully that is a little bit anyway. it's just amazing how tough some of these people, what they have to do with whoever roland dixon gets by on his pension. but he says, life in byron bay has become something of a paradox with a lot of very, very wealthy people who just, it's with, it's a nice place to live. and particularly during copays of the prices in farm bay went up 70 percent one year. and it was expensive here anyway, that immediately cuts out the all the people who work here, all the people who work in restaurants, in the hotels and carefully because of a live environment. during the pandemic, many fell into poverty. it was a huge chart. there were no tourists, no jobs, and rent prices soared. the rate of homelessness in byron bay is now among the
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highest in australia. besides picking up food, those need to can also do their laundry for free. peak town, he has a job and a supermarket, but he can barely afford the goods. he packs on the shelves. so he comes here for the basics. and i've got some of it in salary and bread and some music bye to some other people where i live. so i can just take that they all have a bit of suffering of alleged stuff for the other people as well. pete county used to earn more and live well. things have never been as tight as they are now. in the evening, he shows us his home. he's renting an old van on the edge of a caravan park. he's lived here for over a year for the equivalent of $120.00 euros a week. still quite a lot of money. it's not too bad. i mean, for byron, you'll never get anything cheaper. especially,
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you'll never get anything that price where you have a bit of your own space and i think so you can't afford a flat or even a room together. yeah. possible. you wouldn't find it to start with. and then if you did, i mean it will just be hundreds of dollars away. i'm in a guessing as no point in have a look. i would say $4400.00 a week. after a meal from the soup kitchen, the day comes to an early end. he doesn't complain because he's aware that others are even worse off. after that, there's nothing to do would lie down and wait for morning and hopefully better chance ah, but for those with money, we're just passing through. like said dream in byron bay. the town has 10000 residents, but many more tourists had some stay on. the place is
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a magnet for the hip and wealthy. those able to sit out the pandemic or other crises under the australian sun. a while some enjoyed the quiet during the pandemic. others were bearing the full brunt of what byron's mer calls a housing crisis. seeing a huge move from the cities to the regions and 10. so that means more pressure on housing. more people despised harhouse prices, higher rental costs getting behind getting the job, the harper. and once you had that, you find you get a house and my problem. now, if you've got a job, maybe it's meaningless. you are unique in this be a really well paid job. mikaela bailey has just finished one job, but it's on her way to the next. after her shift at a cafe,
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she works at this take away food job. double duty means job. the stress i got their stiff competition for jobs, for employers. it's cheaper to pay several temporary workers than $1.00 fixed employee mikaela bailey's to jobs. keep a roof over her head just her small band is parked on the edge of town. this is home even with the tier i so the evidence for the place around here. um but yeah, maybe maybe the higher paying job advice, relatively low paying. so i can't really pay for that for the so picturesque byron bay has a problem. while the return of tourists is being celebrated by the industry, many residents priced out of the market during the pandemic can no longer make
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amends with forests play a crucial role for our planets. they regulate the climate wooded areas, a cooler and more moist than elsewhere. and every year they also absorb around $2000000000.00 tons of c o. 2 from the atmosphere. forests span just under a 3rd of the world surface. the largest of these areas are in the northern hemisphere and near the equator. rain supposed huge biodiversity, including large animals like forest elephants and gorillas, through to insects and fun gate. despite this, every year around $10000000.00 hectares of forest to cut down or burnt, that's an area. the size of iceland are reporter ab rodeo fella traveled to the island of borneo, where large areas of rain forest have already disappeared. farmer
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linger, cousin is heading to a forest on the island of borneo. in recent years, he's planted around a 1000 trees on his 7 hector's of land, where there was once just bare earth. he seized the work as an investment in his future. i the lady i talked to thomas tree down man, and i'm thinking that i might wait until the trunk is more than 30 centimeters wide . i did not get the maximum prize for italy, moxie married linger. cason also keeps oil palms and rather trees. but they don't yield enough profit. so in 2016, he was among the 1st to sign up for a re, for a station project. it aimed to create sustainable forests and provide an income for local people. it includes growing crops to avoid creating a monoculture, the farmers are allowed to chop down some of the larger trees to sell. more than
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a 1000 farm is now involved in the project. dubbed 100000000 trees, indonesia has lost nearly a 5th of its forests in just the last 20 years. some work lead for gold mining like here. the damage to the environment that comes from gold mining is huge. as the project manager explains, it used to be a 4th bought after a year. it become like this. and they basically flipped ah, the sand and then bring the top soil inside the ha, it's in the did site part. so it's almost impossible to forest this area and, and ah, it's very high risk job because in a process they're using dangerous chemicals such as mercury. and of course, it's very bad for enforcement as well as the people. but unfortunately, this is one of the few source of income for the local paper here. so it's
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vital to create alternative sources of income. mon elisa, poochie caught up is reaching out to the gold minus, hoping to bring them in to the reforestation project. i went through parting of e m. they're actually very open to new ideas, as long as it is not in all in all, den, not risking their lives. this is what we tried to bring through ventures through 100000000 threes. this form a forest was burned down to make way for a palm oil plantation. now, a new forest is being planted here. many local villages of pitching in that allows them to earn some extra money. it's being financed by private investors. on the german government's international climate initiative. the farm is get the seedlings directly from fair ventures, once they've received training on how and where to plant them.
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today caught up it's visiting farmer, possy hon. he's only been involved in the project for a year, but he's already planted several hundreds and gone. trees descend, gone is very fast growing around 5 to 6 meters in 11 months. this is why we love this kind of 3 so much because you know, the more they grow in the morning project, they put into soil. the more work to life is the soil. and i did a lot of the farmers to actually plan any other things in his field. and yeah, this is how it's growing. and then imagine a $1000000.00 or recent center cali month on. and it was planted by the farmers here. the absorb the carbon. i thing for the farmer, it's not only about providing a stable income for himself and later his children,
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like in many parts of borneo, floods of a growing problem here. that music, i'm happy that in these days our village floods $3.00 to $4.00 times a year. i used to only flood once a year or we saw, but it doesn't seem to matter any more. what the season is. we still get flooded. but how low 2 months happily. adamos in the the, the more get ma'am. i think it's down to the impact of mining the same one. yeah. the forest has been cleared up so the ground doesn't absorb the water a mortgage with that. and when it rains heavily, you know, every word just floods were all young that a little, but gay, you thought i'd been gotta planting more trees. could help prevent such damaging floods in the future. more than a 1000000 new trees have been planted throughout the region. so far, some of them will now be felled and sold as timber, while others are planted in their place. the idea is to attract more business to
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borneo, to help the farmers, the timber industry in indonesia. now it's still very centralized in java island. right. and, and we've tried to convince the industry to or so and invest in color mountain, or what we're trying to do is we tried to connect to farmers directly with the industry to cut down the middle man. which is, you know, we tried to, to make it more to make the most profit for the farmers through this is a farmer linger cason who's been involved from the start, is optimistic. he's hoping that the 100000000 trees initiative will improve its life in the long term while also benefiting the environment even better than reforestation is preserving old growth forest in the 1st place. that's what conservationists in romania has. capacity and mountains are working to do by
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creating one of europe's largest national parks. ah, in romania is car patheon, mountains. it's easy to get lost. everything here is big. even the animals were looking for europe's largest herbivores. oh my gosh, a baggage he and these far garage mountains here in the romanian co pay the ants are the largest contiguous and intact natural area. we have in central, in eastern europe for this reason. we believe this has the potential of becoming the yellowstone of europe, who had a foundation set up by christophe and barbara pom bagger has been progressively buying up and leasing land in the far garage mountains. the car patio project is set to cover 2000 square kilometers of land. but what's the national park with like wildlife 75 bison have no being re introduced to the same area that the used to
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room 200 years ago. you can you name of it's, we always tend to say that we want to create something great. but it costs a lot of money and a whole lot of building and other activities in it, but we don't need that. and then when we talk about nature, the best thing we can do is fix what we broke and then leave it alone for you guys aren't. you are actually intervening by releasing wild animals for example, who could see that. so you're intentionally altering what's here and what we're doing is bringing back the animals, all the species that actually belong in the system to sustain given the bison are shy, but their tracks are everywhere. after hours of searching, we just about managed to spot one from behind. humans constitute a disruptive presence in their world. the video trap shoes that a large number of the animals were here a short while ago. 12345610
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minutes ago timing's over. the posher. give it open. and on, on pin footprints. phoebe, because they're heavy, create smaller holes here which correct water and their kiddos will will live. so an umbrella of the palm burgers have in mind is on long term undertaking. the storing the complex ecosystems will take more than a century. the parks mean benefactor swiss entrepreneur hand ski arc. this has to needed 47000000 euros to the project. the problem back as motto is, think big using the discount, mr. boy, he was born with big ideas, of course,
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off. but we learned somewhere along the way in our lives that if you really want to accomplish something, you need to have a big vision problem to grow. give you see on it says yahoo! and i guess you, it's a very nice story. but in the day to day, it's also an emotional rollercoaster. there were lots of highs and knows who the lows. ah, although they've not always been welcome here. locals attitudes to them sour due to the couple from austria and germany, being seen as carrying more for the welfare of wild animals than people. romania as part of the you. but a country still undergoing transformation with wide spread poverty and little industry. corruption is rampant. the idea of giving nature free rain and having bears, for example, living in the local wilderness is not a very popular one here. the be an mobility on exclude the get all that the bad population is exploding right now. there have always been conflicts,
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but at the moment people have strong opinions about it. so support is dropping a bit right now. be seen. i've seen more bears live here than anywhere else in europe. trophy hunting was ended in 2016. now the fears are protected. and with the winters getting warmer, the bears don't hibernate anymore. well, beach tree shed more nuts, more frequently. and the improved food situation means the bears and turn produce more offspring. some of my, that's not a lick, cindy. yes, golden besides a little drive, but we're in luck. as it is not that he can sneak the whole of this is no longer fresh, but you can see a batch ikea. that's maybe 4 or 5 days old. give from thongless own, from anna mac is the important thing. it's not how high the population is, but how big the conflicts are as homeless, and that's what the management side needs to focus on conflict. it doesn't really matter how many bears there are in the forest in as in boca out of it. if the,
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the light they hadn't, people wouldn't have a problem with 10000 bears in the forest. if they stayed there, i'm the conservation carpathia foundation pays compensation sheet killed by the beers are replaced. and the fcc also provides hurting dogs. dealing with the country's timber mafia is not so easy. they make millions and profits from logging local forests. and the prom baggers. tellers of strong connections to the corrupt authorities in the deluxe or dose d on some from that to now, of course, they're afraid of the national parks model, because they know it poses a threat to their business model and can output the told and that potential change like them is why they're fighting us so fiercely contested became for the couple well to show me the scars left by the timber mafia even before we reached the mountains, the impact of the clear cutting is clear to see widespread erosion and overflowing
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streams. ah, she forrester me. hi sata is distraught at how even to d, the mountain tops up here still resemble a battlefield. it's much easier to destroy. it's hard to restore, but to have to weigh the weight 100 years. the 3 of forest woocommerce, 300 had tears of woodland had been completely raised here. in the meantime, the foundation has begun to reforest the area by planting spruce trees and sycamore maples, pollard forest task. and there is no quick and easy fix for doing what an old mature forest can such as producing oxygen and filtering water. if somebody would ask you 20 years ago and would have told you that we will drink only bottled water, you wouldn't believe. and now we are drinking almost the only bottle of water and
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what will come next. so what do you fear? i think the importance of the water sources will increase or might be glue. you need to see the disastrous consequences up here, but also witness. the beauty of nature, to understand that large national parks and nature reserves are crucial for our future. even if ultimately, the most immediate argument is that protecting nature brings more prosperity and destroying it. humidifier now people here can see for themselves and that does money to be made from this beautiful area without destroying it, without shooting and killing any animals or using any other kind of extract of activity this extractive mixed in schism. overall, the trend is a positive one, and that's also a motivation based alpha. there's no doubt that a european yellowstone park would be a blessing, but it won't come to fruition all by itself.
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this makes global snack is a sweet shade from south africa. ah. go cap lies at the foot of signal hill in cape town. the muslim influence quarters, renowned for its colorful houses and steep anyways. it's home to cooper mohammed or anti cobras. she's known in the neighbourhood. her speciality is cook sister, a sticky, spicy deep fried pastry, a muff that sunday breakfast in bo cup. ah, a quick says the thunder from those years when the site came to south africa, africa that time. right. and they gave our people that a sip of dough net. and what did, what out people say it's a little bit off from them and then as well up to until they came to the end seat.
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and they call the, the, the 1st butter and sugar or blended in hot water, then yeast and the spices that is ginger, that it's a mix spice. we're the cut them all. that is my fine and the see. and this little yellow things here is my, i find an occupation not to pay for that to explain it to us for that i that i out the pills and grind every week. ah, the milk eggs and flour stirred in to form a dough for needing but no account mechanically or the dough will be too soft. will be doing this for over 20 years and it's all weather one man. ah, the joe then stands for 2 hours before it's time to shape the cook sisters. ah,
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and deep fry them for round 4 minutes. every saturday auntie cooper's kitchen is transformed into a bakery. i work continues on sunday morning at daybreak. the cook sisters are warmed in syrup and enrolled and desiccated coconut. the 1st customers already waiting every sunday monday cuz she says otherwise, you know, the sunday. i anti cooper charges 5, south african ram equivalent to 30 euro cents for 3 could sister in good them on sunday is consistent. i hope you thank them all over the show. and then this one who me is who myself, my wife is the beast. i auntie kubrick ansel, up to
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a 1000 cook sisters on sunday mornings and winter a few less in summer. and because south africans loved them so much, september 1st has been official world cook sister day since 2019 and that's all from us that global 3000 this week. don't forget to drop us a line with your feedback, right? see global 3000 dot dw dot com and check us out on facebook. ting, d w global ideas. see you next time. ah, ah. with
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you a small island being plant noon in the indian ocean. the french overseas department is making
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a complete transition to renewable energy. it's set to be completed by 2028 eco africa in 30 minutes on d. w with soccer interest order from any colors in the children in this mountain village to know the ball. where's blue? the color of her favorite sexes. traditions prevent her from going to games and play an insurmountable obstacle. little girl football on the page in 75 minutes on d. w. or asia. an artist lovers guided by vibrating asian cities. 5, a local artist nick experience of their craft,
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join us for exclusive master classes with this week on dw, ah, well come to the dark side where intelligence agencies are pulling the strings. there was a before 911 and an aftermath and he says after 911, the clubs came off. where organized crime rules were conglomerates make their own laws? they invade our private lives through surveillance, hidden, opaque, secretive working through what's big. it doesn't matter. the only criteria worked, we'll hook people up. we ship light on the opaque world who's behind
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benefits. and why are they a threat to whistle opaque worlds this week on d, w? ah, business d w. news live from berlin. russia advances deeper into the don bass. question forces now poised to take complete control of east and city of several thousands of ukrainian civilians remain trapped there without food.

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