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tv   Doc Film  Deutsche Welle  October 22, 2022 7:03am-8:00am CEST

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oh boy, we meet till ukrainian, some poets awarded the peace prize of a german book, trade, an unusual choice. but 1st we looked to spain, the book fair as guest country where women are writing for more justice castilla la mancha. in spain's interior is a poor region, but one which enjoyed world fame in the 17th century. this is the land of don quixote, the melancholy knight who tilts at windmills. and it's where ana ellis simone grew up. her background is modest, her grandparents were communists. traveling fair ground workers, her parents postal workers, that ana israel could go to madrid to study was a step up for the family. then came the financial crisis. after her studies, she lost 3 jobs in mass layouts, unable to afford her own, she shared an apartment. by her late twenty's, she'd had enough and wrote a furious book via a reckoning with empty promises. oh,
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when her parents were young and she was a child, they had already built a life for themselves. but for uneasiness, a stable job, her own apartment, even starting a family, seemed like an impossible dream. at least for her generation with you could open her and i don't think we're last generation either seen on the contrary of in a very visible when that was even right. the 5 had the privilege of thinking a lot about ourselves. we really have been says him, what does he mean? her book is a memoir of growing up in the country side with little but a family that stuck together and hoped for a better future. mm. mm said that then the, the, it's not so much about romanticize in the lives of those who came before us sitting in and saying, hey, there are certain tangible ways in which we have gone downhill, knocking my parents were able to buy a house and started family at 20 sol, yodi,
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and most of my generation that says he can't afford it, we don't even think about and them figures. i think it's not so much nostalgia, because it's real. these are the fat on these ada simone. no longer lives in madrid . she now has a son and rights were a major newspaper. she's glad that finally, there's a public debate about the inequalities in spanish and society. madrid, march, 8th, 2018. millions of women more than ever before and many men are demonstrating across the country of protest for more justice equal rights and a better future. in elena mendez, date you novel the wonders a grandmother and granddaughter crossed paths at this protest without recognizing each other. they've never met. maria had to leave her hometown of cordova when she accidentally became pregnant. a disgrace in the 1960 s. elisia has moved to
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madrid, following a family tragedy. to women from the margins of society. the novel struck a nerve. i think a maybe maria's toady or alice has thought he would be a, a saudi. im also jerry among also bo yang. i'll show mattie gun because head east was about money. our like ease who's a far from bar. there's hung fat from from moments in this toady. maria grew up in franco's spain, a life of menial labor while continuing to learn, opening new worlds for herself. busy alisha, in contrast, is on a downward spiral from a once affluent family, she now works in the train station kiosk, meeting men for random sex. although she is married, alicia and maria to women, trying to get by in a world where everything review of surround money they don't have
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ah, he's not a good time. ha. a we magnus enough to retain ha down people. the next generation to people who were born in the ninety's, they have only known like we've got his works, but i think you have not a worse time than that. and the past, i think spain is still haunted by the memory of the bloody civil war from 1936 to 900. 391 by the fascists. under general branca hundreds of thousands died. countless opponents of the regime were arrested, disappeared, murdered. not until 1975 with franco's death did democracy return, ushering and a new generation of authors who could finally write about the issues that preoccupied them. rosa montero novelist and political journalist is one of them. a legend since the publication of her 1st novel in 1979 crony cost as day, some or,
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or chronicle of enmity, is the story of anna, a single mother and journalist at a major newspaper who has somehow lost her way. after franco's death. independent women like her were banned from the public sphere under franco. the novels considered a key work of its time. it was a moment they will, it's really where i began to say it openly, things that we couldn't half side before because eh, my, i novel appears 4 years after as franco's death. and before you couldn't talk about the real life, we had a life was there, but and i, in the last years as franco's regime, we lived in 2 countries. one day of he shall, wow, that he's was awful. and the other, the real one that be it was set up very similar to other countries around the mass, but you could then net dot cope and the out of that. and then in my novel, i began to talk about bruce montero has published nearly 20 books,
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her work span historical science and fantasy fiction, often with strong female characters at odds with men and with a society she continues to see as unjust. i think a question of class has been always there somehow and you know, in these awful, at ne, dictate those shape in the, the, sorry, i've been poor country. people who call went to right either way, man or a man. they were last, have them for it. make us to half our library at home and i not in my generation che, change it in rosa montero honor. it is simone, elena maydon, 3 women writers fighting for a fairer spain and for a woman's right to make her own choices with
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life and a nuclear family, as seen through the eyes of a little girl. daniela to russia's novel, lies about my mother is a tragic comedy that plays out in the homes, gardens and kitchens of the german middle class. the hockey mat, who has the power as him and to which powers social mechanisms and dynamics of the individual characters subjected to in this intimate theater. we call hamlin and we'll let my mother won't fit in any coffin. she's too fat. she says, when she dies, she doesn't want her ashes to be captain an urn, but simply scattered over open water. the fattest and ulster father has climbed the social ladder full and for an upstart like him. things like appearance,
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planning and not standing out of very important with the army. he needs to exist in this new world. and the mother doesn't fit the bill. the novel takes the reader back in time to west germany in the early eighty's. the era of tennis legend boris becker chancellor. helmut kohl on the cold war a time of rigid gender roles. what was it like to come of age during those years? having a father who controls and rules over your mother who sees her body has been slightly stained on his immaculate facade. just look at yourself from now on. she has away herself every morning under his supervision. the demon, every time the humiliation could be seen flashing across her face. daniella, atrocious, novel is the portrait of a generation and the declaration of love to a mother who refuses to remain a victim and eventually manages to set herself free. ready ah. ready
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large parts of his latest work came to german check ortho, young hector, while riding around on his bike. since it's an autobiographical novel, the title touched it or is it affectionately refers to the will to himself? god's dwarf is the ultimate. well, he's not a complete moron. but he blunders along, and allows himself to come up with countless idiotic ideas and pointless musings, susan, susan, for him, duncan, anything goes out ghosts of his past appear to the cheerful, is yet in the shape of european history, personal memories and entertaining digressions beneath nor versus only i knew what deserves telling from that horace pile. that is my past to that said, he arrives to east poland in 1978. drawn to the more the charm and anarchistic mood
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fueled by intellectuals and artists and the pence, lower back district. he tells tales of free love and squashes apartments shush the footer. the decay suited meal and socialism didn't pretend to be something. it wasn't his wife as soon as everything was ugly and falling apart and so was society of sophia. it was symptomatic and symptom of to somehow and it was like a huge playground. you thought he of insufficient climb from petula and a good mood nowadays. although i don't much like myself when i unexpectedly catch my reflection in a mirror with every show. but underneath all, the lightness is a tragic undertone. to essence, either from death makes an appearance on the very 1st page. it's always present lurking beneath the surface of never denied. mixed fig. playfulness is overshadowed
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by the specter of sorrow and death. young to son lived in the spelling courtyard until he committed suicide in 2012. the novel also serves as a monument to the lost son. oh. ready ready ready ready i believe he has earned his new apartment in istanbul, having worked hard for it for 30 years in germany. now he can finally retire and start a new life in turkey. but who st collapse is after a heart attack? and the family meets not to celebrate the new home, but to bury the head of the family. ah, this catastrophe sets the stage for fatma ada mir's novel, which chronicles the life of hussein and emmy ne turkish curds who want to build a new life in germany. especially for their children, but a sense of reproach is ever present. while we want to see you have a better life, they say head well cindy,
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but then does not have scope to disappoint the parent is the at alpha and toys. in her novel genes, we get to know who sane and his wife emanates their children, septa haakon patty, and omit them, and their gens their spirits. the sent off to these spirits often simply secrets that these characters have that they carry with them and within the family, how they represent traumas that they've never worked through the off god for hussein it was poverty and violence and turkey for emmy. ne, it was the loss of her 1st child for septa married off, a just 18. it's fighting for independence against all odds. hawk on who works for a used car dealer. peddling fast cars, asks whether it's possible to have a life that's different than his father's. will meet the youngest, loves to play soccer and falls in love with the friend. it almost breaks him and then there's perry, the rebellious one. who studies in frankfort,
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and who's angry about everything as suits of elation, perry thought simply had no history. it was the opposite of history. it was history's end it's extinction. fought my aid. amir describes germany as an unfriendly place where everyone is afraid to speak the truth because the truth can sometimes be an imposition who. ready ready ready ready ready have many, she knows const, i never cared much for art, but i found most of the pictures i got to see either unsightly or meaningless. sometimes both at the same time. these are some of the narrates as opening words, and it cuts nikolai novel spits vague. they turn out to be misleading because the book does in fact celebrate art painting and the also to gives the book its title. think if it's vague, has been one of the greatest discoveries of painting for me there so much to explore in these works. and because i've always wanted to be a bit of a detective,
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i discovered a lot more in these paintings than is immediately visible as of to overly it's as ina oh, kirk, he, bachelor's book worms. the novel features carried to stress house of the spits week universe is all begins with a self portrait made, not class of students about to graduate from high school. what follows an insult, an os heist, and a plan for revenge. complete with a show down in a museum, a cat's nichols characters go on a scavenger hunt in which art becomes a source of inspiration, a mirror of the soul and a teacher. and continental nissan, of course, one could say that the book is about what art can be for people and how art can also help people mastered their lives, save from comes and even because art always remind you that life is also full of beauty. for the show, and i think that's one of the great potentials of art potency. either the clue
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spits thee is the coming of a each story, a novel about school and friendship bus above all it champions opps ability to guide a person through life. ready ready ready ready ready oh gosh. ready ready the story takes place out in the countryside, in a village on the keel canal, with lots of greenery and a view of container ships heading out to sea. and in the nearby town, there are many empty business, lots. there's room for something new here. think julia and asked that the main characters and christina bill caused novel name and on or next door julia in her late thirties is racked by self doubt. pride of the question of whether you feel safe or secure somewhere doesn't depend on places, but on relationships. julia is trying to have
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a child in vain as if to punish her. so she spends hours looking at instagram accounts of super moms or those who aspire to be here. the world is still intact. alice, here, everything here is driven by longing for a well without ruptures, but no one here will fulfill her longingly to afer. on the contrary, these longings are a commodity traded and exploited. um, but i got her longings. i like raw material which sustains others washed. but she believes she will find nothing here that lost his grandpa asked with is a doctor going on 60 and considers herself happy. her husband is retired and her children are grown up. but when she's confronted with a suspicious death during a night time house call for self image is shaken to its core affair. blake, as her understanding of people have been deep and critical and not mine as, as that she's actually always been a very self, a showed woman tags. and that old starts to fall a possible. how do we live and with whom?
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and what's actually going on with the neighboring family that disappears out of the blue osmond and julia. each of them has her own thoughts, but their encounter remains bleeding. the novel tells us that home can be a fragile place and that it doesn't matter where. but how we live. ringback and this is book price goes to, oh, okay. no, was all an award for stirring debut novel and a strong gesture of solidarity with the protest movement of women in iran for self determination of one's own body. it's received a standing ovation. what happens if a person doesn't feel at home in their own body? how do you find the language for a body that feels neither male nor female gimme lobbies all spent more than 10 years writing this haunting debut novel thought the d m. i wanted to tell you about
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my constant fear of my own body that did what it's like to share the blanket in my bed with the most terrifying monster. only it's not a blanket kinda, it's my skin than mine, a hot blue. oh, the book of blood tells of a childhood spent in fear in a middle class family and swiss suburbia. the non binary, no race named kim has left all of that behind. when their grandmother develops dementia, kim, questions, the family history? what traumas did their mother and grandmother experienced, and why the silence java with the why are so many things to suppressed in our culture, v to because it's painful to name, the thing is that we have only partially processed or not processed at all. so been, then, i think it's very much about pain from an em general. want about being able to feel, you said feeling of cannon. kim delaney is all weaves. many narrative lay is around
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the family story, giving each its own language. the mothers, callousness, outrageous sex states, contemplation of nature and criticism of the patriarchy, writing becomes an almost magical process. the scribe is hiding is really like life itself, leaving the terrible and beautiful and everything in between. and that's vision, it's an opportunity to heal all. but it can also open the fresh wounds highland about will. so we have to think carefully about which sentence as we ought or on, and which ones we keep inside this via going via mean mean. and another award this year, the peace prize of the german book trade goes to a country that has been living in the russian war progression for months. ah, he never stops. ukrainian writer said he shot on with his scar punk band shot
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uneasily bhakti for shaddon. and the dogs currently on tour in germany. played been playing together for nearly 15 years. but never before the stakes been so high. with this, with this group go to the ability to take part in cultural life to have it be present is something that keeps us connected to life before the war jump. that way you can hang on to things that are important to literature, culture as a lifeline. back to normality at a time when russian president vladimir putin seeks to snuff out the very existence of ukraine, it's fundamental for a people's identity. but that's not all. pulling them at the hour, concerts are also charity events. we collect donations to buy things that are urgently needed in the city. those things range from food, medicine,
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clothing and personal hygiene products for citizens to cars, military outfitting and even drones for the ukrainian troops. is arlen is one of ukraine's most popular and radical voices. after russia's invasion of ukraine, he stepped up his own efforts posting regularly on social media. when he's not touring, he's helping wherever he can, and his besieged home city of hearty. often boosting morale with a bit of poetry or a song like here in the hockey, metro, born in ukraine's eastern low huns, greed and john studied in. hark, ivan has lived there ever since. a city only 40 kilometers from the russian border . and now a target for russian bombs ah will sure nipples of short of 2 days ago, we performed at a festival in berlin. and a theatre group from keith was also there. and they had an air raid siren as part
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of their performance was probably annoyed when we heard it. it triggered something in us. so jones and we immediately felt like we were thrown back into the current reality of ukrainians. as a pull up, i said i live in harkey next to one of the loud speakers where those siren sounds put up and for 7 months now. that's the soundtrack that i hear day and night. and you see me says you've done one of the thing about we're seeing this on throughout the a true you even daniel, much that animates his writing praise for its poetic quality and for his unsparing reflections on the war and its impact on human minds. his works have been translated into more than 20 languages and he's won many prizes. his most recent in 2020 to the prestigious peace prize of the german book trade. the jury recognized his outstanding autistic work as well as his unequivocal humanitarian stance. it's an honor, he says is far more than just to literary accolade and something going on the mild summer. but whittaker, sir, i don't feel it's a recognition for me personally as an author, li,
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acoya. and i don't even want to see it in the context of my own ambitions another. but rather as a gesture of support for ukrainian literature quickly, political, one of the most of so that everything that happens right now open every prize, every accolade closet, every publication or translation. but it is an expression of people's solidarity with ukraine's of age. looks was fiscal mcwhorter still green as to the effect his writing can have? he's acutely aware that russian narrative still dominate western thinking his 2017 novel. the orphanage is a close up account of the war in don bass, an account that western leaders could have taken more seriously. oh, nice. we'll spinny straw. western societies still look at everything that happens in eastern europe through a russian layla's overseas goes to the at east antonio. but if we change perspective and look at ukraine lithuania, lot via estonia and georgia as sovereign states that can act independently. the
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picture is completely different from missouri, that doesn't, and i hope these events will make the world and make europe change. it's thinking how much money will so the current geopolitical picture can be seen differently up . they may yet cost qual us on the surgery moment. his newest book sky over, how to achieve chronicles the 1st 6 months of the war via his social media posts with a rousing refrain. to morrow we wake up another day, closer to our victory so fiercely as but when a society has the capability to carry on with its cultural line, just as commerce that shows it has enough power, date of, and conviction. so well on the studio. the new piece prize winners said he shot on, radiates that power and helps the people of ukraine to defy the violence around them. and believe in a life of peace. freedom and self determination. thoughts was all its 21 with courageous voices until next time.
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with nigerian were 2020 people protest police violence. their demands were simply wanted size the band that officials a victim to be compensation. but the uprising ended in bloodshed. some
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protesters who died the 77 percent looks back and asked, what has happened since i went to the 77 percent with lang on d. w. a. do you like it? with do you want? i love it. okay. then buckle up, put the pedal to the metal, and let's ride in red . in 60 minutes on d, w. are people in trucks injured was trying to flee the city center more and more refugees are being turned away at the border. families on the tax in syria for the credit on its way located demonstrate people fleeing extreme ground.
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rough getting 200 people with around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. yes. why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. w. made for mines with hello everyone. this is a special edition of the 77 percent the shore for africa. you coming to you arrived from lagos, nigeria, i'm yours to flourish chipper in this week. so we are looking back at the events that happened 2 years ago here in
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nigeria. we'll look, i'll be in south protest. i called for a stop to police harassment. in our street. the be, it is the man you talk to the victims and authority which is the street to find out how young people relate to the pony today. mm hm. well i left behind me will let you go again. it's one of the major. what were your major dialogue to process? it gives a specialized robbery sport sized or shot. it's also with dead me shooting security agents shooting out to protest that many get injured and some even died. all these events where streamed on his background by a popular niger and the day cause they did. i plenty remember that night and before i felt as i watched the events oh hold on is doug. well,
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you could hear the sporadic shots. are people out for help? i think we'll let them you might be wondering what led to the shipping and how things escalated so quickly? did our be a report? joshua wow, break it down for us in this report. on the night of october $22020.00. my june police brutally gone down. young protestors who had come together to form one of the biggest youth movement in the country's history. just hours before the killings, thousands had got it to peacefully demonstrate it, gave rise in cases of police brutality. i know that the protests were largely peaceful because i was their report. but that evening the protest songs illegals would turn into christ for help. and the same place where people called for their rights to be upheld would be the same place that were killed. it all started on a 3rd of october, policemen from the special anti robbery squad unit, better known as far as allegedly killed
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a young man in southern delta state and took away his scar as a video of the deadly assault looked online. hundreds of young people took to social media event and share their own experiences. all of which were bad. saw initially form in 1992 to tackle armed robbery in the country. but the unit grew into in notorious for popular for a stuart in an abusing young nigerians. my, it's over a, the online anger against size had gone so much that is built into the st. nationwide. illegal protesters mounted roadblocks and shut down traffic. thousands got it. lucky toll gate in major highway, in which area of the city this would come to be the main demonstration points. their demands was simple, they wanted size band that officials prosecuted and for the victims to be compensated. while they were also advocated for the officials themselves, they wanted them to be mentally evaluated. and for the salaries to be increase,
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so that you'd have fewer raises to extort. on the 11th, as the process gain momentum, the nigerian police finally scrapped thought this fisher drawbridge court of denied europe police otherwise known that size is deserved. but people were buying it. this was the 1st time the police was claiming to reform stars. by then, the demonstrations had become more of a movement anyways, and people were demanding not just the police reforms before better governance put animal animal economy. there it goes. on monday, the 19th legos gum, nobody is new form, introduce the panel to look into saws abuses, but the process continues still and seek for some cases of police crackdowns. there were laws lead fiscal, although criminal elements has started to infiltrate. as thousands of protesters got it again, lucky to get on tuesday, october 20th. they noted the things with different people told me that they saw
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toll gave staff. we move in ccc cameras installed in the area and that as evening fell, the street lights wouldn't come on leaving the place completely dark at around 4 pm . glove notion will lose imposed a curfew, tried to instill order, but many poor testers at the toll gate remained there. then at around 7, menal, the nigerian army holding on several vans authority of the own demonstrators. talk to people. eye witnesses told me, they counted several buddies that night taken away by the army. but he wasn't over as one of the killers traveled. angry mob through the streets, lutheran shops, burning buildings, and attacking policemen. 12 people died according to amnesty international and many more were injured. the nigerian government has set up judicial panels to look into a police violence that denies the killings of october 20th survivors, though. so keep looking for justice features
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a beginning percentage efforts. perch for kids because i needed to measure and south was indeed just the beginning. october 2020 sparked a new wave of national consciousness in many nigerians. and we are seeing the play out as next year's presidential election draws closer. there is a high level of youth engagement with school candidates on pos processed and riley have also become a hallmark channel for young people to be call and make their voices heard. unfortunately, in many cases, we are still met with the police are strictly b. it is kimani met with a group of nigeria to discuss the leki killing and how to prevent thought an event from happening again. with hello and welcome back to the 77 percent
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this week a we are in nigeria. more specifically, lagos, the city that gave us fell equity, who, by the way, in 1977 in his title track for the album, them give us them leave tears, sorrow, and blood explained to how the police officers were at that time. brutalizing, the citizens of nigeria fast forward to 2020 and his words still resonated as young people gathered to protest what they said was ill treatment by the police officers until we're here to find out why do african government seems so threatened by protest held by the youth who better to answer this question for me than fellow nigerians. and i'm going to start out with vi. and so i just want you to give us an overview of what happened in 2020 because not everybody has a key idea. so these agree began with some a lot of discontent and unhappiness and rage against specialized robbery squad of the niger and police. and youth just felt like you know,
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what enough is enough. and like that's almost as if they were coordinated. protests were happening in major cities in the southern parts of the country, especially. okay, let's hear from suffer because i understand you are the protest as well. and obviously wouldn't be talking about these protest if they hadn't ended in unfortunately death. so how did it come to be that something that started organically and that in bloodshed, i think one of the selling points, i'll call it that of the answers protest was that there was no coordinated leadership. people just appointed themselves to, you know, coordinate, collect, and distribute resources. there was a lot of heavy politicize and like in the f city where some of the boys who disrupted the protest, testified that they were given 500 nero or so you could easily by st. power yeah, by any one. okay. let me hear from matthew aka precious stone. oh,
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who was not only at the protest but unfortunately actually ended up being shot. so perhaps that by telling us what took you to the protest, why did you feel that it was so important for your voice to be heard that day? many times files are stored me on it. why do you do your l i d 's as i'm no, i'm no you. oh boy, god oblivion and you know where you live fi or where you to enjoy your bad boy. oh boy, i'm no one of them. but when a hardy to that are people, when you turn in junior, will godaddy left top, this sucks to clean or finish it is of this country. so i need to john to protect. yeah, just fully can you explain to me how you felt when you got there? what was the energy like, how did you feel in the early hours jack missouri was so lovely, but i never believed. hadn't enjoyed. i use cool. cool. sure ship. this really gets flagged in july flag atlas, russia dizzy. what? when tied to, to comma to, to sue, to speak, or what is not good about our country?
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what are near shore, right? piece for lovely energy was right. ok, let me come to an officer who day in here because obviously the police officers actually what the receiving end doing is protests being accused of not just brutalizing young people and harassing them is it's true. would you say in your estimation? yes, actually we have um, same reports of police officers been excessive in their use of force. our butts to it didn't mean that the entire police force was was brutal or was insensitive to the plight of the youth. and this we're friends, we're looking through. we have of departments on the follow up looks into these complaints. what i guess are people have had enough all the fels, we're not moving fast enough. okay. um, i want to hear from allow me day because i see that your hair style is dread locked, which i understand in this country can be a way for people to be targeted. have you experience some of the things that p 2 p
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peter was saying was obviously aroused by selfish as lot of time to try to that because we know to happen. i'm in the cloud o. c o p co, bye for now. do you entered? are you all are record you to an out of the south in southport? this is the from to not that does want me to join because i don't know did go go outside that. i'll get shots because most of it i got up at his i was up at the us with his coffee does reduced the harassment doesn't talk you to okay. does it out of a lazy game? he paused, muffled, you for the buddhist could i'll be so lonely. pulls as i asked me to pull up my s 5 vote to put as when, if i go out, i'm going to cushion out the country, leave me to we deliver to sergeant that our catalog. i'll get them out that i do not the right to such my full mouth blood to get my food from the young boy 1st and only got as an internet for stuff he doesn't want to know what you're doing. foster for future outsourcing is up to stop. i would love him to join the buddhist. okay. now i should mention 2 of you was that of course saws as
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a squad was later disbanded. although young people here say that it was quickly replaced with a force that was very similar to that, but coming back to you of his own day and j. j. no, you he, i'm going to come back to you. i had reports while preparing for this. the people would even have their telephones checked to help police officers look through their bank account balance and have and force them to to withdraw money is, is true. yeah, i mean how, how, how does it get to that point? okay. yeah it's, it's very wrong for him please officer to check in with his phone bank account and we, we appreciate those people who just don't complain and just maybe make maybe rounds on twitter, pardon my language around on twitter. but people actually step to say, oh, this police of sans did this, we actually want to gets such reports and when we get them, we are bringing this officers and make them face on disciplinary action. what is actually wrong? and if i'm a say this, i'm not saying i'm not trying to defend these bad behavior, it's not in the face,
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but you know, statistically you see that most times certain crimes are committed by satin is group and the often not always, but they often have this look, this tattoo, i'm been, i mean yeah, yeah, that's profiling profiling. yes. but for a police officer, what are we saying? nobody in nigeria should wear dreadlocks. like i said from the beginning of this, these not a defense. but as a police officer, i remember the last 10 people that's confessed to this particular crime, actually have 13 in this it is the core character is maybe not physical, but in this is you would not. you would not blame me if i say somebody which doesn't. this is on the 1st thing that comes my mind is or the last employer is that okay, let me come to gigi because he's laughing at your comment. i'm not sure if it's because he thinks it's funny. i share your thoughts j. j. so i was laughing because he was fits in perfectly into the bureau spectrum of buyer. so. and he was
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literally admit, seen by us as a police officer. no 4th of he says he's human, but so the next level as a lease officer and as a, as an institution is to 1st of all admitted by us that they are by us to was great for people like all i media and between them up and doing all of those things, but p t i want to hear from you despite the fact that the government admitted its fault and said we should have shot you, and you are given compensation, you still don't feel safe for her. there's no composition, notting since they want to the pioneer. i will one every to you does not, not upon our chart on my chest, the blood ph come out from the back. so i know general big since that dinner, as typical in the political help structure on my segment. rip, i'm so scared like what are you scared of? i'm, i'm scared all my life because you're just the angry god meant. asked the angry bullish,
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just angry. the quote you can't come up, challenge them in the court of law. it will show crazy. let me come to an officer who day in here because pete, he said very passionately, that police officers are still angry because the youth dead to challenge the authority. they dare to stand up against you, or is this how you're feeling? honestly. i don't agree with him. that's police officer angry because of answers. we knew that the youth started the zone. brutus we're not violent. we acknowledge god. so the, the protest we're our term hijacked by some who loans from chronology on her time. i think you should use the right, i think, okay, the right word, the protest. whenever jack, nobody i, jacks to protect the protests was attacked. so who attacked these brutus? the process was at sacked using government's own properties, government's own efforts. so are you suggesting, sarah, that the people,
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the young hoodlums, as the officer has called them here, who infiltrated the protest was sent by the government? this is a very serious claim. i am not suggesting i am saying you're saying it on the day on the 9th of the lackey massacre, we were able to get about 21. people with the same shapes of i mean the same ships of what last, like this much, etc. the same, they had the same tags and so it was like they were given to them. so we got about 20 to one of these people. i still have, i, i mean, most did all the videos we played at the panel. that was actually what made a panel to which their decision. we took this people to the police and guess what? we're told that they are not their problem. all right, let's come back to the office a. i think it's important that you a or to respond and we'll look at the answers protest, but everybody turns a blind eyes of the fact that many police sessions were attacked. many police sessions were bonds down. i don't know if you, if you're aware that many police officers were killed when police officers will be, had they do, and many, many jobs as where,
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where are roasted on eating. these are facts. and i will tell you that when this process started and we check what they were fighting for men of us were happy because our welfare was part of it so, so, so somewhat behind the scene where given them this not like go ahead, we're going to benefit from okay, so how did it come to be that then people who armed by the government are opening fire on their own citizens who are and i'm going to ask you if, if that statement is a statement of fact, will you tell me who else has fire arms in this country who will police will be every day yesterday the voice there will cover firearms from hoodlums. ok so and i'm wondering from you p t. would you ever participate in a protest again, given what happened to you again and again and again and again, because i cannot ignore the tire, i will note as by dad to can do it. this is sally speaking. we know that the,
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our web, our comments are crazy, so we do need to be crazy. so we need to be treated by bring that also luck. also do the necessity being good. now a butare cod rule to do, all those things is not by saudi is not by okay, look at it. all right, but i, we got just is it do or what new did true to oh ok. jail, let's hear for me is good to hope that. i mean hope is, is free, is good to hold that against be a different game. there were electrons immediately after and sauce, and the phone i was on of louis irvine, the history of the country. does that surprise you though? it doesn't, it doesn't. and we have to say things the way they are right now. there's nothing to say that the voting dynamics of niger i intend got out. so not another because we put our vote on or the opportunity of woodson would change with the lessons that are coming in less than a year. and i want to come back to you of his own day. and because what can we do so that the next time young nigerian which will inevitably happen, come together to protest something then not met by bullets. well answers was
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a lennon process for everyone. if we know you're going to protest, we have to put, i'm certain measures in place to make sure it's not. i checked glass on, i said i checked it with your tongue. ok at sac. okay, so that was good. my years in place to make sure that there is no at sac and i'm going forward. like you said, inevitably, processes going to happen again. but we hope we have lens. we hope that it will become floating next time. okay, sarah, i want to hear from you solutions going forward because like i said, inevitable protests will happen here. every single person in danger, once it better nature, the government needs to understand that you need to constantly talk to these people . you need to consulting, talk to people so that you can know what their grievances are and how to meet them in to me to okay. ah, i'd like to hear from you allow me day in the future. what do you think young people need to do to make the conversation easier between government and yourselves? police officers and yourselves. do do what magog youths shuttle to try to get into
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paula when it's going to be the $70000.00 to be in the us over with in the us it dr . wood. also discussing widows will play for future drugs. they don't back out and goes bush jobs. we shall to our grandson or lime and also put as religion gets involved in politics in nigeria here in northeast the north, we cannot conceal ladies of j. j started by quoting fellow equity, the great master of music, and the things that he was thinking about in his album of 1977, a still very much resonating today. how do we stop that cycle for supposed to sit at requests for a better society that easy, never ending one. and that's not unique to nigeria, it's universal. democracies like the america. it's as old as to 50 years old on overdue. continue to butter. 40 st. on so it's not a question of how to restock them. it's a question of how do we make lives better every year? why we started be q less conclude with you? what do you see for the future of this country, posts and saws? brutus, i think understanding that we form as youth
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a critical mass that can really move the needle forward. is something that we need to take very seriously. i mean, we formed like 60 percent of bacteria, the best we could do is get our pvcs, the more work you put in a better change you will see. all right, well, that's a fantastic place to wrap up this debate. the sun is going down. it's so beautiful here and actually feel really good in my heart, which so rarely happens at the end of debates. but that's because the young people here i asked, i'll protest, threatening to governments perhaps. but what i've had to day resoundingly is that the youth, they know go tire. thank you for watching. ah, we be you, we noble at y ever tire meaning we, the youth will never be tired. and just to show how relevant these events are still to day, we got quite a number of reactions on social media. when we previously add these debates on instagram, them well road. i don't have dreads or tattoos,
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but i still got grabbed my police officer for not carrying my laptop receipts with me. what i reach out says the police man is actually not wrong, but the problem is, after questioning the person why extort money from them. thank you all for your comments. unfortunately, i can't read all of them out. thought we wanted to find out more about the relationship young my jones today 2 years after n sars have with the police, my colleague or lisa, he the streets of legal to fine. and what it's us since the end, so which, which shows that spike and sas brutus. oh, i said, gotten worse. i am here at georgia. i got area all blake goes and i'll be going around the streets to ask people what they think it was like in south never happened like the entire cortez. i know that maybe did
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you see like a cognizant of it, he had like a cognizance effect on those people because some of them are variable, trop, debreto was scrutinizes. these people who keep them in checks who your reports do. if there is anything, if anything goes wrong with your interaction with the police, the police are your friend and our friend, my guy, are not your friend. well, it has improved in the says are they stopped the whole stop. i search for iris in a sense like social media has speedy, huge party documenting police interactions in nigeria. and these days he wanted police sometimes ca, situations where day gets harassed themselves. almost everyone carries a mobile phone. and sometimes it is used to record videos that can serve as every then many young people also are accused to police of negative profiling solely on
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the basis of the i looks an experience at a lateral to me. kalu knows quite well. they do every day i go out every day i decide to hunger on my community, see my food, they say to my friends or wherever i find myself. yeah. get profound every day every day of my life and it doesn't stop. it seems like it's never going to end. i mean, course i, we're dread log, so i have thought to and they, this doesn't define me. my parents do not define situations involve in police profile and can sometimes become unpredictable lead into violence or assaults or loads him. he says he has also been held at gunpoint by a police officer. why i don't know why i should be active. the police why i should be locked in my community way. why should we pull the gone the library full to my he strip searched out of here because i'm coming back from walk. i should the
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ops in my society why i should be back in the police. what issues like these when it comes to the police that make up everyday life in nigeria. also most striking is the very sense when i drop police force do that. it's been bolt for bribery and corruption and is wrong. people in iran psyche, cotton, across generations, john gun. oh, thank you lisa and all of you who shared your thoughts and experiences with us. feel free to comment on youtube, instagram of facebook. all right to us at 7 to 7, a. d, w dot com. we have one last piece for you today in music video by dan dan ross lock key lot. create that question e 4 d w. it's called here us out, employees to come in lego. thank you for watching. yes,
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we only demanding for ya to hear it was. so let us embassy. you please stop the anthem. if they say no need to pay it out cuz we owe you demanding for ya. to help us out. yeah, we only demanding it. so let me in please. what was it? stop the internet. they said no need it out cuz we only demanded. call you out to have us out. i'm calling on north africa. ah, ah, with
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