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tv   DW News Asia  Deutsche Welle  May 5, 2023 5:30pm-5:46pm CEST

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the hello guys, this is the 77 percent. the platform for advocacy issues and share ideas. the, you know, or the side that will be a north of bridge attached and then it gets top of applicants. population is moving fast. the young people clearly have the solution. the future is 77 percent. every weekend on dw, the doctor news aisha coming up today. joining us, correct on of a national security from amended goals to launching investigations against intellect, tools, and rights defenders. china tightens the screws and people it deems dangerous parts
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behind it. the i'm british manager, welcome to the the news aisha. i'm glad you could join us. china has expanded its national security laws. the amendments passed last week allow authorities to increase search and seizures, and prevent individuals from leaving and entering the country. also, these also have the power to determine what comprises national security and by extension it's violation. the law comes into effect on the 1st of july. in recent days, the increased focus on national security has also seen paging announced a national security investigation against ty, with these publisher, lee john herb, the editor in chief of goose ah, publishing. he does appear waiting on a visit to shanghai last month by the was visiting family to
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a basic is main body dealing with tile on the 1st of that lee on her is called under investigation to by national security organs on suspicion of engaging in activities, endangering national security and about the relevant parties would protect, leads and legitimate rights and interests. in accordance with the law and driving off a more is louisa lam, hold fast for the people's republic of news. your gentleman revisited was published in chinese by lee young. have the result. what do you make of china investigating lead for court endangering national security? i mean i think that's a very bad sign. uh charge is such is endangering national security um, really very serious in china and could bring loan jail sentences. so the fact that a book publisher is being investigated on these grounds is, i mean it's bad for him, but it's also sending
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a message to our other publishers in taiwan. because his company published a lot of a sense of 2 books of a huge range of books, but they publish some books that perhaps of the other publishes, might shy away from. so i think it's sending a message to the whole industry as you're going to point out in the published books that are critical of the communist party. i mean, do you think you ever consider that he might be in danger when he's wasting china? i wouldn't be able to tell you what went through his mind, but i mean it's um that his work has bought a lot of offers to chinese language readers and some of them are offers like wong don, who is a student leader in 1999 during that chinaman square protest, and of those like huge air chinese intellectual. but he's also publish books by people like laurie diamond, don't democracy. so it's
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a huge range of books across the sort of intellectual spectrum, not just dissidence, but also books by senators and books by john this like myself. and the china is older, is came to taiwan as its own. and now it's investigating of time when use publisher, you talked about sending a message because china also making a point to applying its laws to a taiwan resident a well, it is a tricky situation because he still had chinese nationality. i believe the point way as he entered china. so it is quite a tricky situation. but i think this is a real analogy to the case of the hong kong booksellers. 5 of whom was detained in china. a disappeared in hong calling turned up in china. in, in uh, several years ago and that we sent a message to home commerce,
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publishing industry where you know, books such as the kind the lee and have company goose are published. what published in the past. so i think this again is a similar kind of message, a warning that perhaps these kinds of activities really need to be judged differently. and we're seeing this tightening in china and journalism as well. um and new espionage laws which might make life incredibly difficult for, for journalist. um, so i think this does a tightening on information as a whole. are you going to want to talk to you about this? the type thing of these a national security law is that essentially give apologies the power of cracking down against anybody. they want the national scale to dig rounds. can you give us a context of why this sudden focus, if you like a national security as well?
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see jim pings number one pie or she has always been national security. and i just think this is part of a progression where a national security trumps every thing. you know, a, china is sort of effectively a, a national security state now. and these new laws means that any documents that might be seen as threatening national security can be treated in, in the same way as state secrets. so it's really sort of upping the ante when it comes to information related to national security. and i think that just shows where speech and things policies lie in general. so you've got defend, as, as reported on how the communist party has already been using exit bands, for instance, as a tool to silence active and send to control ethnic minority groups in china. i just wanted to sense from you as to what this kind of control means for ordinary
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chinese citizens. i think only, i mean the limits of what is acceptable to say to ride, to blog where those things can be said. i think the narrow and all the time. you know, we have had just in the last few weeks about the rest of a chinese john and a stone you you whose only crime so far seems to have been missing a japanese diplomat. he also went on a couple of fellowships overseas. so i think that tightening is really beginning to target people who have overseas ties, people, you know, whose jobs bring them into contact with diplomats from other countries. and so i think that it is also, you know, that's also a sign that things
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a getting hotter as you know, china is boundaries. but now we're waiting. and i think that could have an impact on ordinary citizens in all kinds of different ways. we live with the time being, but thank you so much for joining us today at john the sonata louisa elaine, thank you so much. in the region of course, media has long been known for the distinctive art form of puppy. i'm not sure it's deeply into both on into the culture and traditions. of course, maybe society as well, but neglect and the shortage of autism is affecting its future prospect. these boxes might of paper pope. i'm ready for decoration this is paper mesh, a one of the oldest handicrafts in the world. the art form is deeply interwoven
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with the culture and traditions of the cash me region. many artisans here like most read, john started learning as children. now on us it's got all my own go had a small workshop, but i learned people machine by truth skeleton. so the designs have changed with time roll and we have to keep up with alltran related that i can put it in, but it gets easier. what time would you like to to stop onto fully loan the ops liability? any design off the cost or defense finance on kind of traditional types of measure, it generates jobs for thousands of households in kashmir. there were still nearly 35000 artisans in the city of through nigga but the ones prosperous trade is in decline. it can take years to learn even the basics of paper measure. and
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for many young kashmiris, the painstaking and time consuming job simply doesn't pay enough to make it attractive. a large one of on 50, just because i've been doing this job since i was a kid shumate on the new generation, including my own children feeling. but i want to join the profession valuable because they can do better in other fields. they don't think a job has good economic prospect. got a degree type of mesh oddison is a calling for more government support for the rightful otherwise they say it might disappear altogether. yeah. me stuff. the catalog, people don't respect. jones, my go to you off to an a, the regions tourism department are you is dependent on us. yeah. so it is, um, there is an auto revenue for the state. your art is because the fast office ones who it is um most, rob johnson, anyone can learn pay for measure. i thought unless
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a lot more people do, artworks like this could become rarities me in most fig, jungles and wooded area. i was not a natural habitat for a large variety of specs, but now these reptiles that increase it, coming into contact with humans as an addition, encroaches into why that is, it was meant to eventually run the truck, worked for the top team of snake catches. sure le, and hood crack team are trying to capture a snake under a house and yeah, and going economic growth in me. a ma has brought with the major construction projects which means most snakes come in search of rats. these a busy time. so the country's top stake, removal squad, and the leader known as the psych princess say more respect now to snakes in the past,
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they used to kill them when they found them. are now the better informed and no we can release snakes back into the one. so people call us the capture and remove them from the houses. the t mostly catches, but these parsons, not venomous snakes that typically groat around 5 meters in length. and other small mammals suffocating their prey with constriction in my resume to some of the most venomous snakes in the world. including the deadly cobra's and banded crate every year and more than a 1000 people die from snake bites. that's a high rate than most of the countries because of me and most basic health system that can be regular shortages of anti venom. it's 4 in the morning and young go on shortly. and her team wrestle 30 square, mean parsons, into a rice sec. before loading the reptiles into event they head for the backwoods of
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the bega, u. m. a hills and tracked to a remote area to release the snakes. i should be slowed down to move and now back in nature and people feel safe. i think releasing them back into the jungle as a win win situation for humans and snakes, for the most big living in natural habitats, help the ecosystem. the snake princess watches us the written costs lives as a way, hopefully not to return to the human world. and to danger, to and that does it for today, or there is more on our website. we'll see you again soon by the guardians of truth. my name is junk and and i have paid almost every price of being enjoying this in
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a country like to tease taking on the powers that be they risk every thing john don't r s activist journalist and politicians living and anxiety too much on my shoulders. but i have to hold this weight because i'm responsible for the future follow country for the people who are behind the bus for their mission. people need to know what is happening there in our series guardians of truth watch . now on youtube dw documentary, the, the white house says tech companies have a moral responsibility as they developed a i, applications for about regulation, just by growing costs for more rules around the fence proving technology. a new
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regular regulatory framework does not appear in closer. and also in our show, tourists are coming back in numbers to europe. that's reviving a pre paid demick debate, how much tourism is actually sustainable? we'll visit the spanish island in my york and romanian town. makes progress building out its industry before running into a wall. well, technically a puerto hello welcome to our show i'm seeing here is the invalid white house, one of the world's top, a i, developers of their moral and legal responsibilities to ensure the safety of their products, us vice president, cala harris meeting with the ceo's of leading tech companies, including microsoft alphabet and open a eye on thursday. here's one of the risks of unregulated development of a i products. and the white house later announced plans for $140000000.00 a new a. i research regulating tech and a guy has largely fall into us agencies just by growing public costs for more focused action. and here's what harris said on thursday. she's at the private
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sector has.