tv DW News Africa Deutsche Welle May 5, 2023 11:30pm-12:00am CEST
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wants to buy a gas. how do we make this accessible to everyone? india in 60 minutes on d, w. these places in europe are smash, records stepped into an old adventure. it's the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of us record breaking site on google, max youtube. and now also in book form the this is the, the, the news applicant coming up on the program, the price june list paying to deliver the truth. and they were trained to and this tells us how and why she was fortunate in prison. and we looked at media freedom elsewhere in africa. and why some countries i'm turning into news, black holes, plus back on the hub soil. the nigerians left home speaking a bit of future about bucks,
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stuck in baltimore and libya instead. and saw the african activists say, some of the diamonds on display at this weekend's combination of persons. king charles were loose and we have one opinion on why it is crucial for them to be returned. fortunately, the other part of the colonial contract is not we need is if you told me i played a pretty decent more next continue to use the visa routed. so for us, you know, you quoted me at ease of use with the bus. the thing is something that to me to do something right. and we just take the hello. i'm christine window. it is good to have your company and it's released this week mocking will press freedom day one that media freedom is and the threats. and we'll kinda,
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she's never before. reports is without borders who compiled index say the environment for june, but some is bad. and 7 out of 10 countries in africa. the situation is classified as bad and nearly 40 percent of countries on the continent. and this, the whole region in particular is said to be in the process of becoming and the news that i'll be told into an exposure for more. and that in a moment for 1st it would try, it is ranked the worst country for breast feed them in africa. we met a june list and poet who was imprisoned for her work. the report you're about to see begins with, you're going to say have brought you reading the words of a poem she wrote that led to her incarceration of this the of the style of dis douglas center. how about and go but and i little good enough. is that many of us to flush and that's and that's how old number now you're out of the hands of the concept. helena has up to the atlanta and kind of in a word for them, a poem the let to prison and almost death. 14 years ago,
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every tree and right you had got emphasis on it, but as to was arrested for her words. she wanted to publish a collection of poems, but the phone of the senses authorities interpreted the driver and the poem, as president the size of a working dictator has ruled the country for more than 3 decades. and is accused of crimes against humanity. how about this time tells the driver to drive casserly because he's carrying people to wear a seat belt about he's responsible for those in the cock on. if the driver doesn't have that does sponsibility, he should let all those drives because hello. so i can about mechanical, my whole life will do. she was taken into custody and interrogated divine. and um they said the problem was about the president. i said it was and then i was beaten until i lost consciousness. so the head runs the torch and never stopped with some
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stuff to go over this. so i, you know, she was held in a secret detention side, most of us, myra, and a 2 by 2 meters. so other inmates were held in shipping containers, boiling hot during the day, freezing cold at night. she says there were subjects to regular meetings. one of the heavy to some of the how did it turn my whole body was swollen from the 1st injuries from us to the 1st thing. i didn't think i would survive. it came in. let's see it in the ok. but you did of the 6 years in prison without explanation, she was freed. as soon as she could, she flipped the country, but not only have poems gotten into trouble, she also worked as a rated journalist and every trias capital a smaller um press. frank, there is no freedom of the price and every trail, not private newspapers have been shut down and there is only one state media that says propaganda hold on to up again. every trip is one of the world's biggest
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dangers of report has done this stuff either fled the country on present utica island now lives and works in germany, touring the country, reading the po, and she wrote in prison. people a keen to learn about a country that holds the citizens captive incarcerated janice. now as of right and so she helps her work, can help make people understand the reality and every trip up to that, i will hold them at the heart of tv. i want to go to every try a one day. this where i don't to mention my memories. when i was young, i left go with victims pass out and did not think you could be punished for your fluids in the sun. that's cause the sleep in. god, cargo, you didn't do it in germany, but for now she doesn't see a future for herself in the world's most sense that country us and to talk more about the conditions for press freedom in africa. we've invited angela quincy onto
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the program. she's a form agendas to now works as africa program coordinator for the community to protect journalists, welcome to dw and use africa. angela said this is media freedom index, ones that say content is a at the rates of journalism. but as we just saw in our reports, in some countries, in africa, journalist, they was clear freedom in some cases their lives to deliver the truth from we just said, what would you say is the main threats to price freedom in africa? well it's, it's pretty broad, but let me say and it's, it's the criminalization of journalism. i mean, you know, janice throughout the continental, the world awesome to do and they were come, what are they doing? they're trying to bring the news to the public, trying to ensure that people are in a position to make informed decisions. i know that the people have the right to know. and for that reason they're seen as the switch by a government's repressive governments. and even switching to governments that one's
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good think would be democratic and there is a correct on. and what you see is jen who's been hold before the quotes being jailed and being punished penalized for they're drawn. and this and, and why is the situation particularly bad in the so how the index it says says that the region is and our quotes are becoming and no news. the, it's well, i think it's a multiple effect is i guess part of it, of course is what you've seen in terms of the cruise. but also because the so is being used by international pilots as a, you know, so they proxy bethel is right and, and i think that feeds into it to menu, of course have a problem of, of the fact that you have non state actors operating there. so often you have done this quotes between a rock and a hard place. i mean, let's take marty for example. you know, so there are no go areas in, in monte,
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which in this really called going to, i mean, we can talk about the noise. that even which in this have felt relatively comfortable in terms of operating from um, you know, they face abduction. will they face the wrist? are they accused of not being patry or taken off? and then of course you've got the whole issue of this information where you have major powers. obviously, you know, i'm trying to discredit and smear, you know, each other and in the process generous a quote up in the local channels. so bearing the brunt of course, and then you have the international media international, jen, this who are trying to get the will to understand what is going on, the finding that there are the booted out uh or you have as we've seen, you know, the broad cost is like um, differential cost is, are not allowed to operate there anymore. yeah. yeah. and,
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and staying on that point. uh, angelo, what, what can be done to help doing this, working in these, in these difficult conditions to get the truth out as well. i think definitely organizations like us and the international community needs actually woke the tool . it's all very well, you know, saying that we are, that we believe in free expression. but we need to ensure that we do more than just, you know, it shouldn't public statements. it's very important for janice on the ground to feel that the being heard and that there is someone in their corner that was angela quintal, advocate program coordinator for the committee to protect you and destroying us from needles. let's take a look now at some of his stories making news across the continent starting into the done way. the late to cease fire has failed to hold with us now quickly inspections the u. n. is wanting of a deepening humanitarian crisis in the country as fighting intensifies and the capital to and other major cities disrupting the flow of vital food aid and
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supplies. residents have reported steve price prices with supplies, reputation funding shows on the shelves. and if he's 130 people have died in one death of the torrential rains. tr good floods and lance lies in several parts of the country. thousands up. and if time is of the rivers of match, swept away buildings and other vices, infrastructure, at least 6 people at the report of date and neighboring who signed a due to a glance. and supporters of one of kenya's most famous telephones in the city of braided on the street following his release on fail officer reports, appearance cost is equal. darrell was detained last week as part of an investigation into the depth of dozens of people who police. they stopped themselves to death on the instructions for completed and cameron and foster pul paid joel m b has been named. they embraced less valuable plan. it was an emotional moment for both the play and his teammates,
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from the philadelphia 76 is as the news was announced, he's only the 2nd african. so when the prestigious and you can, that is pushing ahead with its crack down on game in his bins, parliament has post a new version of the bill targeting homosexuals after the president called for a previous one to be watered down. but the new bill still caused the death penalty in specific cases, needing many lesbians and gaming feeling for their lives of the after less than half an hour of debates, uganda is paula minutes. past one of the world strictest n t l g b t q. bill, the, i'm going to be on the page to the decision was you know what i most with some little make us using them. i meant to go on the attack after seeing the
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us even major corporations previously can the different parties legislation, process mess, process. all of our news. we have a kind of deductible to deal with dot com and not the safe house for lesbian women. in the capital con paula staff, i've already urging residents to be more discreet, which in some cases means changing how they dress and behavior. knowledge of the new draft flows, the death penalty could be imposed that those found guilty of certain same sex acts . anyone seems to be promoting homosexuality, could also face up to 20 years in jail. make you look at yourself in america, so you give them your name to clear today. give me a my,
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my rainbows all because of the, the bank i'm kind of like. so you have to select your flooding, jewelry, everything, because everybody's just one, i'm not dangerous. i know that proposed to measure that it relies people to the full time essential activity has now been amended to only require reporting when a child is involved. but despite the bill, not yet, but coming low to some it's just too dangerous to go hide. it's a friend to send me a message to let you know i'd be by talking to a bunch of weirdness, be say, i know how it was that it steps like that. so they wait for you to come back and do whatever they want to do to you because you're, we're not allowed to be in there. so say it because i said looking to leave, you got the role together with people already asking it this refuge about help seeking a saw and them approved. there is some hope here though, that the l g b t q activists will challenge the draft legislation in the quotes and when with
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a similar bill over time to buy, uganda is constitutional quotes. in 2014, you're watching data being use advocate still to come. the moroccan festival rekindling the claims of an ancient medic, this of culture. but it's to this, 1st of a, 13000 nigerian migrants have returned to the country in the last 3 years. that's according to the humans migration agency. thousands gets stuck in libya, which has served as a transit point for migrants and having face calculus perils on the journey. many of them choose to return home as data. if he's only such, a one explains at the airports illegals. it's not the flights of people, but these i major in my grants coming back from libya. for some like 20 years old. give me 60. it's have 1st time home since said 10 by 2020. having live in search of
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green pastures. she, like many others, may be dangerous or rude to join us. we did that to get to you was never made. it has since been in libya where she was out of jobs struggling to survive. she tells us she's happy to be back after facing hash conditions and friedman as a migrant, as soon as possible me. so because there's lots of, but as a whole we've gone through, we, i looked all i'm going to do on the country where was was most of our country, so we all back, all reactive. so on and you know that no, no, we all happy. we all happy the box. it's easy for them for you. we said aided by the international organization for migration, along with and i do, and government agencies to help nigerian my grandson strand in need yet to safely to coming home. may sound simple. what for both?
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if it's a nice and the agents, and it's more than just getting on the flight, i believe one of the most important challenges the psycho social and mental health situation of the migrants one day. the 3rd, that's why we're really privatized. besides supporting some of the same material needs of these people, well, sobriety ties their mental health upon. yeah, right front of the airports, the average use that's a process. but before the out loud, the headphone? yeah. giving more systems it is at science expense as like these illegal studies. we, tony migrants that brooks kid, they get food shelter, medical and counseling services for a few days before they go back to the communities. and the city says she has plans
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to go back to school in the future and can't wait to be the united would have friends. i'm finding quite a lot of my family member. they obviously have my voice and i'm also happy to hear from them. especially in my dodge. this may not have been half planned when she left in 2020. but there are many like huh. who choose to remain in b, b, i and other, assisting them back on the same joint issue funding with dreams. okay, but i live elsewhere because now the coordination of persons, king charles is getting a lot of attention this weekend and it's not all the acts of it say that some of the diamonds on the display in the lavish ceremony was stolen during the colonial era from what he is now, south africa, they say now would be an ideal moment for the british monarchy. as it begins a new era to return what they describe as loot. we'll have more on that in the moment that 1st we take
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a closer look at the diamond in question and how it came to be in the hands of the british royal family. this is the colon and diamond in its reform. it's the biggest jim quality diamond ever mind at over 3100, carrots discovered in 19 o. 5 and trends. well, in present day, south africa. during british colonial rule. the trans file government bought the diamond for the equivalent of 15000000 euro today. in 19 o 7, the young cut diamond was presented as a gift to britain. this king edward the 7th. the stone then went to amsterdam to be cut into gems. the biggest are now part of the british royal sceptre and imperial state, crown. the others are on the crown, the queen consort camilla, where the coronation and still more are featured in other royal jewelry. for years, however, there have been calls to return the call in and diamonds to south africa,
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where the story began. i am now joined by if a restore opinion. he is a professor of african politics at the university of south africa. he edited a books high. so breaking the colonial contractors about how colonialism is still being perpetuated in africa. welcome to the diabetes, africa. profess that you're one of the people calling for the kind of in environment to be returned to south africa. what do you think that would achieve? thank you very much and thank you for having me. i'm very 10 of the calling on time wanted to south africa is meant not only to symbolize breaking with the quality of a contract, but also the beginning of this very difficult conversations about how to retrace the colonial injustice of the past. simply wishing them away, we will not solve any problem in the integration. any of the quarter nation of the
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king is a propitious moment for africa ends, therefore, my colonize as to come together and say, how do we forge if you check to get out of all was very difficult, depressed into these dam on to can be used is that opportunity to break the pro rated bill bice correct. all right, perfect. and you talk there about the cost um saw that because biggest diamond company today is owned by a british company. what would really be the benefits, right to the people of south africa taking back one diamond, putting it in the museum, or ensuring that the country's vast mineral wealth improves the lives of people. what is the priority of the cost or the present? what should be the priority and what's the zip plus the present? unfortunately, a priority to for us both of their calling on time on the end of the day and was in the cold. that way looted from africa must to be accounted for. we will not leave the north to an i intend, you know, a chris to, for, for,
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for i started to suggest is we can not to have a situation where we are 40. so support the lived experiences of that people feel free to continue as if it was during court on your applied to it. so what we, according for, is not just the very 10 of the time, one only. but it is also the acknowledgment of the colonial equals and did the various republishing make a new seems to be put in place. one of them is to do with the lead to issue one of them is to do with the ownership of what i quoted them means of production. so is africans we are calling for a comm mode. oh, what a dress make any seems we, i do mind being not only epistemic independents, we are also demanding their rights to be head into the right to rise like in other citizens of the world. and we must hold for those dr. phones africans for those that the wrong best to begin to process these by acknowledging why did they
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acknowledge, then you can see did this a, if the template them say, how do we forge head professor, what which is say is, is the legacy off. brisson is colonialism in south africa, is it still being felt? in the legacy of british colonialism still continues to divvy. i am sitting here in the pool and pretty dirty. i talking to you in english. in fact, the issue of the cutting on dad went into how it is playing out symbolizes what we call color, nearly to, which is the continual, i've seen a tree called power relations between therefore, my color nice as and before my colonized, you know, for you to we only know tweak, we have the power tool to, to hold accountable. it goes back to them to us, but we also want to get so every piece of for either you. so that's what the paper tray does. it does inform isaac teams can forge as future head way they can be
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viewed as. so if i was, unfortunately, the other type of the colonial contract is not tweeting is if you told me i used to be a british or more next continued use of these and looked at a dime one. so for us here in africa, you use of africa, please call me at ease of use with the past event. it is something that to me, tips it to something that i did with us today. right? profess that every still being at the university of south africa. thank you. thank you very much for giving me a celebration of the no magic way of life has been taking place in morocco. the know that's festival allows people to embarrass themselves in the traditions of the ancient culture that have spread over centuries across these heart visits and been passed out through the generations. in a small town on the edge of this, the hobbit deserts, traditions are being kept,
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allowing like the middle of an old fashioned way of cooking bread in the sand. the a small move, does it hockey the oh, no, no. i think ways of live spread far and wide on the backs of camels. over centuries . creatures at the hearts of this ancient culture will not be able to show more for me. the rule of the camels and less. the camel keeps the new match. heritage alive in the year 2000. it was given intangible cultural heritage states as by unesco. and today all the states that share the camel's culture should mock this fact. thursday is off and make it a federal rating. find a minimum. i figured out that i know that
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tradition being revived at this year's festival is story telling i don't know how to ship. and most of the professors so much american society in general, based the education of the families and the children on story telling can it has a daughter to be late. at night the grandma would gather her family to tell stories she learned to self and that's from her own mother and grandmother. and so what she was telling them stories sort of strong messages. yeah, he can. we usually think no, no traditional nomads experience would be complete without music, with international artists joining local talents to help bring the authentic sounds of this rich. does it culture to and modern day audience or, and that's where we leave it for the program today. be sure to check out all of the
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stories on the w dot com forward slash africa. we're also on facebook, add onto that, and we're always interested to know about what do you think of the stories that we cover here on data. these african, perhaps the stories that you think we should be covering, reach out to me to, i'm at the was 7 months with us. this week i'm particularly interested to know what you think about the diamonds that will be on display at king charles is our nation . i will see you next time. the
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it seems so simple did guy to many possible the english and i was called the oldest guy uti. i finally got me looking to get it connected by it. yes ma'am. oh god, i'll make up what i'll come on. we got that. so in guy to but it, i really need what of course, of the transition needs someone to bio gas. how do we make this accessible to
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everyone? india in 30 minutes on d, w. the same will make suggest to the gen, love and binding thing, step away from me, but i'm not even allowed to go to my own car. and everyone was made of holes in every single day. just getting a you ready to meet the gentleman enjoying me. rachel stood on dw, the legs of species populate our planet. most of them are here long before us. when human escape that the mass extinction began and the diversity of sanctions
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of the british isles, the india, they are calling to preserve this habitat. the wild dials start to main 19 dw brain update. its magic is the kind of magic because this orchestra called the brain continuously announcing cells. so we ask a few astute questions. are we smarter, east warns for us the closest
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monster awaits how powerful are your thoughts? now whether we can control our thoughts, which makes us very power games, we have to learn a lot. and we do that through play. questions about life, the universe. kind of like a superpower. our series 40 to answer almost every thing this week on dw, the this is dw news, and these are us up stories. the world health organization has dictated an end to the coven 90 in global health, and the agency, the u. n. agencies highest the lowest level had been in place for more than 3 is about the w h o director general and.
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