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tv   DW News Asia  Deutsche Welle  February 10, 2023 6:15pm-6:31pm CET

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if that's not enough to wet your appetites, pup sariana will be making her come back in the half time show it's all shaping up to be a super bowl. like no other of next is dw news, asia with fear as vanity and a report on students from india resuming their studies in water. you cried. i'm big was all and thanks for your company. you again, x out of i if you ever have to cover up a murder, the best way is to make it look like an accident. raring to read. you've never read a book like this. to literature list under germany must reads. i
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went interest. the global economy, our portfolio, d w business beyond. here's a closer look at the project. our mission. to analyze the fight for market dominance. if this is where you did that head with the w business beyond with this is did of the news asia coming up today, forced to study in a war zone. that's the reality for indian medical students who've had to, to talk to ukraine to continue their studies, their reason, a lack of opportunities at home to complete their education. and desperate of guns
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faced double blows by harsh winter and their own government. the tiny bon have banned women from working for 80 agencies and 8 groups of warning. the impact would be deadly. ah. i british manager, welcome to d w. news asia. glad you could join us. russia invasion of ukraine sparked an exodus of civilians from the country. many of them foreign students who fled to seek safety. but now many have returned. a significant group is indian students, their back because of a lack of opportunities in india to continue with their education. coming back to a walls on to study appears to have been the only workable option. sonya follicle reports studying in the shadow of war,
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even as millions have fled ukraine. these medical students have returned because jay smiled is from india. he had been studying here for krios when the war started, he left. but because indian authorities wouldn't recognize the work he'd done here before, he came back to finish his degree. it's not possible to continue education in their late, that they don't accept a transfer in india and the what we say and the you have to start again. i've enlisted my 3 years. i came back because i had to continue my education. i have to think i'm a doctor regularly. practical study experience like this is difficult to organize. university authorities say most clinics are busy treating the wounded. but the car says studying medicine in a war zone has taught him pings. he would not have blown to my home. when i see people panicking, i want to have them more. like it's making me a better doctor. i don't know like, it's inspiring me. it's not something which i can express. it's inside of me and
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i'm lonely. lot of tingle and emotional level. the students here are enrolled at the bahama. let's national medical university in t before the war. it had over $3000.00 students from around the world. the director says about 2500 have returned to likely cause. they came to complete the programs in ukraine to have the best education, most of the europe, investor, ganges, except their degrees, and not just except like respect the degrees they have value on the universities. rankings are good if you take it online and it's affordable as compared to in private colleges in one of those. but the war is an ever present factor on my own and states ok, so very risky. i never fully understood it until i saw the neighborhood beside me. get bombed. from the windows, my home i got out and the water shorted for the cost to
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dealy. power cuts often disrupt online classes and it reads auto team. this is the shelter beneath her hostile the ga says, it's all taken a toll more de, pardon india and, and when i came here it's 2 different things. when i came here at that time, only they were, they were bombing massively. so i was quite panic. been doing it in alerts and i did it stored really laid, you know, aside in motion, everything in motion is focused concentration. yes. it does affect the risks continue at night because only ventures out the groceries nearby. there's no electricity. there's no street light working and i've seen accidents happening because of that thing. before i was there, i was living here and i feel like it's
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a very beautiful country and a very beautiful city. i've been to places a doing summers. it's wonderful. busy i have learned this one, you're going and so i can understand what they say and i can convey myself to them . it's les good things before the what i would say, not disdain, that focus on your family. got and you'll find plenty more stories from other the double correspondence reporting in ukraine, on our youtube channel. ah. but you answer if you continue to work and i've gone on despite upon order banning women from working for 8 agencies. that order is in addition to a long line of folly bond dictates preventing women from accessing jobs, education, and source from the quality. the female aid worker ban however, has the potential to impact aid deliveries to a country dependent on them. it's already prompted some agencies to partially
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suspend operations. none of this good news for a country facing food and heating shortages in the middle of a freezing winter. this is a visit that no parent ever wants to make. the, mohammed's are praying at the grieve of their 3 month old son. b, b, i'm ruler, fell ill during a severe cold snap. he died at home the late more that it may god not give any mother the pain of losing our own children. it is very difficult for humans to bear it. it is too painful that these are dark times for afghanistan. the coldest winter in more than a decade, worsened by high fuel costs and economic color. all the international community must pay attention to while conditions. most of
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afghanistan's economy is weak. we see that many people collect plastic to heat themselves, so that is the better the international community says the taliban government is standing in the way of help for one by not allowing female aid workers to operate in afghanistan. high ranking delegation of 8 organizations visited cabo last month and pressed officials to drop their bon. are gently i lose sleep about this. i really do. after their trip, a boss is stepped up there please for the taliban to relent. let that be no ambiguity. tying the hands of angels by, by rank women from giving life saving support to other women will cost lives. we met with a wide range of telephone leaders. they consistently gave us this message that are there will be a place for women working. it's a slightly patronizing message,
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but it's an important one. and we will see we will see if it comes to fruition. it's already true that health and education sectors have these exceptions. we want to have it more than an exception. we want to have it as a norm, obviously back in their freezing home, the bereaved muhammad josh, they're waiting for that help. like 2 thirds of afghans. they rely on 8 to survive . more so since dad lost his job a few months ago. and now it has been given to us, yet we are worried and no one knows about our situation in our houses at the top of the mountain side and my children sleep day and night in hunger. and we have nothing to feed them. one helpless families pain, a microcosm of a national catastrophe from unfolding before the world's eyes. o, as one thought. charles is national director of world vision of grammar san. she joins me now from her. miss charles, odd enough. people getting aid in the middle of one of the worst winters in
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afghanistan. thanks for having me in this car. yeah, that's, that's a very tough situation. and the question that you are asking me no. because then i would, when i started in 2021, i was talking about 18400000 people needing assistance. then towards the mid 2022. i was talking about 24400000. and today i'm talking about 28400000 people needing assistance. the numbers are constantly growing. the him i did in crisis has really, really become a huge challenge. and is a challenge made worse by the taliban on women aid workers? yeah, this ban has also made many of the international organization to suspend our programs
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on the ground because we don't female quickly. it's also very difficult to reach out to the female beneficiaries. and this has made it difficult for her to implement your right. it does. i think not, i really have to ask you this, miss charles, i mean, as a female is work in have gone on. you yourself being able to perform your role in the country. we have been continuing to be active in this country and we have seen some of our health and nutrition interventions based on the exceptions made under the ban. and we are doing education, restarted education program. so we have not given up our hope that our challenges, but we are continue to reach out to be moved into the country. so i activities some productivities continue to happen, which helps us to see that in spite of challenges,
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we can continue our work and make a difference in the country. you've been in this country for quite some time. therefore, i think it's just best the best person to help us understand this. i mean, you mentioned that the taliban on women aid workers is having an impact on a delivery. the taliban knows that have gone. a son is a defendant and female. it work as a crucial why band them then it's and it's a kind of a situation where you, you have no onset for many of this question. i feel hoping that it will be a reversal of the bad. that's what the hoping for. because everybody understand that the men, the men from nearly 54 percent of the population in this country more than half the population. so they are very, very crucial for the development of this country. and i'm the whole and that's what we continue to aggregate bank can be the worst,
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and those will be competing people. that's what the un is saying as well. michelle's 128 agencies and have gone on need right now to be able to reach the maximum number of people. 0, one thing as the on the 1st advocating the need that was enough, the ban on at least exception for few more. take the food. thank you, the livelihood protection so that we can continue to reach out to the people because these activities are quite crucial for people on the ground. looking at the mat in crisis that's happening. and secondly, the author wants the donor to be patient with the existing situation. the moment that challenging at the moment. so there's much more patience needed from the donors so that the found that not to any other countries.
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we understand that too many crimes on the ground, especially now city and turkey. so this shouldn't become a kind of opportunity for us today. they have to stay with michelle torres inspiring, talking to you. thank you so much for your time today. thank you. that doesn't for today, and this week there's more on our website and as ever you can follow us on facebook and twitter with you next week. i. it is not only a time piece of time when the fellow mashhad combines his passion for african storytelling with the measurement of our most precious resource time to
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