tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle September 19, 2022 7:03am-7:31am CEST
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and $21000000.00 unwanted pregnancies worldwide each year. more than 60 percent of them a terminated, but nearly half of those abortions are not carried out in a safe way. according to the w h o each he is $39000.00 women die as a result of improperly conducted abortion procedures. most countries allow abortion, although the legal requirements vary in egypt and the philippines, terminating a pregnancy is generally prohibited in other nations. abortion is only allowed when the mother's life is at risk in the us and mexico, the law of varies from state to state. the right to abortion is a tough fight. as our next report from mexico shows, they disguised themselves to protect themselves. is what these young women do is break to booze. the mitch's abode headers or abortion cuts. collective wants to
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advocate for open discourse on abortion, or leg isn't hello, i'm a support person at mit cheese. i bought our us for your convenience. i accompany women because i lost a friend to abortion in 2015. they will never though. so mother a, i'm a mother, daughter, sister i, i'm a feminist from the suburbs. same. okay. then we'll credit you started equity for yet. so you can buy and buy a company women because this company saved my life. the mitch's company and care for women who want to have medical abortions or who have experienced violence. their mission is to empower women disseminating information on social media. on take talk and instagram your, your body, your choice, they post me even in that african american. i think what the for the end of it for us being on social media means that we can share information freely a gig and we reach a lot of people that way and their calls for help come in from all over mexico.
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them to prove here a young woman writes that she took an abortion pill incorrectly on to mommy's up as though in only took my surprise still alone at home without knowing exactly how to take it. now she's calling us for help because she's very upset because them when they will check how the young woman is doing and then decide if we need to send an ambulance the ica jamara amans. yeah. the matches provide much needed support to women and mexico, which has a high rate of family side. according to statistics, 10 women are murdered every day. male dominique ring possessiveness jealousy and sexual violence. a cited as factors and a 3rd of these killings. many machines have experienced violence themselves or, and make her circle. they're motivated by their anger and their pain. sometimes monuments id faced light to day because they're the ideal place to protest. those
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monument does not, then at least monuments are not alive, not 10 of them. don't perish every day. monuments are made of stone thought that i get them with flesh and blood, and that's almost like we're fighting her. when much more involves anybody's monuments no more murders, they shout their black uniforms are also a statement. doesn't get any check. nancy, the marks mean this is not our personal struggle, but that we stand for all women. and they have achieved a lot, almost one 3rd of mexican states have now legalized abortion progress for women's rights advocates. but in practice, the implementation continues to run up against hurdles, especially outside of the big cities and prejudices persist with the one that there are also women who are opposed to
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abortion. and to demonstrate against it, pro life is protest in front of clinics, offering abortions. those who come here seeking help a given a flyer with their views on abortion views, shaped by their religious faith and morals. alorie, a lot of, i think, went to meet your needs. they maybe about $50000000.00 babies die in their mother's rooms every year. this is the worst genocide in history. it's not even all the was put together of killed so many people. amy, now that don't santa say this woman was being called a murderer, really hurts the mitchie say in good, but above all, they find it hypocritical murderer. it must any look as of them we had for women who were on the verge of killing themselves because of what they were called elsewhere. la,
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we've gotten used to it by now. no matter how many times they call us madras will keep going. acura you them? no, no, no. they were also able to help monica. she's grateful to them and is the only one willing to talk to us. she became pregnant unintentionally, and had a medical abortion at home, but she wasn't alone. the mitchie were with her. no, you're not free. it didn't hurt. i didn't suffer. i so calm all the we talked and breathed together. i felt comfortable. it was a good experience with bonita. oh, the reason the collective felt they had to take care of her was that at the clinic, doctors had simply handed over the abortion pills as if it was for a headache. he might speak on that he's in the us, get them out there than that. they tell you, you have to swallow. so in so many pose after x hours, everything super fast. and afterwards you are says of what did they say,
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how many hours the islam was gone? that's typical. they say here are the pills, take care of it at home. and that's why a lot of women don't go through with the procedure because they don't know exactly what to do. and as a lot of misinformation about the medications, no lying or taping for matthew method ago, less but the yes, the niches say inadequate medical instruction is often a subtle form of resistance from doctors. that's another reason why they want to continue their work. they're looking to break down prejudices many mit she is are also mothers. they say women deserve to have freedom of choice. they post messages with their children who are of course, also concealed record. i remember that women who are already mothers also have abortions. that doesn't make them but mothers with a few clicks. the next tick tock video is created with, with a message to the world. freedom for every woman to choose for herself without
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social taboos. ah dry hot weather with no sign of rain for weeks on end. large parts of europe are suffering the worst drought in 500 years. southern spain has been particularly hard, hence, trees have withered crops, have dried up. forests, have burned, and local reservoirs is starting to resemble deserts, making water scarcity. a huge problem. the lake front has receded and the sun has sucked the moisture out of the ground. deep cracks run through the dry. so we're in the hinterlands of mulligan. the reservoir loving you, ala is the most important source of water in the southern spanish province. but it's only at 11 percent capacity. it was meant to bring prosperity to the region. now, there is almost no water left here than withdrawal. the reservoirs losing so much water,
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it's not being replenished because it just won't rain with the ducks were once a bustling tourist trade took place now on dry land. eleanor sanchez hasn't even put her boats in the water this year. the tour guide used to offer kayak tours stand up paddling and much more. she opens the boat house for us. it's very sad. they are dry and they should be what i should be washing and bathing. yes, it's the 1st time in 8 years. i've been that we haven't been able to burn miss activity. last summer they sat here in the afternoons. as the children played the lake reached to the 1st row of trees, she says, the view, the quiet now is depressing. she's hoping desperately for rain, but has also changed her strategy. she now offers day trip to us to other places. the we are great. we have beats is cleaves gov's. not that out part reverse too high. big long times i looked off wide believe use his story, astronomy. so doris,
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him, he says they'll come in the villages around the lake, a favor destinations for british belgian and german tourists. staying on the near by coast 4 years ago. the stuff bought moved to under lexia. it's never been as dry as it is now. gets beyond was, you can last year. there was no rain in the fall. that's decisive. it's normal for it to rain in the fall and in the spring on it than everything is replenished. that's why it's so bad. i get the casa paula. emma's helps out in a fiance restaurant. she grew up in the village and is worried about the future. if the drought continues next to tourism agriculture is the main economy in the region . her father grows, avocados, deny our wine at bonham. i don't know if the reservoir runs troy than we call water
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or feel, everything would dry out. many families live off the plantations. they would have to find some other kind of what was more and more plants are already dying. some farmers are resorting to drastic measures sacrificing some old trees so that others have enough water. one kilo of avocados, a tropical fruit replies between 800 and a 1000 liters of water. this region is one of europe's largest of a cato providers. but the monoculture is driving the region to the brink of collapse. according to ecologist, ruffle use plans to save would have just been implemented too late to save the reservoir. does it gravel? it's only like was like that didn't happen from one year to the next to the list of dollars. why are you sonya? go mucho, it's the result of several years. were too much water was used for agriculture issue, neither one of the can us out knobby this within the u, as in the fact that it hasn't rained enough. color means the water levels are
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sinking to the point that there isn't any left to living a more they, they will. he, san jose fernandez has decided to go another way. his working with the starter businessman and mr. rico. he developed a system for efficient watering. it doesn't just bring the water directly to the roots, the flow can be checked with these cap singles. not a drop is wasted. yawning momentarily when i walk my rounds and check that the water is really flowing everywhere it that that's the systems advantage underground. your relation is nothing new here, but i was never sure how much water was reaching the plants and away if he didn't. he or what but he has, he has a fernandez, was able to cut his water consumption in half. i still his going to, he was proud of his harvest due to the ongoing heat wave this year. ne, unbelievable that some people still deny climate change. whether i don't grow,
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lemme get a get a little them up. bit of the drought is a problem. but because of the drought many are developing a new awareness about water management gather. unless if he think that'll drill, and he didn't do it right in the spring, he had only 20 customers like this summer. he had 300 more stuff but is trying something new and he's showing us his garden and his inventions, he's using the extremely dry weather to dry fruit in his new device. the you can do this on your own. this is where the sun comes in to fade goes up and the things inside dry out on the hood who control can fix tomatoes, pomegranates. the family wants to enjoy mediterranean variety and to live in harmony with nature is no more men and so on. m, and so the yahoo got agnes and like we're living during a once in
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a century of vanity a milestone. it sounds dramatic, but if human beings want to exist on this planet, then we have to re imagine how we live. it is. it's a summer that has made many reflect. the lack of water in love in whaler reservoir is critical. rain is no way in sight. meteorologists, a warning that droughts in spain will be happening more often. ah, bands on calm washing and lawn sprinklers limits on running water. these are just some of the ways authorities have been responding to the heat waves in many cities . but is that enough? the climate crisis is making life insufferable for many urban dwellers. concrete and tarmac store heat, and there's often too little show aid and to few cooling green areas. but some
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cities are developing strategies to cope. so the most dangerous extreme weather phenomena shift was basically affect our bodies and the echo systems around us. and they send us to the hospital or the killer. this is phillips, 1st teeth heat officer for a task is to find ways to protect citizens from the dangerous effects of extreme heat. as the climate warms and the frequency of heat waves dramatically increases, cds are pointing people like her to limit the dangerous. we talked to 3 of them to find out how we can best deal with this new normal. what's coming our way and what can we do to protect ourselves? i started thinking of what i have to do in 3 pillars. the 1st pillar has to do with raising awareness. how do we communicate and gets people to take this seriously? many of us i'm aware of just how dangerous heed can be because heat as
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a silent killer. we don't see the effects of extreme heat as visibly as the physical destruction brought a hurricane flag and other natural disasters. that extra heat now kills at half a 1000000 people worldwide each year. that's more than all other natural disasters that aren't due to the temperature. and a problem is getting worse, especially in cities, which are heating up at why is the global average rate because they trap heat what a non urban areas this is going to be one of the coolest summers that we're going to have for the rest of our lives, and that's not something that we should pick likely we really have to understand and see. these are really hotspots. they're not going to be able to be viable in a few decades. by 2100 cities across the world could warm as much as 4.4 degrees celsius on average. so how do officials best sound the alarm and make sure people
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understand the gravity of the situation? one of the things that was done for raising awareness, which i think is really a game changer, is we have been categorizing heat waves for the 1st time in athens. this year it's a pilot project that was started and city spain and athens, greece, and will be adopted by other citizen. and categorizes heat waves based on the effect of human health. much like earthquakes get categorized based on the intensity. the idea is to help people prepare and respond better and that thought all heat waves will also be named in the future just like hurricane katrina immediately evokes these images in your head and makes it easier to remember the disaster. so may heat wave though it the world's 1st ever hit event to officially be named and he at the end of july once it's clear that he'd great as especially dangerous information on how to stay safe, can be spread to those who are most endangered messaging around waves is,
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is really critical because there are a lot, there's a lot people can do with their own behavior to keep them safe from the city of athens, even develop an extreme heat up that's now also being used in milan, paris, and one of them. we have an application called extreme global that shows you your personalized risk depending where you are in the city and your age and your gender . and whether you are, you are, you have pre existing conditions and tells you also on the map where to go to take cover where the cool spots are around you. in a similar effort africa's 1st heat officer is currently creating a heat map for the city of freetown. what we're trying to do is to understand where are the hot sport ah, where are the all been? it's island to bed said plan and crowd size resources. resources in sierra leone a limited, so eugene yard carbo wants to focus on helping the most vulnerable people 1st that
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include female vendors who are exposed to the sun all day when selling their produce and uncovered markets without any shade. so what we've done is to work together, we, those we men and design a projects which we call the market shade cover project. basically, we use a material that is heat reflective that doesn't absorb the heat to provide a shade cobra. for the we men, the project will be implemented and launch within the next few months, just even seeing the joy on their phase night when i was talking to them about the project. and gave me hope that definitely there is something that can be done to help save lives and help improve believing condition of people who are the most vulnerable. on a larger scale, the design of the entire cities can evolve to beat the heat. one of the solutions that athens has been trying to implement it, which
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a lot of seats that have tried to implement around the world is creating green corridors, and we have finalized the designs of 3 green corridors in athens. meanwhile, freetown is currently cleaning up garbage sites and converting them into public gardens that clean, safe, and cool to also planting a 1000000 trees across the city for that free time eventually becomes treated. fantabulous chile is taking a similar approach. we just from a $2000000.00. 2 moran forest program is, is a really ambitious we should be able to provide we've, at the 30 south m increase or the city we never had that in the past before. trees bundles provide shape and reflect a sun's rays back up. they also help lower the air temperature around them by essentially sweating the take up water from the ground, which then gets put back into the air through a process called evapotranspiration. but they aren't the only form of vegetation
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that can help called on the air. in places where there might not be enough space for new trees. streets and roofs can also be green. cities across the world from paris to london, bangkok to singapore have started incorporating green roofs or living was in there urban architecture and santiago that sheila is looking to do the same dropout to start building a cool roof and a public building. we know that google's again wrote, promote a, provide many benefits, like winning down there, the buildings saving energy and also a helping people to look some really it i felt with their mental health and also provide legal or diversity within the city. so we are doing the 1st one is september, india is to measure everything in order to escape up to the rest of the city in the near future. experts believe the cities also have to change the way they construct new buildings to adapt to the heat. in the future, our cities are built primarily with materials that absorbs solar energy that are
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impermeable to water. so we don't get that sort of rapid of benefits. and so we basically designed our cities to trap heat and that's what they're doing using nature based materials with high solar reflectance as one idea. another is going back to using light colored materials for the outside of buildings from all to roofs. something that southern europe has been doing for a long time. and now other cities across the globe can adapt that idea. we have a lot of informal communities, people. i'm who lived in houses built from zinc, so. 2 mary backs is back in point, seeing how we can i provide an white's pain and i'm just really, it's, it's, it's kind of a basic solution, but the impact is immense. of course, climate change caused by carbon emissions is the real driver of extreme heat b. i should drastically cut our greenhouse gas emissions in order to prevent a catastrophic level of global warming. but experts say that even them so much
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damage has already been done and will also have to learn to adapt projections, shown that things are only getting risk from here. and that's why we are address, you get it from. and now, in order to prepare for the future, we know that preparedness, it takes time out the east and will not meet. just wait until i'll stop there while you wait. he's on the base in order to remember, the good news is there's a lot we can do and we have it her fingertips. we don't. this is lesson innovation problem and more of an adoption. and that means we can do something quickly about it. if we put a much she owe reproaches, have been on the search for delicious snacks again. this time in gum. ah, aka is the lively capital of gardener. you can enjoy specialty dishes from any
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region of the country. they're in almost all those recipes. the favorite side dish is the plan t deep fried topped with lots of spices. it's a staple food of gun and cuisine. grilled it makes a perfect snack. sits aveena georgina has had this stand for 12 years and grooves, plantings over a charcoal fire. oh, real st. food. let them on on. that is a great spot because lots of people in cars passed by and see my food in them via laughing yet them of i've said safina georgina has both green and yellow clam chains. the yellow ones are riper and sell better because they're sweeter starting at 10 am. you can find the mother of 3 on the side of the road peeling cooking the plantations. most of our customers come in the afternoon when the weather is really hot. that's when business starts booming and with group plan teens sets of penal
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georgina says nothing goes better than roasted peanuts. owl might be our duck. what i'd like to add another snack to the menu that would, i'd never give up grilling planting. because i make a lot from in a group plan chain costs the equivalent of $20.00 euro cents. like in the drive through the customers can pull up and placed their order. they love it. i love this so healthy, very healthy, sweet bland, teens piping hot, the perfect snack for that special craving. and that so from us that global 3000 this week. thanks for joining us. and don't forget to tell us what you particularly liked about the show, right to global 3000 at d, w dot com and visit us on facebook to dw global ideas. way
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their solutions? how can people protect themselves in the future? tomorrow to next on d w. oh wow, i has no limit. love is for everybody. love is live with love matters and that's my new podcast. i'm evelyn sharma, and i really think we need to talk about all the topics that north divides and denied this. i have invited many deer and well known guests, and i would like to invite you to an end will you become a criminal pre ca,
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already know who's with hackers? paralyzing the tire says, ah, computers than elsewhere you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can go for, and that's how they can also go terribly. watch it. now, i'm new to more than half of old people worldwide live in cities. and it's getting hotter than what counting green building facades, how to keep our cities who own a mental glitch in the living room. they look nice, but what are the environmental consequences many people.
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