tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle March 15, 2023 12:30am-1:01am CET
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now, yes, it is getting trained, you can choose to go back to somewhere else. currently, more people than ever are on the move worldwide in search of a better life. so why do i want to go back to 9 g, like i don't have any reason to, but there's no reason that's moving from there. yeah, i believe something grid is coming very, very so. yeah. can we learn more about la valley's story info. my grief reliable news, how my grants, wherever they may be. oh oh, welcome to global 3000 child brides in south the down women are fighting to end to forced marriage. on the right track,
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a school on wheels is bringing education to children in the philippines and a sunny spot. renewable energy is a crucial for our future. but why should we build the new power plants? a carefree childhood access to education and the right to choose one's own future. these says the un are all basic human rights. and yet the reality, particularly for many girls, is often different. every year, worldwide around $12000000.00 girls below the age of 18 of forced into marriage. ready the un estimates that around 650000000 women alive to day when married as children, the girls relatives often force her to marry. ready ready with poverty, a major driving force who when jacquelina c, y looks around when she speaks to her compatriots. she's struck by the notion that
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tradition can be a very stubborn opponent. there is a lot that needs to be done in terms of creating awareness as to why they don't need to treat the goals for that all on for marriage before. they'll do that. south sudan, you may be, can't see it here. but this casual market is also a marriage market. animals are the currency, but the goods are people 40 of all. but if you look, you got this one was all once you got the one on that. some i was to 50. glad that though, because we were gonna come to soon it. oh, i got rid morgantown. sarah was one of those sold off. she doesn't know how many cows her by a paid full. her. the money went to an uncle who parted her at the age of $14.00 to
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a man almost 3 times as old. her new husband got her pregnant, hit her port, boiling water over her. at 16, she couldn't take it anymore and fled. i thought and my baby and then my little items older. and then i moved the little 30 night after i reach out to the in the morning and. and when i find some cup, i does bid this potentially here i do have one. i do enough in it in the site, and i go with my big jaclyn has heard many of these stories. the 43 year old campaigns for the rights of child brides. she wants to make their fates known and change south to denise society, step by step with the country that she imagines is a place where girls go to school instead of being traded to
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a new owner for a few cows. but to bring about this new world, she needs powerful analysts. so it's good then that soft, saddam just had a visit from someone that many here look up to or really want to see that it will come out strongly on the issue. so idea unforced marriage, and also the issues of conflict related facial violence, resolve the as when they go to different lead time against the very young outs. amused during the summer men get pregnant. with half cases, all children are now to live on the road through land full of cruelty, but also full of hope. jacqueline once women to network with each other. she organizes self help events throughout south saddam in the cities and the countryside. but jenny is over, land are dangerous arrival in a village,
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almost 2 hours drive north of tuba. a dozen girls and women have come. they want to talk to jack lean. tell her what's happened to them. build up each other's strength . even if that can be and chris, the hot this woman says that she was married off as a child and later forced to give away her own daughter because her in laws urgently needed money and cattle. the pain has to come out of she was thinking of suicide before on crying. i'm saying, i feel like killing myself and you know, it helps out to leave like okay, you just happy that you don't need to keep yourself. so what we are going to do is to follow up with bad psychosocial, constantly, maybe $1.00 to $1.00. i'm group session with them. not leaving each other alone is the most important thing. jacqueline helped sarah to she's been
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housed at a secret location where the man who bought and tortured her can't find her hard work, little money. but one big dream that her son will one day become a man who respects women please let him go to school. when is a school and then we'll look to wellness up to help people he lives somewhere. see that that and what about the hopeful message from the pope? sarah and jacqueline, listen to what he had to say. mothers and women are the key to transforming the country. he said no clear stance against child brides and force marriage. but still he spoke about protection of women against the abuse.
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and he said, those who abuse women to abuse god, i think that's very powerful to me. powerful enough to create fundamental change and south sedan. she and her fellow activists hope so, and will continue their fight against what they see as regressive traditions. there was celebration when following the coven 19 look down, school children were finally able to return to in person learning. according to unicef, around 1600000000 children in a 190 countries were affected by the school closures. however, not everyone has experienced a successful restart. many children have not returned to school. so one creative school in the philippines is doing it the other way around. each step brings allen closer to his goal. his daily wage were 9 hours drive from manila, the railway east to link the southern provinces to the capitol. no train has run
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here for nearly 20 years. the tracks are still the main traffic. all 3 carrying cells built carriage is powered by muscle bowl aboard. it's time to make some money. alan and 3 to 5 years a day pushing his railway taxi. though he'd rather go to school in the ballpark of laila, if we don't have anything left to eat, i don't go to school. the use to power instead i work on the rails. so we can buy rice. i thought of the coven 19 pandemic changed every day. life here, fishing coconut to harvest everything misty, railed. many people lost their jobs. since then, 17 year old alan has had to work a lot more and that's after his school had shot finelli. 2 years later, up on our bad word, i had really big problems learning because we only got homework and no one
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explained the questions for you. i like the 2 pandemic years, were really hard and alone thought my head up for the last 2 years. few countries, band classroom lessons as long as the philippines mary, joy was also happy when she was finally able to go back to school. she would like to become a teacher, but she has a lot of catching up to do from the time when she had to study alone. especially with math and english. while among education is important love, i want to learn that i bought up. i have to finish school so that i'm in the position to pay my mother and father something back because they have all my mom, there are days when my father is very tired, but he still does everything for us to know. i mean,
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the philippines corona virus measures were strict for months. people under 18 or over 65, we're only allowed to leave the house in an emergency. mary joyce father picked up her homework from the school. she then tried to do it alone without a teacher, internet, smartphone or contact with her classmates. teacher some boy delay on the allah understands these problem and is doing something about them. when the children were banned from going to school, he brought to school to them. and even since normal lesson 3 started, not all the children can attend regularly. that's why he keeps going. before he shows us how he takes us to the market. here the 28 year old buys ingredients for a classic filipino chocolate rice pudding. but a salmon ball,
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it's easier to teach the children and we have food barely saw what it means. they can learn more. so that's why the rice pudding in the other school is just as important as the books and teachers since the ordinary school reopened. the railway school has taken the lessons to the villages the pandemic, worse than the philippines. educational problems, long commutes, poorly equipped schools. children who work instead of learning to read and write, instead of all aboard and make some money. it's all aboard and learn to read. when everyone's full, the lessons begin i, gloomy than what most of the children here are poor home. so i may munger back then, and therefore can't go to school school messing up, or i, dylan and he, it, up them. i, the pandemic,
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worse than the poverty here. a loss of parents even depend on very young children to add to the family income. they must work. the railway school relies on donations and especially personal commitment. nearly as older students act as auxilary teacher's name on the name such as chi err on the 17 year old designed the railway school. he wants to be an architect. he knows how hard it is to learn without a teacher a signing up off, elena. i'm so used to being on my phone the whole day. no, i'm looking forward to teaching these children to the sense of accomplishment. i'm assuming that i have other people. niana is proud of his budding teaches. the younger children, profit from the oldest students knowledge. it's
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a life between work and school between poverty and hope. and every day is a new challenge. when i'm looking for muscle, so we have something to eat. on the one side, the sea, on the other, the coconut trees, and in between the railway niana himself grew up right next to the tracks. he experienced this life himself. but socking to see you, it hurts me to see the children like this, but a fucking cassie, when i was a child, i did the same. well. i did everything possible to help my family and by law off i'd but buy them up the lawfulness, among them a go along with he had support from a teacher who pushed him sometimes long after lessons had finished. he wants to use the railway school to pass that on to his students.
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the global energy crisis ticket by the russian invasion of ukraine is accelerating the move to renewable energy sources. according to the international energy agency, by 2025 renewables will overtake cold as the top solis of energy generation in germany alone. clean power generation is set to double by 2030, but photovoltaic clamps need a lot of space. so where can they go? we're already using a lot of our soil to farm food and are facing a growing space issue. but what if we grew crops and generated energy at the same time? it's time for agro voltaic and enticing idea with the prospect of doubling your harvest. the photovoltaic or p v modules are designed to ensure the soil beneath
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them can still be used for growing plants. there are various options. one is solar fences with the space in between them being used to grow crops or flowers, or for livestock. or the modules could be built in a way that gives the panels enough space to rotate towards the sun. but how do plants fair that grow underneath or right next to the panels? we've been growing lots of different kinds of props. things that you would see at your local farmers market, so tomatoes, peppers, squash ob regime. and all of these different types of prompts have seemed to do really well. so the plants still do get in a flight. in fact, tomatoes and chili peppers even doubled their yield when shaded by solar panels. that's because too much sun means they get stressed and stop photo synthesizing and stop growing. in a world that's getting hotter and hotter the modules ensure that less water is
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needed for irrigation. the trend for the near future is promising. according to a market analysis institute that will market is anticipated to grow by almost 40 percent in the next 5 years. aggravation takes could save a lot of land and water in dry regions, or those that rely heavily on agriculture like india, indonesia, and many african and south american countries. floating bo takes might just be the next big thing. the idea behind float oval takes solar panels are mounted on red flag structures, which rest on a body of water on the pimples in coverage. all there is awards which are available in the room in the world give above 23. however, what peak of installed capacity this is, thomas ryder, he evaluates economic and technological feasibility of large scale floating p v.
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systems to put this into perspective. on these $23.00 terror was would generate as much electricity is the whole world of needs to be in a year. you can already see what that might look like at one of the world's biggest floating solar farms in singapore. in this case, the solar plant floats on the surface of a reservoir and produces enough energy to power about 16000 for room apartments in the city state. the water also cools down the floating panels, making them more efficient. the panels in the associated structures have to withstand wind waves and corrosion so far though multiple studies have not found any severe impact on either water quality or ecosystems. experts expect float o voltaic to expand by up to 30 percent annually over the next 5 years. mainly in asian market, but europe,
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africa and the u. s. are starting to invest as well. so other, any other places left to put solar panels? how about up in space getting closer to the actual source queue. the sun shines 24 hours a day and you need 0 land back on earth. so why don't we install solar panels in the earth's orbit? the bridge lead space energy initiative with around 50 partners from industry? government and science is planning to put a solar panel satellite in space by 2035 the us china and japan are also taking part in the solar space power quest. and this is how it might work. satellites in the earth's geo stationary orbit, which is around 35000 kilometers from earth, harvest energy using huge solar panels. and after converting it beam down the resulting microwave radiation down to earth on the ground,
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a network of receiving antennas, or rick tin as collect them microwaves and turned them to electricity for the grid . each satellite would produce 2 gigawatts of continuous power. as much as around $700.00 utility scale wind turbines, they'd be huge around 1.7 kilometers in diameter and would weigh several 1000 tons . the satellites could beam energy to earth 24 hours a day. the microwaves are considered safe and harmless for animals and humans, and about a quarter of the strength of the midday sun. one drawback is that energy is lost during the transmission and the conversion process. while the costs of getting the modules into space are well sky high. even if we manage to build and finance solar power satellites in the decades to come, there are already more feasible ways of generating solar energy quickly without
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losing urgently needed land. and all of them are cheaper, faster, and far more promising. when it comes to social interaction, our voice is one of the key tools we humans have. there are around $7000.00 languages on our planet, but around half are under threat. often, along with the cultures they come from mexico is home to around $23000000.00. indigenous people, roughly 7000000 speak only their traditional languages. this makes them easily overlooked in society. one woman is giving them a voice and helping keep a rich linguistic heritage alive. ah, when maria rena sings indigenous songs, another world opens up to her the soprano sings and to re pitcher mistake and her own native language. misha,
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it's time for us. so check for her show to night. in mexico, city, or name was allowed miss by knew of course we can speak spanish, but when we speak in our native language, everything's different. our language is what shapes our view of life and of the world. it's the basis of everything. if i didn't, maria rena left were harker. the city where she grew up to study, singing better. she's fluent in spanish, but always dreamed of performing in asia. to day, she sings in the big stage. oh, she performs in 14 indigenous languages. she's fighting, but they're not forgotten. some day she hopes to sing in all 68 of mexico's indigenous languages. eileen, when they are languages that are in danger of extinction. yeah, some are disappearing. it weighs more. it's very sad because when a language dies,
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a culture dies with people would add so much to night she's going to dedicate a song to her mother and me her. oh oh my god. when the again, when i returned to my home vintage everything is different because my parents don't speak spanish when i'm there. i speak my native language. i know some 600 kilometers away lives. the mountain village of t la, who told to pick people here lead a modest life in a world apart from maria's glamorous life. but the conversations over the family kitchen table will always be familiar. maria's mother has lived here all her life, but she encouraged her daughter to see the world miss sacramento annually. lo, my mom says she is proud and that it's a good thing that other people get to hear our language link. that it me happy to put you're not going to be mo, in the village, maria rena is known as the misha soprano. osh. go daddy. think it, glen the thing. she says that people in the village sometimes approach her and ask,
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is that your daughter see? miss maria rena had to finance her singing studies with side jobs as a maid, and nevertheless, her success should give hope to others illness when he thought those i think the mostly special thing is to be an inspiration to other indigenous women who are pursuing their goals and drain, it gets, i'll use andy sources when you say that the singer will soon perform on stage in new york. she wants to wear a traditional scarf showing where she comes from, is important to her. oh oh, but many mexicans turned their backs on their homeland when they moved to the u. s . in search of a better life. the risk losing their native mickey language. oh, larry arena, says music has brought her closer to her roots. she performs in traditional dress
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and says that it's part of her storytelling, lumber, mammoth. and when we go out into the mountains, there are many colors and flowers that we encounter on the way. if what is shown by these thick yellow and then 100 miles. yeah, but back in mexico, the reality is somewhat contradictory, while indigenous cultures seem to be celebrated in public life with markets full of handicrafts, most indigenous people live in poverty neglected by the state. i but busily see, says duncan, unless some aspects have been forgotten, lucky, good as his ideas key, but here thanks to p, black marina, as well as percentage i'll work as made visible explanation mister tobacco these days. maria rena is in a position to financially support her parents to give something back to them. she hopes her music will make a difference and give others the courage to follow her path. oh,
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dear. gather kink at okay, but it was with our ours with sewing seats black. in my case, it's with music at your campus by singing in my native language. i want to inspire children and young people. i want to show them that it can open doors. i believe can mean was when he fell on my dear samo snake, not a fear well ritual before maria raina leaves her village before every one says their good byes. the family gathers to pre to mother earth medical gotten under going them through. i didn't. how can going, is this bella, we asked mother our foot? nothing happened to maria based on what we train and she's able to keep up her singing her like you see other land dick that everything works out for her. in the city, no bus and not up with the pseudo. back in mexico city, very arenas concert begins with the song dedicated to her mother. she sings that
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while her mother is far away. she has her close to her heart. ah, the audience doesn't need to be able to understand the mission, lyrics to be moved by the special magic for singing this. yeah. and that's all from us that global 3000 this week. thanks for joining us. drop us a line at global 3000 at d, w dot com or on facebook. see you next time, take care. ah, [000:00:00;00]
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opportunities for advancement and equal rights are offering new prospects for well educated women. even those living outside major cities played in germany. in 30 minutes on d. w. of the me, a mystery. concealed in the ground, most just painting notorious and controversial and the out well basically means re writing from the scholarship revealed and nevertheless a mystery to this day. what lies behind the cut in 75 minutes, w o.
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making the headlights and what's behind them. dw news africa, the show that's actually issues shaping the continent. life is slowly getting back to normal here on the streets to give you enough reports on the inside. our cars funds is on the ground reporting from across the continent, all the trend stuff, the mob to you t w news africa every friday on d w. the only way i can be on the top is to create my own empire. discover a story full days with just a click away. majority the destination, right? find out they stuck trees. i never seen before. i came in tree. that has to floated you do the
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fool. i'd have to channel. fantastic. ah, she survived auschwitz, thanks to music. he was the nazis favorite conductor. he is morally degenerate to musicians under the swastika, a documentary about the sounds of power, inspiring story about survival at home and go get the cellist. i was the only one. what lies it look. music in nazi germany. watch now on youtube, d. w documentary. ah, ah, this is deed of the news and these are our top stories. a russian warplane has collided with a us drawn over the black sea. washington says the incident was caused by what it's
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