tv Child Slavery in Myanmar Deutsche Welle June 10, 2022 3:15am-4:01am CEST
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yes, half, not reporting from berlin. and before we go, we want to take a quick look at our top story at this hour. the committee investigating the january 2nd attack on the u. s. capital has begun presenting its findings and a 1st televised hearing. a committee chair said former president donald trump was at the center of a conspiracy which he described as an attempted coup. he warned that the u. s. democracy remains at risk youth and that's all for me for now. thank you so much for watching. 3175 years ago. start up entrepreneur at a specific goal. 1 build the best article instruments in the world. good size. do you wish has become
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a reality 175 years of size starts june 19th on w. ah. said away by their parents for work or adoption, beaten and abused by their employers. they hit me with metal chains, unused tires on me, the plate of many child servants and me and mark is only now being exposed. and the printer with a strip the child make it all and v to viciously, yet it's leslie, very the condition, the way they were treated. what is what you call under cover asia delves into the murky trade of me and mars invisible and fung? oh, how young can we get that around? 12 or 13 as good. yeah. and we expose the risks and the suffering faced by children who have been adopted into slavery.
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ah ah ah, in september 2016, a shocking story hit the headlines and men mar 2 teenage domestic workers were freed from a tailor shopping young gone where they had spent 5 years being beaten, stabbed, and deprived of sleep and fooled, did sway when a well known report from a new site called me and mar now brought the story to the public's attention. they never apologized. they exploited the children without remorse. for
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the 2 girls, sand, k kind and orphan tarzan had endured daily physical and emotional abuse for years. sanjay kyne had been so badly tortured on her arms and hands that she became permanently disfigured. much of the abuse took place in the famous avo tailoring shop in young gone where the girls were. the shop is well known among locals in the city. this combined with the shocking pictures made social media pay extra attention. the ella, the case was posted on a forum for journalists by the news agency. me a ma, now the finding the posts that they were going to the children's village and invited the media to go with them. i saw rights and went to like that they had it added oddly via by why jim moon, when reports on issues concerning women and children. so she was eager to follow
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the story. ah and you know, when i arrived i met with the girls and apparently i saw sunk a kind fur sanky. she's the girl who's 10 fingers were broken. at 1st i didn't notice her hands, but i just noticed her behavior. they'd be of them. yeah. she was in total shock and couldn't talk. i. i've never seen anything like that before. joseph, later we saw her hands and her fingers were bent over and broken. let you know a whole. it was very shocking that you cannot, that i showed you. i level battalion. mm hm. they stabbed me on my neck, my back and my arms and my and this was from a lighter from a slice to my nose with
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a knife and hurts me with an iron taylor. this is ethan. she broke all 10 of my fingers because i spoke back to her mother. they broke my arm when i gave her sister a massage because they said i didn't do it properly. so they grabbed me from behind and pushed down until it broke. i will tell you stories of maid abuse and me and mar are not uncommon. thousands of children from poor villages are routinely sent to me in mars, booming cities to support their families. as the economy develops, there is growing demand for domestic servants and middle class households and helpers for home run businesses. first and foremost, that parents or caregivers are not aware of those risks, all where on the right to either myself, the children. i tundra joe works for the child protection bro ram. it saves the
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children, mia, laura. she says that despite the risks, birds continue to send their young children away. parents think it's free, bought in food, as well as that. then their salary is the net. at the same time, the child will have a better chance of life schooling as well. so those and leaves or assumptions push their parents to send their children to our domestic satisfactory, i think, but after they arrive at the employer's house, many of these children are cut off from their families and exposed to mistreatment . one former domestic worker who wanted to remain anonymous, agreed to share her story with us. oh, i was living in the countryside and some people came for a donation ceremony saw me and took me back with selling. my mail was amazon. they said they were adopting me and took me away from my father another for the 1st
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couple of months. they were nice to me, but then they started to hit me when things didn't go that way. i knew that. so i asked her nicely if i could go home because i was unhappy, nippy, and she said, who are you going to live with? if you leave your father gave you to us, they didn't let me go with this girl was only 9 years old when she was told she was being adopted. but when she arrived at her new home, she was forced to work day and night, starved and abused. ah, the girl continued to suffer her richard abuse for 5 years before she finally escaped her life as a so called adopted child. there are 2 types for like there are families can send their children are and like health professional, you know, i domestic worker expecting a certain level of i earning out of the child and there are a different types of family is ah, okay, please take that my child, as i adopted,
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you know, like foster child by today where case says that the problem is, is not kept at all adoption rules in myanmar or anything but clear cut. there is no state legislation for adoption. formal adoption is covered only by the buddhist customary law, which means any registered adoption must be between buddhists. alibaba in me and mar custom renewal adoption comes with inheritance rights under the kit emma adoption axis had actually. adoptive parents must give inheritance rights to their adopted child but a parted. her adoption doesn't include these rights that had the practice of upper tater or casual adoption. though not technically legal is widely accepted. a child can be taken in by a family and cared for without any paperwork, for official monitoring them, or on their my, in me and mar. there are people of all religions and fates who take care of
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a non related child at the homely, the apple with another kid they because they feel sympathy for the child. what had i? but there were no regulations, legislation or legal provisions for the circumstances. a bow there is also no specific law to protect domestic workers. many children who are hired to live and work in households far away from home, fall completely under the control of their new family. is almost like the employers on your life. of course, some would say that you dizzy, many terrance or intervention that i can do to the poor, low family, but in some they would also see it. it is, is an opportunities to take advantage over the poor family where they're completely depends on me to hire them. and i can offer them even little money. they are happy already because they start from 0 didn't have money, right. the bad kid started to come to the surface now. where'd improve take for
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granted that you were from me and i helped you and perhaps i oh, i own your life. not that i think it is my right to punish you very badly, but it is my right to make sure that you are obedience to me. no matter how, what i am in the ivr taylor, in case the children's families had at 1st received a small salary for their services. but after about 2 years, the money stopped and all contact was cut off. the girls were trapped into bonded labor. ah, asleep very the condition, the way they were treated. what is what you call your i try you on some money but you never catch that money. so you never see the money and allies you were treated as an object, not even like a human being. what kind of situation would you call it, unless it is likely very seeking justice in me and
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mark can be tough. a police report was filed with the police failed to bring charges, but this time influential journalist sway when was following the case. and he was not going to let it go through and is an award winning journalist in miramar. he continued posting updates about the story and kept the case in the headlines. ah, outraged grew when he leaked details of a meeting he had attended, called by the national human rights commission. he revealed that senior members of the commission had pressured the girls families to settle the case through financial compensation instead of legal action. claiming lawyer, the commissioners urged them to negotiate for money. oh, michelle virtua. they said it will be tough if you take this to trial because you'll have to go back and forth from your village to the city all the time. go out in one of them. settle this case is just
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a typical problem between domestic workers and their employers. i beat my house my some times during the revelation that even senior members of a commission set up to protect people's rights would tolerate such abuse caused an uproar sway. when had shown a spotlight on a widely accepted practice and a major flaw in the system. the story went viral. the girls were taken to hospital for treatment, and a criminal case was fired. ah, a public were incense faced with huge public pressure. the human rights commission held a press conference and young gone with him allowing him to get you both cannibal, all 10 of her fingers were broken. the knowledgeable, why did you accept the situation? any such and ignore the law for these 2 human beings who have suffered so much only
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near the i the i am a song of any about o d need hard muma nocka media. why did you accept this negotiation anyway? i'm on the wall. bob, i don't, i don't have to answer that. we didn't specify how much should be paid for the negotiation with them. uh huh. okay. so let me have that in your life. we gave them 2 choices. one either goes through the justice system or accept compensation for their suffering. and i did that was the option they chose 9 years. we didn't tell them to choose one or the other table of the love lab and he'll have the phone with the press conference further, inflamed public opinion, bringing national attention to the issue. a parliamentary investigation was commission and for the commissions members were forced to reside this case at highlighted widespread tolerance of the mistreatment of underage
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domestic workers. thunder jaw says that often people in the community, no abuse is happening, but they don't speak up in yet. my people say, believe that physical punishment on btr slapping if nothing wrong and so it sticks happen. people usually don't want to go to the police station and report the case in. okay. like are tailoring case as it has been going on 5 years, the torturing of children to that degree. and nobody has come forward in may 2012 with a 15 year old domestic gilbert. a you on, escaped from the house of a judge in the vigour reaching her employer. the judges wife had allegedly tortured her with the hot iron a you on the mother file the case, but the family was too poor to hire a lawyer or attend court. oh, the police didn't take further action from the perpetrator. never faced trial. i
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because but betrayed her. it's web connect it hour or, and i, while the influential soul, usually the victims are from line poor and vague wrong. and if you are going to live prosecution process, who's going to support the char and the family? the victims family who are very poor people who have housemaids are often from rich and powerful families. in the maids. relatives are sometimes intimidated into dropping charges, policing me and mar, rarely try a case without appointing. this means that it is often left to the families who are too poor or too intimidated to go to trial. many cases like these don't even make it to court. when you leave in that society, which is no rows of law, anything can get you into trouble. so the best you can do is to mitigate or liske
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by just my being mindful of your own business and not your neighbors business. you never know the next door neighbor you sore abusing somebody to have usa friend of somebody big. however, social media is changing the way people react to abuse in society. in november 2015, a photo emerged on facebook. a young girl tied up naked outside a house in an affluent neighborhood in young gong. a driver working for the family next door had taken the photo. oh, but she missed one. i was hearing these screams every morning. the child was crying out in pain. i don't even know why i know i looked over the wall and saw something that made me so angry. the child had no clothes, entourage stripped naked, and they were beating her viciously. the girl took that night my blood boil. i couldn't stay out of it any more. so i took
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a photo and reported it to the police. i won't. i will. yeah. jojo, yes. and then it appeared yet while the driver had listened to the sound of the 9 year old girl being tortured for days before he went to the police. even now, he doesn't want to be identified for fear of repercussions. derek alada down nor i knew it was dangerous to get involved in this era. that may be a lot of people who wants to harm to me because of this early. those hellish sounds of them torturing the child every day, way getting worse and worse than they were. yeah. and i couldn't ignore it because they said it where you know the entire. yeah. because our dianon lab fidelmo for real before any police action was taken, the photo was shared on social media. it caught the public's attention immediately . mimi works for a political organization that fights for democracy and human rights. when the photo
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appeared on social media, she started to investigate the head. yes. can you feel that the police station and behind township announced that the victim was the niece of the lady who owns the house? and she was being punished by her aunt for her misbehavior. talk yeah, i think i need money on that day at about 7 p. m. i got a call from an unknown number. my nephew, i was told that the information from the behind police station was wrong. and yes, and i knew he or they antonietta got my me. the call was from a whistle blower who had been told that the child had been adopted by one of his superiors, a member of parliament from the military. me, me managed to contact the parents of the child who admitted that they had given her away as high said she wasn't sent to a stranger's house, but to the house of the 2nd in command of his battalions in a while and that it wasn't an official adoption but they had made
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a contract. when she saw the agreement, mimi realised to her horror that she was not looking at adoption papers. but a sales contract. by that all, i knew marie, i had the agreement says that 1000000 kiara at 800 g u. s. dollars has been given as an act of generosity. it also specifies that they must not make contact with the child again or ask for more money. so it's obvious that the child was sold for 1000000 kiosk that they say they need alpha i as in it's our body. it is common and not illegal to create private contracts for the guardianship of a child. under myanmar law, the contract only becomes illegal when there is money involved. a legal way, it's a contract. states that you paid for a child is automatically invalid. you can't buy a child by buying and selling children violates the onset human trafficking, nor the older maid who had been allegedly abusing the girl was arrested,
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charged with child abuse and sentenced to 2 years in prison. the military officer who had bought the girl was removed as a member of parliament and discharged from the military. however, no criminal charges were filed against him or his family. that the aba chase said a new precedent in me and mark media scrutiny in public pressure lead to the police filing charges on behalf of the victims. the case was moved to a higher court and human trafficking charges were brought by the trafficking police kayla. as i was, i not angle the defendants in the aba taylor shop case pleaded innocent in court and to the use of domestic workers. did i laugh at the any young a mattress? will i buy let that happen. they're charged under a section of the human trafficking act that carries the death penalty, alley, and every day the is on demand and then to on is
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a defense lawyer and the other tailoring family kicks. that is, she thinks the defendants are being unfairly persecuted because of media pressure and because they are mostly okay with them. man, mar, as a majority, buddhist country and anti muslim tensions have grown in recent years. thought in me and my law multiple charges are seldom filed for one case. i wouldn't, but in this case for a problem between housemaids and their employers, what they were charged under the human trafficking act, the child law, and the causing bodily harm to lack of em all. it's the 1st time i've seen this, even the senior lawyers and judges hadn't seen this before. although the girls in the avo taylor in case had not been bought with the contract . they had been forced to work for no salary and with no way to get home contact with their families had been cut off and the neighbors were keeping quiet. they were trapped. ah,
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you, you mean tom is a photographer who focuses on issues that affect women. she has documented subjects such as human trafficking and domestic abuse. she has been visiting sancho kind in hospital and is now working on a project about her life before avo. they were treated badly because they were invisible behind the dawson. it makes me angry whenever she visited san k kind, the girl would ask about going back to her village you, you decided to go to the village to take photos for the girl. ah, as soon as i and arrived this village, my 1st thing that i noticed on the road the roads are very maddie is even difficult to go buy a motorcycle and also the, the whole village. um,
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does it have electricity in the area or the property is very, very obvious. and the poor condition of the people living that make the situation like sending their kids to the other family to work as a housemate. color, sometimes my husband's income is enough to survive on that, but sometimes it's not. and it's very distressing. we have to borrow money. sam k kinds mother noon you a when says they were forced to send their daughter away because they needed the money. a woman from the village who had moved to work in young gone, came back to recruit, others fled. she told my daughter, it is a good job. so my daughter told me that she wanted to go because it was good money, and it would help our family all it. we got one month's salary in advance on her 1st day that we were told, the pay was $15000.00 key art, which about $11.00 loud that we only got about $70.00. that
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8011 year old t. as in an orphan who had been living with an elderly, relative in the same village, went together with sanitary con, for over 3 of the 5 years, the girl spent at the avo tailoring household. they were completely cut off from their families. the families received no salary and the girls had no contact with any one from their village. but what i learned whenever we called they always said they were away, the latter. we told them to call us when they were back because we wanted her to come home doable. the girls families are illiterate and have little education or experience in dealing with the authorities. when they lost contact with the children, they didn't know what to do. then one day the village head came to town. yo yo when to go to young, gone to bring the children ha, unaware of what had happened. she went to get the diet. when i went there i saw
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something had happened to my daughter's fingers that she would then i saw those injuries when she took her shirt off today. and i said, how did you get those injuries? what happened? she told me they had stabbed her with a pair of scissors and oh, when her mother saw the extent of her injuries, she was distraught out of it. i have a little white luncheon on a day of gang of kind. i just wanted to had them the way they had my daughter, and i couldn't think about anything else. i even wanted to kill them like i was so sad to i couldn't bear to look at my daughter. will m g o? glad i never said him a girl and i would gladly younger housemaids are more vulnerable to exploitation. it is harder for them to speak up against their employers and they are more likely to suffer physical abuse. families keep the young kids because according then yeah, more culture, it's kind of like negative things to order the older brisson in the culture. the
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younger is supposed to give the respect to the elder people is that concept makes more family to half the younger kids. as the housemates, they have less power. you can't cheat an adult liking tina, chop it in your complete power f, as in sam k kind were only 11 and 12 when they were sent to live with the aba tailoring families. although the minimum working age for most labor sectors in myanmar is 14, there is no minimum age or wage for domestic helpers under mia mar la. some children are sent away to work when they are as young as 8 or not in man mar, it is not difficult to find some one to arrange for an under age worker. people even advertise openly for young domestic helpers on social media. one of the more common ways for women and especially young girls to be
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recruited as domestic helpers is through an ane, paul quesada, or housemaid broker. we arranged to meet one such broker to see how easy it would be to buy an under age may. oh, how young can we get so let it around. 12 or 13 is good. more. yeah, they were manju. our families are too scared to sent that kids away when that young to look after themselves. a 9 by 12 or 13, it's easy to get them to walk. they're not so emotional, a restless society. they become so difficult to manage when they're 15 or 16. cadillac brokers tend to be from the same village or even from the extended family they recruit from. but sometimes they extend the search elsewhere. ah, that is that some clients don't accept helpers who live in young bombay. they asked me where i get them from and they don't want maids from young gone because they can
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run away easily and it's really cheap for them to get home. when i bring them from my own village, they don't go back. if i tell them not to keep their id cards as well, i've only had it with her. now we get orphans to you. i don't want to lang it. yes, i can. i was an orphan which there's no charge for the arrangement. you just make a donation. when the girl doesn't keep her pay, it gets donated to the orphanage for example. it can be better that way. levels of yellow do a thing, he is the head none at this nunnery school and orphanage. oh, here are 180 young nuns as well as another 80 other children living here orphans children, seeing the civil war or those whose parents are unable to care for them. hillburn. and even though it is not perfect, like a normal family, at least they can eat,
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they can study and live safely home. this is what we can provide, at least i feel that their lives are safer here. and they agree with that. we have often but not a reason. monasteries are also a common place for people to look for young children. they say they will adopt, but end up treating as unpaid domestic workers. door a thing, he says they often get such requests, but they don't let the children go hello. our lobby are down. there have been people including a police officer who have requested to adopt children with the contract that we were. but because of our love for them and concern about what would happen to them, we don't allow them to be adopted and we keep the children here. i don't if we did allow people to adopt, it's possible they could give better support because they're only looking after one child, but we don't feel it's safe for them. so we don't allow them to be adopted in
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me and mar. many of those who do adopt young girls see themselves as doing something generous. lou take a runs a close shop and young gone. a few years ago, she took in a 14 year old girl to help with household chores and errands. she says she took this girl into her home to be charitable, and she treats her like one of her own romania in l. m. devereux, now she's in a very sorry state because she has no mother to rely on and she never went to school while she worked with other employers before she worked for me a year later that she was slapped and became deaf. and again, la are now my doll with her eyesight is also not good only in him gum, maloney, lanier, so he would accept irish, we didn't do well man, she has a good life with us now living with welcome am. i treat her like my own daughter, who are immediate. i don't know what the mill of and what i take
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a says the girl does not have to work hard for her. and her life is better with her than it would have been if she had stayed in her village, i believe. or sally did. now. she can do some and write a few words because she is helping out at the shop. she's improving slowly. only adela little there are no opportunities to improve her life in the village. you most girls, her age, just get married and have children live with daddy. yet many people who have young domestic workers living with them are treading a fine line between an employee and an adopted child. it makes rules regarding punishment, a little murky to my little, i've also hit her to mind when i lose my temper. i hit her on the arm he has wheel cadell, m. o pong, let my alley it under my door, the train i ask her to come to me when i get hungry, i pinch, herrera and ask her if it hurt, you know, do on later. and she walks away with
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a smile on her face saying it doesn't hurt at all. now, bella, jim, uh, it's just a mild punishment to discipline her. that i mean, i think of her, his family did. and i think the discipline should not be harsh to the mild, let them, it's not ok to believe that they will not him on but how can these girls protect themselves from potential abuse? mangum up to human trafficking happens a lot in our country, especially to girls the minute the guy in gunny after several months of hospital treatment, the girls from the of our case were taken into the custody of the department of social welfare and younger photographer. you, your mid town has decided to help bring the girls families to visit them in young god. ah, sancho kinds, mom and thousands, aunt have seldom ventured out of their village. the journey takes more than 3 hours
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and it would have been very difficult for them to make it to the big city on their own. sancho kinds mom wants to bring her home, but his unsure if they will be allowed to keeping her there is safer, but i want to go back to living with my child again. they will say we created the situation, but we sent them there because we are poor. we had no choice and hulu, the trip to young gone is unsettling, and the women are very nervous. yellow, no, i don't want to be in young gone any? no, we're afraid, i don't know. what are you afraid of going to the court police station that we don't understand things. they ask lots of questions that we don't know how to answer. that's her solution. in some rural places, people don't want to go to the course at all, and they're afraid to go in the black him when it's the result of an old system. yet to maria, the
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a petty bonner noon for both the center sanky time. they were quite overwhelming. and they were very sad, even the sin cry, they want to go home. that's what they said, because they haven't been tacked to go home for a long time. so that's what they want. but for now, the girls have to remain in the custody of the social welfare department, nor tower director of the women's development division says they are now looking after several former housemaids who have been abused. yet very few cases are reported. and the system does not help throw yeah, at the kero, tamara d. and once they're taken into people's houses via there's often no way back carol, and i guess there's no register or contracts for domestic workers. let me she and there's no agency agency peter tell. so we have no information about who's brought
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to which house muslim at the the children are sent by their connections. see, say on, if we go so we know only when problems arise all day tomorrow, at the up. social media plays a big role in discovering abuse cases here, for some cases are reported through our helpline will happen and some are discovered through social media tomorrow. d social media need was she, the minister of social welfare? asks us to take immediate action and those. okay, so he's not he, she barry official monitoring is only one challenge ingrained cultural attitudes or another big issue. nobody take rule of law in this country. seriously . this is there felt a long time that there's no justice. does this exist when you have more money? is your comma. so to have to put up with the come at, lee paid their comma come are done in that previously. and it is to me is it is
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a very distorted concept of buddhism in mina because of traditional beliefs. even some people who work in human rights except what happens to the victims on some level of o r i d. even when i saw the worst of what happened, that may high or low as i'm a buddha sod. why believe it's the child's fate and punishment for her pass was unusable. now she penny again d. as on this is a believe that piano hopes to change. if you visit date of visit, visit is not karma, is somebody did something wrong to you and you have to stand up and say something. this is the law, at least as a criminal law at the moment they were punished, the person was slap you under face. nobody's entitled to slap anybody on the face, even the ard, your employers, even the pe yosemite, they are not eligible either treated, you like that. they treat you less,
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then human being that is not to be tolerated. these are information. do we need to spread out as much as possible? ah, yeah, josephine is doing just that. g is the sports program coordinator for a girl, determined, a group that works with adolescent girls and me and mar to help them understand their rights and reach their potential. the program reaches out to vulnerable communities all over the country, targeting the kind of girls that brokers and employers pray are they are empowering girls to speak up most difficult things for them to is use their own voice. so through the spars through these volleyball august, we're trying to encourage gauze, whose use their voice to shout out and to call for her to call for either of us was
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to walk as a team to walk together to help each other. so that in a different situation, if they need help, they can i look for each other, the content, each other, broken into among you and your friends in the 7th grade. is there anyone who's quit school downtown either? yes. yes, there are. mm hm. we do have for some guys who have gone and became like, can i start walkers and other regions to, to their families. financial situations are the chopped off on school. so from, from last year we came up with an initio deal which we call our safety and security initiative. and through the program we tried to give each net each got a code number. and inside we call an id card. and, and our, we have that information, we help them and i, hotline, emergency phone number is for, and we have some situations examples. they could,
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i refer to as an extra help doctor tell me what, you know about human trafficking, y'all on that. but that manu by monday, what i remember about human trafficking as not to believe what other sabre to listen to our parents around and we shouldn't just hang around on our own or with friends. i real my. wow. only to linger now ma'am. yeah, i'm glad you've been taught about this yet. you. it's important for you to know. i could. human trafficking happens a lot in our country, especially to girls. at the awe, 14 months after the arrest of the arbor family, the day of the verdict has arrived. a crowd of journalists gathered outside the district court. police kept media well back from the court house as the defendants arrived. the normally empty court room was packed.
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i nearly when the judge to look at the prison sentence, the relatives in the crowd started crying. dea dow, the main accused woman has in lived with. and the woman's daughter who took in sancho kind were each sentence to 16 years in prison for trafficking child abuse and grievous bodily ha. the daughter's husband and brother received shorter sentences for the same charters. to other family members were quitted. ah ha dia to death. this case has changed people's reactions towards incidents involving domestic workers. they don't just ignore them and say, it has nothing to do with them. since this of a case, many of the housemaid cases have come to light and all of them have been reported by their neighbors. i know. so i want to raise my public awareness about these
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issues and get more legal protection with better legal protection. there will be fewer cases like this. you often avo whom even though the verdict is out, t as in sam k kind have yet to return home. oh, they are finishing a vocational training course aimed at helping them with their future. ah, echo solution autoclaved me. i've got a new job. what are your shins on? it means they're both happy in the school. just letting you know they can now. so very well which i will throw. yeah. yeah. you at him were providing vocational training for them so that when they go home people, they can be naturally independent variable. but bretty clearly to my look, i like ah, what their home town offers little in the way of job opportunities. the extreme poverty does in sand k kind come from helps drive vulnerable girls like them toward
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the cities. ensuring housemaids are in continuing supply in via mar. ah, the girls may have escaped their abusers, but they have yet to escape the cycle of poverty. ah, for me, i feel very sad for her because i feel like so from the start to now she doesn't have twice when she was dead. she doesn't have a choice. because out the situation of the family, the financial problem, to send their kids to that your family and also in a family she doesn't have choice, she was kept and you've been taught, you're in there now and all the she turned into 17 and she's non in social wipers doing the training, but i feel like she wants to go back home still. she cannot and yeah, i be like, she doesn't choices. traumatized and physically disabled by their experiences. they may remain prisoners of an imbalance
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a stand on the war in ukraine. how taking this position has affected him. busy focus on europe. in 30 minutes on d. w is the end of the pandemic in site. we show what it could look like will return to normal. and we visit those who are finding it difficult with successes in our weekly cove, in 19 special 910 minutes on d. w. o . devastated with to how we can with cars carried off by flooding. defects of climate change,
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i mean felt worldwide before a station in the rain forest continued. carbon dioxide emissions have risen again. young people all over the world are committed to climate protection. what impact will they have? because change doesn't happen on its own. make up your own mind it. d, w for mines. ah, this is dw news, and these are our top stories greater the committee investigating the january 6 attack on the u. s. capital has begun presenting its findings in prime time t. v hearings. the committee chair said former president donald trump was at the center of a conspiracy which he described.
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