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tv   Eternal Sentinel  Deutsche Welle  April 2, 2023 7:02am-8:01am CEST

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ah, ah, how can journalism help us in overcoming divisions save the date for the d. w global media form 2023 in bonn, germany and increasingly fragmented world with a growing number of voices, digitally amplified. we see where this clutter can lead what we really need, overcoming divisions into vision for tomorrow's journalism. save the date and join us for this discussion. at the 16th edition of d, w. c, global media forum. a
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currently more people than ever are on the move worldwide in such a better life. one of us and so it as a committee, god, that hello goes out. ashley. the now. yeah. is it a mac or a the god that the real so the bench double paid us the nanda keen donation one back to the gun. find out about robina story in for migraines, reliable news for migraines. wherever they may be, i ah, ah ah, ah,
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ah, ah, ah 28 you have or between is on a new arc ended. i was 6 years old. the conflict is long over. but the mines that both sides left behind continue to take more lives or change them forever. they case have passed the persian gold for the persecution unless i go off the court. these people and the recent conflict with ices of aggravated the situation and delayed the process of the mining. mm. perhaps my childhood memories of war and watching new conflicts arising along the word have giving me as someone who believes in recording the truth to so the journey that
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took me to board evolve t and syrian cortisol to cover the lethal remnants of war walls which appear to be over, continue to pay greek terms because they are not in our bag, spurs to the move land mines, those eternal sentinels as well as uncountable ideas, improvised explosive devices planted by ices which are killing may me again. tell wising civilians on a daily basis. ah i, i try to describe war i am talking about myself. my i am wore the good and bad sides both negative and positive wouldn't get who they are. all in me is that war has destroyed us all while they're home again.
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ah, we thought the danger was coming in the sky, but we were standing on the danger was underneath our feet, you know, or you just don't know, but war is a dangerous place and if you want to stay safe, you just shouldn't be there. is for all the war films that seen in all the suppose it glamour around journalist in war zones that actually ends with the lying on the floor and then everything goes black. and so you need to have a bigger i big the leaves in journalism. first of all, i sink it and then you need to be a bit crazy for your muscle. yes, i am caught on. am all on that of one of my colleagues allen little was one of the best b, b. c. reporters. his cameraman was killed in bosnia to bosnia. he used to say, since i returned to london whenever i walk in a hard line, i looked down for fear of stepping on
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a mine will mean netapp. here was full of i. e this, this area. go back a little work. is he i these i should was using these says i eve i me 20th 2017. we been targeted by one of those ideas, accompanied by a group of journalists from, i'm up to a new for who wanted to interview the fighters, coming back from to frontline, who entered the building near dest strategy tab, go down to the failure. i had walked in the same building just after the down was
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liberated from iceland. at that time when i stepped into the building, someone shouted my name and want me to come out. as there was a risk of explosion. 2 weeks later, we assumed the building was safe, sadly, was not, ah, i took a few photos of saw going to recall how you manage to do so. ah, we lost at one hand the alley, one of the find who's, who's stepped on an id in all the same font of was assigned being to be i would call and thinking that if we were not dead, he would not walk into the building. so if that's good and then i have that feeling
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solely, i'm not the 1st or the last june, earliest who has had said from my experience the on many film have lost their lives . some have been injured on maine and some have survived with no physical injuries . what's offered a trauma that has changed and so land mine is different because land mine is so a factory would build it, i would say, but in the one of ices and also before there was called e d. but i've never seen it in my life until i was involved in some form 9 stories as a fixer and we kind of so the devices in, in real life, let's say recently 2017 i was, i was in mosul and then as well for 2 weeks were embed with the special force
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and it was that as well as the time i saw the impact of id on people on civilians. there was one when explosion that happened near by our place. that was where, where, where they were basing with the iraqi forces. and this, the family came and the whole family where basically they were kind of, there were traumatized and there was blood on them. and the guy lost his, he was the coma. he was just laying down. i remember there was a friends, a woman, a journalist, he knew how to wake him up. basically. that was an experience that i will never forget because a couple months ago she died in, in the explosion in was all, it was the 2 other friends john always. and one iraqi fixer there was, she was very used to military hills. she was like, 50 years old. i mean there was and i remember because there was some guy injured at
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that time and she was like a nurse and military enough to me she, she knew she was from someone special. it was with thank you, i can quote this song that we went to the place that the accident happened. the place were 2 friends, general son, the friend of 1st is called got killed the white. and i the so here like i'm in the humid but here everyone like goes for it. and now we will, keller, where they died. the here was full of it. it's actually, oh we have families were coming like this way. she was appearing from time to time thing i'm, i have a good story. you can here on the field and then she disappeared for years and i don't know but, but that time she called me sick
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a whole i have something very big to for you. i want to go back to the field. i want to go back to jordan easily. i read an article in the fia who was above the french lou, special forces were in and trained to where the leased and trying to catch the french her gdc in was school and i call them all and i say listen, i want the story is very interesting, and she had the feet with the regular army and another 5th with the french military to be honest. so i said maybe you can manage to do that, sorry for us and find that he's then go and get that. and she, okay, i'm gonna try and there, and that's why she left. ah, it didn't explode yesterday, busy and like it will not expose today. so in terms of ideas,
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what they were doing is putting fished lines. you know, we had to be so careful when we were like, well, community service, but not the syria. it looks like people were here. see like you can well, like is consist, steps off coupon with she started the story. it was not so easy cuz the erect military. well not so cooperative on that friend. she send those french stories inside. so she remained a long time in abeline. that's where she met back job. and then she, she called me on the friday, the 9th, and she said lisa and i have found the tv. so i'm going to stay and i say the,
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oh you the not going to thing for us. i mean, it should be clear, be with us that the local to us, we are, we don't, we are not going to process from the story and, and she could, but we were friends on such a day. she called me again and she say, you know, i'm going to make that one is he's in laws can then i'm waiting for the guy was going to be the camera and i say, okay, we're still very excited about it. i'm sorry, like that. i'm actually going to read if you make that, i'm happy for you. if you are happy and so we are the spoke on the saturday, but she didn't tell me it's going to be fun because i knew him very well. and he was with friends for a long time and then she left and they thought that on the monday morning in this area, these journals, they died somewhere in here. everything you can see here it was an id like especially the new wires in the middle of the tree. it's like this. like in the
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middle like something. there was new wires. those wires in the like they were so weird. and also for example, bottles and anything unique here was an id just like some of them and like everything was made by hand. so i says use the clothes that use in general like to, to clean the water for civilian but they stole all of a 6 month war, gloria and they made bumps with it to kill journalist soldiers, whoever's working in the, in the city. my food, 6000 feet id was in 2015 when i went to co bonnie, in the real only a few weeks after i was liberated on was shocked to see all doors, handmade ideas and the little hand on proper tunes. the locals had
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a clearing button. i made samarnie and local bomb diffuser. we explained the different types of ideas from over from what he did them. that's when you call this number, it rings up, shut that ringing, produces sound waves, which create pressure, and caused detonation. you welcome on it for the liquid. this can be used to detonate bonds remotely, that we actually have a while from a tele, when you live with the law says, you know, they want this type of bomb is often found on i as suicide bombers. when they use it to commit suicide and kill those around them, william. good. it came up in muddy. and what this is a chemical weaponry is one that was you know, more on the amount to check it. they are put together in city one and in homes. renew shortly. they burn and blind cable one afternoon and we found hundreds of these things. southern mahogany de lisa palmer and several found
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a lot of them to you know, 3 years on i've been back to co bonnie, to talk to must suffer a local journalist and a fixer to let me recall. i experienced feet id. i told some journalist to with her where like i am in read days like a guy called the money with a kid with okay, be ready for him, isn't one. yes, my name is amani. i am part of there as a huge security organization and co bonnie of the obscure with this is where like here a village about 20 kilometers east of kamani, kenton. we were informed they were id see up ah
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ah ah. i knew it could still be dangerous with okay, thanks guys for leaving me alone here with him. when no one of them i mean the guy your father. he went to a mine and he went like following to, i mean to him, him like me to be closed from him in a moment the the find out like him. i would like from the my. so it's a matter of the moment. i mean very will be alive or he would be dead that they zam on you saved our life spot, acting quickly, but sadly,
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a few months later he lost his life while diffusing ideas in another village and called on ah ah, landlines. i constant reminder of inducing consequences of these was long after the fighting is over. we have some mind felt be been late before iraqi and an army conflict and doing a cheer and on and iraq lay minds. we didn't finish that. the iraqi army forces
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been attacked by u. s. army. and we have out of line between all the could the shot and cooper, stan parts and iraqi part. you, it to probably be something very decisive was happening in the middle east because the us and britain were going into direct war with he wrong. well, i don't, i'm sure that in 2030 the reporters and generally says, came to colder sand or flooded into corners. and i can see to, to cover the news of toppling the iraqi regime down by the coalition forces. lead by the you is that time was so fraught that their main action or authorities did not think of giving lectures and
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doing my and awareness among the report this because of the lack of that awareness . many people were victims of minor accident. and of course, among them reporters and took it out of like our booster list on uranium for the job. done, documentary maker who had a great influence on my work and many was sadly under the reach them of my 15 years after the tragic accident. you seem to find out why they went to key fi and how much they remember from that thing. over the last 15 years, the memories have faded a little bit. but remember, april, the 2nd 2003 very well. i was interviewed in one of the hotels
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in solomon ia because the most of the journalist for based on hotels and they didn't have offices. so i remember it was in the lobby where i met jim. you were going to down to get free this place on the line near the line between the kurdish forces and the government, iraqi government forces. and he was just so happy that day, you know, nick lost his hair and he looked good and we stopped. and we had a picnic and he said things like, you know, i'm a war journalist, i'm only happy when i'm in war and they said, yeah, when i'm in situations like this, i feel like i may strobing the driver's level. traditional force missed the call. we were in, in the minefield with
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a big smile on his face full of life, full of happiness, just as kobe was a. so he's a happy picture from that point of view. but it's also a sad picture because we didn't know what was going to happen just a couple of hours later. this is one consolation that we can say some, some an awful tragic day is that i hope covered doing what he loved. and maybe if i didn't have that picture, then i would not realize that 100 percent. sure that this is the area so most role least was here. i don't know, i have a feeling that it was here. somebody's in the streets has grown,
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at least maybe i grew up as well with them, but the trees, i recall they were the same size 15 years ago we went to get free. we talk to the commander there, the u. k. in the town of kit for him, we went on the roof to and he explained to know the positions and so on. and i said, well, can we go there? because we wanted the position to do life things with a good background. you know? so you said, yeah, sure, i thought the safety said yes. and i said, can you give us a guidance? said yes, you gave up the pressure margaret to come with a cover was sitting in the front and she worked was behind cover and the fish market guide was behind jim. you and i was in the back seat in the middle. and as we approached the position, i was just going to go up to the position and stop the below the hill, but the patch, moga guy said no, put it down to the left where there was
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a kind of deck with grass and stuff. he said go down there because you know, maybe they can see you from where they are. you know, 10 kilometers. well thought bit unlikely. but anyway we, i follow indications and i stepped out of the vehicle planning to go and get my equipment down in the back of the g. and immediately there was a back he and we also were being shelled by motors because at least 2 times in the previous days we had been shuttled sofa. so without thinking was working shell again, you know. and the pass murder guy jumped out and run back up the road we came shouting how and how and the motor and i looked and i could see that part of my heel. it being blown away. i ran down to the back of the car and threw
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myself on the ground, but the light within shell. you know, if i were to my job, i wasn't going to throw myself on the ground called a shell. so he jumped out. he was a very false runner. he wasn't private school running. he jumped out and ran down down further down the hill into the mine field because we were in a minefield. and he stepped on one month and fell on another one. so 2 more explosions, you know, those dust and a lot of noise. you know? so i knew that every movement i made, if i try to roll under the vehicle, there could be in line my left where the minds were when it sort of the dust started settling, i got through it into the back of the car because he was right beside me with his
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loan off, so i got him in the back and picks up and he was okay that i said where it was called a. when jim said where his cover, i didn't know that i am outside of the car. i left the car and we were looking for carpet, rubbing the translator, the kurdish guy who is still in the back because he was in the middle. haven't had time to get out. this all happened in 23 2nd. you know, he said, call he's over there. so i had the dilemma because now when you as a minefield, you know how you get the body maybe 20 minutes away in a mindset with the classic situation. when you go to the, the courses where you study what to do in battlefield, they tell you don't move, no, but cover with my friends. i couldn't abandon them. so in the beginning, i had that idea that now i know that's a stupid idea to bring the metal boxes that we had and throw it on the
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ground in hope that if there is a mind that the law and the boxes equipment cases. and i thought if i sort of threw them, they would make mines explode. that might not hit me. so i but that was stupid thing, really upset me. and i just walked over to where he was putting my feet where i could see he had been you know, got him and dragged him back to the car, put them in by the time he was in the car was definitely dead because robin felt his health and he had gone what minute i'm in my early thirty's going about my job. the next minute on an entity with the land mindset that killed a and the engine made weren't. they were targeting us, we just were in the wrong place. that time
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if you ask me, i would blame the fact to who made that mine. i would blame the regime who decided to put mine over the smuggler, all the legal entity who purchased that my inform the manufacturer in country and brought it to iraq. i blame the person who put that there and i plan and lot of people, it's a chain we were aware of it. yes. because where you go to see little triangular signs thing minds and there was nothing there. we had been told by the movie mom that it was safe and we had a guy who guided us into the thank you, david. ah, 16 years ago you left them on you to keep the as well as that if you thought does
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it feel to go back actually to be honest, i went back a few times in different occasions. was believe it or not i maybe i build bad wall . what of never not, never. when i went back to cafe, i never went back to the same side or never tried to recall that memory. it's the 1st time to go with the intention of having that recalled again. i should for less thanks to come in. how are you? i'm are being told, you know, for the, for the rest of us i can remember. i mean, if you do you remember me? no, i'm afraid. i haven't had the pleasure of meeting you before. i didn't recognize you
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at 1st either. we were only together briefly. i was working with the baby a team. when we drove to the location, i was sitting next to you in the car and you start to look for you, the interpreter. don't you remember the accident be alone? i remember every detail. sure. let me tell you what happened. how many explosions were there? sometimes 3 was a 3 then. yes, it was 3. the men next to me, last leg and i got him back in the car. then 2 minds exploded close to cover one right off to the other. it sounded like one explosion, but there were 2 of them. don't you remember? didn't. they said that i don't remember that you were there that i was there. and he was doubtful that i was the trunk lid to the time. i later was sign with him, both p, i double re, we stopped here and i said up with, let's go on foot sad because there was
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a path here. when i said we should leave the car and walk into god. lemme it would be better without the car. hm. the way was so short on her new amana. she'll go gotta another reason. it wasn't safe with the car was because baptist forces were shelling at the time. linda could lousy no, been there. but you know, up i would, yeah, no, but they didn't want to walk with them. so i agreed to go by car. but you know, saddle with a little stuck having all this done was hit by 2 explosions. the 1st one blew him off his feet and the 2nd one exploded in the middle of his back with it. he was torn in half and all his guts was filling out the driver. and i brought coffee back to the car. what ye could add that then this is what stuart did. generally, when a mind goes off near you from a close, it sounds like a heavy machine gun banging the true sound of a mine. explosion can only be heard from a distance. from up close. there is no explosive sound. stuart jumped out of the car and started to run out. was that a panic taken? then he also detonated a mine and lost his leg. could you have thought?
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that's what i know. and remember. ag, after that you in the driver? did he get out of the car? the hell am b 8 the dogs that little flag a guy iowa. but is that donna, was he las had no, no, no. to la said i got done with you didn't get out even when i asked you to help us get something in it. i got it. what about, you know, we legal, ibm on a through with know you went then rebecca, you went to the road, my back listen, but let me tell you the subs. either you went to the road and started shooting. i could, i was still in the car, not sad. okay. i will restore it to the guy grabbing legalities my box. i got him with all due respect to ravines, words with mind that you need to find the smallest areas to put your foot down. come kidding. geog are being said. they tested the area with boxes. but she knew shaneka modifies. you cannot see anything because the grass is so high. chillman. so how can i test it with a box local molly la la la, reminds all over. ha ha nan. no, there was no chance to do anything looking there was no time to bring boxes and do
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tempt. you don't have time for that and you could be just next to the car. i shot my gun to 3 times as a call for hell. i'm going to what we do in a car arrived and the driver turned out to be a relative of mine. to say we took the wounded, any goal is done and drove back. it didn't come on how good color williston money got an adult. we use my coat, was a winter coat. i don't me, we use we use it to actually to a light coat. we use it to put cover in it and we took the body back to the car. and yeah, i remember that very well. this is after 15 years, so some of the details, locations, buildings,
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and a lot of things might, may change at what i think or someone else, think about the location or something like that. but this is the best that i can remember for now. i think robin's description is how i remember it. it's difficult to remember it because look different and obviously there's little houses one there at the time. but the details of what he describes is, is pretty much how i remember i don't remember the face of the pest murder. unfortunately, people remember things differently. and anybody was that you there is going to have a different story cuz it goes from one mouth to another and you know, it gets embroidery gets changed and you know, i think it's amazing all of the things that you found over there and,
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and the pieces of the puzzle that you've managed to fit in, but the jim was never going to be finished. so always going to be pieces missing. i think maybe if i try to hard to get to the truth of what happened, i would just drive myself crazy because he's never going and never going to get the, you know, short of there being video footage which that wasn't what happened or we're left with it people's memories and people's memories subject different people's memories, fade, my memory of what happened on that day. it's not as clear as it was 15 years ago. so how can i expect anybody else to have a clear memory? and i think i could drive myself crazy trying to get to the truth. i think i've kind of made peace with what happened. i don't blame anybody for anything that happened on that day. i don't think it was anybody's fault. so for me that's enough
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. after the that's main accident that was that close of killing power. i didn't hear of any other main accident. no. i'm sorry that we were the 1st people to stumble across it. but if, as a result of what happened to us, the other people, why actually is, and i think that's quite, quite to friend. you know, i had not so of that we were this, maybe we were the 1st and last it didn't and i guess that that's a good thing to hear. ah, with
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a total with mad she maybe most that me good. she had gotten an extreme. well, you should be bash, i'd like you didn't. she never did. you want to learn how to do. i so push a didn't cushion. could have been, you know, be here hacker. sadly, if dad would be done so it could be that shut. she still did get back with some sadie with that
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ah ah, with the fact that when i'm back 7 go to that. people think that we journalists in the war zones face to face with all this violence corpses and all sorts of dangerous. they think that were made of stone, they should not now to are deeply affected and the memories of war come back when we return home, the james van be ready as quoted. so if you don't ask questions, you can live in peace throw. i live in peace to hell with war. well it's are to hell with all the dead to me via google my way to hell with all those who step on mines and become amputees, which are filers, michel, to hell with. all of them are much more live for yourselves. but will all those
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images we've captured ever leave us alone? does the 3rd not to me that it? ah, no hold on go on that affects you subconsciously. he's out of his band yet. that's why so many reporters suffer from p t s d once they return home on the bottom. yeah then, but a lot of them think no, this is my problem and i shouldn't talk about it with my family and friendly the 11 . i'm both not talking about it. leads to depression, mckesson included with dish both f. so to give me shit, i had this feeling when i was on the feel you seem, you believe you are in the center of the world that this the story you're carrying, it is so interesting and everybody wants to know about it. but sometimes people don't even care anymore in france and you know that people are risking their lives without realizing that the story is going to make something. neither a difference or something. when you give up, did you do it?
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after the war and mosul, i put my camera aside, knew i'd had enough little dumble. i sold all my cameras as soon as i had paid 3000 for them and sold them for just 200. i let them go because they had destroyed me manufactured i guess i'm in a, a kind of privileged position and that i can leave and come back to a country and go to another country, but for, for local, generous. they come. this is, this is their life. doing my curly mission us. do you know don mccullen left at you? he came to see me in the hospital in abilene, when i was injured. marston, i believe he told me about his own injury from vietnam. latisha. he said, no, i was wounded here, go from bearings and he showed me his legs and told me not to be angry. no, no, i said to him, your blood is more precious than mine are. i am from the east and you are from the western drive. yes. he disagreed and said it was not like that of june june. i said, you are now done mccullen. but who am i? who anyway?
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nobody and she has nothing. when he chinney them for couple of weeks i had like i had 3 days back, really horrible law nightmares of like a stuff that i don't remember. i can't have realized that this nightmares a comes after like saturday, such kind of trauma thing that he said, of course, like it will have an effect. bah, i mean the point here, i mean being, i'm being a living in the, in a ward soon. i mean, you would be used to eat now in the depression. it will come if not today, then tomorrow and yourself are working and more zone was it. maybe it hasn't come yet, but it will show us perhaps in 2 or 3 years that are, this is something you know, when you work as a journalist from us, your job is about pushing, trying to make things happen and get things done. the plan and things and asking for, you know, i need this and i need this, i need that situation. the only thing that i could do was just surround myself
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completely to the situation and just let other people take control when we arrived back in town. and it was very, very emotional because you know, now i'm getting everybody from the office and his son and then go to the funeral. i felt very privileged because i was taking him back his life with his mother's sister when it was a privilege for me to be able to go through the whole morning process with them. the funeral which was an illness. and again, huge emotional hour
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because he had told the whole generation that they will that take us through the 3 days and then the week, you know, we're setting the house people coming to give condolences and i think that that is very helpful for everybody because you can kind of live through it and come to terms with the last in the west. we tend to be embarrassed about death when we, when we come to talk about it, we buy them very quickly and then nobody talks about your kind of, you feel it's a death in the west of the kind of embarrassment. whereas in the east, they not to make much more of a kind of pouring which is more healthy, i think, you know,
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so i very quickly got involved in the land mine issue more widely through the minds advisory group. i was aware that i was kind of in a position where i could share my experience with other people and raise awareness of the learn mind issue and maybe get them to think about the problem happening around the world and maybe open up their wallets and donate to help help kayla mine . so that was something i kind of threw myself into quote, vigorously and still do. i think it was probably quite therapeutic for me still is particularly in the early days to at least say, well this has happened. tragic circumstances, but it's turning into something positive, something useful. i think i'll maybe i wasn't doing that consciously, but i think in retrospect it probably did help with my recovery when i went back to go to some to continue by then of course, you know,
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the americans had taken cook and muzzle and so on. so i'm sorted, clap, so the situation changed a lot. but i went back to get free work. the thing had happened apparently is a good thing to do because if, if you, upon to avoid p t s d post traumatic stress disorder, which this was great, definitely a traumatic experience. and if you just suppress it, you know, you can a very big problems. i had to deal with my own film on the guilt and coming to terms with my own exceeds one year after the explosion that gene and one i had to see home in a fellow fly to an a close friend of ad. wonderful. what did he blame for the incident? seem michelle, how can i have your fighting? we went to the bridge and top car to take a break about him. there were 15 of us, a husband about an hour after the break for people from the media came up to us. i think him and asked us if we wanted to do an interview for arab 24 and talk about
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the war with nath, wasn't and explained to the world how we liberated the topics. dana from the islamic state, are shut up because ottoman which i had a long strip of volatile a $1000.00 pay at avia dash get like a cio matter. that was, i had a lot of stories about land mines in chill okey heading to feel good and in the explosion that affected me most happened at tab cadell who became the justness a little couple of months ago. miss, you say there were 3 of us myself, another friend, an odd one. the media people asked if there were ideas around what i said. no. the americans had cleared them in an empty gambled, wickedness, metty. and john perceived no. i thought he at that point that won't marry him, asked if it was dangerous to london, go not one of them said martin, die die and said, there was no danger to men. am there to get them was we set off, comrade antoine was in the lead, holding his phone, recording how the airplane attacked and damaged the site. we were all behind him.
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that as the group of journalists came in, a mind suddenly exploded, a buckled, den, get put up under the door. we heard a loud noise. manama, everything around us was destroyed and the air was filled with dust. would oh, every one sat down on the spot off, one of them, and when the dust settles, we looked around and we didn't know what to do. my teacher, after a while, we saw that the s t f fighter who told us, mottos, don't die. it was in pieces court, but his soul hadn't left him yet. your pet chevery, he was still breathing heavily. the jim was excruciating benefits for the even now over a year later, ross, i can't shake the image of that young fight on a he of the falling. that was we as a mom that i weakest cbs, malcolm. no, it wasn't anyone's fault. the media people couldn't have known us, but if they hadn't caused that, we wouldn't have been there in the 1st place. it was not easy to hear that he also blamed us for the death of i to him. but perhaps i needed to hear that to deal with
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that feeling of guilt. i hat ah, the last for though i took fun, it appeared before my eyes almost every day asked emily tan. but how did he feel at that moment? ah, we lost it in kind of that very moment. the moment my friend became a martyr doughty, i felt as if i died and he was the one alive. daniel, i felt a very strange sense of grief. i couldn't stop crying for 3 days. yes said awesome . there were always tears in my eyes and my eyes were full of helplessness. shot him, i was heartbroken and in pain and good because he was my childhood friend. good. we went to school together in asia, what we like the same things and what it is we went home together that we went to the city together on what we were together 24 hours a day on that. we used to eat together and wake up together. i have a one room of under log one ah
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. dashboard. now when the i s troops live rocca, the, i said the fighting would go on for another 10 years and they were talking about i e days that mit i had left at the mines were still there. not even 20 percent of the ideas of rocca have been cleared up. it's full of i. e days. we been working in the land with them. i now we, i walk him in the city with the id. the risk is the friend that has a lot of ideas and the technique is very difficult. so in my opinion, it will take a lot of time. you can say 10 years. if nothing happened again.
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if you could give a name to id or land mines, why could you call them a name to id? i mean, yeah. second question, a ghost made it into mine's a death that he know this is how i see it. they call them hidden soldiers. that being of it's a good name, but they are still death in murder. it's a silent killer to sign the killer. he didn't in emmy to, to remind me how you love their sleeping beasts waiting for a victim as it. and they can wake up very quickly. she the death e. ah, i then levels actually, you know,
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they were, they are hiding no right now. we know like, i'm sure like you know, like a free look around properly. we search like 10 meters around us. like, there are some ideas here. i don't know who came up with the phrase, but i believe it was came from cambodia. but la, mine's a been referred to as the eternal sentinels. ah, because they are, they are soldiers who and never off duty. once they're in the graham, they can stay there indefinitely. are probably you slightly rooted, were supposed to say destroyed landmarks. there is no label for mines, just pain. that alone there's no way out there my his unless war ends one day, 29 year sold. so 2 wars,
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3. alrighty. in iraq. so i wish to live finished. i think we as journalists think the poor as being terrible things happening all the time. but i've seen amazing kindness involved. i've seen people pulling together in war and i, when i was in iraq in 2000 or 3, i saw an incredible kindness and i think of that as well. ah, what i am concerned about the war not water, then sell. i'm wondering about after war a
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a touch of art and to coronary excellence. this is where all the actually serving in europe to saver your rollbacks in 30 minutes on d. w. a sex drugs and rock and roll a break in the rolling stones, the most affordable time would be for you 2190 minutes a whole week isn't market tactical all in or not at all women in architecture. why are they
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so invisible to the larger public? we decided to ask them. what is the poetry the secret of a house? shattering the glass ceiling. women in architecture starts april 20th on d. w. several did and right wing extremists, when i tried to regression again, world might be a couple late and burned in south africa. people with disabilities more likely to lose their jobs. in the pandemic black lives matter, protest shine a spotlight on racially motivated police violence, same sex marriage is being legalized in more and more countries. discrimination and inequality are part of everyday life. for many, we ask why? because life is diversity. to make up your own mind. mm. d. w. lead for mines
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who. oh or your buys keys to safer food? well, keep clean to prevent contamination. oh yeah. a separate raw and cooked foods. to avoid cross contamination. cook thoroughly to kill microorganisms. i keep food at safe temperatures, i called to prevent bacterial growth you safe water and sea raw materials to avoid contaminate food producers are the
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ones primarily responsible for the safety of the food you buy. but you can protect yourself and your family from diseases in the home by plying the 5 keys to see for food use them. you also have a role to play. ah, this is t w. news ally from berlin, death and destruction and storms tear through several us states. arkansas declares and emergency and calls in the national guard after multiple tornado strikes, leave a trail of devastation. also on the program, finland's.

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