tv Eco India Deutsche Welle May 2, 2023 7:30am-8:01am CEST
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would there be a certain red? it's 10 times more holocaust survivors in post war germany for them life after 945 through today has meant starting a new and processing the past. it's been a common notion in the post more period until in port today. nancy's are always those other people on the ongoing struggle for remembrance and it gets denial to the land of the perpetrators starts may 6th on d, w with if you've been on the internet, you must have seen these imaginary scenarios of how nature would flourish with no humans it don't. in fact,
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we also glimpses offered during the corbin 19 logged down, the blue skies more greenly and birds in our balcony. in fact, if human beings honestly tried to exist with nature in tandem with love and respect every day with flourish. hello and welcome. i'm sorry, i got the body. you all watching you go india. and today we will explore more about this relationship between nature and our eco tourism. at 1st, this sounds like an eta conceivable contradiction, at least to me. because the 1st things that i think off are loud intrusive tourists, just disrupting the piece and gall of nature. but if done in the right manner, eco tourism can help us not only concern flora and fauna, but also bring lockers and ecology together. i mutually benefit. let's head to a small, beautiful corston village to find out more. ah,
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and north they go, these fresh, the hutch olive readily, turtles have to honey on the way from the nest to the bottom of the easy brain for launch grabs into but today they are a bit gum russia. there is a do this group watching on velocity beach. these dani turtles have done the small coastal village of vill us in the state of mot, austin, and a big attraction. one of the onlookers is a student from mom by i came from i, i forget that up because i did is like to get some pictures and i wasn't really sure what to do. i was thinking conservation work or something. but then i've allowed to say doctors going to the secretaries for them as a wife. the female turtles lay up 260 export messed in the winter. until a few years ago, locals regularly plunder domestics and 8 or so the eggs. okay, to be that all children 20 years ago and one mental production and you saw the new
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sog metro began see of god. these he dirt was which have been classified by the site as an endangered species. a subsample indoor is me, bilateral, at i will logo, jo. hm. isha be started sensitizing, be people who used to doom these beaches and stealing turtle eggs. at least we made them aware of the importance of these turtles and they had exam good on it. that is how or just became a part of this conservation activity on a job or just a, in a lower grace conservation activated a salmonella. some villagers are now able to make a living from working with the turtles. ah, that it's grown to real eco tourism create that benefits both animals and people when you can see inexperience, something then and like you will appreciate them and you will have that ard store and so them are not more about the species. so this is where legalism comes in.
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picture it brings, it connects us be she is habitat and the visitors city call up and her family have been hosting students to come to see the dirt for nearly 70 years. now. each year the convert their house into homestead just in time for the villas turtle festival, me and then homestead, since we started this homes debbie had done quite well for i was said before, there was nothing here and the only employment was day labor. but now they make good money and more tourists come to our village. you go to setup a new work opportunities seem to be a drawer for the village. you do abroad. who decor left his job in the middle east, and came back to visit us to set up the 1st homestead camp ground you bailey's gown, nor when he heard, i would heard of the letter. it was tugee in a corner of india somewhere. abner. now it's famous because of the very last turtle
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festival on on, and that's transformed into religion for still be better able to find a steady source of income. and just your people come here, enjoyed the sites and learn new things about the daughters was not. they find the experience be peaceful there, which is good for a day enjoying or they are local because they information will there piecemeal, diane burger, nearly 80 percent of homes and villas to day are operating businesses directly connected to turtle tourism. the absence of commercial hotels is also working to keep the rural expedients as authentic as possible for visit. coming to see the amazing knitter here without disturbing it, the community establish some grounds to make that possible is illegal killer when he and he so there is no sand activity allowed on the beach even if more tourists wanted, what other sports will not be allowed to light,
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there will be no lights on the beach and cards can only be bought at the dish and it's hot miniature lumber that had to i'm, the focus is on conservation activity, be advantage badge. and then another challenge for the look. the total season lost just a few weeks per year. new ideas are needed to attract to this year all year round that matter, the conditions are certainly favorable. oh yeah, i had it that again, this legion is eaten. biodiversity villa says that i went by mountains on 3 sides and the see on the ford side. and you can see the inter titles all odd life he had because of that he did as the tide pool covering of one kilometers. switch off rock bottom saw lots of diversity. they wanted him in the weather, dawson safaris out on the ocean or crayon troops through the mon grew fathers, money locals have become tour guides. no one knows the local floor and phone are better than they do. now. where did he come into?
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the pitcher is me. oh boy, them like those that live lloyd them with some of the trimmings, lake hospitality or how to speak to that buddhism. how to make a, how to take forward that knowledge. how do i include the local knowledge and hospital er influence, a buddhist who got genes than mine, send this gentle eco tourism, which began as a measure to save the olive, rightly, turtles and the loss has now become a blueprint for 10 other village along the coast. ah, if all goes well, these dani turtles will return to villas beach to lay eggs in the sand tanks to the mindful development of tourism. here a future generations of turkeys will also have the chance to make their way to the sea a clear night to make this chest a tree dyed. to make this book a clean eyed even for our toilet paper. we need wood for
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a lot of these things and to get this wood, we got forests. and cutting forest doesn't just mean a couple 100 trees. it means the floor and follow that live in and on the sea. an entire ecosystem and preserving our forests means preserving that seem ecosystem. he not he, in finance far north is still home to primeval forest on this good reason to leave it b. 2 decades ago, o t listen dantes forest with its 500 year old trees, was slated to be felt. she's a member of the indigenous sammy, people sell in heaven, even if the landy so in flight is big. and yoga iraq. well, it's ho. oh, on sale. oh, oh. for money. back in 2003. once a week, a big freight a docked in lieu back germany. greenpeace said part of its cargo consisted of
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contraband from the last intact primeval forest in europe. virgin forest cut down to my toilet paper. the trail led back to erie. here a small delegation of traditional reindeer herders was waiting. they didn't need to go far to find freshly chopped tree stumps. booty figures this tree was a couple of 100 years old of it as far as she can tell, without a magnifying glass with them it's growth rings lie so close together. it will be in yellow. it will, the national forest authority promised to safeguard a certain areas, but the trees are just being felled and other areas. in the end, alex follow the forest will be gone on 20 years later in the naughty. the chainsaws are quiet and the european union is making short stays that way. can levy puddle, remembers when young environmental activists live for months and tree houses.
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arguing with the lumberjacks. and how greenpeace quietly threatened to boycott, germany's largest publishing houses. fanco lucas will come from the mac, then they stopped the clear cutting me. i knew we didn't let up them, but i like it but now it's been quiet here for years. that little lock. you can see it. we don't have to keep our animals behind fences. they can move freely around the forestry ice, even in winter petrie mottos managed to save his forest too, which had been targeted by the wood industry. that was before the unrest. didn't he naughty? this is what a healthy forest looks like. teeming with young reindeer. there's no need for fences. ah, ah, ah, go polly, just born in the yesterday evening. i am august those like there is one upgrade. so
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i got 1000 but my air mark and then i opened that gate than they go back to the freedom and and petri matos likes reindeer that want to be free. they thrive better and don't cost him lots of money. at 1st sight, sweden looks like one continuous forest. no country in europe has more trees. they cover 3 quarters of the country surface. but further north, many places resemble a lunar landscape like here and more neil on the border between sweden and finland, 200 kilometers north of the arctic circle. environmental activists blame swedish lumber companies in an omen. i'll get on when i drive around here you see one play cuts after the other. and what do they replant? fee house, every forest is the same with all the trees at the same age that planted in long rows. that's an aggressive way to treat the forest. they become plantations.
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hudson's toys are that huge trucks of forest are slated for clear cutting their forests own by sway a scoop, sweetness state when oil company. but the firm made its calculations without taking greenpeace and reindeer herders into account. they took the trees into their protection patrol the area, and demonstrated there for months at a time. a quiet protest that compelled the company's headquarters in stockholm to comply with the protesters demands. the old management was fired. we meet with new company boss, eric brown's mom. he appreciates the range of issues involved. we previously haven't managed that conflicts and in an optimal way. and there are have been situations where we have not advanced the possibilities for that for, for, to read your hers to, to practice their profession. back in the forests,
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owned by fail. scoop the more in your area is home to 4000 reindeer. in the summer time there's enough for the animals to eat. in the fall, the semi domesticated animals enjoy eating mushrooms. we made the chairman of the local reindeer cooperative. hans hallmark. does he trust the company's assurances at the moment he says it doesn't look like the forest is going to be cut down and he's hoping it will stay that way. thought martin. one hope of course we're hoping for improvements. javier. yeah, for a new course. eric brands may came up to visit us, probably not, but honestly, it's all coming 30 years too late. oh, if a bad thing up at us and they had most of the ancient forests are already gone. gone for faintness, winter and lapland is
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a barren time. but the forest this time of year is like a garden for the reindeer. there they find the lichens, they need to help them survive lap plans long, harsh winters. well, yeah, humans, i think he is in several farms of farming andreotti disable these traditional rock . this is, are not only important for the sustenance of these community, but also to combat climate change. yet another example of how humans we thought on the problems that have been created by them in it's an icy 7 o'clock in the morning and goto and the harbor here on the po, daughter is draped in a thick fog. provide us pies, auntie, that doesn't make setting out any easier. but out here nobody got it. you tried to navigate by orienting yourself to certain landmarks. but on mornings like this. when the fog,
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which we call kaliko is so thick got it. it makes navigating difficult, super feature very difficult. his father fished the adriatic before him, but to day, but his harp is clams bungalow. where and how much they can that changes every day, placido cargo, but at eva mandel, michelle. in the evening, we get a message from the co operatives. you don't mind telling us what zone we can fish when we can set out the needs. and when we have to return to lot audio and how much we can bring ashore. if the bees are, they put a little bit, but they glide for a half an hour through the silent lagoon. then suddenly the quiet ends. the clam. fishers appeared from the fog like ghosts. $1500.00 men and women worked to go to lagoon. clam fishing is more like farming the sea better than traditional fishing. a girdle fishers harvest almost $14000.00 tons of mollusks each year.
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well up, well today we can all harvest 30 kilos. they suck the mollusks out of the sand with a special device. the water is 6 degrees celsius, just right for winter. but in recent years, the temperature has stayed around 11 degrees celsius. climate change is also affecting the po, delta noise we video, montgomery, mental tonight we observed the effects of climate change here when the sea level changes aqua, when the shock a wind blows or during the phases of the moon, the fuzzy lunar video, one that i see cumbia mentally, but we also see the effect of climate change when we find fishery demolish and crap species that we've never seen here before. it showed that the b value, jonetta king prima known of it. that's why clam farming is important. he says to help protect the climate liquid key, the shelves are made of calcium carbonate,
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go out to the car, which is just captured carbon dioxide. lemmy that he did cut her bony at the university of ferrara. professor elena thom bodine has authored a study on the impact of muscles on the climate. it confirms will grow fisher's argument to do more with can be mildly as they grow mollusks for michelle in that capture c o 2, charlotte oak too. and i'm gonna, if i harvest sticky low of clams, were the c o 2 emitted for their commercial use is much less than the c o 2 captured by the clamshell as they grow said he already spat glass. you and what that's the surprising thing. shows that even good evening. don't look at this when i was back was i sort of been in the lagoon. the goto fishers now form a dozen mullis species over 10 square kilometers. 7 years ago, vidas and the other fishers launched another climate friendly project. farming oysters from the mediterranean, using the tides. i confirmed assuming dalia.
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we're the only oyster producers in it allow me there. so now it's low tide or yeah . and these baskets with a young oysters are hanging in the air and the sun, or yeah, yeah, solar gondola, when the tide comes in with this entire zone will be flooded via lego, hooked up to stuff like waste and okay. la from bella with very nice beliefs. and crystal why fully funded me led me there from 2020 shot to me that ain't a fishers called her oysters golden goro, and sell them to chop shafts all over italy. but above all, bodice loves one thing about his work. and he built on his seal, so it's that sense of freedom. lemme a you follow the ebb and flow of the tides and the phases of the moon crystal, at least you are part of this beautiful world, our world, the po, delta. preserving this world and ensuring its future
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providers and the fishers of goro, it's their life's work. all of us who live in these big concrete jungle often wonder what must to feel to live in nature. i often do sleeping in caves, drinking from the streams. the nature being on infrastructure. imagine walking on bridges that can actually live and breathe. yeah, in fact that israel, it's not a magical land, it's a small town in the northeastern states of makalya. all the people of these hills have countless names for rain smoke. now we see, right, wow, and no wonder for this is the wettest, rainiest spots on planet earth. the monsoon takes on many forms in the hilly state of mine, carla, in north eastern india. ah,
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what starts as the gentle streams and ends as raging rivers makes life for the 40000 people that live in this region really difficult. the kasey tribal community here i'm mostly farmers. and the rivers that form every year cut their homes off from the farms and markets. but the community here has found a really unique way to survive and thrive, to a system of living route bridges. a part of a number of allow you on power connecting incredibly, a fat ma'am. got them up a 2nd lanky tau. well, how bout are another? i am proud to have built these bridges and leave this legacy for generations to come. narvie longmeyer and i hope the one to come that's even better than what we have done won't come let us yet, especially with new technology and better understanding of the science company.
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these root bridges can last 100 years because they sit high. yeah. and they do not rock alicia, and wildly but no con lamb is a farmer from a village named moly, known. he started learning to build his route bridges at around 11 years old, and is still using his skills 3 decades later. people from his village are building a new one, the ceiling to help especially women get access to the market which helps the local economy. mikayla's bridges are special and famous because unlike modern bridges they are alive. busy the construction material is mainly words that comes from trees that are still living. and usually even more trees are planted to keep them standing, which helps biodiversity here. how they work as the aerial roots of the, at the fighters are led into the trunk of an array country where young roads can grow. bamboo scaffolding gives bought the roots and the villages support rubber fig
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roots which had the special ability to fuse and grow as one i used by the local people to guide the bridge across the river bank. it's an epic undertaking. bridges can me over 50 me, doesn't length and can have multiple decks. a single bridge can carry up to 50 people at a time. norris din song is also a farmer from this region. and to day he's having a day out with his son, teaching him what he was taught, his sons number banga among one marjorie. i learned how to build root bridges from the age of 15 by my grandfather. believe it is important to preserve these rude garages. for our children b, we must teach our children so that the knowledge can be passed down from generation to generation. so that even when i am gone, these villages gonna still be used by my grandchildren along and so long on my run garden with di da timothy. it actually takes do, or even 3 decades for
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a living bridge to become usable. so children working on a bridge to day are doing it to support members of the community, even a few 100 years from now. and they return home on a bridge that their ancestors whom they may have never met, built for them. even under god is a sociologist who works with the communities here to preserve the knowledge and skills. the living room didn't, if has, could be protect that because we retain that influence of our forefathers who has thought us how we use their natural resources without destroying the mother at her belief is that these bridges are the best symbols of the culture of the region and represent the relationship between indigenous communities and the ecosystem. and they help in other ways to the living room that's not
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a lot of employment opportunity for their people. it felt their unemployment problem and also has increased the income, generic thing of the people in both villages, especially where living room with usaa locals look as guides, as well as by converting their homes into homesafe a night and a homestead in a village with living room bridges can honor family around 2000 rupees or $25.00 euros per night. tourism door can be a double edged sword. concrete steps, ticketing bullets and walls funded by the state government have sprung up and bridges that were meant to hold a few people at a time are beginning to show signs of wear under hordes of trampling tourists feet . 70. ready do may carlin, villages have now been identified and unesco 2023, tentative list of world headed sites for their bridges. this recognition will
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increase their popularity and will attract more financial support from the world heritage front and other institutions. but going forward, the community emphasizes that there must be front and center for this kind of sustainable development. do remain managed to come up. we move forward in building group reaches together imparting knowledge from generation to generation on how to plant and build these woodbridge's law. this kind of eco engineering supports bought biodiversity and the development of native communities. and these bridges are a testament to the fact that both can exist at the same time. ah, you know, the selflessness with which nature keeps giving us endlessly. it shouldn't be very difficult to give it back a action of 800,
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but i'm short. today's stories left us with a lot of hope and motivation and compelled us to introspect. but you will let me know what did you like most about today's episode, and what would you like to see more or you can write to us as equal to add that h d w dot com. keep coming back every week. see you soon. the ah ah, with
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knology of which is really a thing of the past 30 minutes to kick off. what's going on here with they are good questions. you can find the answers here. all the games, all the goals, the point is the highlights. ah 90 minutes on d. w. guardians of truth. my name is john dinner and i have paid almost every price of being a journalist in a country like turkey. taking all the powers that be they risk everything
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john dunbar, asks activists, journalists and politicians living in exile is too much on my shoulders. but i have to hold this weight because i'm responsible for the future of our country, for the people who are behind the past. they live for their mission. people need to know what is happening in our series guardians of truth watch know on youtube, d. w documentary, oh, time, once again. oh, brain update. because this orchestra called the brain continuously adapts itself. and so we ask a few astute questions. we can control our thoughts, which makes us very power, kind of like a super power in questions about life,
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the universe. our series 40 to the answer to almost everything this week on d w. ah ah ah, ah, this is d, w is coming to you live from berlin sedans, warring generals agree to send delegates to a conference, so to negotiations. rather, it's hope the 2 sides can agree a stable ceasefire and it comes as the un, warren's more than 800000 people.
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