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tv   Bauen. Wohnen. Design  Deutsche Welle  October 29, 2022 6:15pm-6:46pm CEST

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thousands of people have braved rain in time pay for the 20th to taiwan pride parade. the annual event celebrates the island status as a regional leader in l. g. b t writes taiwan is the only country in asia where same sex marriage is legal. coming up next sports life where you can get to know a canyon girl who's taking the international golf world by storm at the age of just 10. yes. 10. i'm michael. ok. thanks for watching. there's more news as always at the beginning of the next year when you become a criminal, ah franklin mayo already know who's with about hackers and paralyzing the tire societies computers than elsewhere. you
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and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can go in for, and that's how they can also go terribly. watch it now on youtube. someone else to the hardwood tv highlights of selected for you? you every week in your inbox, subscribe now. with . oh, are you a boy? oh boy. with
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blue. oh my trophy, that's a one you can. one of them is for the campus, right? it makes me feel happy, makes me feel pad, listen to inspire more people to p. i all go on there. they come as professional, go find a nana. these wake up mommy. the day begins with stretching full canano door me. this young girl is one of kenya's greatest golf talents. so as you can see, that's her time table. basically it's a visa here in the morning. she has to wake up. do. try to then have her breakfast
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and get ready for school. yeah, i find it very chic key because i have to maintain school. i have to do was there to go to golf practice? well, well, so clear defense to war used to happen basically is oh with adult golf player. so every, every sunday after sight, then the dad will say guys come, come, come, come, come, let's go for golf. so go and then we guys go and sit on the club house, him in gore play with his boys. so that time can and there's like mommy, i'm so bored. so caruana started asking the dad father d. i also want to play golf. so in half if, but they have a dad told me a bit, we need to buy ha, a golf set. so we bought our goal, set its head, concrete clubs. it had a driver, a party donald item. so how court to car. i mean, she was fine. she, she was a character economy zone. she's
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a very jovial kid and she loved the sport. with these days, caruana takes her sport a bit more seriously. so this is my gulf. lag has 12 clubs and this, this golf boy, is he 3 years old? my dad for my 7 ion, i usually use it when i need to go under and he needs to go far. to my local edge. i use it to chick put on. yeah. they have to sit in the slough of things and my favorite of all of them. my job, but it goes very far. my father's was 202 years. i think
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a house my mean and it's near is and this is a driver. if a guy, missus, driver and canada have won a number of tournaments together, but no, she has to said mrs driver's side for home work when you're finished. okay. if you have an issue, let me know. yeah. okay. just make sure you go through the walk past her parents, jackie and roberts are making sure their daughter stays on the ball in school. it's not easy right now. jimenez facing the final round of kenya's biggest junior golf tournament. once she hopes to win. yeah it's, it's the final oh, leg of the, of the safari. com tour at the royal golf club. and obviously we want to finish.
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well, she's not last tournament at all. vizier. she's so she's, she's won all that on. i'm in the, she's entered. she of course focuses on performance, but her appearance also matters to her for tomorrow. i'm going to wear this. i like this. it's nice and this, this on shirt. i like that. and then also i'm going to word this hats. this don't look too bad. so yeah, to morrow i think i'm going to walk on my short game. also my long game. earned my chip pin and make sure them i'm going to go my lying. and i just hope this practice well to morrow. off to the last training session, before the big tournament,
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i hope we're not running needs are. are you eating slowly? that's why we're, i mean we run late, spend on land. no, isn't it? so what happened? you a, i did. yeah, i'm sorry. okay. yeah, yeah, but anyway, we're almost here with the final round drawing near canada can't help but think your head. oh yes. oh. yeah. because mm hm. oh it's hot. water have been my thing is then good. i won't have a good school. oh, that's it. thank you. your worry. no, you see last i will happen is so i think you didn't have time to do practice. yeah . was the went straight to the team. yeah. so you should be fine with me and then i'm confident that you're what you're doing well. and you should also, okay, i plumbing root
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canal normally trains with her parents guys. but today is she's working with her personal coach that she does with twice a week as family funds along with all the finishes. no good, say no fine gall, challenging on says the club is a bit longer for my eat. i have to choke it a bit. you got it. he cannot and takes a technical approach to all aspects of the game. but where she really excels is on the team. if you're still shutting the wrong number, my goodness was a lot of okay, don't close at all. much is when i sort of okay, look over which one is moving for just to. oh,
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had brought with one that flicking the 10 year old stance. all of 148 centimeters tall, but her driving distance rivals, most adult amateurs. oh yeah, i had to quite flower than a club. i had larry father, the father of i had, has turned it into what they think a durst though neither knew record to me while her powerful long game is not in question. her coach does worry about another aspect of the sport. so my concern about con, i'm on game is abodes, mental bottle root. she's very competitive. and then a, you know, in golf we of would good didn't buy, did what shibley's badly. she lost the murat, where my so clear, like a bit off and i'm having a by dear. i'm lame lying lay tells me she just continued going. just on think about on that in your coach, toyota, to make it better. and you can do it though,
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sometimes i get that feeling like i need to continue doing better. i put myself on well i just wanted to take a one step at a time. don't push myself to now the training days over canada can be an ordinary kid. again, when i'm stressed on what i like to do to north 3rd, go and play outside with my friends, angelo, my friend who has known each other for 8 years since we were 2 years old. we went to the same primary together on the same kindergarten. ah the day of the safari come junior golf to a final has arrived and excitement is in the air. ah, it's the combination of more than 14 weeks of tournaments that have spanned the
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country. more than 180 kids have qualified with canada, squeezes in some final practice swings, even as her competitors are getting lined up at the t panama or k l b b. her bow all on time. oh, good for you. here before the weekend to get ready to find me good. written down, sarah and her number dawn, me and the game is on the 10 year old girls played 9 holes each. they're not only competing against each other, but the dozens of other tournament contestants as well. canal powers serves her well with long stray drives off the tea. but her short game and putting
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remained stumbling blocks as final scores are tallied. she is unsure whether her performance was enough to push her over the line. and sometimes i'll may focus a lot when leis shaking. and they forget about my show to game on the 9th hall, i heard may jo very well by their name or by shot major. then when i came back to chip again, i turned to my chair and then again each of dea, near the wall. then they fluttered. once i saved double. to day, i had to ask all 40 may go last time they said they wanted to play in the thirty's . by then, i guess a just shot a little bit higher than they wanted to. a bogey means that she needed one stroke more than a good adult golfer. oh god with
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canada has done it again. she not only best at the other girls in her age group, but every girl in the competition as well as many of the boys in folk are not what i see. i see a few of them and then i see a lot of products getting inspired. traditionally, because one will being allowed to play sport, do i know being in car it's the one most safe spaces for gouts. and as she continues on this journey than she's telling a lot of other parents and a local weather gods. but you could also do it. now that's not my favorite to play like that because i've been waiting for probably tab i didn't think i wow, boy, a
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window with making the headlines and what's behind them. dw news africa. the show back typically issues shaping the continent. life is slowly getting back to normal here on the street to give you enough reports on the inside. our correspondence with on the ground reporting from across the continent, all the trend stuff, the mob talk to you next to on d. w. for 77 percent unleashing the power of business. women. if you want to see change, the 1st step is to hold the conversation, dodge being silenced, realize all this time with across africa. female
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entrepreneurs, i'm making way gas shooting, economic growth. i have a signed in 60 minutes on dw g. d w's crime fighters are back with africa. most successful radio drama series continues. remember, all episodes are available online. course you can share and as goes on d, w, africa's facebook page and other social media platforms, crime fighters, tune now mrs . seed avenues africa coming up on the program that the snow burn of climate change is forcing millions from their homes across the continent. in madagascar, the worst drought in decades is driving farmers from their barren fields. massey is one of them, or she has left us cactus to feed the cattle and her children. but those forced to
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flee can return and rebuild. we have a report from born or state in northern nigeria where people are now be given new homes to replace their old village destroyed by vocal her up. and the princess awaits off to centuries of slumber. we have the tail of the bettina fossil legendary and then got trapped in a munich museum, determined to return to her ancestral homeland. ah, with hello christine moonlight. it is good to have your company across the continent. extreme weather caused by climate changes ending people's lives. forcing them to flee their homes, pushing millions into hunter and starvation. there are grim new figures from the world material, logical organization. they say africa is warming faster than any other place in the
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world. and with that, agricultural productivity is declining. the rise and sea levels is increasing along the african coastline at a higher rate than the global average threatening low lying coastal cities and extreme weather events like floods and droughts are increasing in frequency and intensity. killing thousands of people. large swathes of africa are already experiencing acute drought, and one of the worst effects of countries right now is madagascar where the rains have failed. for years, a corresponding adrian creek visited the above hornby region massey . what song? i used to be a farmer. now all she is able to harvest are cactus leaves are endless. drought has left large parts of southern madagascar dry and unproductive, and it has left people like marcy in the precarious situation. she now relies on turning cactus leaves into capital feet to survive. since the rain stopped alive
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has been turned on. it said he how yonder toys as we left the village because of the drought, it's very difficult to find water there. there was no harvest. so we had to sell all our belongings. la nab is in from idaho. many others are suffering the same fate as massey. she lives alongside them in this informal camp and the town of amboy volvo, trade, odami heavy salad, opened the camp when he saw how many people had nowhere to go to being forced to leave the villagers. your nathan allen, a guardian of this old man lying here. you stop a 120 head of cattle. yeah, i know he was a rich man. these really big issue that over the years he had to sell everything he owned. if it's his ometer and when the people have nothing to eat with, they end up just lying here like this. i he, in the region, they call it carry the hangup people got used to not having enough foods, going to bed hungry. it is incredible how they manage to adapt to this hostile
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environments, but of course it comes at a price. i magneer the sewer village is in charge of the mon attrition unit for children at the hospital and above one bit. she says many children here are chronically ill. last month, 2 children came to late and died. this little girl is one of the 5 she is currently treating. her hit on this baby is 17 months old. and her arms circumference is very low, little van. it's in the red part. net $98.00 millimeters, but normally it should be $130.00 for her age. she thought the formulas that she still can't stand isn't mother ari. normally at this age, children already run and she can't even stand out cassock assemblies. oh, we don't have good food at home. sometimes we mix the nutrition aid that
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n g o z give us with cassava and we cook the cassava with a lot of water. if i have some money that yeah, i buy sweet potatoes back at the camp. dami harris alice says he tries to help here and there by buying medicine and collecting donations. he believes mainly climate change is to blame for the situation. but he also says corruption by n g o staff and government incompetence, i'm making matters worse. for decades the government fails to invest in the region . the cycle of poverty gets was, as rainfall gets less, south top is unknown, it is definitely going to be very difficult to stop this crisis. unless the aid organization is clean up there actually banassi blessedly. and he will also be difficult if the government doesn't see what's really happening on the ground or on my to take the right measures. front amount is also over to so much fun. monday we
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need a hands on approach to bring this situation to an end, answer. se one's amazon, those of us as she prepares, the 1st and only meal of the day for her family must see what saga asks herself. why this is hector. i did not bother you. i don't know why the rain doesn't fall in, but it may be because of us humans. we don't love each other and it was maybe that's why the rain has stopped falling. or because strangers did something to prevent the rain, i don't know. i just have some greens and 2 cuffs of rice. that's all the family of 14 can afford for to day. yet they still offer their neighbors to join, trying to help so we've heard from some people in madagascar forced from their villages by the drought, but it's not chest madagascar. and to talk more about this,
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i am joined by mohammed optical. he is director for east africa and the horn of africa at the you ends international organization for migration. it's good to have you on the program. thank you so much for being here mister applicant. let's begin by talking about the migration in africa that is being caused by climate change. just what is the scale of this change. thank you for having be here today. first, we need to talk about climate change. we can no longer ignore the issue of displacement, mobility, and migration, and we never used to talk about that. and right now we're bringing that issue of mobility in migration. that is becoming key for us. a good example in somalia where today we have over 1300000 people displaced because of slow infused climate migration. 1.3000000 people. at the same time you have lost a 7800000 people in need of food assistance. and if we don't act very quickly, we have over 280000 people who are in acute food insecurity, who might die because of lack of foot. that just gives an example of this kill is
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somalia. but if you look at the region itself over 36100000 people in need of assistance because of slow onset climate to my just that we're dealing with today. well, i mean these, these numbers are citing and you talked about action and now i want to get to that point in a short man and, but let's talk about the patterns. if we can, when people do move, how do they move it? and where are they likely to go a bit right now. what's happened is the a lot of the rural about migration i can use so might as a case study, where we're seeing a large number of somal is moving away from the rural areas to the capital city or to the cities within the country itself. be filled out by door decide with state you have hundreds of thousands of somalis who also run away from al bob hill area is an extremist group to run from there. now they're going to buy a door looking for assistance and we have to over $10000.00. for example, i have last week alone, 10000 people asking for assistance where the un and humans and buttons are
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providing food, shelter, shelter, non food items for the bid to deal with this. but that is just in somalia, you have some of them in burundi. we have the rising waters afflicting a new gun which is displacing hundreds of bonds themselves. you've got to south to don is a whole city called been too under water the last 7 months because of climate change . mr. ab digger and here in europe at the focus is on the migrants who take the route of crossing the mediterranean. many have died doing so, but in east and africa we do work. and there are also dangerous routes that people are taking. can you tell us more, the biggest route, the biggest maritime road in the world is called it ist and wrote, the biggest maritime wrote in the world. everybody talks about libya, mediterranean to europe, right there. we talked about mexico u. s. border, but we'll talk about the eastern drawer to talk about the largest maritime migration road in the world from the horn of africa through somalia, djibouti, the red sea, 2 young men, which is
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a country and conflict to saudi arabia. every year we have a close 250000 people, 150000 people who cross through these countries in deserts in smuggled and prospect going into i'm in a conflict, so i'm going into saudi arabia. at the same time, we have saudi arabia deporting a large number of this migrants back their home countries. a good example is in ethiopia. they've deported the last 7 months, a 103000. if your bills back to, if your gets off and a lot of those people on the move would classify as being climate change, refugees, people who've been displaced because of climate change. and generally is this is you've been given enough attention. that is, is the international community committing enough money to helping people in this case, preposition, you've told us some really astonishing numbers the, we ought to have come up with what we call the migrant response plan for one of africa and yemen. it's appealing for about close to a $100000000.00 to support this migrants in djibouti, in yemen,
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in somalia and any of your good self. we're getting some support, not as much as we wanted to get, but it's not as much support as we would like to see. and we always appealed to our development part. doesn't dawn us to increase that support. we've seen the smuggling the trafficking. we've seen that economic impacts this house on this migrants and we're seeing a very different trend, which is the feminization of migration before it used to be men on the move trying to fit their families. but noticing more and more women and girls on the move as well. and that is what is worrying us more because of the traffic in the abused agenda based violence are going through on the end brought to their migration was tried to reach mostly saudi arabia. that's where they want to go. that's where the domestic walkers is, the irregular migrant themselves and that it has an impact, but also it's not just climate induced migration. what we have is very much an economic reason. we asked of all the time. why are you on the move on all of them
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tell us i have no job. is poverty, lack of economic opportunities in the region and people on the move. oh, miss applica, we could really go on for a lot longer. but i think we, we can leave a chair right now that is mohammed applica from the international organization off migration. thank you sir. but to pardon me? ah. your watching date every news africa still to come? an ancient african princess awaits in the cellar of a munich museum and begins to dream of her ancestral homeland in africa. but 1st, for those who are forced to flee, there is often an eternal longing to return home. climate change is also a driver of conflict. in northern nigeria where broke her arm rebels destroyed houses and drove thousands into camps in bore no state. but now some of them are going home. as dw news, african america acoya reports from the beach and hundreds
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of new homes. a new beginning for old inhabitants in 2015 book her amen surgeons drove the people of and got them from their old village, leaving them to find refuge in camps. now he is liter. they are going home. don't leave behind the 10th. the sheltered in 4 years and after the pain they have endured. finally, the res, relief well come along, we're going back to and guarantee them, you know, we'll be able to grow food for ourselves and our children. i mean that we're tired of living away from home as long as you know the unhappy that i'm returning home and getting in house alone. i never ever thought i could find someone. i could build a house for me and i can return home. i got an alarm in ice on call. i'm gonna then
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i'm returning to got an am so i can live peacefully, no fears, no trouble any more. that's why i'm excited to be going back to garden. um. some years ago those community got an um, was completely flattened out, destroyed. people were displeased and livelihoods destroyed. but now the story has changed as they, uh, back into the community, been re settled and stocks in del lives afresh. again. bab im god off when i sally lost every scene on the mind of the attack since then his lived in 3 different comes is new house is bigger and house, more rooms than his old on his looking forward to moving in and enjoying the freedom that comes with leaving here in the co op by she did, i don't think our lives have returned to normal like before would in was look at our room. oh wow. gosh, you can get up at 10 in the morning and leave the house and no one will bother you
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at off da da quantum no one will wake you up from sleep and ask you to go to another place attached a dock. as of no one i'll give you any restrictions like in the camp is where you go. jo renewed it bound and now it is my house and i am in charge. i da damage the mark i'm. i'm the you don't. okay. did. did you that can go bound it into the good? one of niger is foremost architects, towson tional craft at the buildings known for her creative solutions. just as consultation with the people was keyed, so coming up with designs, the resonate had with them. you know, it's very important to me that people should be proud of their home. i think if people have them pride in where they live at peace of mind, anything can be achieved. it means so much to be able to sleep some way in safety and comfort and be able to get up in the morning and go to work and be able to we.

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