tv Eco India Deutsche Welle October 23, 2022 4:02am-4:31am CEST
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ah, this week on world stories, fishermen protesting in india. a 13 year old artist paints for the homeless in france. we begin in ukraine, which has reclaimed more territory from russia after a counter offensive in the south at the cost of many deaths and injuries. these positions are well fortified. ukrainian soldiers have withstood several months of shelling in these trenches. the lines haven't moved to most of that time . the recently things started shifting up ahead. they've started to attack russian positions more aggressively. by yep,
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bonus mob in some directions. we have been able to move forward, even right now, an attack is going on with us. we try to put them under constant pressuring, so it will go our way. the way this civil loved him. don't it? because we do work to prove, let me show you where i guys live. the soldiers stay for several months. the army doesn't have enough personnel to retake them in and out more often. this group is getting ready for the cold season. we have written good here work only as we move forward in winter we will have to heat all the space and will be in his song by then. let's hope so for god's sake. 2 days ago, a shell hit just above their beds or look, thankfully the roof and so well build and go ahead and get through hostile naperville. further behind the lines,
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ambulances wait for injured soldiers to evacuate into hospitals were told that 3 ukrainians were heard by a storming, rushing position. frontline paramedics had them over to an ambulance that shuttles between the war zone and the hospital. oh grain, you know, authorities have admitted to roughly 10000 dead soldiers as well below estimates of russian losses, but neither side are releasing precise or credible number. oh, this time none of the injuries seem to be severe. for this call yet move a counter attack is costing ukrainian blood the paramedics say they've become
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busier recently. bishop on nickel, missouri, the number of injured is higher during the attack because our guys move forward to the positions of the russian villains. and then it's easy for the russians to hit them because they know what their positions well and can show them. even if i can to some it was, it's in a car, right. the paramedics returned to their waiting position. they don't know when the next trip to the hospital will be. they know it will come. ah, in russia, more and more young men are being drafted for proteins, war to compensate for heavy casualties. but these recruits lack almost everything. rusty weapons and squalid condition was loosely sha issue or that will that affect loosely leg?
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these are just some of the images that have been circulating on russian social media and telegram shots, showing the things that mobilized russian men are having to deal with a tampon. do you know what it is for? you stick it in a boy and, and it expands and stops the bleeding hard to be done. what's the, and these pictures also from telegram allegedly show residents bringing supplies to a military base and over subversive moscow's mobilization efforts are not going to plan. soldiers are missing sleeping bags, food and medical equipment. we found groups on russian social media where relatives of russian soldiers are sharing pictures of the equipment they are sending to the front. we reached out to russian soldiers, but couldn't get any to appear on camera for an interview. when asked why they were going to war, one of them replied,
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i'm not looking into the causes of this war. if i was mobilized, it means that my motherland needs me. i am a simple soldier. the question why and what for is not my responsibility. russian lawyer mux, i'll, you'll need, jeff says social conditioning like this dates back to soviet times. and is part of the problem. and he and the majority of russian people are not ready to go to war e, but there's a willingness to rely on the government's decisions. is it because there is a belief that authorities know better phone fin? the people don't think critically, thus they don't understand that when the government is using them as cannon fodder looked at the bush and ha, it's been 3 weeks since russian president putin announced a partial mobilization. since then, hundreds of thousands more russian families have been drawn into the war.
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in corolla india, a controversial port project is expected to boost the economy. but fishermen fear that this could threaten their fishing grounds and hopes. for weeks, hundreds of fishermen have gathered to protest at the sight they have been protesting, day and night in front of the visine young dani port being built by india's richest men. gow tom, a dod him among them, jackson to buck iran, a local fishermen who comes here every day with his family. r. o bad, for him, protesting is the only way to fight for his arrival. in last year we saved our house by using sandbags. now it is a major water rise because of his port. i'll lose my house and family inevitable.
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to day, jackson is visiting a site near the donny port to check the status of construction. this is not a natural thought. the construction of the breakwater will erode the coastline on the other side. it will start losing our homes by now or 7. now. there are around 40000 fishermen in this area since the port work started in 2015, at least 500 houses have been damaged and more than a 100 families have lost their homes due to coastal erosion. just a few kilometers away. hundreds of displaced families are living in the cement warehouses. deva shy yum a local fisherman has been living with his family in this tiny cubicle for the last year. what a boy when our house got damaged, i was sleeping on the beach for many days. my love, sometimes i slept in other people's houses out of iraq brennan,
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and whatever. and anyway, today he is heading to fish and deeper waters as port construction has chased away fish from this area. but even here he has no luck. in the day i got nothing, no fish at all. it's a bad day for me. i don't know how i'll feed my family with the c o of isn't ja, madonna. group sees things differently. he says this port will boost the economy if this boarded operational, this is big enough efficiency to logistics cost and time. not only sublime inc, ms at bush and then go to the presented committee. so the will be the media been in sea city. but as the protest enters the 5th week, fishermen like jackson are not convinced. he says he will not give up even if it means fighting the countries richest man while ordered
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them. to souffle is a 13 year old french artist who sells his paintings to support homeless people. he has been doing this since he was 5 years old at chill. so flea is 13 years old and a budding artist, but actually doesn't paint just for the sake of it. i wanted to help the people on the street and i didn't know how, but i saw some artists on the beach and i thought i could do the same all this afternoon at your house is playing some of his works for sale and an artist run gallery if you get not every one encourages what he's doing eventually to louis. okay. thing rigans or some people think it's too much for me that i should stop over at johan,
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his family will use the money raised to buy food here. they're on their way to the city of to way in northern france, where 20 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. a 3rd more than the national average. they're meeting co highly jabrisa as social worker and family friend, and lou to v. claire ferpa. a homeless man. oh, there. mr. la fella is an alcoholic. he's been homeless for 4 years that he's yeah, his situation is challenging, but archie refuses to lose hope. i'm unhappy. but mary, of course, i guess i didn't know it. good. you good. i lost a good friend of mine, was lucille socrates have to be informed of your situation so they can help you. okay. same fucking please. as ag won't look good. i don't think they're really interested. lou aren't good. good that found that mr. le fabula has been living
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in his car for months. he's loaded with blankets and made a home for himself. and author will come sit in my room, 2 of them will room and actual bring some light to a dark situation. oral the movement. you're the king here? normal? no, i'm not the king of anything. of your life. it well. you at least should live life to the full then will. oh. what does it mean to have are to you had your site will get a lot of good forms. my hearts girl if possible, i think you going to find a way out. come on like get all school that he
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may i please look like you've taught me a lot. thanks to a few to talk to you may not have changed mr. le fabulous situation. but he has shown him that there is someone out there who believes in him, and who cares about people experiencing homelessness. ah, every day counts for us and for our planet. global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make seating screener? how can we protect habitat, what to do with a bowl? our waste?
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ah, here in a sparse rocky landscape and jordan, mysterious grave has been discovered the 9000 year old resting place of a young girl who is buried below the floor of a house in a stone age settlement. ah, the girl was buried alongside valuable, elaborate grave goods which will most likely symbols of a great sense of love and loss. meet us as humans settled, the dead became part of everyday life. whole people increasingly related to those they had lost and to their ancestors. upon the archaeologists who uncovered the remains of the 8 year old child named her shamella. the beautiful
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ah what happened all those thousands of years ago? and what does the grave reveal about life in basha? this neolithic settlement with the 26th of june 2018 in boucher the years excavations are drawing to a close and the archaeologists are carefully recovering the final artifacts from the site. it is business as usual until the team suddenly comes across shimaya's grave. they are amazed by their discovery
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i. the grange was extremely elaborate, so fiendish as all the grave goods. alongside tremulous remains i would say that the necklace of this child is outstanding. it is a fascinating piece of jewelry to console against. it gives you goosebumps, it's incredible. even compared to ancient. petra was one times taught the berry treasures taken to germany for further examination. the restoration experts. andrea fisher and ali spoke heart. prepare the beats so that the archeologist ha, she can reconstruct the necklace which will then be returned to jordan.
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suddenly the modern world is brought to a standstill by a virus. international travel largely ceases. and national borders are closed. finally, an autumn of 2021, the experts from the fire, only vegetate berlin's ex, already into scientific association, are able to return with shameless restored necklace or the stone age artwork is to receive a special place in the new petro museum. near the basha excavation site, archaeological discoveries are only allowed to be taken out of jordan for research purposes, but they remain the countries property before jemila nicholas is mounted in the museum, the restoration experts and archaeologists make another visit to the discovery site . what will they uncovered this time?
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unskilled ca, gabe, who came to barge in 1984 and has overseen the excavations ever since granted. read z, add a lee fazel and mohammed a members of the marine tribe of some of them have spent decades assisting with the excavations along with their families. many of the local bedouins once lived in and around neighboring petra, as tourism became increasingly important. the jordanian government moved them into a purpose built village albania. the village is also the base camp for the badger. archaeologists. the necessary equipment is stored in one of albedo as simple houses. the team only ever take what
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they really need with them as getting to the site is extremely difficult. with the pickups, make their way through the dusty rocky landscape to the entrance into the deep basha gorge. the spouse vegetation here requires irrigation to grow these large trees on the other hand, grew without human interference. they marked the beginning of the gourd shaped by masses of water, of a thousands of years known locally as a seek. from here the team has to continue on foot. the luggage makes the climb even more challenging. multiple journeys are required to transport everything to the site. despite
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the difficulties, the seek remains the easiest way to access the well hidden location. it is safe to assume that people took the same route to the settlement. 9000 years ago. somewhat unsurprisingly, father was 1st discovered by a mountaineer. more than 30 years ago, the austrian climber came across some stone age tools at the foot of one of the rock walls, hands kia ca gave her learned of the discovery and set out to investigate. guided by curiosity and luck. in 1984 gabriel had to navigate the gorge without equipment. these days, 3 lad is remain in place in the seek during the excavations while the others are required at the site itself. the remote hidden location of the stone age village, protected the artifacts from grave robbers, and from late
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a human expansion and construction towards the top of the seek, opens up to reveal the high plateau. the archaeologists have named barsha after the surrounding mountains. marian benson hans kia ca gabor's find themselves in familiar surroundings. but it is the 1st time andrea fisher and alleys, poor cod, had laid eyes on the excavation site, which amelia's grave and the beads, the 2 restoration experts have now been working on for almost 2 years. were found for thousands of years. the only visitors to this place consisted of a k personal goat heard as the 9000 year old village was discovered during the removal of the 1st layer of earth. archaeologists can only base
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their conclusions on materials, able to survive for millennia, such as rock, horn, bone, or shell, the jordanian archaeologist an art historian, serene. albuquerque uses the scientific results of her colleagues, as well as her knowledge and her imagination to bring the village back to life. i shall baki was part of the excavation team in 2018 and has developed a strong bond with the ancient site. it is the 5th time marianna bens has visited barsha in 2018. she and halla, al, at ashi, uncover jamil as grave that's over because a me, vasa is like winning the lottery to him and i was able to excavate a number of graves that told me a lot about ancient and social structures. that is my specialist else to now mind the transition from the magic to sedentary ways of life and the resulting social change, or se as a child. find that in barsha,
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one of the oldest villages discovered to date this transition occurred around 9000 years ago. along with jericho and hazel baster and other places, basha is part of the so called mega site phenomenon along the jordan rift valley, which introduced new socio economic patterns to the area. oh, initial settlements were founded here around a 1000 years. be, see these settlements expanded covering areas of up to 16 hector's. then banished again. barger lies approximately half way between the red sea and the dead sea. at the edge of what he out of the dead sea region acts as a form of natural archive for geologists and hydrologists. the strata, or layers of rock and soil reflect the climatic conditions of the past. a
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warm period began around 12000 years ago, causing glaciers to melt and sea levels to rise. the changing climate resulted in cold, damp winces, and hot summer months. ideal conditions were growing grain and legumes. these changes, along with the fertile soils allowed previously nomadic peoples to settle in one place, villages sprung up and then expanded their inhabitants farmed land and enjoyed their new found leisure opportunities. at the time the landscape between a man and october probably looked similar to the north of modern day jordan, where reforestation efforts are now proving successful
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to date, it is not known how the people who lived on the plateau gained access to water. there was no indication that there was a spring in the vicinity. did the villagers perhaps use the seek as a reservoir? and what did this remote plato look like at the time? you know, life is changing from bus. until now until i didn't. now we have many things that make high temperature in the loft and, and before in the site they have like cam water source around. the site indicate from the tools the lift to it's also when you find some tunes, they use the po, again, like see. and this is indicate that they use it for planets, and it was good laden scorn, fly. there, death the people of vasa lived our farming and their livestock month that they primarily grew legumes. and we have found conclusive proof that they found peas,
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the alps as a her animal protein was provided by sheep and goats and zones would do shop. we assume that the field stretched out towards valley arabic and were also located up here towards the east of the arabian plateau. reached him while the arbor at the time this mount, the beginning of the vast stems which are now desert, or yet the calls and stepan unpinned, sought the american side, or to boost ist population numbers increased rapidly. carbohydrates were now readily available, which was not the case for hunter gatherer societies. women were therefore able to give birth every 2 years, rather than every 4 to 5 years. but why would people choose to settle in such a constricted area?
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they would have been a limited amount of land available for farming and access to water was as problematic then as it is now. for tyler z, even darlin does as up one of the advantages of this location is that it is quite remote law. in addition, once it was settled, there was little chance of territorial dispute. yeah. been, the people may have argued amongst themselves over land life, but there was no outside threat. it's also muffin of a neat mammoth on the because space was limited. dwellings were built close together layer by layer the work as advanced further into the past. some of the walls reach depths of around 4 meters, which suggests the buildings had at least 2 stories. ah,
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the rooms are small and have little or no daylight. the excavations confirm that they were largely use for food preparation and storage as yet, there is no indication of any path. so lanes between the buildings never can. we can say with some confidence that the settlement was very densely constructed. wherever we dug, we uncovered wolves come on, it is increasingly clear that the little rooms be excavated and the initial phases are, were too small for people to live in the i'm of we therefore assume that much of the village is life to place on the roofs and in nature of physical indiana to off that to one point as hunters and gatherers small numbers of humans had spread out across bos territories. now hundreds lived close together.
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