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tv   Im Visier der Mafia  Deutsche Welle  October 29, 2022 8:00pm-9:01pm CEST

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we don't do something our children won't be able to enjoy fresh air. you are 3 dots november 3rd on d, w. d. ah, this is d w. news line from berlin. russia spends in international deal on ukrainian grain exports. moscow says the move is in retaliation for a drone attack on its navy. the agreement had helped to ease the global food crisis . dozens dead in a tropical storm in the philippines. rescuers search for survivors as floods and
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landslides, destroy homes. tens of thousands have been moved to safety and byron munich are back on top of the buddhist legal thanks to a high score when against minds of the goals and more coming up in our sports news . ah, i'm aaron tilton. berlin, thanks for joining us. officials in south korea see at least 59 people have been killed in a crowd stampede. during halloween, celebrations, emergency services treated many of those crushed or heart problems. more than 150 road revellers were injured. stampede happened in a popular entertainment district in the capital. sole eye witnesses say streets were so crowded. it was difficult for ambulances to get through and turning to the
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war ukraine. russia is pulling out of an international agreement, which allows ukraine to export millions of tons of grain. the kremlin says the move is in retaliation for an attack against this black sea fleet. ukraine, however, says russia is using a false pretext to block its exports. move these grainy exports were guaranteed safe passage out of ukraine under the international agreement. now the kremlin sees the deal is off. the defense ministry claims ukraine and britain attacked it's black sea fleet and the occupied crimea. suspension of the agreement signed months ago to aid the global food crisis could mean no more shipments of ukrainian grain. the kremlin also accuses britain of being involved and explosions and the node stream gas pipeline last month, which is in 4 months it was through the british navy, took part in planning and carrying out the terrorist attack in the baltic sea. on
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september. the 26th of aimed at blowing up the notes dream pipelines, well, the removal of all of your little go do the serial nipple, dwell britain rejects that claim out. right? saying the russian ministry of defense is resorting to piddling false claims on an apex scale. this invented story says more about arguments going on inside the russian government than it does about the waste. the united nations is worried about ukrainian grain now, not reaching world markets at once, the deal to be extended saying it's a critical humanitarian. if it. earlier we spoke to former, he was military commander, ben hodge. i asked him if he thought russia's reasons for pulling out of the agreement were plausible. this is ridiculous. so the russians of course, have been murdering innocent ukrainian civilians for months now with missile strike against ukrainian towns and destroying ukrainian power or energy infrastructure.
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the fact that ukraine may have launched drones against military targets and some estoppel is nothing that would be gentleman. reason for russia to stop enabling the delivery of grain. 2 millions of people didn't need it. now russia claims that the you k and maybe other western powers or of all the tax on it ships . what you make of this. i think this is another, a fairy tale that comes out of the kremlin. and interestingly, i don't, i don't think that any serious person believes any of these reports that come from the criminal. they have, you know, they have been exposed as being lies or distortions. now for so long that nobody gives them any credibility. of course the west has been helping with training for ukrainian forces, but the idea that there are you k or others, it had a hand in actually launching a drone attack against the russian black c fleet makes no sense to me. it's not
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necessarily ukrainians are more than capable of doing this themselves. so what could the kremlin goals be in actually pulling out of this agreement? well, the kremlin goal is always been to exert maximum pressure on, on all the capitals of the west to, to lose the will to continue supporting ukraine. i mean, they, they see that they're losing, the russian military is losing, in every single category of this conflict. so they resorted to missile strikes against the energy and infrastructure of ukraine, locking grain shipments, doing everything they can to cause us. and also by the way the, the. busy threats to use a nuclear weapon. all of these are intended to cause the wes, to lose the will to support ukraine or to, to stretch out the conflict for as long as possible. that's how that's how
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desperate they are. they have no other real options. so, so losing on the battlefield. so the key here, the key here to, to bring this more to a, to quickest successful conclusion is for the west to stick together, lead by the united states, the u. k. germany, other european allies, help ukraine when as quickly as possible. that's how you start this killing. now, what would an end to the green export do actually mean for the conflict as a whole? well, of course the, the start stopping the flow of grain affects millions of people that needed that live in africa in the middle east, even in asia. so that's, that's who's really going to pay the biggest price. there's obviously an economic growth factor here affects ukraine. the ex order of all of this grain, but the bigger price is going to be paid by millions of people who will once again
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be short of food that they need. i think also this is important for turkey. you know, president era one played a key role and happened a broker, this grain deal. and so his reputation, i think, is at stake a little bit. and, you know, he's managed to count even as a law he's, he's managed to play both sides a little bit because he had a relationship with president putin as well as present zelinski and turkeys intervals. this, the rain starts flowing again and russia lives up to the deal. i read what the russian ministry said that, you know, they can't, they, they're pulling out the grain deal because the ships that are needed to protect the flow of grain. you know, we're, we're under attack now that's probably one of the most preposterous claims i've heard. there's 0 ships required. 0 russian ships required to protect the grain grain used to flow while the time without s court. why would russian ships have to
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be there to protect it when they're the only ones that had an interest stopping it? all right, well that was former u. s. military commander and senior adviser with human rights for spin. hodge, thank you for your insights. thank you. we're turning to the philippines now. we're a tropical storm has killed at least 45 people, dozens more, are injured, storm. no guys. heavy rains have cause severe, landslides and floods throughout the country. emergency teams are racing to rescue survivors and deliver aid. they are counting their dead amidst the rubble of a village. now washed away the earth beneath their feet. a death trap. as flash, floods churned, rocks, trees, and dirt into a sea of gloomy mud. as rescue efforts continue, authorities take stock of the carnage. now guy unleashed on the southern mike in the now province. amidst the gloom,
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a ray of light as authorities on saturday revised down the number of dead after discovering that some happy count to twice with gusts max and now at around 130 kilometers an hour. it's unrelenting rainfall, rather than the lashing winds that's causing the most damage, knots, and rescue work. it's scrambling to evacuate thousands of residency. uh huh. but if the see, keep rising, we have no choice but to leave. it will be too dangerous here. either would be nice if the waste a small but they could get very high and sweep off a roof lie to limit the damage authorities, have close schools, cancel flights, and suspended very services through much of the country. while the philippines is no stranger to tropical storms, seeing an average of 20 each year, scientists warn they are becoming more and more powerful because of climate change . a grim forecast for a nation where natural disasters ranging from earthquake to bo came eruptions are
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already keeping vast regions in perpetual poverty. south africa, celebrating the coordination of a new king of the zulus. kin music zulu is the 9th to the monarch and the 1st to be crowned in democratic south africa. thousands of revelers joined the festivities in durban president. surreal. ram of hosa has been given music zulu official resignation or recognition rather 2 months after he took the throne. thousands of people have breed rain in taipei for the 20th taiwan prize 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. ah, are i turning to germany's bonus league or reigning champions? byron munich hosted hoisted mines, knowing victory would send them back to the top of the table. byron's critics see
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they've liked our cutting edge this season, but an 8 gold throat gold thriller. the varian showed they still pac serious firepower by ins. play as welcome minds to the answering a hoping, the raucous home atmosphere would lift them to a 3rd straight beneath league. a victory and they repay the faithful after just 5 minutes. said can every slotting home from close range to germany, international sport strike of the league campaign opened the scores. it was to nil before the half hour mark jamal museum. finding the bottom corner, after a neat exchange with eric maxime to promoting a death touch and an unstoppable finish. sorry man, i was harpooned in the mind serious. surely before half time and a senegalese took the penalty himself, scoring of the rebound to put by and 3 up minds then got a penalty themselves. whence then all i smacked jonathan burkhart. but can't did the honest 2 only for all right. to tip it over the bar nightmare by ins. bands
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glee was short lived, however, as sil than whitman nodded home from the resulting corner. 31 at the break, mine speck in it. leon gorenca swiftly restored by an striegel lead off to the break, a towering header from the germany man. a perfectly floated cross teen gripped, scrub re 2nd of the bundles legal season. substitute mathis tale got in on the actual, on the 79 minutes. the teenager shots getting a little help on its way through an 82nd minute finish from marketing bots and gave mites respite from the onslaught traveling fan celebrated as if they were leading. but bryan went down there to promoting, made it 62 in the dying moments, just reward for a fine performance job done for you. leon nozzles man, sighed i message to the competition by oliva cousins waffle. start the
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campaign continued with a tunnel defeated abbey leipzig lever cruz. and we're 3rd an honestly last season, but are at the opposite end. this her master, a 7th defeat already. leipzig, 2nd goal came late in the game, courtesy of germany strike chemo, vienna. in contrast, adieva who's in leipzig are now flying after they also change coast just a few weeks ago. now let's check out the results from the other bonus league games played so far this weekend. improving voice book beat, lowly bomb stood guard, edged away from trouble with a late to one when over augsburg. and on friday, bremen ended a 3 game losing streak against hatter. bell in frankfort endorsement are playing. now. when you in berlin are in action on sunday, where there are 3 games in total. and here's a quick, a look at the bonus league table with 4 matches still to be completed this weekend . by only the way again, but when you own can take back the top spot on sunday. leipzig are now up to 5th at
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the other and leave a cruise and are already looking in real bother. they sit on the relegation playoff spot, and we're only spirit, a worse fate by bomb also losing. now let's check out some other stories from the world of sports and tennis. the new media has powered into the vienna open final, after beating griego to me throw in straight sets the top cd to just 85 minutes to seal victory. the russian looks in good form for the a t p finals next month. then marks. i'll bet the kid and key out of pills. edison trimmed at the world triathlon cup event in japan. she prevailed despite choppy conditions for the ocean. swim. a flat fly going section and fast run helped her make up ground. and she sealed goal. and he's a reminder of the top story we're following for you. russia is pulling out of an international agreement which allows ukraine to export millions of tons of green.
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moscow says the move is in retaliation for ukrainian drone attack against this black sea fleet, in cranes as russia is using a false pretext, the block it's exports. all right, this is debbie news line from berlin and you're up to date coming up next. our reporter program asks, with a european union is doing to tackle poverty in latin america. and remember, if you wanted to see more news, there's always our website. that's d w dot com. and you can check us out from social media that we are handling at d. w. news. i'm here until berlin. thanks for watching people and trucks injured one trying to flee the city center. more and more refugees are being turned away from the border. families and see the reason for the credit on that is with people seeing extreme
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ross getting 200 people in around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. yes. why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. d. w, made for mines. oh, ah, yes, lena church as he robs chief crisis manager, often at the forefront in response to natural disasters or humanitarian crises. he works with and joe's coordinates with you and agencies and can mobilize millions of
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euros. we need to step back out from the date and if we are doing so, the european union is a key player when it comes to humanitarian 8. the block says it's committed to upholding fundamental human rights and to protecting those let down by their own governments. by okay, plus years go, bo, and everything stays the same. they don't deliver what they have promised. but what is the impact of the you action on the ground and can it's really bring about change with early morning invoke cha, columbia pianos, leonard church, and his team are on their way to the north west of the country, the department of chaco. this is where the spanish conquistadors found at one of their 1st cities in the americas today,
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the province as the poorest and columbia lena judge visits the indigenous community of 1000000000, whether more than 40 families lithia with jose warmer, cuz they said that they have been forcibly displaced twice as a result of threats and violence by criminal gangs. they lost their home, their livestock, and they're still live in fear of arm groups which are recruiting their children and threatening their leaders when as berlin shampoo will, kaiser is the heart of villanueva, thus, i'm just like his grandfather. he has been fighting for the rights of his people since he was young. a book where we would like to ask wally all for you, mr. the european union. because of her suffering like body or history. russell, because of what we've been enduring in without will we ask you to assist us when it comes to our problems. my mother in law came into a territory. i live in monte,
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on housing. we don't want any young life to die any longer in this area. your bower will get a moment. i am lena judge listens, asks question. the security situation in columbia has been deteriorating. the new leftist government, however, has promised to restore to talked with guerrilla groups, and feel that happens until peace comes in this region. and the cross of gross columbia, he meant as an affair. i thought he meant that i've no doing a bath in after that he thought and thought i could only, i want to shoot the 2 to be a noon and will continue to stand by. you will continue to provide our, with getting funding so that we work with over bottom us in order to ensure your protection to provide basic health services to allow children to go to school. kids in the community do receive some education in the village by the school, like the equipment and learning materials. hello. this is loose almost in as
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possible as the thought of. as leonard church continues to stroll around the village, some of its residents show us their houses, built of palm wood. deanna while an seo 34 years old, she tells us she is happy about the visit. anything to improve their situation as well come she says from anything to help with the lack of food but of one that they need more when we have food then we eat them but there are days when we don't have anything at all and then we dont it'll come up sometime selling handmade jewelry helps us as a jackie that get the him. berlin shampoo will car either also invites us into his house at one of the windows when we're here. this is where we sleep buddha, this is our shelter more here for people selecting it, built in over there to more people. a small on scale government and adults there will need those little bit of money for migrant. is it the locker room?
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i mean, or typical? yeah, the if then with the casino, where most of this is our kitchen, the water filter here was a gift from the you and hcr, not the gallery. consider logo. thanks to corporation. we managed to get there, supported the and in order to a model that are going on and on, but in data he left for you support from the you and the you it's well come says the father of for this, but he still waiting for real change them or he and i was innocently, we're sick and tired, but sometimes we are also denied or history did america many institutions came here . they asked us, why are you displaced? why are you here? said corey, complimenting owner, for the moment they showed us they cared and told us they would help us to be safe . to have housing, food hill, land, lady, vienna newman. thus your daughter, he said,
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but years go by and everything stays the same. they don't deliver what they have promised la local permit. at least this time, he doesn't need to worry about food. after the meeting with the commissioner, everyone in the community invited for lunch, we do help a lot precisely because the government is largely absent from this particular department, as well as from some other pe, be federal departments of the country due to the violence, but better protected by the autumn groups, that's why i think it's extremely important that we supported the efforts, but the new president of columbia, to people who tries to, to, to, to reach what he calls a total piece. helping columbia find peace and stability is often europe's own interest. that block wants to intensify its trade relations with latin america. a
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region where the u is struggling to gain influence against other players like china and russia, will leave columbia and had to neighboring panama. our destination is a refugee camp at the darienne gap, a 100 kilometer long swath of dense rain forest on the border between columbia and panama, one of the world's most dangerous migration routes. lena chits team has been pushing to get access to the area where the number of refugees of migrants has been growing . the you has just quadrupled. it's 8 to support those people to 2700000 euros. i see that a lot of both are coming home any of comfortable for the day now on 2007 canoes in only 10 minutes. that's what we see after
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perilous journey from columbia to panama. those who managed to survive the forest are brought in by boats to la has blankets a reception center here along the route, robbery and rape are as president a danger as the insects and the lack of drinking water already. really. it's horrible, but i and steve belize, the yoga flooded rivers. you need to crossed by ropes, water that oh yes. i think i love yet. you had to put the life of your kids and danger night, but there are no words. i thank god for allowing us to make it here and and this nightmare. no, it's very hard. east valley advanced apasetti yet. but i waited it whether they are exhausted. some are in need of immediate help but most are just relieved. they have survived believe easily gone. it's very
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complicated with children, even worse than just the way up. it is not what people tell you, that it is just 3 days at england be takes longer. it's hard total. after being registered by the authorities, most are free to continue with a journey. there. a dream is a life in the united states. leonard church meets with families in private during his visit. he says he's moved by their stories, especially when i see family with small children or people who are who, who have disability is wrong. and of course, you can see that they are not certainly not equipped for their new stretching. so that is the reserve. it is a big tragedy on the holdings here. we know that these people have been moved with false false promises into undertaking such a journey. oh, so we will have to record. however,
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some who have been stranded here for many days. tell us the center was cleaned up by the authorities before the commissioners visit. nope, now they don't believe this is usually as clean as you can see it. now. the conditions of from migrants are terrible here. that'll help me get the toilets are dirty. that hawaii, they don't respect hygiene standards, illegal complaint, i mean they critic say the government of panama, which is not a poor country by international standards. it's not doing enough to tackle the problem criticism the government rejects known as a drug, their name or yeah, we have been trying for more than 2 years to voice our concerns and both in regional and multinational level that they said that people know a buddies, human tragedy of what we cannot do it alone. they believe that we need the information. we need corporations from other countries who are part of the migration flow, basic as well. but if you know, in other words, stopping human trafficking and tackling the rude causes of migration is also in the
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interest of those countries that my grants are headed for, including the european union and apart from human italian concerns. that is certainly one of the reasons why d. u is stepping up its game. in panama, d. u is now opening its 1st overseas 8 stockpile with pre positioned goods and equipment, in case of an emergency for leonard church. the intention is to show the support remains, as by the current crisis, europe itself is facing. we have no stable war on our own continent, and this terrible war would also suggestion against ukraine. his resulted in the woods from lieutenant crisis in europe since the 2nd world war. and it's a has created some fearless in other parts of the world. the feudal would know neglect other from that in crisis. with my presence here, i wanted to make it clear that not only we neglect, we don't neglect,
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but we also step up our systems whenever necessary, panama city in the evening, hours. more evidence of europe's commitment to the region is the opening of a new headquarters of the use civil protection and humanitarian aid operations. to reassure local partners to you is here to stay the you need to be here. we need, especially on the, on the humanitarian side, we need this funding. i think that the kind of response of a u, a u has been providing to frame is precisely the kind of solidarity and disability that like ha, across the board with despite the war in ukraine, despite europe's own problems with the people he had tell lena church not to forget them in latin america. when he had spec to brussels with
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making the headlines and what's behind them. dw news africa. they show that the issue is shaping the continent. life is slowly getting back to normal. yeah. well, the streams to give you enough reports on the inside of our cars on the ground and reporting from across the continent. all the trains doesn't matter to you. next on the w or the vladimir putin has made a monumental mistake, he believes that he is destroying the ukrainian state. in reality, he's only destroying his own. he won't be able to retain power for much longer.
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who's cleaving for power? restoring empires former glory by any means necessary. who rushes dreams of glory? 45 minutes. for what people have to say matters to us. m. that's why we listen to their stories. reporter every weekend on d. w. misses eda be news africa coming up on the program? the snow burn of climate change is forcing millions from their homes across the continent. in madagascar, the worst drought in decades is driving farm is 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 vintage 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 hello, i'm christine. wonder. it is good to have your company across the continent. extreme weather caused by climate changes up ending people's lives, forcing them to flee their homes and pushing millions into hunger 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 slaves 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. are corresponding. adrienne creech visited the above hornby region. marcy, ward sag, i used to be a farmer. now all she is able to harvest our characters leafs rentals drought has left large parts of southern madagascar dry and unproductive, and it has left people like mercy in the precarious situation. she now relies on turning capitals leaves into kettle feats to survive. since the rain stopped alive
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has been turned on its head. he handled toys and 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 infinitely idaho. many others are suffering the same fate as massey. she lives alongside them in this informal camp in the town of amble, bombay trade, odami heavy salad, opened the camp when he saw how many people had nowhere to go to being forced to leave their villagers, you'll let them alone. i got him a bear. 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 up to somebody, and when the people have nothing to eat with, they end up just lying here like this. i he and the region they call it carry the hangup people got used to not having enough foods,
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going to bed hungry. it is incredible how they manage to adapt to this hostile environments, but of course, it comes at a price i magnetize so our village is in charge of the mount attrition unit for children at the hospital. the number one bit, she says many children here are chronically ill. last month, 2 children came to late and died in this little girl is one of the 5 she is currently treating me was hit on. this baby is 17 months old. and her arm circumference is very low, if it over, and it's in the red part that $98.00 millimeters. normally it should be 130 for her age. she thought the form of lemma, she still can't stand his own mother ari. normally at this age, children already run and because she can't even stand out her cousin lease, 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 cooked a cassava with a lot of water. if i have some money that 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 in competence, 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 their act, banassi blessedly. and it 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
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among those over to us. but on monday, we need a hands on approach to bring this situation to an end answer. save on some the circle. 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 heather. 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 than that. maybe that's why the rain has stopped falling. or because strangers did something to prevent the rain, i don't know. i had something better. some dreams 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 u. n's international organization, migration, it's good to have you on the program. thank you so much for being here, mr. applica. 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 induced climate migration. 1.3000000 people. at the same time, you have close to 7800000 people in need of food assistance. and if we don't act very quickly, we have over 280000 people who are acute food insecurity deal might die because of
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lack of foot. that just gives an example of this kill is somalia. but if you look at the region itself over 36 point to 1000000 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, i say she and you talked about action, and now i'm going to get to that point in a short moment. 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 with the kind of country itself because i went by door decide with state you have hundreds of thousands of somalis will 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 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, none, food items for the ability to deal with this, but that is just in somalia, you have some of them in burundi. you 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 m here in europe at the focus is on the migrants who take the roots, are off 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 and 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. bottom, but we'll talk about the eastern drawer to talk about the largest maritime migration world in the world. from the horn of africa through somalia, djibouti the red sea to yemen, 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. it's the obvious back to if you're 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 impact 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 king, the abused agenda based violence. they go through on the en route to their migration was tried to reach mostly saudi arabia. that's where they want to go. that's where the domestic walker's is. the irregular migrants 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 them all the time. why are you on the move and all of
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them tell us i have no job. is poverty, lack of economic opportunities in the region and people on the move. oh, miss erica, 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 so much for being. ah, you're watching deed 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 born state. but now some of them are going home. as dw news africa's america acoya reports from the beach and
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hundreds of new homes, a new beginning for old inhabitants in 2015 book or her amen surgeons drove the people, haven't got them from the 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 are tired of living away from home as long as you nadia unhappy that i am returning home and getting a house along. i never ever thought i could find someone who could build a house for me and i can return home home. i got an alarm in i think well i'm gonna
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. 6 i'm returning to got an am so i can live peacefully, no fears, not rabbits anymore. that's why i'm excited to be going back to garden um. some years ago, thus, community garden was completely flattened out, destroyed people's 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 a fresh again. babin, god will. 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. jonesboro om budget, i don't think our lives have returned to normal like before would in was look at our room. ha, ha ha. gov. you can get up at 10 in the morning and leave the house and no one will
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bother you at da da da quin em. no one will wake you up from sleep and ask you to go to another place at dusk of dark. as of no one i will give you any restrictions like in the campuses, which you guys, jo, renewed, it bound, and now it is my house. and i am in charge, i did um we did the mark um, i'll get okay, get it into the account about it into the good one of niger is foremost architects, towson, ocean, our craft tech, the buildings known for her creative solutions. just as consultation with the people was key to coming up with designs the resonates had with them. you know, it's very important to me that people should be proud of their home. i think if people have pride in where they live, that 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 raise your children to be able
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to, to, to walk around to meet your friends, to speak with family at peace grandma's. 6 on the project is a joint i thought of the bonus did government and the united nations development program, and it's donors. the aim is to replicate this model. elsewhere. this people have been denied for more than a decade. ability to come back. not only to come to home for a decade, we have been in comes a new come so important in terms of saving lives in broad pro and security, but also took so a degree for many people. so she is also coming back to the good. but the insurgency and violent extremism are not banished from bonus, didn't completely. there remains concerns about security in many areas. but for the people of an gannon, the rece, at least a returned to dignity as they rediscover normal life again. my next
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guest is the architect who designed the homes you just saw in that report toasty in ocean or she joins as from lagos. welcome to the diabetes, africa. chelsea and it's good to see you. so you're an architect by trade. how was this project difference to the homes that you've designed before? i thank you for having made this is the 1st person that i've done within the humanitarian sector. i do tend to work in the private sector dealing with individual clients. so companies, corporations, and this project specifically was different because it's humanitarian and there were a lot of stakeholders. but ultimately what was really important to me was ensuring that i was still treating the community as, as a private clients. right. so it was important to me to ensure that i was able to speak them about their requirements, what exactly they needed in their homes. and one of the questions i asked them in one of the consultation meetings was what color they would like. the building to be
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and i had already seen some traditional buildings in the area and the location way we have this meeting was in a school and there was a color that's very close. what's going to end up with jeff brown. and that's actually very similar to the color of a building walls. and i realized that this was really a call of nostalgia, which they didn't realize. and it was because of that, i was very specific that we would have to ensure that we use the ground condition to create the finish of the walls of the building. so overseas, trying to as much as possible, take them back to what they would have had before the insides around. and it really looks stunning, those, those, those colors or any compelling. but we heard from some of the beneficiaries in the report and they expressed how much it means to them to finally have decent housing . what has this meant for you to be able to be involved in a project that's about restoring the dignity of your fellow countrymen and women who have been the victims of vocal harm? i think it, it means so much it's, it's the most impactful what i've done today to be able to contribute towards that
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i'm, it's little things you know, it's making sure that you're providing housing that's comfortable for the end user cross ventilation. making sure that the homes are appropriate, that they're not, that there's no build up of having around the areas for them to sit outside because there isn't much kind of become because of the region. and also because a lot of the base station had been taken down to reduce lines of sight to reduce that conflicts of lines of sites. so you know, it, it means so much and, and to know that one is really adding value to people's lives and hopefully providing them infrastructure that will give them the opportunity to really get back to what they need to do to have a nice progressive economic development yes, well, it means a lot incredible stuff and, and thank you for the time you've taken to to be on the program. great look to see ocean or talking to us from lake or stay. thank you. thank you very much, lou. now from people returning to rebuild their lives,
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to the return of looted african artifacts. currently in museums in the west, it has been the subject of much debate in recent years now was even inspired as story scripted for stage and screen actually 2 stages, 2 audiences. but one show which brings a 12 century west african sculpture to life measured. it wasn't really good movie, common in her 2 venues, nearly 5000 kilometers apart with the live video link being the bridge connecting them. it's a complex attempt at shining the spotlight on an even more complex topic about looted african cultural treasures in european museums, many slumbering in the vaults. one of them, a statue of yet anger, a warrior princess of the medieval de, gone by kingdom. now in modern day, burkina faso awakes to life in a munich museum. the play shows what could
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a stature have seen all over these years? what could have february read off, and this that your dreams of returning to west africa? the actors of the ensemble developed this vision of a return simultaneously a both venues in munich and in law. man. the theatre as a means of connecting people on 2 continents, the colonizing country, and the descendants of the rod for thinking about how, whether it is to be together in their mental way. because you're seeing the same thing, but you're not physically together. this is for me, bizarre and beautiful at the same time a poetic play about the search for justice in dealing with looted artifacts, which has deep significance for the actors and the audience. in ohio. they tell us our history, the history that we sometimes seem to have forgotten. i'm really excited about the conversations with evoking and like these coming out of the african communities
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that like are the most important voices that lisa, they sent it in. this conversation. toggle was a german colony from 1884 to 1916, and many cultural treasures were taken to germany during this time, the debate over their return, like princess and yet anger is now alive. and for more on this theatre piece, i am wanted to speak to search or make willy bally. he is the choreographer who worked on the project and he joins us now from what i do go in brooklyn, a fossil welcome to deed avenues, africa search am central to this piece is yeah, manga. that's a legendary burke. another princess from the 12th century. tell us a little bit more about why you chose her. yes, so i want to get a a
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. and then if you think, yeah, for example, you can see like i said, she wanted to make sure she wanted to be funny. she just a she, she just got off and then an a key chain go. and, well, actually one of the key out here. so i wanted to open up a, like a, b a,
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because i know you are usually on stage as a choreographer. why did you go behind the scenes for this protection? actually, i have to say a lot to be behind because i'm getting a a becoming difficult to pick out my own body. i while you look, you still look very, and if that's any consolation, but i do want to end of here search, and the piece is called statues, dream to visions of return, and so without giving too much away here, dest printed princes in angus dream come true,
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in the end yes is a so, but i think next year he's a c i a a, a, a, a, a because it's so easy, so easy. a 95 percent of the of the day. so you can do
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a send them a while to why? well thank you say add good talking to you all the best out with the shows that was acquitted by the talking to say from what i do. good. thank you. and that's if, when i'll be sure to take out our, the stories on d, w dot com, forward slash africa. we're also on facebook. and on tuesday, i'll see you next time with
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who are gonna put your vladimir putin made a monumental mistake. he believes that he is destroying the ukrainian state, but in reality, he's only destroying his own. he won't be able to retain power for much longer.
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who's cleaving for power? restoring and empires former glory by any means necessary. who rushes dreams of glory? in 15 minutes on d. w. o. end of the pandemic in sight. we show what it could look like will return to normal. and we visit those who are finding it difficult with success in our weekly coping 19 special every thursday on d w. oh, will you become a criminal? mm franklin mayo already know who's
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with hackers? paralyzed me to your societies. computers that i'm sure you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can go in for but how they can also go terribly. watch it now on youtube. a ended listening place of money. the mediterranean it's waters connect people of many cultures. seen it almost rock and to far a bill, korea drift along with exploring modern lifestyles and mediterranean where has history left its traces meeting
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people hearing their dreams editorial during this week on d w. ah ah, this is dw news line from berlin, following celebrations turned to tragedy in south korea. at least 120 are crushed to death as a crowd surges forward in the capital so many of the victims suffered heart failure . as d, w is life from berlin, russia suspends and.

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