tv Faith Matters Deutsche Welle May 8, 2023 6:15am-6:46am CEST
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if you went a game, everybody's the grades for an oil, you lose a game, these dates on dirt on you. it's literally that simple. you know, it's all about, you know, training your mind for, you know, the next child which, you know, what's the next challenge this game is over with very well. okay, cool. but we've got another one on monday. and that is your sports and use offsite for now. stay tuned for global 3000 next half on the w. as always, there is more news and analysis around the clock on dw adults. com. i'm a lot of psycho and for me in the team handling. thanks for watching. taking the guardians of truth. my name is joan and i have paid almost every price of being enjoying this in a country like to tease. taking on the powers that be they risk every thing
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john, don't r s activist journalist and politicians living in exile too much on my shoulders. but i have to hold this way because i'm responsible for the future. follow culture for the people who are behind the bus for their mission. people need to know what is happening there. you know are series guardians of truth . watch now on youtube dw documentary, the welcome to the label 3000. this week we had to south africa where an innovative medical clinic runs on train tracks australia come the country did chits
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dependence on fossil fuels and impairment line one, orchestra is leaving new like center discount each waste. many people lack access to decent medical care. the w h shows says that in more than 80 countries there is few as and one delta to every 1000 pico and specialist such as selma logistics. dentists, gynecologists and surgeons are even right, right. particularly in rural areas. also, overall health care has greatly improved in recent years. the still a shortage of around $15000000.00 specialists globally, especially in africa and southeast asia. so what do you do when you need medical assistance? but the nearest hospital is many kilometers away. on next report from south africa
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shows they're all creative solutions. cecilia and ponds caught up in the middle of the night to be here on time. the journey by bus to one and a half hours the trans and that paper they put train is a free mobo health care clinic. the travels around south africa cecilia in ponds has had problems with our eyesight for a few months. now, i need to hear a little button. i'm not in a hurry. i'm here to get help. that's the main thing. and i'll let me leave once i've seen someone. she can't even read the bible anymore. she says she used to have glasses, but they don't help now. and she can't afford new ones to the nearest doctors and hospitals are far away and expensive. when someone comes to woods me, i can make out that it's a person, but i can't see the face. i can't see who it is. now she's seen
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a doctor. she'll get a new pair of glasses, which will make her life much, much easier. yeah, we have to pay for labor health care train has $18.00 coaches and facilities to conduct general health checks and supplied patients with medicine or even psychologists on board launched in 1994. the paypal lipid trains run 36 weeks a year and travel to up to 70 remote communities annually. for the next 2 weeks, the train is in flu flu, a, a small town in the province of cloud, zulu natal manager, a selma. so take is in charge that we also asked to put that into consideration of the. busy the data sources that we have at some point, we have to attend them for, for the next phase. a lot of patients that comes to the same model. there's
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a huge demand for the service and she explains every day, hundreds of people come seeking treatment. so take is a qualified ophthalmologist, but it's been her entire working life here on the train, helping people without access to state health care. 2 weeks is never enough. it can never be, you know, so we do what we can, we do the most that we can she spends 9 months a year traveling the country. so she speaks to her 4 children every day, but has never been able to take part in their daily lives. that's how it's always been, but it's not easy. there's no way you can move your family. so but also i love what i do and helping the bonham people that might not have gotten the help if the train didn't get to the place. the pay for
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labor train is a huge logistical operation funded by south africa state on rail company. for many in rural south africa, it's the only way to get comprehensive medical treatment as part of its outreach efforts, the doctors also visit local communities. we accompany a team to an elementary school about 30 minutes away. they're showing the children how to brush their teeth. the tooth brush for each child, the 1st from any. the doctors give them all a quick checkup. if there's a problem that needs treatment, they have to go to the train with people if i'm just too much office and you know, some kind of places where they can buy, you know, suites and things like that. you find that most kids on the home dental care button, like the way kate's on the what the parents scrolling,
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the treatment doesn't cost much. a tooth extraction, for example, cost the equivalent of less than $1.00 euro. back to cecilia panza. in the up patients coach, she's given a pair of glasses for everyday use. and also a pair of reading glasses. she pays just under 2 euro for each pair. bonded. it makes such a difference. i can't even see that man over the from where i'm fishing. don't mind them, i can see much more clearly this is a good feeling to be helping somebody is amazing what 2 pieces of philosophy, cecilia and ponds that lives in a remote corner of the country and gets about 2000 ron. that's approximately
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a 100 years a month from the state. that's all she. her daughters and her grandchildren have to live on they often don't even have enough to eat. a good idea of who got killed wasn't one of my grandchildren fell ill on have nothing can be done. i meant if i could, i would take him to hospitals in them, but i've got no money money not being the 2nd you need to. so i know we just have to wait for his cost to go away by itself or wrong. induce me to add her failing eyesight, had been making it increasingly hard for her to look after her grandchildren. she could barely see a near bite, be bing it to me. i couldn't even read the bible, but i never picked it on to porter one. when my grandchildren met his medicine, they had to wait for them. others to come home because i couldn't read the instructions on the corner by the way. no,
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it was the light. but now i can see clearly and again remind you. seeing a button usually line now quibble. cecilia in panza. hopes her eyesight won't continue to worse than it could be some time for the paper light, but train comes back the last time it stopped in slow, slow way, was in 2001 more than 20 years ago. the australian outback nature, it's wildest and so many a place of loaning, but winter temperatures on the east coast, rise to 50 degrees celsius. the it'll is of it's climate change up close and power . this australia is reliance on its coal industry means it has one of the highest c o 2 emission rates in the world. kind of turn this around and become climate neutral. this country doesn't make sense. it has a pristine nature. terrific wildfire that is one of the richest countries with some
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of the best renewable resources in the world. we're gonna say how, like we say good i think is here every day. he's a good guy. but despite having an easier job stopping climate change than most and way more reason to do so frustrating and sort of under the world's bluster polluters, then they'll being less than most and they're emissions week. so how did australia become a climate village and kind of clean up its act? to understand australia of climate policy, you have to understand its economy, which was built on mining its resources and shipping them to re stays or in the us . a big part of that was called just 2 decades ago. australia made 80 percent of its electricity from coal. today that share is still around 50 percent. that's twice as much as the us spend 25 times more than the u. k.
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but the fuel advance at home isn't the only pregnant australia also exports smoke holes in any country except indonesia and all that shows in its politics for the last decade. and they should have conservative parties pushed coal friendly policy and pushed back on basic climate. so they were kicked out in french 22, giving australia your chance to finally clean up. it's not, but it was the actions of the old look back table strategy, the reputation of excitement billing. when we turn out to international meetings, we always get the wooden stone, where all was called out as a maggot. this is kate crowley. she studied australia climate policy or the last decade. now, policy positions, if you look rate between the lines that will lives well, will do anything but actually kind of missions will do anything but actually reduce the amount of coal were exploding, will do anything but make
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a profit transition. the most obvious reason frustrating is slight progress is it's co oil and gas industries and the power it's a lobbyist wheel, the politicians and media to make much of the west australia has some of the weakest political finance lose them on rich countries in the last election on identified political doug and escape the big party for the $19000000.00 australian dollars. now this money comes from the dentist with all sorts of interest. but what's outrages is that go straight into have no idea which industry to buy inputs . it's very difficult to disentangle that level of influence, so you'd have to do something in about strengthening political lobbying laws, implants were done, eisen laws for stock now, for a country pence are badly by extreme weather. it seems strange that people haven't demanded the government stand up to the fossil fuel industry. but there is a good reason for this. passes on media with one side down plain climate change.
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first, have a look at this be monitoring from the climate council show strategies. emissions really could make a difference. a surprisingly large truck couple strange meteors in the hands of one powerful man. the 3 biggest newspapers are in by rebooting that of the 91 year old media mogul behind fox news in the us is company news call strain. the also is a tv channel sky news, australia maddox papers have historically so doubts about scientific facts and detect policies that can come pollution. and the coverage of policies to stop global warming was twice as likely to be negative and positive. things have started to change, at least a bit. it went to 20. rupert murdoch's, the youngest son, james, called out his father's meter and piper climate. did i elizabeth bush bye as a rabbit still strained it, and then he quit. yet later, the company surprised everyone with a campaign to highlight the benefits of talk to emissions. useful papers i filed
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involved in your inventory position this morning with a 16 page wrap around searching action, uncommon change. so the company is moving away from open climate to know, but it's still pushing to delay action. one document that is what potentially well is the idea that fighting climate change will cost australia and jobs, australia time to some of the biggest mining companies. the industry makes up about 10 percent of the country. it's judy pete and politicians, journalist and business executive shouts about this loudly propose this game is already threatening future contracts. putting the jobs of 500 staff at risk finding your jobs for fossil fuel work cause it's important. but the rolled at coal, oil, and gas that is way smaller than australians think is perception that fossil fuels are really crucial to the threat and economy in terms of jobs is fundamental in sort of the narrative against con, i'm action. but really like, it doesn't really stack up in, in, you know,
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in practical tends. this is climate time. let me try and catch us up the money and she found australians over estimate the size of gas and oil industry employment by a factor of $58.00. it's a similar story, it's a co people think coal mining mix up to 13 percent of g d p. it's actually 10 times less the width thing here is that not only does australia have enough to sign in when to make loads of renewable energy. it also have huge deposits and minerals that a key to cleaning up economy like corporate lithium. and despite all the denial strains are pretty supportive of stuff in climate change, which given the fires and floods and droughts that they're living through maybe isn't so surprising. this training institute study from 75 percent of australians are concerned about climate change. 179 percent want to phase out cold plants. those are some pretty large figures that show the opinions of israeli and then maybe doesn't desktops or much with this idea that it's really ins on the whole of
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climate denies that mindset played a big role in the last election. the new government has set to talk and come to missions, 43 percent by 2030, from the 2005 levels. but these targets are still too weak to stop the planet heating. 1.5 degrees celsius. the level well the to subtract, waiting for, but it would get it down to about 2 degrees. despite to fire emission, the new government has 2 big problems. the 1st to the number of plus a few projects have plans to build. that's really has a 117 new fossil fuel projects in the pipeline. and so it started to get approved. if those go through that's going to be like all of our admissions, you know, yvette any limit that we set. but the bigger problem is the reliance on comp and offsets to clean up the economy. the government wants to make industry a bit less, c, o 2 finch. good. it produces, the limit will shrink about 5 percent each year. but instead of forcing companies
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to pollute less the government's lifting some of them by certificates that say they've avoided pollution elsewhere. a lot of the time by planting trees or protecting parts. there's no requirement that they cannot start new projects. they can keep polluting, they can keep expanding, they can keep increasing their emissions as long as they buy offset, that's totally fine. still, australia is cleaning up its energy system. cheap, renewable energy of displacing fossil fuels. even what policy is we and even where the federal government has been slower, some states have very fast queensland to victoria getting out cold. pennsylvania, the electricity grid is already 100 percent renewable, and it wants to generate tablets need from clean energy by 2014 australia, the reputation of excitement that make sense for policies to clean up the economy lobby. as some journalists have kept to focus on fossil fuels, but it's people, one change. and that's something that's starting to show the
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thinking as a network. acting as one global 3000 is now global us. for a more united world for a future worth living, new, global us on d. w. right now the world needs a lot of good ideas. like how to give waste a new knife. this could be turning old plastic into clothes, so bags, making jewelry out of scraps of wyatt. even buildings have bottles. of passionate music can empower the line, even tons trash into musical instruments, and likes and home sing projects. the, the smallest mountain of waste is known as the country or the landfill. this area
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on the outskirts of power g, y is capital us and shown is cool. the streets stream with rubbish, fabio travis is on a mission to improve the lives of local residents. the 1st game he had 17 years ago to work at the country or a landfill, as an environmental engineer. but then he decided to launch a project for young people and broadening the horizons. if it doesn't seem like local children, wake up every morning and see the landfill side in the distance and it gets bigger every day. so i can remember all of it. but all i want it to broaden their horizons with music. and we can watch the scene and they say we saw a keen musician 5 years ago and sharing his enthusiasm for music with local children and the communists. many here live from the nipple they can earn collecting and recycling waste. chavez has been teaching 14 year old. i've no
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change to play to town for full use. your simplicity of the people here, always welcome me with a smile. and we'll see if there's no why we're bringing them the best gift in the world right now that they will all i'm bringing is music and bull bull. but that's enough for them. he probably just always, you know, atlanta play traditional folk songs on a guitar native team come the goal for you. i'd like to be like 5 years when i grow up suddenly that's my dream. and he helps people like us, and he's always in a good mood by you said 5 year chavez broke the silence of music to this rundown neighborhood. and with it, the music school affiliated to the orchestra is nearby william lopez, bill instruments, recycled materials,
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including these days. i know the secret of good sound is on you, but this baking tray, for example, sounds better if the food cooked on him. he was burnt. skilled at turning trash into musical treasures voting cons, students and folks you can find it. use afraid to this is the, this double base used to be an oil drum of the more we found it on some street corner and the key more maybe in the same way. india with them is an idea. yeah. i'm not sure what kind of oil that contained the approved but it sounds great and yeah, that's what i'm reading. when chavez was to the landfill, 17 years ago, he would play music with the children. and if the ways collected who were waiting for the parents to come home, we brought them in victo instrument. okay,
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more and more of them wanted to learn violin to me by then we'd run out of instruments. and when we leave violence cost more than a home here, we'll see you live, i live nice to me. we didn't know what else to do. so we built instrument this out of rubbish. it'll say comments on michael. so you can, we never expected our idea to become world famous for you on the 4th on that, but i don't see it don't all these days over 400 students take weekly lessons and the music school filled with the health of donations from all over the world and with the proceeds from the students performances, the music school has become the focal point of coffee order. this is an oasis in the district. we're not just teaching these young people to play music. we're giving them a sense of security. it's vital people and cut to what i have to find ways to survive despite the many conflicts. here the drugs and the crime,
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they need this positive freedom every year. savio chavez takes the most talented students on a wells tool. coffee orders, recycled orchestra has performed every way from south korea to spain. they see them performed for the pope the many of the firmness, including agnes, also receive financial aid from the orchestra to pay for school materials and health insurance. the project has kept many young people off the streets and out of trouble. and i gave them the kind of whenever he plays, we go in and watch it in the romilly or not. they do you love watching my son make music? i read do that, and the
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get might be the last place you'd expect to find an orchestra that cuts the order has become famous, not just for its landfill, but also for his music. the day this weeks global snack, we discovered a deep sea delicacy in madeira. the beautiful portuguese islands up in the bay area, is located just under 1002. how much is southwest? and has been. all sorts of kind of mary specialties can be found in the capital from shawn business bundles of colorful local properties at the mercado does nothing to do. it is in the cities tend to the sub tropical climate means that much more fruit, crows in the day rather than in mainland europe, such as passion, food, and canada is not far from the market. is it do us sometime?
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any of the restaurants about a father and jesus fresh produce straight from the markets list. somebody else who saw has been running the place for 12 years did definitely we still have typical my dear and dishes such as blacks. cabbage says, which is very popular with taurus. studies says we serve it with banana and passion for each for fish, for that is a fish. that means a lot to us because it's local is caught in my depths of the ocean customers and food. you got the blacks got it fish and lives at depth of up to 2000 meters when it's cost. it changes coming from corpus to black due to the rapid change impression it's white flesh is tend to abstract free and above all nations. so the father shifts, nuno prepares the scope of fish for the restaurants signature, dis 1st we coefficient flower independent egg.
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before it goes into the pan it has to be skin side up, so it doesn't fall apart. these same cornell, the setup force, then we garnish the fish with banana, sliced, and defend diagonal pieces. now we start passion, fruit publish, and some cream cream shouldn't be too sweet. sweet cream doesn't work in the sauce . then add salt and peppers. and last but not least talk so bored. i sato secret ingredients we serve the fish with a passion for it sauce, and garnish it with a sprig of parsley. here it looks great and goes perfectly with our special sauce.
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the blacks got it. fish with banana and passion for it. so it is the same as madame and dish. the it's about a father, it costs about 12 years. but the dates say, say here the and that so from us at global 3000 this week, please send us your comments. label 3000 d, w dot com. see you next time. take care the
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and finding some inner p believers on we're introduced to are these places in europe are smash records step into a pool. that venture keeps the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of us record breaking site on google back to and now also in the book form for a brain uptake. it's magic. it's a kind of magic because this orchestra called the brain continuously announcing cells. so we ask a few stupid questions. are we some marjorie swarms for us.
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the closest monster awaits hope. your full on your thoughts. however, 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 and kind of like a superpower. our series 40 to almost every thing this week on the get the money out of the young and the restless model because you can be killed for doing this. they can shoot you for it. so you'll die today or tomorrow so they can do what they please. but all right, so i'm just going to be.
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