tv Tomorrow Today Deutsche Welle March 27, 2023 9:30am-10:01am CEST
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i think to tennis tennis yesterday. ah, she survived outfits. thanks to music. he was the nazis favorite conductor. he is morally degenerate. ah, 2 musicians under the swastika, a documentary about the sounds of power, inspiring story about survival at home. i don't get the tennis. i was the only one . what might it look? music in nazi germany. watch now on youtube. d. w documentary. oh, good, good. hello everybody and welcome to vis new edition of eco africa. get to have you with us. i'm chris lives coming to you from ogen state in
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the area with me today as always is my co host, uganda. how you doing sandra? just good piece. i'm really looking for it. today's show will be covering a lot of interesting environmental topics from both africa and also you. so let's go ahead and get started with a turkish artist make portrayed from b and y conservationists in symbolic wanted to predict wild dope o 4346. we look at the popular delicacy able crop. the global appetite across from canyon is huge. every month, around $10000.00 tones, a quote of the countries on exported around the world. but now quote population bear on the threat. so is there a way to form the she'll fish sustainably. we paid a visit to a project,
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trying to do. just stop me . whenever the tide is low, side glue is out here. hunting for mud crabs at the might. a creek in what time? ok, leafy county, it has been his daily routine for the past 30 years. he used to catch about 10 crabs a day. but due to over fishing on a good day, his glad to find 5. this time he'll have to make do with just one. salinger's, amazon metal flung and buck i saw these low yields are the result of climate change umbrella kuanz, and he hardly hear welcome back in and that's where most of the problems lie gone and i'm ready for your help. was a money the dry season is now much longer than it used to be. what can crabs prefer? a rainy weather our body do only or got one for wonder? well, one i've been most of side go years catch ends up in restaurants like the che charlotte,
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which is renowned for its crappy justin. a near has been in charge here since 1999 . over the years he noticed that the crab sold to his restaurant were declining in both size and number. so he started looking into breeding them. what i noticed is that m a lot of their mangrove areas and club areas where they have these grubs that are growing naturally were depleted. there was no more grub in these areas. and or even though you had very big farms for crab, but there was no more cra crabs and mangrove forests share a symbiotic relationship. when disrupt it, it can have adverse ecological effects. crabs live and breed in the mangroves while digging their burrows. they helped to aerate the sediment. they also feed on
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mangrove leaves and other organic matter, which means the nutrients get recycled. the crabs are very good in terms of the core logic or monitoring because they tell you among them was completed. the good. did you not find the crabs there. so there an indicator of the mangrove in waterman to help this, the dwindling crab stocks just in a near decided to set up a hatchery in 2017. he see this gave back most of the worlds hatcheries are found in asia and years. hatchery is one of the 1st to be established on the african continent. he believes it will provide an alternative for the fishing community, and that it will also have a ripple effect on mangrove conservation. what that does, is it, it stops on the harvesting of juvenile and wild club. therefore,
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the natural mangrove habitat stays natural. i will thrive. crab farming is a very delicate process. while a single mud crab can lay approximately $6000000.00 eggs, only a few will survive to the juvenile stage. to give them a higher chance of survival just in a near as currently experimenting with ocean water to replicate conditions in their natural breathing grounds. to make sure the program succeeds, he holds training sessions at his hatchery for local farmers. then learning the importance of conserving the mud crab and about their symbiotic relationship with the mangrove forests. once the program starts, they'll purchase baby crabs instead of fishing in the nearby creek slide. just in in years hatchery will sell a killer of eggs to the farmers at about 2 euros 30. once they mature into crabs, the farmers will release some into the bank, ro, forests,
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and sell some of them to restaurants. you and waste water from the hatchery. can also be used to help regenerate the mangrove forests. i collect mangrove seed. that washes up on our beach. here, put them in this mud and that waste water because it is full of over over good stuff for mangrove, but bad stuff for grubs. the mangrove thrive from the bad stuff. from grubs. justin and yours hatchery, at chase shallow may not single handedly solve the issues of over fishing, all mangrove conservation on the canyon coast. but it certainly one step in the right direction. annex revolt at texas to calhoun. while we meet a young man that he's very concerned about the impact climate change, his having in his home town and the entire world and is doing something about it
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was started as a bit of fun. has now become much more than just a hobby. if you think teenagers are lazy, this guy will make you think again before gets into work. these kids how to wash their project supplies, which is a bit out of the ordinary. they're taking part in a workshop run by 17 year old our sin. don't everything hastily from trash. the children will learn how to design and build their own models. city out of waste . actual i'm on across is all on my kitchen. we're building a model of the city of to morrow, with trees and renewable energy to combat global warming for multi multi it all started with an early passion for building. our sin was unhappy at a traditional school, so his parents sent him to a technical school instead. long senari local mom. he started to develop ideas
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there, to do drawings. he built little things out of stuff like cardboard. gradually he got to the level he's at to day, and he had a talent unless a mother, i wanted to encourage him to develope this. he's now gaining a falling online. he gives most of his models away, but some he sells. this stadium was quickly snapped up in the positive for more so i didn't just buy it for myself. i also bought it so that i could advertise for him . but if someone wants something built and they see this model and ask who built it, i'll tell them it's the design of a talented young architect. dribble said enough, she did appear don't signs enough material where he lives in yolande, the capital of come room. he goes to businesses and homes to collect trash, especially cardboard and cluster. he's helped to raise awareness about recycling.
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ivan wanted clear panel, we didn't recycle before kathy. what's awesome dung was initiates. you taught us how to systematically separate out trash. there's a local sanitation company, but you can only process limited amounts. only about 40 percent of the trash gets collected. the trucks only drive on big paved streets, but most residents live along small roofs. oh, but i love when you walk to the city, you see garbage all over the place. most people just throw it anywhere empty bottle . every community needs to develop a waste disposal strategy, plug it in his own industry, in the same book area where our sin lives. at least some of the truck gets picked up by him and he needs it for his weekly workshops. ready he doesn't, i can set up on the, i'll, is it a market, it's my goal to teach as many kids as possible,
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how to build these models out of trash and how to separate trash run. and the parents learn as well. around 30 families are taking part, an interest is growing, they just pay small fee for the tools. i've seen arsons models and they really interest me. that's why i find my son up so he can make them to did his so can i say he started giving workshops early this year. the children pay attention to him or now his morals haven't only inspired a love of building the workshops also make them more aware of their environment. even though the only building models are cheese on solar panels. they're learning more about environmental protection. and acendo move hoops to inspire even more people. i dream of sharing my passion with the whole world and seeing one of my models being built in full scale. even if his dream isn't a reality yet,
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our send dog moon is tenacious and continues to forge his own half. his already created his green district. if only in model form wal impressive onshore will be say, more of that young man in future. people everywhere are taken with materials and up cycling them into something new, like an artist in turkey who makes portrait out of stuff that others have tossed out. oh, her portraits are put together from plastic, bottle tops, colored scraps of paper and fabric. and lots of cords this turkish artist works and the medium of trash all the while following a mission. marvel are by no, i'm dennis savage. i'm trying to create a social consciousness by tuning all kinds of every day consumer items into works of ours of get up my toes should. she composes the portraits and her istanbul
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studio picking out interesting faces on the internet. first, she prints out photos of details and assembled them to form a template one meter 40 by one meter 40. that's when the creative work commences. owns anything of the him can reach festival, my mind plays with the phaser, and i analyze this play. i met with yours before i designed the portrait, i go to works of black and white photography for inspiration and leave out the colored pieces will the time being as in thinking that sorry i actually, it was a bit like a puzzle. i watched them. i saw that in as david saw mir puzzles. oh, then he sounded, stores her materials next door to her studio, piling up all kinds of scraps and bits and pieces, including cables, wires, leather, and aluminum cans. she gets her materials from the east on bull garbage collectors,
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and private companies parked the park. the mazda millard, while i looked like a wide variety of materials, such as for instance, textiles graphs. today miss all these up plastic bottle cappy that we've collected over time live in, oh, sorry, i missed that would on the hard. this is all electronic john, large electronic data that i actually found in one piece lit a pic, but we break them down into little companion with hans with and then all of these little paths can become odd if you could start miss her works are displayed in public spaces like as don bull's airport. here, the artist reaches the broad international audience that she wants to sensitize to a more conscious use of resources. many of the travelers take the time to inspect denise savage is complex, works close up. it denied the asylum about when people
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see my words from a distance, they generally take them for oil painting sickness molden up when they come a little closer they start to realize they're made up of household. doug j executive sorta pick out in then they can hardly believe what they're seeing and reflexively start touching my worst. that sometimes even, that's not enough for them here. they might have picked something off and take it along as $17.00 and wrong. still are currently the artist is working on a series of portraits consisting of lots of colored plastic bags. she fixes each disposable bag to the board with a glue gun. she devotes around 3 to 6 weeks to works like this. for them can i think you on time actually show that odd doesn't have to be made only using the classic methods of your son for i'd like to develop his school of art that proves cooking can be art it, him of them. the holding a camera is azure and even how we act can be art i they did
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a could they me academic expertise isn't all that kathleen? i'd like to open a school where you can learn from practical experience school i to my costume. oh, i catching worse with an agenda than he sought edge hopes her ard can help make the world a slightly better place. south africa has undergone rapid development and wrists and decades. with g p over $400000000000.00. it's the 3rd largest economy on the african continent. it excellent universe, these huge reserves of rural materials and how you developed financial sector make south africa af, 4 runner in many areas. but in its drive to develop and modernize tradition of knowledge is at risk of being lost. for the wind up people or south africa, trees are sacred. each and every one to day vol. mccardie joyce and
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a group of students are planting 20 in nothin limpopo province. the organization from one or more pool or voice of nature has planted over a 100 trees in the village of chins river in the past few weeks. since 2000 import poor had lost 17 per cent of its indigenous forest cover, as trees were raised to make way for plantations and might be more no, no organization exist to give a voice to nature which cannot speak for itself. we believe it is our responsibility to protect the environment and its inhabitants. as a child, i was taught to respect trees and not to cut them down indiscriminately on the wall trees. i like the elders of the living things. when we destroy them, we lose a part of our heritage and our connection to the natural world re, i'm barely, we met, elders are highly respected in vendor karcher valmont as addie joyce is emma catchy,
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a female leader who upholds traditional knowledge of seeds, soil, and nature which she passes on to younger generations. over defended, dr. emerson, he called them me. i love planting trees. not only do trees produce oxygen. they also help us in so many other ways. they provide us medicine, wood for furniture and delicious fruits. to eat. planting trees makes me feel good and where he had a family chair somewhere. lemme was mac haji work closely with other communities to address issues such as food security, land, degredation, biodiversity loss, and climate change. these elders thick to foster a deeper understanding and appreciation of their natural and cultural heritage as the voice of nature. they also defend their land against potential threats. and these wise elders are in big demand. today the chief of she'd c v consult with for
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mac as i did, joyce regarding a proposed coal mine development near the village. the mine needs their approval to go ahead and, but the 2 leaders are skeptical. roadrunner with whom i mean i won't allow mining here mine workers will die. the gas as they breathe out like poison, the pollution makes the whole community sick. if the waters contaminated the trees replanted will die to it's like sitting on top of a bomb went 0 in. the chiefs concerns a well founded in the neighboring province of him from a longer coal mines have caused massive environmental degradation and health problems. but the fear goes farther. vendor people believe nature is spiritually interconnected. trees, rivers and mountains are living beans with their own personalities, mining wood, destruct disconnection, and endanger the traditional way of life. in order to protect it,
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a founding member of zone more law, more potent bartolini mccully promotes the cultivation of indigenous crops like finger millette and calabash, thus combining the preservation of cultural heritage with plant they bassetti. she is setting up a seed bank where farmers can land about overlooked crops. this was, was of this is the bank is in educational facility, where from children, yours area death. farmers. there will come in the lin, he then no leisure around these seed into foot sister and b e. cause is that because a said to does notice b alone for does not be an ecosystem is needed for all this them to wait inch in fever, vol. mccardie joyce is sharing her knowledge with the yet another group of children . the deep conviction that all things are part of a larger hall that connect humans, animals, and nature, is taught from
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a young age. to illustrate that better, she shows them a seasonal calendar up based on traditional knowledge for vol mac as their d joyce culture and the stewardship of nature are one. and the same thing i would like to do, we are teaching these children about the seasons in a way they can understand the traditional practices of their ancestors, passed long through generations to ensure that our culture vietcong, in way of life not lost in a world where indigenous cultures, an entire echo systems are under constant threat zone one. lamar pole is a bastion of hope for the preservation of both do you have a dog in your life? dogs are conceded as good companions and fiercely loyal to the others. but somewhat surprising people consider wild dogs then to roof an unpredictable
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that may be true, crease banter. the 40th wild dogs actually play an important part in the ecosystems in which they leave. so conservationists in zebra way of fighting hard to protect one especially beautifully species formed. there this pretty pop looks like a peaceful fellow. but this species bad reputation has letty it been one of the most endangered in the world. just 130 african painted dogs live in the valley national park in northwest zimbabwe. here most people only view the animals as a threat to the cattle and otherwise useless. a local and julie's working to change that perception during a mob near atlanta with david coover. walker is a team. if you have played a docs in an ecosystem, it means your pray base is good. if you have a good pri best,
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it also means you know, it means your, your, your, your, your, your, your producers, you know, your grass or trees and stuff. it means there is something that the prey can feed. so want to your friend the docs in the system, it shows that there's enough space and there's enough, ah, wildlife in the spin assist him. the biggest threats to the wild dogs are trump said, my poachers, though the major targets of these traps are small animals, pursued for their me. painted dogs frequently get entangled in them over there known to cover great distances in the wild as the hunt to use the range as work would be insufficient without the support of local residents. once a month, hoover walker pays the visits to the my barley community where he meets with a village leader. they discussed their mutual efforts, knowing that collaboration is key to their success. $200.00 members of the
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community have organized and voluntary service scheme. how to protect the wild dogs . it's an undertaking for future generations. anyone does work together in nuclear or live nails, hillary, kimberly, to fill if we don't look after them, i take a wound the cake no more. i go on boy young that you do not know what a dope is. in the past 2 decades, over 30000 slaves have been relieved through such corporation between painted door conservation and community. but to make an even greater difference, the factors that often push people into poaching in the 1st reef need to be addressed. here at the eager yana otts on crowd center, collected wire snares find new life in the hands of over 30 artists who are employed to make different artifacts. mainly for the european markets,
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a 3rd of the profits around $50000.00 a year goes to the artisans. the rest supports of that conservation efforts for the painted dogs. we're making animals through at so we can look up our parents who can look up our friends who can look after our children, saw that they go to school, they could to weeks and in the make it a living. they, improving livelihoods is essential for conservation efforts. but so his education painted doll conservation is to the hosting a class from one of the 21 schools in wiley for a week on program called eager yanna boucher. it's an opportunity for kids around the age of 11 to learn more about the printer, dogs, and the environment. what i would do is legitimate of an opportunity that otherwise limited as part of the camps activities. davie cover walker is given the children
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a tour of the n jules rehabilitation center. injured dogs are nursed back to health here and then released over 80, have already been rehabilitated and sent back into the wild. said danny ever, yvonne by enamel. i have learned that when painted dogs are in the wild, they mostly hunt down weaker or diseased animals, new america, and if they become extinct. so there will be a lot of spread of disease among animals which will see them dying. nazena says guys are all who last as a see for all the efforts going on here. i have in the meaningful impact, but there is still a need for longer term measures to prevent species like the african painter dog from dying out. well we've run out of time for this week. we hope you like to show and that it's given you something to think about. i am chris alone signed off from
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nigeria. see you again. next time in berlin. you sure will piece. next week we'll be presenting it africa on location in the gentleman capital. so do be sure to tuning into that very special edition. i do look forward to seeing you then for now. so long for me, sandra, to be nobody here in counsellor uganda. ah . a ah ah, with
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flourishing. this report follows trafficking routes from the congo to vietnam. 75 on d, w with a we're interested in the global economy. our portfolio d w business beyond. here's a closer look at the project. our mission. to analyze the flight for market dominance. just did that with d w. business beyond a nice at abilene, sharon, my, welcome to my podcast, love the matter is that i invite celebrities influences and experts to talk about
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